Reading the Chunksters discussion
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Favorite Chunksters
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Loretta
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Nov 17, 2011 09:28AM
Please use this thread to list your favorite chunksters of all time (and any other 4 and 5 star chunksters you've read). Feel free to tell us why you loved these books so much.
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My favorite was one we read together. I LOVED The Woman in White! It was a great classic mystery novel...and it kept me guessing what was going to happen.I also love all the Outlander books (which are all chunksters) by Diana Gabaldon...the story is so good...heartwrenching but good at the same time! I've been listening to them on Audio, since Audible now has the whole series Unabridged!
Kristi, I'm with you. I loved TWIW & really enjoyed the 2 Outlander books I've read (think I gave Dragonfly in Amber 3.5 stars ... she's too long-winded for me :-).Also, loved The Pillars of the Earth. There may be more. I'll have to give this more thought.
Martha wrote: "Kristi, I'm with you. I loved TWIW & really enjoyed the 2 Outlander books I've read (think I gave Dragonfly in Amber 3.5 stars ... she's too long-winded for me :-).Also, loved [book:The Pillars..."
I find that the Audiobooks of Diana Gabaldon are much more fun that the actual book. Davina Porter really brings the characters to life! It make up for any longwinded-ness on the author's part.
I agree, Kristi, that's how I 'read' them. Her voice is wonderful, but I sometimes think that we don't need to hear every single thought that flits through Claire's head!! LOL This woman is a great writer. Just amazes me that she's written so many of them and they're all so long! I'll probably do the 3rd one this year.
Yep...I totally agree! I'm on #5, and I'm hoping to finish them next year. Do you know if An Echo in the Bone is the last one, or is she going to come out with more. I was under the impression that was the last for the series.
I know a lot of people felt that 20 pages (give or take a few) on the Paris sewer system was probably a bit much, but I love Victor Hugo's Les MisérablesSharon Kay Penman's The Sunne In Splendour is also a favorite.
I've probably read The Lord of the Rings five times in my life and will probably read it five more times before I die.
And while I'm still bitter and currently boycotting his current book (I will read the rest of the series when it's finished)the first three books of George R.R. Martin's Fire and Ice series are great.
I have many:
- This book is filled with colorful characters, history, texture, and layers of moral complexity. One of my all time favorites.
- exciting, romantic, and ultimately about the dangers of trying to "play God." I adored this book.
- I know the group is reading this now, but I read it about 8 or so years ago now, and remember it being a magical, empowering ride.
- a book about the importance and value of the tales of mythical heroes that also happens to be filled with endearing, well-drawn characters and some truly affecting love stories.
- I'm working my way through these now. I love how they're really aimed at the careful reader who can notice/remember small moments to help puzzle things out.
- a book about the power of family and love and learning how to release yourself from your past.
- Chunkster "lite" at just over 500 pages, but one of my all-time favorites, about figuring out who you are and where you belong, and how that ties into everything that's come before you.
- what teenage girl wouldn't love this tale? I first read it when I was 14.
My favorite chunkster that I can think off the top of my head is Jane Eyre but I know there's more and I will add them when I think of them. I loved the series by Jennifer Donnelly.
I never think of Jane Eyre as a chunkster-I still think it's a bit short. I think my favorite is Our Mutual Friend.I'm beginning to think that my days as a chunkster-reader are over-although I am heavily involved with Haruki Murakami's new book, 1Q84, which at almost 1,000 pages is something of a chunkster.
But all those lovely 19th century chunksters-or even 20th century-I just don't seem to have the stamina for anymore. :(
Favorite chunksters? Hmmm, now.Certainly the Iliad and the Odyssey. Timeless, wonderful, rich in characters, magnificent language, drama.
Bleak House for sure.
Middlemarch equally for sure.
Too many to list, what can I say (I like big books and I cannot lie...thanks to Sir Mix-a-lot...)but a few are:
The Lord of the Rings trilogy,
Outlander
Les Misérables
Jane Eyre
and The Sword of Shannara which was the first fantasy book
to make the New York Times bestseller list. I was only 9 when it came out.
Love Diana Gabaldon Outlander series and Ken Follet's The Pillars of the Earth and World Without End
I loved The Woman in White! I was amazed by how compelling it was for something written 150 years ago. It had some great characters, too.And though I'm not currently reading it with the group, East of Eden is one of my all-time favorites. I love Steinbeck's writing and of all his books that I've read, EoE is one of the most beautiful and most hopeful.
My top favorite chunksters areEast of Eden I read it last year
Cutting for Stone Awesome book
The Woman in White I read this last year and would love to read The Moonstone next year
I have got to read The Count of Monte Cristo, I love the story (I've seen several film versions) and it really seems to have all the elements that make for a great book!
Two major chunksters I'm waiting to get to and hoping will become favorite chunksers: Churchill's History of the English Speaking Peoples and Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. I just need the time and energy to get to them! (Hmmm, possible side reads at no more than 50 pages a week??)
