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JPK's Classics Read

#41 User is offline   QuickTidal 

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Posted 04 January 2025 - 09:19 PM

View PostMacros, on 03 January 2025 - 07:09 PM, said:

surely you mean the only adaptation worth watching, the '95 series
no one of any kind of taste actually enjoyed the '05 fiasco

honestly, such peasants at times


So here’s the thing.

For accuracy, characters, and attention to regency and Austen detail, the 1995 miniseries is the ONLY one that matters, I agree. I agree so hard that I bought the high def bluray set for it so that I can watch and enjoy it anytime.

BUT

The 2005 film, though wildly anachronistic, completely miscast in some instances, with terrible scene choices and shot blocking…and score…has a near exquisite cinematography that looks often like oil paintings and is a sumptuous buffet of visual delight. And though Longbourn of the film looks NOTHING like what it should look like….something about it sings to me. And though most of the cast annoys me, both Donald Sutherland and Matthew Mcfaddyen excel at their roles.and Rosumund Pike sells Jane Bennet as the most gorgeous girl around more than Susannah Harker ever did.


So yes ‘95 is leaps and bounds better…but I can still find enjoyment in the 2005 film.

This post has been edited by QuickTidal: 04 January 2025 - 09:20 PM

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#42 User is offline   JPK 

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Posted 05 January 2025 - 03:05 AM

Next up for classics I've found myself agreeing to a pair of buddy reads, so I'm doing to do something I don't plan on being the norm and doubling up.

On deck is Dickens' A TALE OF TWO CITIES and I'm scheduled to start Marcus Aurelius' MEDITATIONS on Monday.

I'm about 50 pages into ATOTC and have to say I'm absolutely loving it so far. I'm always partial to stories set around the French Revolution and the first couple chapters here are absolutely compelling. I do have to note that I'm finding a lot more humor here than I originally anticipated, but it does fit the duality of the novel as set in the opening paragraph. A particular gem from chapter 4:
Spoiler

It's still pretty early to say, but I have the distinct impression already that I'm really going to like this book.
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#43 User is offline   Gabriele 

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Posted 05 January 2025 - 12:55 PM

View PostJPK, on 04 January 2025 - 03:43 AM, said:



My favorite character has to be Mr Bennett. I completely understand the desire to hide from everyone and seclude myself in my library.


I can totally relate to that feeling.
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#44 User is offline   Gabriele 

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Posted 05 January 2025 - 01:00 PM

View PostJPK, on 05 January 2025 - 03:05 AM, said:

Next up for classics I've found myself agreeing to a pair of buddy reads, so I'm doing to do something I don't plan on being the norm and doubling up.

On deck is Dickens' A TALE OF TWO CITIES and I'm scheduled to start Marcus Aurelius' MEDITATIONS on Monday.

I'm about 50 pages into ATOTC and have to say I'm absolutely loving it so far. I'm always partial to stories set around the French Revolution and the first couple chapters here are absolutely compelling. I do have to note that I'm finding a lot more humor here than I originally anticipated, but it does fit the duality of the novel as set in the opening paragraph. A particular gem from chapter 4:
Spoiler

It's still pretty early to say, but I have the distinct impression already that I'm really going to like this book.


Maybe I'll give Dickens another shot. I burned out on him with Oliver Twist and David Copperfield both of which I didn't really like, and never read anything else by him. Going to follow your read-along. :)
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#45 User is offline   JPK 

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Posted 20 January 2025 - 03:28 PM

Alright, I've been a busy man lately. Some updates.

A TALE OF TWO CITIES: I'm sitting around 60% on this one and honestly it's only because I'm doing it as a buddy read and agreed to stay with a serialized pace. If it weren't for that, I would have devoured this one. There have been several times when I have caught myself rereading paragraphs just so I can really let the gorgeous prose sink in. Events are starting to ramp up in the novel now, and unless something really goes sideways before the end I expect this will likely be taking a rightful place as one of the best novels I've ever read.

