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Is should also mention The True Deceiver, Tove Jansson, where so much was happening 'between the lines' that I had to stop reading at least once every page or so to absorb it all. Amazing stuff.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 9 February 2023 19:41 (one year ago) link
seven months pass...
Edna O'Brien's Country Girls trilogy.
Before that Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset, tr. Tina Nunnally. Deserves to be better known though a 1000 page novel about a 14th century norwegian woman is obviously not going to fly off the shelves.
― lurch of england (ledge), Monday, 18 September 2023 09:53 (six months ago) link
Classic. THink it has to be
Diana Wynne Jones Howl's Moving Castle and Dogsbody which I onoy got to read a couplle of weeks ago. Though I think I had seen teh studio Ghibli animation
Federici Caliban & The Witch book on feminism and the Witch Trials very good book though I'm still wondering best way to navigate text with so many reference points to endnotes. Efficiently without interrupting reading flow like. & most of teh endnotes were significant not just citation.
C Willett Cunnington's Handbook of English costume in the nineteenth century so much so that I think I want to get a permanenet reference copy.
Country music originals : the legends and the lost Tony Russell,
2010 so may not be old enough to be classic though the contents certainly are. Again something I want to get a personal copy of.
Is the idea of classic book time directed as in book needs to be over 25 years old? Cos I think that was the way that the music thread worked.
I'm just finishing an anthology of Linda Nochlin's articles including Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists? which itself was from 1971 so the standalone book should be included. I read that before I got the anthology.
― Stevo, Monday, 18 September 2023 10:24 (six months ago) link
> Is the idea of classic book time directed as in book needs to be over 25 years old?
it's just a mirror of the 'classic album' thread on ilm. nobody's going to be arrested by the thread police for posting never books. that said, it shouldn't just be a 'what are you reading?' or 'what have you bought recently?' thread, because we have those.
― koogs, Monday, 18 September 2023 10:37 (six months ago) link
Left hand of darkness. Works as a book of ideas, works as a book of beautiful sentences, and works as a kickass survival adventure. And so spookily modern on modern-day right wing politics.
― Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 18 September 2023 15:02 (six months ago) link