James Delingpole says You Know It Makes Sense
What I thought I’d do this summer holidays is catch up with all those classics I’ve been meaning to read for ages: A la recherche du temps perdu, Moby-Dick, David Copperfield, Crime and Punishment, Madame Bovary, Vanity Fair, everything by the Brontës, anything German, Metamorphosis, the Odyssey, the Iliad, most Balzac, anything by P.G. Wodehouse, Our Mutual Friend, Anna Karenina...
But where to start? Our Mutual Friend is out because the wife is reading it and it’s surely a waste to buy two copies. Also, Dickens generally is very Dickensian and I’m not sure how much of that I can cope with on holiday. The Brontës, I think, are more a girl thing than a boy thing. I’ve seen Vanity Fair on TV. Moby-Dick’s one of those books you need to read in the right circumstances — on a whaling holiday, something like that. The Odyssey and the Iliad you kind of don’t need to read because a bit like the Bible — which I also haven’t read — you know the key stories anyway. The Proust I’ve tried and I think I’m more of a War and Peace kind of person. Kafka, Schmafka. Germans? You don’t really need to read the Germans, do you? Balzac’s possible — I enjoyed Père Goriot — but I don’t know which others are any good. P.G. Wodehouse I’m sure would be fun, but then I’d no longer be able to shock Wodehouse fans by telling them I’ve never read any Wodehouse.
Which leaves either Anna Karenina or Madame Bovary, except I’m pretty sure they both die at the end so isn’t that going to spoil it slightly? The whole way through the books — really thick, commitment-requiring books at that — you’ll be saying to yourself: ‘Yeah, but it’s all going to end horribly, so what’s the point?’
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Lubumbashi
August 5th, 2010 10:29am Report this commentHow about all nine volumes of the Forsyte Saga? Or the dozen Poldark novels? My holiday reads for this season are the novels of Dick Francis, in chronological order. Not exactly classics,I acknowledge, but they record social and technological advances from 1962 onwards, and are quite entertaining.
Since I got my Kindle, I too have been going through all the books that I ought to have read. Actual books, especially in English, are in short supply here in the Congo. Perhaps I read a poor translation, but I found Madame Bovary wholly unmoving.
And Wuthering Heights fell short of appealing to this female reader.
Sir Graphus
August 12th, 2010 9:44am Report this commentThe best Balzac's I've read, & heartily recommend, are "Cousin Pons" and "Eugenie Grandet".
Amanda Craig
August 12th, 2010 12:33pm Report this commentTry JG Farrell's The Seige of Krishnapur, one of the very few readable (and rew-readable) Booker winners, also John Masters's The Deceivers and The Night Runners of Bengal. Also Vanity Fair, which has battle scenes., love and enough waspish humour even to spike your guns.
John Richardson
August 12th, 2010 12:42pm Report this commentSuggestions ?
You haven't mentioned Joyce.
'A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man' is certainly worth reading.
How about Thomas Pynchon's 'The Crying of Lot 49' ? This novel suggests brilliance & madness. Pynchon's intelligence is
obvious.
Now here's the point THEY ARE BOTH VERY SHORT. Oh yes, slight, undemanding, brief.
You will not be worrying about dropping these little puppies on your toe.
No chance.
Think about it. You can tell people that you're reading 'Joyce & Pynchon', not lie, and still have time for your life.
Failing that read 'Alien Dawn' by Colin Wilson. You will not be bored.
Michel Murray
August 13th, 2010 3:11pm Report this commentEasiest question ever. Start with Patrick o'brian's Master and Commander, and if you like it - and you will - there are 19 more volumes in the series.
Cyclops
steve ulin
August 13th, 2010 3:33pm Report this commentWe went to a used book store, bought six Frederick Forsyth novels at 90 cents each and did even better than that on value by reading Day of the Jackal twice. It's that good.
I fear I've shortchanged the author in all this and were he to invoice me the difference between second-hand and new I wouldn't say no to making up the shortfall. Well, I did enjoy myself immensely, didn't I ?
D. Phillips
August 15th, 2010 10:13pm Report this commentJames! If only you'd get an eReader your dilemma would be solved! I'm currently reading Anna Karenina, which came free with ninety-nine other public domain books on my Kobo. Amazon and Barnes and Noble both have similar machines, and there are free apps on iPhone, iPod, and Android which allow you to download books for free. Of course, I'm writing from North America, I don't know what the eReader situation is in Britain.
D Short
August 20th, 2010 12:05am Report this commentWilbur Smith
Peter Walsh
August 20th, 2010 12:13pm Report this commentJames, If you are looking for something easy and perhaps with humour in it, break your "Denial" status on Wodehouse and get yourself a copy of "The Clicking of Cuthbert" which is a collection of short stories. Head straight for the story, "The Coming of Gowf". It won't take long to read it and you just might see the fun in it. Good luck, let me know know you get on with it.
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