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JPK's Classics Read

#21 User is offline   QuickTidal 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 07:43 PM

View PostMacros, on 18 December 2024 - 07:29 PM, said:

Shogun


Seconded.
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#22 User is offline   Macros 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 09:47 PM

*casts summon PG*
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#23 User is online   JPK 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 09:53 PM

View PostHammerhead88, on 17 December 2024 - 11:48 PM, said:

Also adding in master and the Margareta - Bulgakov



View PostMacros, on 18 December 2024 - 07:29 PM, said:

Shogun


I've read both of these. I liked MASTER AND MARGARITA and plan to reread it at some point. I loved SHOGUN though and have gotten two other family members to read it as well.
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#24 User is offline   polishgenius 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 09:59 PM

View PostMacros, on 18 December 2024 - 09:47 PM, said:

*casts summon PG*



Moot point since JPK has read it, but double stamp, motherfuckers.





It is not in any way a similar book- different setting, different themes, different structure- so I don't know why I think this, but I always felt Lonesome Dove goes hard in similar ways to Shogun. Although I see JPK has read that too so I guess that rec is just for the others.

This post has been edited by polishgenius: 18 December 2024 - 10:00 PM

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#25 User is offline   Azath Vitr (D'ivers 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 10:24 PM

Thanks for updating the list with those you've read.

Most of my top classic literature recommendations would be outside the realm of "novel-like fictional narrative". (For example: poetry of Basho, Sappho, Catullus, Horace, etc.) Or plays (with narrative content), short stories, allegories---they seem like a bit of a gray area.

My top recommendations for "novel-like fictional narratives" (not counting plays):

Gilgamesh

Water Margin: Outlaws of the Marsh (probably mid-14th century, "Attributed to Shi Nai'an, Water Margin was one of the earliest Chinese novels written in vernacular Mandarin Chinese. [...] Water Margin is based on the exploits of the outlaw Song Jiang and his 108 companions (The 36 "Heavenly Spirits" (三十六天罡) and the 72 "Earthly Demons" (七十二地煞)). [...] The opening episode in the novel is the release of the 108 Spirits, imprisoned under an ancient stele-bearing tortoise. [...] the novel is notable for its gruesome and often gory and over-the-top depictions of violence. [...] It has introduced readers to some of the best-known characters in Chinese literature [...] Water Margin also exerted a significant influence on the development of fiction elsewhere in East Asia, such as on Japanese literature. [...] Water Margin is referred to in numerous Japanese manga")

Journey to the West ("Chinese novel published in the 16th century during the Ming dynasty and attributed to Wu Cheng'en. It is regarded as one of the great Chinese novels"), and has been described as arguably the most popular literary work in East Asia")

The Talisman - Sir Walter Scott (or Ivanhoe for literary-historical significance)

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket - Edgar Allan Poe

The Turn of the Screw - Henry James

Middlemarch - George Eliot (female author)

To the Lighthouse - Virginia Woolf

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - James Joyce (Ulysses if you dare)

Story of the Eye - Georges Bataille (French)

At the Mountains of Madness - H. P. Lovecraft


More of literary-historical than purely literary interest for me (relative to other texts), but I'd also recommend:

Aenid - Virgil

Satyricon - Petronius (ancient Roman)

Beowulf

The Tale of Genji - by "lady-in-waiting Murasaki Shikibu around the peak of the Heian period, in the early 11th century", arguably the first novel

Oroonoko: or, the Royal Slave, Aphra Behn ("the foremother of British female writers[...] Oroonoko is a crucial text in the history of the novel"---the text claims to be a "true story", but scholars agree that it is almost certainly fictional)

Dream of the Red Chamber (mid-18th century, by Cao Xueqin)

The Mysteries of Udolpho - Ann Radcliffe, 1794 ("The Mysteries of Udolpho is a quintessential Gothic romance, replete with incidents of physical and psychological terror: remote crumbling castles, seemingly supernatural events, a brooding, scheming villain and a persecuted heroine.")

The Sorrows of Young Werther - Goethe

Dracula - Bram Stoker

Madame Bovary - Flaubert ("Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will melt the stars." (- as translated by Francis Steegmuller))

All Quiet on the Western Front ("Im Westen nichts Neues, lit. 'In the West, nothing new'" - WWI narrative)

The Stranger - Camus

(Quotations above are from Wikipedia, except where indicated)

This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 18 December 2024 - 11:57 PM

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#26 User is offline   pat5150 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 10:41 PM

No Dan Brown??? WTF!
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#27 User is offline   worry 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 11:03 PM

View PostAzath Vitr (D, on 18 December 2024 - 10:24 PM, said:

Story of the Eye - Georges Bataille (French)


To each their own, but I would anti-recommend this one, unless you reaaaaaaalllly like eggs.
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#28 User is offline   Abyss 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 11:06 PM

Maybe the real Classics are the friends we made along the way?
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#29 User is offline   Azath Vitr (D'ivers 

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Posted 18 December 2024 - 11:23 PM

Oh, I forgot a few big ones (add to my list of top recommendations):

Don Quixote - Cervantes

Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carroll

The Metamorphosis - Kafka

El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan (The Garden of Forking Paths, literally "The Garden of Paths that Themselves Bifurcate") - Borges

This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 18 December 2024 - 11:34 PM

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#30 User is offline   Tiste Simeon 

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Posted 19 December 2024 - 09:04 AM

 Macros, on 18 December 2024 - 07:29 PM, said:

Shogun

Seconded.
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#31 User is offline   Azath Vitr (D'ivers 

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Posted 19 December 2024 - 04:56 PM

Perhaps I should add that Don Quixote is generally regarded as the first European novel (by many scholars at least), and Oroonoko similarly is now widely considered to be the first English novel (widely in academia, that is).