Martha wrote: "Kristina, I hope to read The Moonstone next year. I'm really looking forward to it."Maybe we can read it together as a side-read? :)
Oooh, this is a tough question. I love all the Outlander books by Diana Gabaldon and she is not finished with the series. I believe the next one will be titled "In My Own Heart's Blood" and will be out in 2012. I also loved East of Eden and IT by Stephen King.
Kathy wrote: "Martha wrote: "Kristina, I hope to read The Moonstone next year. I'm really looking forward to it."Maybe we can read it together as a side-read? :)"
Would love to, Kathy! Did you have a specific time in mind? I know January won't be good as I'm reading Brideshead Revisited then.
Everyman wrote: "Two major chunksters I'm waiting to get to and hoping will become favorite chunksers: Churchill's History of the English Speaking Peoples and Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. I just..."I'll admit to some curiosity about the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
Kathy wrote: "Martha wrote: "Kristina, I hope to read The Moonstone next year. I'm really looking forward to it."Maybe we can read it together as a side-read? :)"
I would read it as a side read for sure. We should definitely see about it in the new year!! Feb sounds good.
Kristina wrote: "Kathy wrote: "Martha wrote: "Kristina, I hope to read The Moonstone next year. I'm really looking forward to it."
Maybe we can read it together as a side-read? :)"
I would read it as a side rea..."
The Moonstone is on my TBR list and I own a copy so I would love to join. I also have exams that finish at the end of January so will be looking for a good read to enjoy as a change from textbooks!
Maybe we can read it together as a side-read? :)"
I would read it as a side rea..."
The Moonstone is on my TBR list and I own a copy so I would love to join. I also have exams that finish at the end of January so will be looking for a good read to enjoy as a change from textbooks!
I would also like to read The Moonstone. I wanted to join East of Eden for my first group read, but couldn't because we moved in October. My copy got packed in a box and we didn't have internet until mid-November anyway...too late to join in now! I do have a copy of The Moonstone too though, and would love to read it with this group!
So glad to see people interested in reading The Moonstone together. Toward the end of January I will post a thread for it ... or have one of the mods do it. Offhand, I don't know how this group does it. I'll check that out. Re another chunkster. I'm currently reading Villette. It's over 2000 pages on my iPhone and that qualifies as a chunkster in my book. It's a favorite, but not THE favorite. Many like it better than Jane Eyre, but I do not and I'm over 90% done so I don't see my opinion changing in that. It's a 'quieter' book than JE ... if that makes sense ... much more thoughtful than action oriented.
This is such a great discussion! I think to really give a good answer I'm going to have to go through my read book lists and come back with a reply.
Kathy wrote: "My favorite chuncksters are:
[b..."I just received [book:11/22/63|12035084]and I'm hoping to read it before Christmas. I have heard good things so far. Perhaps I should start it today since it is 11/22/11
I have to say my favorite chunkster was Anna Karenina. Maybe because I have been getting more into Russian literature and I want to go to Russia. I just thought that you really got to know the characters, not just one or two but almost all of them.
Jolene wrote: "I just received 11/22/63 and I'm hoping to read it before Christmas."As one who lived through it once, I'm not sure I could live through it again through a book. Too painful. I still remember vividly the moment in biology lab when a professor poked his head into the room and announced the death to us.
Gaijinmama wrote: "I have got to read The Count of Monte Cristo, I love the story (I've seen several film versions) and it really seems to have all the elements that make for a great book!"Which film would you recommend? And yes, you have to read it - it's a chunkster but you whiz through it, it's so much fun. (Make sure it's the Robin Buss translation).
I'll give another vote for The Count. Also War & Peace, Les Mis and Middlemarch.
Martha wrote: "I'm reading Bleak House now and enjoying it very much."It is really an excellent read - two narrators, two tenses, tow absolutely different yarns wonderfully interwoven. I have read nearly all his novels, and it is his BEST, IMHO.
Martha wrote: "I'm reading Bleak House now and enjoying it very much."It is really an excellent read - two narrators, two tenses, tow absolutely different yarns wonderfully interwoven. I have read nearly all his novels, and it is his BEST, IMHO
Kathy wrote: "Jolene, I would highly recommend it! I'm loving every second of it! :)"Thanks Kathy. I look forward to it.
Everyman wrote: "Jolene wrote: "I just received 11/22/63 and I'm hoping to read it before Christmas."As one who lived through it once, I'm not sure I could live through it again through a book. Too painful. I s..."
JFK was shot on my mother's 17th birthday. She reminds me every year and tells me what she was doing at the time. I think it's one of those moments in history that everyone remembers what they were doing or where they were when they heard the news.
You guys are making me want to revisit Dickens. I admit I only read him in high school and college for classes and, while I appreciated the stories after I was done, they always seemed like long painful slogs at the time. Recently, I've been devouring stuff by his contemporaries, however... perhaps the time has come? Maybe I'll add a few of his to my to-read list for next year.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Elizabeth Kostova (other topics)J. Sheridan Le Fanu (other topics)
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Jennifer Donnelly (other topics)
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