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Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Topic suggested by Ravi on Fri Aug 14 17:25:30 .


Since contemporary is anything after WWII, this topic covers anything before that time.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
What? Noone to discuss classics for the 6 days since this started? Or is it that only today it has been given publicity? As far as classics are
concerned I used to love Hardy once upon a time, but after reading most of Hardy twice I found that he is actually quite stuck on the single
topic of rural is good urban is bad. So then I turned to Dikens (the ones that I hadnt read) and found that he is extremely versatile
unlike Hardy. That is as far as Novels are concerned. Presently Im more into short stories. Saki and O Henry. Anyone a fan of O Henry? Im
a big fan!

Hey! I cant spell correctly 'cos this thing says that Dicens is a forbidden word!!

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Bull - I just love your sense of humour. Dikens and then Dicens. :-)))))

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Bull: Try Jerome.K.Jerome's 'three men in a Boat'.This is a very humorous book. This book is available online at the following site.
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/books.html (http://www.cs.cmu.edu/books.html
)
A lot of classics are available at this site.

James Thurber is another author whose short stories are very humorous. I have to mention here 'The secret life of Walter Mitty' (which i have been told has come out as a movie) and 'The day the bed fell on my dad'.
I was laughing in the middle of the night after reading this one and got scolded by my grandma 'pei madhiri rathiri enna sirippu vendi kidakkalai:)'

Regarding short stories one suggestion wld be to read the anthologies which come out and not soemthing like the complete short stories of so and so'. Because when you read the short stories collection you see a pattern in it and lose interest. I tried reading Somerset Maughm and lost interest towards the end of the book

Also try Mark Twain. He has written a book about the days when he was a pilot in the river missisippi (i hope i got the name right, it's been a long time since i read this one).

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Ramanan : Yes Ive read "Three men in a boat". Absolutely hilarious! About Thurber, I read a two volume collection of Thruber's works, including his own illustrations called Vintage Thurber some years back having borrowed it from the Indian Institute of Science library. Donno if those books are still there, but Ive been looking for those books to buy since then. Never found them anywhere else! The ideas this guy has are amazing!

Im surprised you didnt like Maughm. Have you read some of his serious work? Like Cakes and Ale? I love his humourous short stories. I had a story called Princess September in, I think, my 11th std, but Ive never found that story anywhere since then.
I dont know what kind of Maughm collection you read which made you feel that they are stereotype.

I have a collection of 273 stories of O Henry and every one of them is a different kind of story! No matter how much of O Henry you have read before, you can never predict the ending!!

While we are on Short stories might I suggest Wilde and Saki too, though Wilde's stories are pretty tragic whereas Saki's are mostly hilarious and some of them political satire too (there is on full collection called Chronicles of Clovis which deals with politics of his day. Cant understand most of it!!)

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Bull: thanks for your response. You seem to be a very well read person.;-)

I do like Somerset Maughm. I read his complete short stories when i was in my college. He has this habit of having a twist or punch in the last line. When you read so many of his stories, you see a pattern and began to expect things. This becomes boring after sometime.that is what i meant.

i have read a few saki during my college days for my non detailed text and O 'Henry.

Hoping to see/hear more from you in this thread ;-)

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
My favorite classics are the Russian ones by Fyodor Dostoeyevsky (Crime and Punishment) and Ivan Turgenev (Fathers and Sons). In Russian writers I find cutting-ironic humor that comes with experiencing immense suffering. Also, these Russian giants always have an undertone of humility. Their works have passion and empathy for human beings of all classes which I find lacking in many European and American writers. I wish I can indulge myself more here today, but I can't. I will certainly be back though. I have enjoyed all your postings.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
I did try Dostoeyvesky, but almost all such authors seem too depressing to me. I have read Anna Karanina and a few short stories of Tolstoy, but they too pretty much harp on pain, misery and suffering. Of course, those things too are part of life and therefore literature, I suppose!! How much land does a man need? is my favourite by Tolstoy.

And then there is Any Rand who also talks about the Russian Revolution in We the living, but I suppose you cannot talk of that as a classic, atleast going by Ravi's definition, you cant 'cos Rand wrote after WW II.

