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Books / Writing > What very popular, or very classic books have you not read?

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message 1: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
I was surprised we didn't already have this thread.

I never read the Anne of Green Gables books. Also The Hobbit and LOTR. I started the Hobbit when I was a middle schooler and couldn't get into it.


message 2: by Riona (new)

Riona (rionafaith) | 488 comments So many.

I've never read LOTR either. I did read The Hobbit a couple years ago.

I've never read any Jane Austen or Charlotte Brontë.

I've also never read Frankenstein or Dracula, 2 I really need to get around to.


message 3: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
I haven't read Frankenstein or Dracula. Were we supposed to? By the time I found out they were actual literary works and not just movies or cartoon characters, I think it was actually too late to read them.


message 4: by Riona (new)

Riona (rionafaith) | 488 comments I know a bunch of people who have read both of them, especially in school. I don't think it's ever "too late" to read a book. I have both of them on my kindle, along with 8 million other free public domain books.

Oh, I've also never read The Great Gatsby. I feel like everyone except me has read that one.


message 5: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
I didn't read GG until a couple years ago. I finally was like, "I'm the only person in America who hasn't read this." Now that person is you.


message 6: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
I still haven't read Robinson Crusoe, but I own a copy and it's on my TR.

Same with Uncle Tom's Cabin. UTC is one of those books that I always thought, "there is so much secondary source material on this book, I can just absorb enough material that I'll never actually have to read it." But then I got a really cheap copy at a sidewalk sale so I figured I might as well read it at some point.


message 7: by Phil (new)

Phil | 11856 comments Lobstergirl wrote: "I didn't read GG until a couple years ago. I finally was like, "I'm the only person in America who hasn't read this." Now that person is you."

Riona can hang out with me. We'll be the "never read Gatsby" club.


message 8: by Suefly (new)

Suefly | 620 comments Riona wrote: "So many.

I've never read LOTR either. I did read The Hobbit a couple years ago.

I've never read any Jane Austen or Charlotte Brontë.

I've also never read Frankenstein or Dracula, 2 I really need..."




I have never read The Hobbit either, and, frankly, I don't understand the fuss.
I have skimmed Austen and Bronte, but, again, I could never get into them either.


message 9: by Riona (new)

Riona (rionafaith) | 488 comments Phil wrote: "Riona can hang out with me. We'll be the "never read Gatsby" club."

I actually have it in a stack on my bedside table. I feel like I need to read it eventually.


message 10: by Matt (new)

Matt | 819 comments If you like prose that is achingly beautiful you should definitely give Gatsby a try at some point.

My list would include Don Quixote, The Iliad, and Pride and Prejudice. I hope to get around to all three within the next year.

I was very Luddite about the whole ebook thing until I got my most recent phone and discovered the joys of public domain classics. Now instead of being bored when stuck in a line, I pull out my phone and read a poem.


message 11: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 67 comments Dracula and Robinson Crusoe were easy reads for me.

I have never read War & Peace, Ulysses or any Jane Austen novels. Nor have I ever been successful at getting into LOTR or Tho Hobbit. Any one have suggestions on how to tackle to W&P or Ulysses? I can usually get a few pages in and then I pick another book up instead.

I used to have issues with reading Hemingway and Fitzgerald - just couldn't get into them and then I took a course in University about them and their novels and now I love their styles!


message 12: by Cloudedleopard (last edited Aug 21, 2012 06:26AM) (new)

Cloudedleopard | 44 comments I loved Dracula but never came close to any of the Twillight-books. Shelley, Dostoyevsky, Fielding and Hawthorne are on my to-read shelf for "maybe next year".
I had to go through Gatsby at school - a waste of time.


message 13: by Jammies (new)

Jammies I haven't read any of the Twilight or Dragon Tattoo books, and probably won't change that. As far as classics go, I haven't read Turn of the Screw and probably a zillion others.


message 14: by ~Geektastic~ (new)

 ~Geektastic~ (atroskity) | 3205 comments I haven't ever finished The Scarlet Letter. Not even in High School.


message 15: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 67 comments BunWat wrote: "I have finished The Scarlet Letter, but I have not finished East of Eden. Me and Steinbeck, we have not clicked yet."

