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Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
SUGGESTIONS NEEDED FOR MARCH/ APRIL FICTION DISCUSSION!
It's time to start thinking about what book of fiction we would like to discuss during the months of March and April.
Please add your fiction book suggestions here and remember to add a link to the book you are recommending. Feel free to add whether or not you have already read the book you are suggesting, and why you feel it would make for a good discussion. Comments on the books suggested are crucial to deciding which books will go into the official poll. Please leave feedback on the suggested novels, without feedback, it is impossible to determine which books will generate the best discussions.
Members who are eligible to nominate books are those members who have made a minimum of 25 posts. The goal for our fiction discussion is to attract active members who will participate in the discussion of the book of fiction that is ultimately selected.
The novels which receive the most positive feedback will be placed in a poll open to all members with 25 or more posts. Personal taste in books of fiction varies greatly. Please keep this in mind and be respectful when making any negative comments.
I'm looking forward to seeing the suggestions.
_________________ I feel like a wet seed wild in the hot blind earth. --William Faulkner
I would like to add that the book's subject matter at first turned me off as I did not want to read yet another coming of age story. Sounded dull. But the boys serve actually as a vehicle for a wonderful magic realism take/tales. The use of language is magnificent as is the imagery. The style, the story, the magic realism.....all components that leave you thinking about the book long after you've finished.
_________________ Gods and spirits are parasitic--Pascal Boyer
Religion is the only force in the world that lets a person have his prejudice or hatred and feel good about it --S C Hitchcock
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
Death in Venice and Other Stories Thomas Mann
From the Publisher
Quote:
This superb new translation of "Death in Venice" and six other stories by Thomas Mann is a tour de force, sure to establish itself as the definitive text for English-speaking readers. The seven stories in this collection represent the early part of Mann's literary career, beginning with work he produced in 1896 at the age of 21, and culminating in his most celebrated novella, "Death in Venice" (1912). Although Mann continued working until the end of his life in 1955, he despaired of ever matching the quality of his early writing. In these stories, Mann began to grapple with themes that were to recur throughout his work. In the first piece, "Little Herr Friedemann," as in "Death in Venice," a character's carefully structured way of life is suddenly and unexpectedly threatened by sexual passion. In "Gladius Dei," puritanical intellect clashes with beauty. In "Tristan," Mann presents an ironic and comical account of tension between an artist and bourgeois society. All seven of these stories are accomplished and memorable, but it is "Death in Venice" that truly forms the centerpiece of the collection. Themes that weave their way through many of the shorter stories come to a climax in this novella, out century's most haunting, magnificent tale of art and self-destruction.
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
An admission: I know I am supposed to adore The Magic Mountain and that it is one of the greatest novels ever written, but I really don't like it much. I have not read it in the English translation, but the German sentences begin on one page and end 4 pages later, complete with 16.5 clauses and tense changes. That said, I adore Death in Venice, Tonio Kröger, etc. Beautiful literature. Here again, I haven't read them in English, but I loved them in German. So, I would be willing to read them again (btw, required reading in German schools). Mann actually wrote in a house 3 kilometers from where I live (was only there shortly).
_________________ Gods and spirits are parasitic--Pascal Boyer
Religion is the only force in the world that lets a person have his prejudice or hatred and feel good about it --S C Hitchcock
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
Does anyone have any novels that have been sitting on their shelves for who knows how just waiting to be read. Something that you have always wanted to read but just have not gotten the chance to? If so, why not think about suggesting it for our next discussion.
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
All I have are my dusty books
Here's my pick... and it's sad because I've been relegated to fiction only when I read mostly non-fiction. Too bad everyone wants to read about god - without atheists god wouldn't be brought up in the least. Praise atheists... long live the king.
Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert. This is a 19th century French romantic writer of the 1st order. Expect pining and eager men, a woman unsure but wanting, and hopefully a consummation of love between the two. I've read Sentimental Education by this writer and it was a very good book. For those who don't consider themselves romantic, this is still a good book to read as it is good enough for even romantic connoisseurs. Your appetite should be satiated with the most select literary morsel... although I admit to have never read it. A sell like all "loves" are, right? ...interested?