Anyone read a book on Anastasia Romanov? I have seen the (non-animated) movie.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
How can we leave Arthur Conan Doyle ? His character Sherlock Holmes has outlived his creator. I hare read and reread Sherlock Holmes saga.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
one of the profound books on human minds is "count of monte cristo" by alaxandre dumas. each one of the characters is so well depicted that one tends to identify with them. dumas' sequence of events is also remarkable in the sense that one can see a logical thread running throughout.

well! the story is of a young sailor (edmond dante) who is a victim of a plot of 3 people and as a result suffers from life imprisonment in a prison on an island and also loses his father and his beloved fiancee. there he comes into contact with a person called abbe faria who introduces him to the mysteries of life and science and also bequeathes to him a large treasure hid in an island called monte cristo. edmond manages to escape and takes possession of the treasure. how he returns of marseilles and takes revenge on the persons who caused him immeasurable grief is the story.

a wonderful book filled with gems of wisdom on human nature, greed et al.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
one of the profound books on human minds is "count of monte cristo" by alaxandre dumas. each one of the characters is so well depicted that one tends to identify with them. dumas' sequence of events is also remarkable in the sense that one can see a logical thread running throughout.

well! the story is of a young sailor (edmond dante) who is a victim of a plot of 3 people and as a result suffers from life imprisonment in a prison on an island and also loses his father and his beloved fiancee. there he comes into contact with a person called abbe faria who introduces him to the mysteries of life and science and also bequeathes to him a large treasure hid in an island called monte cristo. edmond manages to escape and takes possession of the treasure. how he returns to marseilles and takes revenge on the persons who caused him immeasurable grief is the story.

a wonderful book filled with gems of wisdom on human nature, greed et al.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Hello I really appreciate Ravi for starting this site.I'am an avid reader of classics,both Indian and abroad.I loved to see England through the eyes of all those fabulous English writers.My all time favourite is Shakespeare.The variety of his writing filled with an entire parade of all kinds of human emotions is amazing.
We must not ignore great Indian authors like Rajaji,Tagore,K.M.Munshi,RKNarayan who delivered works of true magnificence,recreating history and mythology. It's amazing more so because of such simplicity of the language used.
"count of monte cristo" is one of my favourites too badri.good choice.O'Henry is also great and renowned for the unexpected turns and surprise endings

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
my favourite authors: emily bronte, o.henry, dikens etc. some books which were not mentioned
above which i find are very good : george eliot : mill on the floss wilkie collins : moonstone , the first
detective story anton chekov's short stories. i consider him to be sujatha^10. jane austen : all her
novels.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Bull

Count me in on O'Henry!

Reg. source for books, there's a shop in Mumbai that is probably one of the few places where u can find old classics, mostly original prints @ unbelievable prices. Years ago, I got some great bargains there, incl. original Thurber's.. I forget the name of this place, only that it's somewhere near Flora Fountain. Will try & recall the name of the shop..
Of course, this is assuming that u have access to Thackeraynagar in some way(:-))

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Just wondering how a book gets into the classic league . Does classic mean that it is difficult to comprehend? or that it has to age for some time ( Shakespeare/Ramayana?)

Does this apply to music as well?

Classic music (whether indian or western) is applicable to music that is complex and has stood the time test, - are these the main/only factors?

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Any PG Wodehouse lovers ?

Ramji

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Ramji: Count me among Wodehouse lovers. I've never seen a better musician of English than him. In fact, I never used to appreciate style much till I read his works.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness" is an amazing novel that treads the darker aspects of the human psyche. Conrad was way ahead of exploring the psychological doubles long before Freud ascribed scientific names to them. A fascinating thing about Conrad is that he only learnt English in his late 30s but still went on to become one of the most revered writers in the language.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
My favorite sample of Pg Wodehouse humor. I am not quoting the exact words.

" He went into the room and came back so fast he almost met himself coming out"

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Ramji,
Meet your twin soul, as far as PGW goes , in me. Try this :
"The fascination of shooting as a sport wholly depends on whether you are on the right side or wrong side of the gun"
More :

1. ...fell into the washing machine and did as many revolutions per
minute as a small African republic....
2.Unlike the male codfish which, suddenly finding itself the parent
of three million five hundred thousand little codfish, cheerfully
resolves to love them all, the British aristocracy is apt to look with
a somewhat jaundiced eye on its younger sons.
Rajesh

More when I have time!