Steonbeck is a very tough nut to crack, I'd try Mice and Men first and ease into his longer works. . .


message 16: by Jo (new)

Jo | 8 comments I have Never been able to finish War and Peace. 10 pages is as far as I ever get.


message 17: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 67 comments Jo wrote: "I have Never been able to finish War and Peace. 10 pages is as far as I ever get."

I don't even remember how far exactly I got the first time I tried . . .I made it to the party where the bear falls out the window and that is all I remember. It's one of those books that I am determined to read at some point though.


message 18: by Cheri (new)

Cheri | 795 comments I've never been able to finish a James Joyce.


message 19: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments BunWat wrote: "I have a long list of classics I have not (yet) read. I'm not sure how popular it is but Yiddish Policemen's Union has been sitting on a shelf staring at me for over three years now."

Popular in my family! I loved it.

I've never finished a Russian novel. I would like to.
Never read Of Mice and Men, Moby Dick. Never read Orwell, Joyce or Stevenson.

On the other hand, I am proud to say I have never read a good number of very popular books including 50 Shades of whatever, Twilight, the Da Vinci Code, etc. Popular does not factor into my choices.


message 20: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
The only Steinbeck I've read is The Pearl. He's one of those authors that just doesn't really beckon to me...."read me.....read me...."

I've read PoAaYM and I think I read Dubliners. Both in high school. Never read Moby Dick and honestly....I have no desire. I feel like I've read so much passing commentary about Moby Dick that I've read a third of it already. I've read random parts of The Scarlet Letter. Why parts, I couldn't say.

The only Hemingway I've read is A Moveable Feast - which was good - I recommend it - and Across the River and into the Trees which was totes boring. Oh yeah and The Old Man and the Sea I read in 9th grade and loooooaaaaathed it.


message 21: by Lobstergirl, el principe (last edited Aug 21, 2012 04:43PM) (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

Ibid, Tom Sawyer.

Don Quixote.

Vanity Fair.



message 22: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
Bridge to Terabithia.

The Giver.



message 23: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
Flannery O'Connor.

William Faulkner.


message 24: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
Things Fall Apart.


message 25: by Alias Reader (new)

Alias Reader (aliasreader) On the Students Reading table at Barnes and Noble, I saw
Flowers for Algernon~Daniel Keyes. I haven't read it and hope to remedy the situation this year.


message 26: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
That's another one I haven't read. My sister had to read it for school and still shudders about it, though.


message 27: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Flowers for Algernon is a lovely, sad story.


message 28: by Mark (new)

Mark Burns (TheFailedPhilosopher) | 441 comments I'd like to give a list of never-will-read books/authors now...but there are so many.


message 29: by ~Geektastic~ (new)

 ~Geektastic~ (atroskity) | 3205 comments Mark wrote: "I'd like to give a list of never-will-read books/authors now...but there are so many."

We have a thread for that topic, actually.


message 30: by ~Geektastic~ (new)

 ~Geektastic~ (atroskity) | 3205 comments Sarah Pi wrote: "Flowers for Algernon is a lovely, sad story."

I agree. I just read it a year or two ago and loved it.


message 31: by Jammies (new)

Jammies BunWat wrote: "War and Peace, on the other hand, I read when I was 11."

That's how old I was when I read The Grapes of Wrath!

Oh, and I have read Last of the Mohicans, but didn't manage to finish The Illiad.


message 32: by Louise (new)

Louise I gave up on the Brönte sisters after starting and abandoning Wuthering Heights - I was so disappointed, so depressing and bleak and not really a great love story at all (in my humble opinion). Give me Austen every time!

I also tried and gave up on LOTR and William Faulkner.
Apart from Gogol and Chekov, I haven't really read any of the Russian Greats.


message 33: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
Wuthering Heights was dreck. Don't let that prevent you from reading Jane Eyre, which is a rollicking good story.


message 34: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 67 comments Lobstergirl wrote: "Wuthering Heights was dreck. Don't let that prevent you from reading Jane Eyre, which is a rollicking good story."

