stoutfellow: Joker (Default)
stoutfellow ([personal profile] stoutfellow) wrote2006-08-01 08:33 pm
Entry tags:

Classics

I just finished reading Jane Eyre.

As far as nineteenth-century English-language literature goes, my experience is a bit spotty. I've read a lot of Dickens and a fair bit of Scott, Eliot, Collins, and Trollope; on this side of the pond, I've read quite a bit of Twain and some Hawthorne and Melville. I haven't read anything by Thackeray or Hardy, nor by Irving or Cooper (although I have Library of America volumes of both of the latter two). Any prose writer I haven't mentioned, you can probably assume I haven't dipped into. (Oh, wait; I've read Wuthering Heights as well.)

Anyone want to make any suggestions?

Actually, I'm debating tackling Les Miserables; I have a three-volume French edition that I bought in Paris in '89. That, however, will require considerable effort, and I may put it off yet again.

Addendum. My memory is going. I've also read a small amount of Kipling, and quite a bit of Austen, not to mention (in various amounts) Lewis Carroll, H. Rider Haggard, Arthur Conan Doyle, George Macdonald, O. Henry, and Robert Louis Stevenson.

[identity profile] oilhistorian.livejournal.com 2006-08-02 11:06 am (UTC)(link)
Hugo is worth the effort, though I'll be the first to admit I read Les Mis in English rather than the original French.

I also really enjoy Cooper's works, though that may be the historian in me coming out.

For something a little different, might I suggest Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward? Late 19th century, but nevertheless an important and interesting work. Fairly short as well. More of a political novel than a literary novel, but intriguing.

[identity profile] oilhistorian.livejournal.com 2006-08-02 11:15 am (UTC)(link)
How could I forget! Kipling. No better sense of the late Victorian Empire than in his works, both fiction and nonfiction.

[identity profile] dan-ad-nauseam.livejournal.com 2006-08-02 05:37 pm (UTC)(link)
You seem to have missed Austen.

[identity profile] carbonelle.livejournal.com 2006-08-03 09:33 pm (UTC)(link)
Thackery's VANITY FAIR is interesting on so many levels - only one of which is that Thackery is the next generation writing after the Napoleonic War - a bit like Boomer's tackling World War 2 novels.

Also good: MILL ON THE FLOSS by George Elliot.
filkferengi: (Default)

[personal profile] filkferengi 2006-08-09 02:27 am (UTC)(link)
Avoid Zola & Hardy like the bubonic. I quite liked _Villette_ by Charlotte Bronte [what I recall of it, anyway]. I'm a huge Alcott fan; how's your Emerson? He rocks too.