Classics Without All the Class discussion
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Taylor
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Jan 27, 2013 02:23PM
Hello! My name is Taylor, and I just joined this group today. I have just made a personal challenge for myself, and it is to read 10 classics. Honestly, I really want to read some classics, because they all seem so good, but I have a really hard time getting into them, and I usually give up quite quickly. I was just wondering if anybody had any tips for me? Or any recommendations of what classics to start off with?
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I really liked The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins. If you're into mystery or thereabouts. A Tale of two Cities(Charles Dickens), Pride and Prejudice(Jane Austen), Tess of D'Urbervilles(Thomas Hardy) are some of my favorites. Although, I love almost eeverything by Jane Austen lol.
i think first, think about what kind of genres do you like outside of classics? horror? romance? there are all kinds of genres within the classics category.
Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen is a good one to start with; it's shorter and easier to read, and the main character is a lot of fun.
Hi Taylor! Thanks for joining, I just wanted to let you know I moved your thread into the What Else Are You Reading folder. Good luck! I have to go with Shannon and say A Tale of Two Cities. Very good book. I read it in school and one day I'd like to go back and enjoy it without worrying about what's going to be on the test!
I really enjoyed Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome. It is probably the funniest book I have ever read.
I think The Great Gatsby is good to start with. The End of the Affair by Graham Greene is also fantastic!!!
Travis of NNY wrote: "How about stepping in to the mind of a madman withCrime and Punishment"Great book.
I would not recommend starting with Dickens. He is verbose and arguably dull as dirt at times, and that might put someone off classics all together. Save him for when you've got a few other books done to better ease yourself into his style. Great Gatsby is a good starting point. Frankenstein, Crime and Punishment, Rebecca. If you want to try poetry, read Poe.
I liked a Woman in White as suggested by Shannon, and Rebecca is a good read - both have a bit of classical gothic mystery in them. I thought Crime and Punishment was a fabulous read. That one stuck with me for quite awhile afterward. Happy Reading!
Taylor, In the classic horror category, may I suggest The Turn of the Screw by Henry James.
For romance (albeit, tragic romance), I strongly second Shannon's recommendation for Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy.
Also, you cannot go wrong with Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë, because it is a great story with great romance, AND there is more than a little horror in the second half!
I read all of these in my teens, and then enjoyed rereading them years later, and I do not reread books very often.
Happy Reading!
My suggestions: Gone With The Wind
Roots
Little Women
Catcher In The Rye
Any HG Wells (I really loved The Invisible Man)
Dracula
Frankenstein
Alice In Wonderland
The Handmaid's Tale
A Clockwork Orange
1984
The Great Gatsby
The Hobbit
The Kite Runner
Taylor, I think The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald,is just about the most easily enjoyed classic book I've read.
Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens. I loved the BBC adaptation. I've started reading it, and then my mum took it from my bookshelf to read. hehe...but i did enjoy reading it.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Turn of the Screw (other topics)Tess of the D’Urbervilles (other topics)
Jane Eyre (other topics)
Crime and Punishment (other topics)
A Tale of Two Cities (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Henry James (other topics)Thomas Hardy (other topics)
Charlotte Brontë (other topics)