(Robinson Crusoe used to be the consensus pick for the first English novel, but no longer. For one, Oroonoko was written long before Robinson Crusoe. Christian conservatives might complain that Pilgrim's Progress came before Oroonoko, but that's more in the tradition of abstract Christian allegory---the characters are named after what they represent, for example Obstinate, Pliable, Hypocrisy, etc.

Quote

The entire book is presented as a dream sequence [...] The allegory's protagonist, Christian, is an everyman character, and the plot centres on his journey from his hometown, the "City of Destruction" ("this world"), to the "Celestial City" ("that which is to come": Heaven) atop Mount Zion. Christian is weighed down by a great burden—the knowledge of his sin—which he believed came from his reading "the book in his hand" (the Bible).

Pilgrim's Progress - Wikipedia



In contrast, one arguments against regarding Oroonoko as a novel is that it claims to be a true story. However scholars are pretty certain it's fictional. "Anti-woke" types would probably argue that contemporary academics prefer Oroonoko as the first English novel because it's written by a woman and is about a Black slave. Here's a chronological list of candidates proposed by academics (via Wikipedia):

Quote


Thomas Malory, Le Morte d'Arthur (a.k.a. Le Morte Darthur), (written c. 1470, published 1485)



(Despite its French title, Le Morte d'Arthur is written in Middle English.)

Quote


William Baldwin, Beware the Cat, (written 1553, published 1570, 1584)[1][2]

John Lyly, Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit (1578) and Euphues and his England (1580) [3]

Philip Sidney, The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia (a.k.a. Arcadia) (1581)

[Note: Don Quixote was published in 1605]

Margaret Cavendish, The Description of a New World, Called The Blazing-World, (a.k.a. The Blazing World) (1666)

John Bunyan, The Pilgrim's Progress from This World, to That Which Is to Come (1678)[4]

Aphra Behn, Oroonoko: or, the Royal Slave (1688)

List of claimed first English novels


While I'd love it if the first English novel were called Beware the Cat, it's a bit too short to be a novel (160 pages), so it's arguably the first modern English novella. Among other things, it satirizes Catholicism. I confess I haven't read it (yet!), although reading the Wikipedia entry I now wonder whether it was an influence on Redick's Chathrand Voyage series.

Beware the Cat - Wikipedia

The Lyly books iirc are mostly focused on flowery satirical rhetoric and wordplay, with very little plot. Sidney's Arcadia

Quote

is a romance that combines pastoral elements with a mood derived from the Hellenistic model of Heliodorus. A highly idealized version of the shepherd's life adjoins, on the other hand and not always naturally (in its literary sense), stories of jousts, political treachery, kidnappings, battles, and rapes. As published, the narrative follows the Greek model: stories are nested within each other, and different storylines are intertwined. [...] According to [the preeminent English poet] John Milton [Paradise Lost and so forth ...],Charles I quoted lines from the book, an excerpt termed "Pamela's Prayer", from a prayer of the heroine Pamela, as he mounted the scaffold to be executed. Although Milton praised the book as among the best of its kind, he complains of the dead king's choice of a profane text for his final prayer. [...] By the beginning of the Romantic era, the grand, artificial, sometimes obstinately unwieldy style of Sidney's Arcadia had made it thoroughly alien to more modern tastes.

The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia - Wikipedia


I like some of Sidney's verse poetry a lot (and the poetry and plays of his close friend and biographer, Fulke Greville, even more), but I wouldn't recommend Arcadia for most people. Granted, I've only slogged through short excerpts.

As for the Blazing World---I don't recall having read about it before...

Quote

Feminist critic Dale Spender calls it a forerunner of science fiction. It can also be read as a utopian work. [World on fire = utopia? Well... if that's the case, then we're on the right path!] [...] The Blazing World is a fanciful depiction of a satirical, utopian kingdom in another world (with different stars in the sky) that can be reached via the North Pole.


[...] The Blazing World incorporates many different genres, "which include not only travel narrative and romance but also utopia, epic, biography, cabbala, Lucianic fable, Menippean satire, natural history, and morality play, among others…" [...] that "the term 'hybridisation' aptly captures Cavendish's method of blending established genres and categories into a new order, and of presenting her fantasy empire as versimilar."


[...] In Alan Moore's graphic novels chronicling the adventures of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, the Blazing World was identified as
Spoiler


The Blazing World - Wikipedia



... that bit in the spoiler seems like a probable throwback to Pilgrim's Progress too.
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#32 User is online   JPK 

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Posted 19 December 2024 - 09:03 PM

Thank you for adding more suggestions, I'll update later tonight again.
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#33 User is offline   Abyss 

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Posted 19 December 2024 - 10:02 PM

View PostTiste Simeon, on 19 December 2024 - 09:04 AM, said:

View PostMacros, on 18 December 2024 - 07:29 PM, said:

Shogun

Seconded.


Thirded.
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#34 User is online   JPK 

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Posted Yesterday, 08:02 PM

Alright, updated again. There were some good suggestions there that I'm surprised I missed like DRACULA, GILGAMESH, AENID, and THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS that I'm surprised I missed. Thank you Azath.

Current update: I'm now at 25% read on PRIDE AND PREJUDICE and really enjoying it. The amount of snark in the novel is right up my alley. I'm starting to form some opinions, but I suspect they're the opinions that are intended by the author at this point as I suspect we're definitely missing some information regard Mr. Darcy. Negging is not a good way to attract a person Mr. Darcy.
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