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Posted
9 minutes ago, adunn1992 said:

I am not surprised one bit @Vin_Marco You were always a well-rounded bibliophile and intellect :) need to add to my reading list now that I'm done with school

🫂 I can't wait to see you.... thank you for your kind words. 🙂

Posted
On 9/12/2023 at 2:44 PM, Vin_Marco said:

At the moment I'm reading Hamilton 

IMG_9913.jpeg

I see the Captain Cook book at the bottom of the pile. The cottage where he grew up in England was dismantled and reassembled in the park across from our apartment in Australia...stop by and see it!

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Honestly, I would love to get a list of the literary classics. I had an English professor in undergrad, share her recommendations of literary classics everyone should read.  Any feedback on some classics you all have enjoyed?

Posted
6 minutes ago, poolboy48220 said:

one of my best English teachers left a recommended reading list at the end of the term.  "The Importance of Being Earnest" was on it.  Years later I found an audio version of it and bought it, it's one of my favorites.  

An inspired recommendation!

Posted (edited)

I really enjoyed A Tale of Two Cities. You gotta love details though.

Also recommend Les Miserables. You find out how much Fantine really suffers. Not a feel-good read though. 😏

Edited by Mr.E
Posted
On 9/26/2023 at 1:53 PM, adunn1992 said:

Honestly, I would love to get a list of the literary classics. I had an English professor in undergrad, share her recommendations of literary classics everyone should read.  Any feedback on some classics you all have enjoyed?

Walden spoke to me and even though written in 1854, it's relevance in todays world 🌎 left me baffled 😯 

Posted
23 hours ago, Mr.E said:

I really enjoyed A Tale of Two Cities. You gotta love details though.

Also recommend Les Miserables. You find out how much Fantine really suffers. Not a feel-good read though. 😏

Another high school teacher, not the great one who recommended "The Importance of Being Earnest", ruined Dickens and Les Miserables for me.  She made reading them into a chore.

Posted
19 minutes ago, poolboy48220 said:

Another high school teacher, not the great one who recommended "The Importance of Being Earnest", ruined Dickens and Les Miserables for me.  She made reading them into a chore.

I hear you on that. I find that reading a great book without the pressure of having to write a paper about it later makes the experience so much better.

Posted (edited)

I suspect that there are now so many AI-written papers about the so-called Great Books that giving such an assignment today would be a waste of time, unless it were a very specifically pointed question (e.g., "Why do you believe that Jane Austen decided to give her novel the title Pride and Prejudice instead of All's Well that Ends Well or A Sensible Marriage?").

Edited by Charlie
Posted

When I was in 11th grade - I had a mad crush on my English teacher.  He was very sexy, in an unusual way. The girls swooned over him and I sat in my seat in English class trying to conceal a raging boner nearly every day.  They gave the assignment of having to do a project on a 20th century American author - we got to choose the author.  Of course, half the kids wanted to do Steinbeck and the other half wanted to do Hemingway.  I was going to do Steinbeck, but the teacher said he wanted me to do a particular author - Sherwood Anderson.  His best known work is a book of short stories about people in a fictional town called Winesburg, Ohio and that was the book's title. He told me to start with that book.  In this book, there was a story about a teacher, who had fluttery, expressive hands that made all the men in town nervous.  He ended up getting run out of town after one of his male students developed a mad crush on him.  The boy was so lovesick that he began telling people about his fantasies, and, because they were uncomfortable with him anyway, they believed that the teacher was actually doing improper things with his students. 

I didn't think a thing of it at the time, but many years later, it suddenly dawned on me that he had known how in lust I was with him. 

Posted
13 minutes ago, Rudynate said:

When I was in 11th grade - I had a mad crush on my English teacher.  He was very sexy, in an unusual way. The girls swooned over him and I sat in my seat in English class trying to conceal a raging boner nearly every day.  They gave the assignment of having to do a project on a 20th century American author - we got to choose the author.  Of course, half the kids wanted to do Steinbeck and the other half wanted to do Hemingway.  I was going to do Steinbeck, but the teacher said he wanted me to do a particular author - Sherwood Anderson.  His best known work is a book of short stories about people in a fictional town called Winesburg, Ohio and that was the book's title. He told me to start with that book.  In this book, there was a story about a teacher, who had fluttery, expressive hands that made all the men in town nervous.  He ended up getting run out of town after one of his male students developed a mad crush on him.  The boy was so lovesick that he began telling people about his fantasies, and, because they were uncomfortable with him anyway, they believed that the teacher was actually doing improper things with his students. 

I didn't think a thing of it at the time, but many years later, it suddenly dawned on me that he had known how in lust I was with him. 

I remember reading that short story; what a wonderful way to tell you that he knows how you felt.

 

Posted (edited)
15 hours ago, Just Sayin said:

I remember reading that short story; what a wonderful way to tell you that he knows how you felt.

 

It was actually a rather daring thing for the teacher to do, if he was trying to signal that he was aware of @Rudynate's interest in him and was warning him of the possible consequences.

Edited by Charlie
Posted
On 8/11/2023 at 4:54 PM, Lucky said:

I just finished reading Farrell Covington and the Limits of Style by Paul Rudnick. It is a very likable gay romance novel about a very handsome rich kid and an aspiring young playwright. Lots of history, lots of sex. Pretty good book. Not that it didn't irritate me a time or two.

I liked it too.

Posted

I just finished another gay-themed novel, this one about the theater world and New York in the eighties. I enjoyed Up With The Sun a lot. It's by Thomas Mallon. Street hustlers are common in the novel, and a visit to Rounds and the Haymarket are included. (Remember Rounds?)

It's basically a story about Dick Kallman, a gay actor whose career never reached great heights before he and his partner were murdered. The narrator is a musician who played in the theaters of New York.

Check out the reviews on Amazon. The first one says that "Enjoyment may vary greatly with one's knowledge of and interest in the subject matter"

Well, duh! The theater, New York life, hustlers, etc. should get some appeal here!

https://www.amazon.com/Up-Sun-novel-Thomas-Mallon/dp/1524748196/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1696529924&sr=8-1

71NOcJQPQ+L._AC_UL232_SR232,232_.jpg

 
 
 
Posted
On 9/26/2023 at 1:53 PM, adunn1992 said:

Honestly, I would love to get a list of the literary classics. I had an English professor in undergrad, share her recommendations of literary classics everyone should read.  Any feedback on some classics you all have enjoyed?

Anything by Joseph Conrad or Thomas Hardy will rivet you.  Also, Madame Bovary is devastating and wonderful.

Posted

The Magician

A biography  of gay German author Thomas Mann. He and his wife had six   children. They escaped to The Unified States when  Hitler came to power.

Mann received a Noble Prize  literature xor his Shot  stories and.the the novel The Magic Mountain 

 

 

Posted
On 10/17/2023 at 12:16 PM, WilliamM said:

The Magician

A biography  of gay German author Thomas Mann. He and his wife had six   children. They escaped to The Unified States when  Hitler came to power.

Mann received a Noble Prize  literature xor his Shot  stories and.the the novel The Magic Mountain 

 

 

A few years ago, a friend gave me Colm Toibin's novel about Henry James, "The Master;" I read it last summer and then went on to Toibin's "The Magician;" both are about men who, deep down inside, are gay, but live in a straight world.  I've read more about Toibin, who is openly gay, and I sense that he is definitely the kind of guy you'd want to sit down and have a beer with.

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