Andorion, on 23 February 2016 - 01:21 AM, said:
Mentalist, on 22 February 2016 - 06:35 PM, said:
Andorion, on 22 February 2016 - 04:11 PM, said:
Puck, on 22 February 2016 - 02:54 PM, said:
But speaking of bad.. I'm currently reading Jealous Gods and Chosen People as my non-fiction intermezzo, and while the idea to draw connections between the mythologies of the Middle East and the area's tendency towards violence seems intriguing, this books so far does a bad job. Might as well be reading Wikipedia, for all the info and excitement. Can't recommend. It's only good point is that it's short (which may, in fact, be what keeps it from becoming good on the other hand).
Not all classics are bad. I am an enthusiastic proponent of Homer, Its just that the entire Victorian period is like this huge black hole which sucks up all my energy. Are people like Jack London, Jules Verne, Herman Melville considered classic authors? Because I like them.
Edit: Does the argument of your book hold up?
Yes, they are classics. Never read Melville, but it's considered a classic. Jack London is one of my favourite non-SFF writers of all time.
Never got into Victorian lit. I read "The Tale of 2 Cities" a few years back, but that's about it. English lit is a pretty big gap in my education.
Speaking of classics: almost done volume 1 of "10 years later". I remembered very little of it, and so far none of the bad stuff happened. I vaguely recall that vol 2 is mostly about love triangles/intrigues, and then there's Vol 3, writing of which would be spoilerific. I'm curious to see if I was just immature the first time I read vol 2 or if it's actually bad and boring.
I'm certainly appreciating the political stuff more now than I did last time I read it (which was maybe 15 yrs ago)
Tale of Two Cities is the only Dickens I do like. The others are.... not good. Austen and the Brontes are total nono for me. Can't touch them. Oscar Wilde is mildly entertaining at best. Victor Hugo bores me. But I love Alexandre Dumas and I consider the Count of Monte Cristo one of the best books ever written
I think I read some Wilde before. I liked most of Conan Doyle stuff I read. Also had to read the Xmass Carol for foreign lit class back home in Grade 6 before I came to Canada. Walter Scott and R.L.Stevenson are probably what I'd do think of "English classics" in the vein of Verne- YA-ish adventure novels.
ETA: and, yes, The Count of Monte Cristo rocks hard.
This post has been edited by Mentalist: 23 February 2016 - 03:14 PM