Re: I feel like starting a book related thread, so...Moby-Dick
Grace, on host 205.164.128.155
Monday, January 10, 2000, at 00:20:12
Re: I feel like starting a book related thread, so... posted by Brunnen-G on Sunday, January 9, 2000, at 02:45:01:
> > What would you say are the best fiction books ever written? > > I wouldn't presume to make a list of the *best*, but I can tell you some of my favourites. My definition of that is any book that I can happily read six million times, year after year, even when I just about know it all by heart, and STILL want to read it again. Some of them I can read numerous times a year, others need to settle in and be semi-forgotten before I come back to them like old friends. These aren't in any particular order. > > The Lord of the Rings > Treasure Island > King Solomon's Mines > Kidnapped > Any of Agatha Christie's Miss Marple or Poirot stories > Shogun (James Clavell) > Cannery Row (John Steinbeck) > Herodotus's "History" (all right, all right, he didn't intend it as fiction, but it is one awesomely entertaining read) > The Guns of Navarone (Alistair Maclean) > The Golden Rendezvous (Alistair Maclean) > Moby Dick (I'm probably the only person in the *world* who reads *that* for pleasure) > My Family and Other Animals (Gerald Durrell) > Hmm, most of Gerald Durrell's other books, too > The Ladies of Mandrigyn (a heroic fantasy thing whose author I can't remember) > Innumerable books by Terry Pratchett > Les Miserables > The Wind in the Willows > The first Chronicles of Thomas Covenant trilogy > Le Morte D'Arthur (Malory) > The Mists of Avalon (Marion Zimmer Bradley) > Beowulf > Njal's Saga (not quite sure if that qualifies as fiction, but what the heck) > Huckleberry Finn > Under the Mountain (a children's book by NZ author Maurice Gee) > The Odyssey > > I think I'd better stop there or I'll end up with a list longer than the Adventures With Dave story. Besides, I know as soon as I hit "post" I'll think of another 20 books that should have been right at the top of the list. > > Brunnen-"does this reveal anything about my personality?"G
I just recently finished reading Moby-Dick for the first time. I was nervous to start a book which sets most people groaning and moaning at the thought of reading. I loved it. I can't wait to start it again. There is so much in that book. Granted, I'm a literature geek, but this book seemed to encompass almost every form of written expression I can think of. Mostly written in prose, it also had some peotry, and even a few chapters which seemed dramatically written, like a play. Also, there are so many levels of meaning. I tried, on the first run through, to read it mainly for its plot and more blatant literary symbolism etc.. But as a commentary on the history of American whaling, or as a Biblical story, or as almost anything you want it to be, this book can be read and enjoyed. After finishing it, I couldn't quite grasp why it is so hated (feared?) by the majority.
Gr"all these things are not without their meanings"ace
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