Anonymous
Post 07/09/2024 10:45     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Katherine, by Anya Seton.

Seconding A Suitable Boy, by Vikram Seth.

And next on my own list, so I'm passing on the title without having read it yet: The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese.

Also, Dumas' Three Musketeers and sequels are fantastic if you haven't read them.
Anonymous
Post 07/09/2024 10:25     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:Gone To Soldiers-ww2 novel


I read this a long time ago, wanted to re-read it but had forgotten the title. Thanks-
Anonymous
Post 07/09/2024 10:23     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Aztec by Gary Jennings.
He's written a couple other epics, too, but this is my favorite.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 16:33     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

The Kent Family Chronicles series by John Jakes: The Bastard, The Rebels, The Seekers, etc. I read them obsessively.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 16:03     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:I'll second:
East of Eden
The Stand
100 Years of Solitude
Vanity Fair

And add:
Wolf Hall
Dead Souls
Anna Karenina
1Q84


PP here. Can't believe I forgot Huck Finn.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 16:02     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

I'll second:
East of Eden
The Stand
100 Years of Solitude
Vanity Fair

And add:
Wolf Hall
Dead Souls
Anna Karenina
1Q84
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 15:22     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

+1 for Kristin Lavransdatter. I prefer the newer translation by Tiina Nunnally over the original translation by Charles Archer and J.S. Scott. Archer/Scott reads as archaic and stilted, whereas Nunnally's modern rendering flows more easily. However, I'm sure there are people who prefer the Archer/Scott, because it sounds more authentic and medieval-ish.



Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 13:20     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

The Love Songs of W.E.B. DuBois is excellent.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 13:14     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:I was a big fan of The Dutch House by Ann Patchett.


A good multigenerational story but I wouldn’t call it an epic.

If we’re going with this “scale”, then Cutting For Stone is amazing.

Nonfiction that reads like fiction: Random Family covers a pretty wide stretch of time, and a lot of changes for the “characters”.

People of the Book follows an object through multiple periods of history.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 09:44     Subject: Re:sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:The Far Pavilions


Yaaas! Love this book!
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 09:43     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:The Stand, especially the unabridged version

Now that I’m on the 16th Louise Penny, I’d put the Gamache series on this list too. I’m really invested in the backstory of all the characters.


This isn't a sweeping epic novel, just a series. I like the characters, but Penny's writing is so annoying after a while. She uses so many sentence fragments.
Like this. Because she can.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 09:41     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anything by James Michener?


I've never read any James Michener. Do you think it would feel dated? He's written a lot of books - favorites?


I just read and loved The Covenant. It's about how South Africa came to be. Am now reading Hawaii, and it's really good so far, too.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 09:38     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

The Stand, especially the unabridged version

Now that I’m on the 16th Louise Penny, I’d put the Gamache series on this list too. I’m really invested in the backstory of all the characters.
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 09:25     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Anything by James Michener?


I've never read any James Michener. Do you think it would feel dated? He's written a lot of books - favorites?


Chesapeake was entertaining if just for some local history. The Sarum books were my favorite
Anonymous
Post 07/08/2024 09:22     Subject: sweeping epic novels - recommendations

The 18 volumes of Maisie Dobbs start just after WW1 (with some flashbacks) and end as WW2 comes to an end. Every character doesn't make it to the end, but enough of them do to make your heart sing at the end.