For this novel of French bourgeois life in all its inglorious banality, Flaubert invented a paradoxically original and wholly modern style. His heroine, Emma Bovary, a bored provincial housewife, abandons her husband to pursue the libertine Rodolphe in a desperate love affair. A succès de scandale in its day, Madame Bovary remains a powerful and arousing novel.
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
President Camacho wrote:
All I have are my dusty books
Here's my pick... and it's sad because I've been relegated to fiction only when I read mostly non-fiction. Too bad everyone wants to read about god - without atheists god wouldn't be brought up in the least. Praise atheists... long live the king.
Madame Bovary sounds an interesting choice. There's a good chance I have a dusty copy somewhere.
The book, I mentioned over there in non-fiction, Joseph Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Faces, is not about god and only peripherally about religion. I think you would like this book, Camacho.
Here's a couple of comments from the jacket:
"In the three decades since I discovered The Hero with a Thousand Faces, it has continued to fascinate and inspire me. Joseph Campbell peers through centuries and shows us that we are all connected by a basic need to hear stories and understand ourselves. As a book, it is wonderful to read; as illumination into the human condition, it is a revelation." -- George Lucas
"Campbell's words carry extraordinary weight, not only among scholars but among a wide range of other people who find his search down mythological pathways relevant to their lives today. . . . The book for which he is most famous, The Hero with a Thousand Faces, [is] a brilliant examination, through ancient hero myths, of man's eternal struggle for identity
I have returned to no book more often since leaving college than this one, and every time I discover new insight into the human journey. Every generation will find in Hero wisdom for the ages." -- Bill Moyers
_________________ -Geo Who Knows Only His Own Generation Remains Always a Child Cicero, Orator 120
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
How about:
The Arabian Nights: Tales from a Thousand and One Nights Translation: Richard F. Burton.
Quote:
Full of mischief, valor, ribaldry, and romance, The Arabian Nights has enthralled readers for centuries. These are the tales that saved the life of Shahrazad, whose husband, the king, executed each of his wives after a single night of marriage. Beginning an enchanting story each evening, Shahrazad always withheld the ending: A thousand and one nights later, her life was spared forever.
This volume reproduces the 1932 Modern Library edition, for which Bennett A. Cerf chose the most famous and representative stories from Sir Richard F. Burton's multivolume translation, and includes Burton's extensive and acclaimed explanatory notes. These tales, including Alaeddin; or, the Wonderful Lamp, Sinbad the Seaman and Sinbad the Landsman, and Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves, have entered into the popular imagination, demonstrating that Shahrazad's spell remains unbroken.
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Re: Suggestions needed for March/April fiction discussion
I would too! This is a great choice!
kyjake23, do you plan on participating?
The Brothers Karamazov Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Quote:
The final novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, first published as Bratya Karamazovy in 1879-80, and generally considered to be his masterpiece. It is the story of Fyodor Karamazov and his sons Alyosha, Dmitry, and Ivan. It is also a story of patricide, into the sordid unfolding of which Dostoyevsky introduces a love-hate struggle with profound psychological and spiritual implications. Throughout the whole novel there persists a search for faith, for God--the central idea of the work. The dramatization of Ivan's repudiation of God is concentrated in the famous "Legend of the Grand Inquisitor." A response to Ivan is contained in the preaching of the monk Zosima that the secret of universal harmony is not achieved by the mind but by the heart.
I don't want to make translation a huge issue. The above link is for the Penquin edition. It can also be downloaded for free on ereaders. It's a bit long, the length does not bother me, we could always extend the discussion period to include a third month.
Lets give this a few days to see if we can get more people on board. But right now, we have three nods.
_________________ I feel like a wet seed wild in the hot blind earth. --William Faulkner
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