Standing with AmyLiz's heretic corner.
'Why We Fight'
We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
FWIW, I've read Moby Dick too. I recall enjoying it, but couldn't say much more than that. I've also read 100 Years of Solitude, and loved it. One of my favourite books.
I've also read 100 Years of Solitude, and loved it. One of my favourite books.
Moi aussi, aussie.
I've thought about reading it, but in the end I didn't have the nerve. After the book is over, maybe.
FWIW, I've read Moby Dick too. I recall enjoying it, but couldn't say much more than that. I've also read 100 Years of Solitude, and loved it. One of my favourite books.
Heh. I'm the un-bt. Greatly enjoyed 100 Years... but remember little of it other than a general lucid-dream kind of atmosphere. Moby Dick, though, is vividly lovable to me in exactly the way -t describes: I read it in high school because it was on a list of stuff we were supposed to have read by the time we graduated, picked it up dreading it, and found myself frequently weeping with laughter and wondering who the assholes were who'd covered it with Important Literature warnings and spoiled it for everyone else.
Of course, I also loved Tom Jones (and a novel by Fielding's lesser-known but apparently equally snarkful and sex-comic sister is presently near the top of my to be read list) and Tristram Shandy and have adored the bits and pieces of Ulysses I've nibbled at, so my taste is clearly antiquarian, eccentric and likely suspect in the extreme.
Joe, that was a splendid recommendation for Moby-Dick; it made me want to try reading the book.
Speaking of Tristram Shandy, have you read the comic version yet? How is it?
who the assholes were who'd covered it with Important Literature warnings and spoiled it for everyone else
This is why I wish more people would get past the Middle English and actually read Chaucer--he's hilarious!! I would be sitting in my dorm common room reading the Nun's Priest Tale and cracking up, and have non-English majors give me the "what do you find so funny in him?" look.
I was reading The Odyssey on the bus once, snickering over irony and Penelope. Someone said, sounding perplexed, "Are you reading that for a class?" "Huh?" I said, annoyed at the interruption, "um, no, I'm just reading it." I swear, the person edged away from me.