MEDITATIONS by Marcus Aurelius: mercifully short book, this one. If you're unaware, this is essentially a Stoic philosophy written by a Roman Emperor. Apparently it was never meant to be published but was more of a personal journal of sorts. I hate read this book, and probably should have dropped it for something else but I fell prey to a sunk-cost fallacy mentality on it. There were bits in there that I thought were actually thought-provoking (like major sections about accepting death and your place in the greater place of nature) but so much of it just doesn't stand for me. He repeats as a core mantra that everyone dies and to accept death and that everyone is forgotten usually eventually, but that very premise is difficult to take since I'm reading his words nearly 2000 years after his lifetime and so many of the names are of men, mostly emperors and philosophers, that are still known as well.

THE ROAD by Cormac McCarthy: Another mercifully short one, though this one sat much more favorably with me. This is a heartbreaking novel, and exceptionally grim. But that shouldn't be a surprise to anyone glancingly familiar with the author. It's really hard to describe my thoughts on this one because of how unrelentingly dark it is, but it's the core of hope even in the darkest circumstances and of a father trying to care and provide for his child even when it seems hopeless that really touched me. That said, I'm not sure I'll ever read this one again because it was just brutal.
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#46 User is offline   Gabriele 

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Posted 21 January 2025 - 05:31 PM

View PostJPK, on 20 January 2025 - 03:28 PM, said:

Alright, I've been a busy man lately. Some updates.

MEDITATIONS by Marcus Aurelius: mercifully short book, this one. If you're unaware, this is essentially a Stoic philosophy written by a Roman Emperor. Apparently it was never meant to be published but was more of a personal journal of sorts. I hate read this book, and probably should have dropped it for something else but I fell prey to a sunk-cost fallacy mentality on it. There were bits in there that I thought were actually thought-provoking (like major sections about accepting death and your place in the greater place of nature) but so much of it just doesn't stand for me. He repeats as a core mantra that everyone dies and to accept death and that everyone is forgotten usually eventually, but that very premise is difficult to take since I'm reading his words nearly 2000 years after his lifetime and so many of the names are of men, mostly emperors and philosophers, that are still known as well.



If you want some fun Roman stuff, try Suetonius' Twelve Caesars. Just don't base an history essays on his juicy gossip without cross checking a bunch of other sources. :D

Meditations and Augustin's Confessions were more like must reads for me.
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#47 User is offline   JPK 

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Posted 30 January 2025 - 11:07 PM

Finished A TALE OF TWO CITIES today. My earlier statements stand and this was a 5* read for me. The back half of the novel is a master class in keeping the reader in a state of high tension. I'll also say that the closing line of the novel is gorgeous. Somehow it manages to be heartbreaking and hopeful at the same time.

I'm currently about 40% into THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS by le Guin. I am enjoying this book now, but made the mistake of picking it up on inauguration day to avoid facing the political shit show. Then I come across non-binary nationalistic aliens. Once I came to terms with that, I've found the novel very engaging. Le Guin always amazes me with how much worldbuilding and character she manages to push into a small pagecount. Between this and the two EARTHSEA books I've read, I'm starting to think she may end up as a deep-dive author for me.

I think my next serialized novel is one I've been meaning to read for years that was suggested by Azath: DON QUIXOTE.
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#48 User is offline   JPK 

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Posted Yesterday, 07:26 PM

I polished off THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS last night. My earlier thoughts on this one rang true through to the end. It's a beautifully written book with very interesting explorations on sex, gender, and politics. Makes me want to look deeper into more of her Hainish cycle.

I'm still chipping away at DON QUIXOTE and enjoying it. I think I'd love it more if it didn't lean so heavily into referencing the materials it's satirizing but I can also see why it was necessary to do so.

This one's a pretty hefty one so it's definitely going to slow my pace a bit. I'm also going to give myself a bit of a breather and hop over to something a bit more current to accompany it as I've been making pretty good time so far. I'll likely double up again sometime in late Feb or early March.
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