A question for second gary and other literature aficionados: Jan 15, 02:21
How about Charles Dickens and Thomas Hardy {nm} Jan 15, 06:50
Thanks for that suggestion, blaze. I'll try to get copies of them. {nm} Jan 15, 14:51
Ulysses is a classic, or Crime and Punishment. {nm} Jan 15, 07:27
They sound like good books, I'll have to see if I can find some copies. {nm} Jan 15, 14:51
Really? Those are hard titles to get through. {nm} Jan 15, 15:17
What do you mean by hard titles to get through? Are they a slog to understand, or just big books? {nm} Jan 15, 15:43
Ulysses is renowned for being impenetrable. Crime and Punishment is not as difficult but... not easy. {nm} Jan 15, 16:11
I've read Ulysses Jan 15, 22:46
Wow, that sounds like a really strange book then. Thanks for the heads-up. {nm} Jan 16, 14:01
They're not books people read for fun. Even Literature students dread them. Jan 15, 16:15
Thanks very much for that information and those links. :) {nm} Jan 15, 21:11
I disagree: Crime is something I read as a teen and loved. Nothing difficult about it. Stop stereotyping it. {nm} Jan 18, 11:43
All of the above. {nm} Jan 15, 13:48
Well at present I'm still trying to figure out what kind of books like that I'd be interested in. Jan 15, 18:12
Pride & Prejudice {nm} Jan 15, 19:48
Thanks for the suggestion. I've never read that one before, I'll have to check it out. {nm} Jan 16, 19:19
"Dune", "Dune Messiah", "Children of Dune", and if you're bored, "Chapter House". I consider them classics. {nm} Jan 17, 22:10
How can I forget, "God Emperor of Dune". {nm} Jan 17, 22:15