Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really enjoyed Middlemarch recently. I read Silas Marner years ago and always wanted to read more George Eliot but like others kept turning to shorter options. Once I started I was smitten and happy to go along for the journey. The dialogue was amusing and clever. I found the characters very relatable and the relationships felt authentic.
Middlemarch is so good!
Anonymous wrote:Reading now: Dickens, Our Mutual Friend
Anonymous wrote:Somerset Maugham is still good. The Moon and Sixpence. The Razor's Edge.
But there are a lot of classic authors I can't read anymore - Hemingway, Fitzgerald, Norman Mailer, John Updike. The dicks with a thesaurus as David Foster Wallace put it. Didn't age well.
The Russians are still good though. The Brothers Karamazov. And Anna Karenina and War and Peace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love Trollope, too.
Not too long ago I finally read War and Peace, and it is stunning. Just so good. I don’t always love the Russians (I recently tired to read The Brothers Karamazov and couldn’t get into it) but War and Peace is outstanding.
That’s on my reading “bucket list.” I read Anna Karenina this past year, and thoroughly enjoyed it. It took a few months for me to read, but I did it. I now have Crime and Punishment on my bedside table, but I keep putting it aside for quicker reads. I do love immersing myself in richly detailed long-ago worlds.
My favorite Russian classics are:
Anna Karenina by Tolstoy
War and Peace by Tolstoy
Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky
The Master and Margarita by Bulgakov
Dead Souls by Gogol
Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman
I had a hard time with Doctor Zhivago, though I think it's because it was a Pevear and Volokhonsky translation. I read their Anna Karenina as a reread and absolutely hated how they did it.
I also had a hard time with Brothers Karamazov, but I may have been too young - in my 20s.
What other Russians should I try?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On a different note, I just read "The Talented Mr. Ripley" and it was so good. The author's mind is so different than my own to have come up with that story.
FYI I watched the movie, and it was different enough to not be like the book at all. It wasn't a bad movie, but it was distressing to me how different it was, psychologically-speaking.
Go for the book!
There are 4 or 5 more books that follow Mr. Ripley and what he gets up to. They are excellent.
Patricia Highsmith is so devilish!
Anonymous wrote:Edith Wharton and Willa Cather. I have read a few by both and have loved and reread them.