I totally agree! I hated Wuthering Heights but love Jane Eyre!


message 35: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments BunWat wrote: "Barb wrote: "Hey, Bun.
I'm curious; have you gotten around to reading The Grapes of Wrath yet?"

In the last 22 hours? Ummmm... I'm not quite... um"


I think Barb asked because your post about Grapes of Wrath appeared three times above. It's very enthusiastic.


message 36: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 67 comments I got sucked into Fifty Shades out of curiousity and trust me - it wasn't the pain of reading of them - avoiding is definitely the smart thing to do. I wish I hadn't - the writing is horrendous and I will never get thouse hours back!!!!


message 37: by Sally, la reina (new)

Sally (mrsnolte) | 17373 comments Mod
It hurts me that War and Peace and East of Eden and Grapes of Wrath and Gatsby can be mentioned in the same topic that Fifty Shades of Grey. I think that is because popular and classic can be better defined as two categories. They may overlap, venn-style, but do they often?


message 38: by Jennifer (new)

Jennifer | 67 comments Sally wrote: "It hurts me that War and Peace and East of Eden and Grapes of Wrath and Gatsby can be mentioned in the same topic that Fifty Shades of Grey. I think that is because popular and classic can be bett..."

I don't think that they are in the same category. Not even close!


message 39: by Sally, la reina (new)

Sally (mrsnolte) | 17373 comments Mod
Yes, they are on the far sides of the Venn diagram.


message 40: by Sally, la reina (new)

Sally (mrsnolte) | 17373 comments Mod
There aren't any books that are both classic and popular?


message 41: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Sally wrote: "There aren't any books that are both classic and popular?"

Jane Austen?


message 42: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments In the title of the thread it's not enough just to be classic. It has to be very classic.


message 43: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
I wasn't really thinking of books like 50 Shades when I created the topic.

I suppose I was thinking more of books like Anne of Green Gables, or The Bridge to Terabithia (which I hadn't heard of until a few years ago but apparently a lot of school kids read?). Books that have become sort of classics via the passage of time and popularity (sheer number of readers), but don't have the literary merit of Crime and Punishment or Madame Bovary.


message 44: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments BunWat wrote: "Sarah Pi wrote: "In the title of the thread it's not enough just to be classic. It has to be very classic."

Snort. Okay does it have to be written by a guy in wig?"


Is that the bar for very classic? Perhaps printed by Gutenberg himself?


message 45: by Cheri (new)

Cheri | 795 comments a definition
http://classiclit.about.com/od/forbeg...

Isn't the thread title 'very popular' or 'very classic book NOT read.


message 46: by Lobstergirl, el principe (new)

Lobstergirl | 24834 comments Mod
Yes. Not read.


message 47: by Amy (new)

Amy Neftzger (neftzger) | 304 comments Jennifer wrote: "I got sucked into Fifty Shades out of curiousity and trust me - it wasn't the pain of reading of them - avoiding is definitely the smart thing to do. I wish I hadn't - the writing is horrendous an..."

I read a review from a blogger who almost never slams a book and she hated it, so I've successfully avoided it. Most of the people I hear raving about it are not people who typically read for enjoyment.

I also tend to stay away from Faulkner because I read him in high school and didn't find it engrossing. Now maybe if someone wrote "50 Shades of Faulkner" I'd read that. But maybe not.


message 48: by Sally, la reina (new)

Sally (mrsnolte) | 17373 comments Mod
Ew. Faulkner was like my Grandpa.


message 49: by Matt (new)

Matt | 819 comments He was also around 5'3". I think that it probably ruins the whole effect when the dominator has to go fetch a step stool.


message 50: by Louise (last edited Aug 26, 2012 01:32AM) (new)

Louise BunWat wrote: "The only area of overlap is that people talk about them and ask if you have read them. One category is not like the other except in that respect."

And how long they talk about them. My guess is 5+ years from now, no one will be talking about 50 shades, but 50 years from now, people will still talk about War and Peace.
There are plenty of books and authors that were hugely popular in their time, but pratically no one knows them now.


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