
What classics would you recommend?
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- Loredoctor
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- Loredoctor
- Lord
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- Loredoctor
- Lord
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An abrieviated list of classics not previoulsly mentioned:
Gilgamesh
Beowulf--Séamas Heaney has a new translation of this, and Tolkien's is in the works.
Antigone by Sophocles
Song of Roland
Authors:
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Henry David Thoreau
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Herman Melville
Walt Whitman
Thomas Hardy
A.E. Housman
Sigfried Sassoon
Wilfred Owen
James Joyce
Dylan Thomas
W.H. Auden
This is just skimming the surface. . . I'll have to come back later with specifics.
Gilgamesh
Beowulf--Séamas Heaney has a new translation of this, and Tolkien's is in the works.
Antigone by Sophocles
Song of Roland
Authors:
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Henry David Thoreau
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Herman Melville
Walt Whitman
Thomas Hardy
A.E. Housman
Sigfried Sassoon
Wilfred Owen
James Joyce
Dylan Thomas
W.H. Auden
This is just skimming the surface. . . I'll have to come back later with specifics.

- Holsety
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Thumbs up for Aeschylus, he's my favorite Greek writer. But if you're including Bovary I'd suggest skipping Don Quixote, and vice versa, at least until later - the two are compared, and for good reason; they might satirize different genres, but ultimately one doesn't need both, at least if'n you ask me. I prefer DQ but Bovary is shorter.duchess of malfi wrote: Cervantes Don Quixote
...
Aeschylus The Oresteia
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Flaubert Madame Bovary
It's just my opinion, but I would reccomend Richard Wright's The Outsider over Camus' The Stranger. And I suppose I'll add on Savage Holiday and Pagan Spain as well, the only nonfiction works of Wright I've been able to purchase and read.danlo wrote:I'd add Ada by Nabakov
Nicolas & Alexandra
The Sun Also Rises by Hemingway
Two Years Before the Mast by Dana
Pultarch's Lives
Homage the Catalonia by Orwell
The Stranger by Camus
The Heart of Darkness by Conrad
and Razor's Edge by Mamaugh
EDIT-The Stranger involves a character more "developed" than Cross Damon - that is, Meursault has already become 'an individual'. But The Outsider was, to me, much more interesting.
Gormenghast! Good choice!Ainulindale wrote:Some Classic I like:
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Gormenghast - Mervyn Peake
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The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu
The mention of japanese author reminds me of Natsume Soseki's work I am a Cat, which is absolutely genius; a reflection on the transformation of the Meiji era through the eyes of a lazy housecat.
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Ooh ooh I almost forgot. John Dos Passos! Well, I've only read the USA trilogy; it has its ups and downs, but all in all it's a pretty nice book. The biographical sections are particularly interesting, and his use of the "stream of conciousness" technique is pretty fun to read.
He's written a number of other works, but I've not read a one. I'm thinking about seeing what his District of Columbia series is like, though.
He's written a number of other works, but I've not read a one. I'm thinking about seeing what his District of Columbia series is like, though.