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Rajesh:

I just wrote back to you in another thread. I think this place is more suitable. PGW belongs in the classics- timeless.

Ramji

P.S. I just realized I had quoted the same lines in two places. Will come back with more later.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Ramji and Ramamoorthy sir,

Here I am again..but I am afraid I'll have to take
leave till March. Tomorrow, I'll try to sign off in style with more quotes..

I'll be looking forward to reviving this thread in March, if you choose to leave it dormant till then, that is. Please do continue the good work!
Here are some links on the net:9if you havent seen them ,that is)

http://mech.math.msu.su/~gmk/pgw.htm (http://mech.math.msu.su/~gmk/pgw.htm
)
http://web.singnet.com.sg/~siddarth/pgwodehouse.html (http://web.singnet.com.sg/~siddarth/pgwodehouse.html
)
http://www.egr.msu.edu/~bhurkeal/wodehousians.html (http://www.egr.msu.edu/~bhurkeal/wodehousians.html
)
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~chandra/pgw.html (http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~chandra/pgw.html
)
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~chandra/plum.HTML (http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~chandra/plum.HTML
)
http://www.smart.net/~tak/wodehouse.html (http://www.smart.net/~tak/wodehouse.html
)
http://www.smart.net/~tak/wodehouse.html (http://www.smart.net/~tak/wodehouse.html
)
http://kekux1-stub.kek.jp/~marat/pgw.html (http://kekux1-stub.kek.jp/~marat/pgw.html
)
http://www.aiusa.com/satire/wodehouse.htm (http://www.aiusa.com/satire/wodehouse.htm
)
http://www.newdream.net/~scully/toelw/wodehouse.htm (http://www.newdream.net/~scully/toelw/wodehouse.htm
)

"Do you know,' said a thoughtful Bean,'I'll bet that if all the girls Freddie has loved and lost were placed end to end--not that I suppose one could do it--they would reach half-way down Piccadilly.'
'Further than that,' said the Egg. 'Some of them were pretty tall.' "

``Alf Todd,'' said Ukridge, soaring to an impressive burst of
imagery, ``has about as much chance as a one-armed blind man in a dark
room trying to shove a pound of melted butter into a wild cat's left
ear with a red-hot needle.''
_Ukridge_ (1924)


More can be found from the sites above.

Cheerio, then.
Raj

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Anybody here to discuss W. Somerset Maugham ?

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Babu : SURE! Have you read "Liza of Lambeth"?

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
yeah, thats his first short story I think. My favourite is "On Human Bondage". the title itself deserves credit and none of the novel I have read describes unrequited love and intense obsessions with such passion. That novel sort of reminded me of myself :)

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Ramji and Ramamoorthy:
Wodehouse fan is back! Try this:
"To attract attention in the dining-room of the Senior Conservative
Club between the hours of one and two-thirty, you have to be a mutton
chop, not an earl."

" It was one of those jolly, peaceful mornings that make a fellow wish
he'd got a soul or something..."

More will come

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
When I was schooling, our English master forced us to read up P.G.Wodehouse. He said it would improve our style and vocabulary. The old man was right.
It did help a lot. You know what a "lily-livered poltroon" is? Aha! For that you have to be a Wodehousian.
I started with the "Jeeves" series. Carry on, Jeeves", etc. and my last book was "Mulliner Nights". When I went to do my medicine in India, Higginbotham's was a treasure house. So I continued with my forage into the world of Wodehouse. Bertram Wooster getting into trouble all the time. Jeeves would ridicule him, just by lifting one eye-brow.
Such subtlities.
I only dropped Wodehouse when I became addicted to Ian Fleming. But Ian Fleming is no master. But through him, the world got its greatest hero of all times-J.B. Not JayBee. I meant James Bond-special agent 007, licenced to kill:-)

Regards

JayBee

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Could someone review Charles Dic*ens.. for me?

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
just finished reading 'the old curiosity shop' by CD.. while the story is extremely predictable and even quite cliched at times, the descriptions more than make up! especially descriptions of Quelp, the ultimate villain of all time.. i shall post some clips soon..

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
a review of Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Brothers Karamazov

Dostoevsky considered this last novel his magnum opus. With this he felt he had expressed himself completely. This sprawling 936-page novel does tackle every issue that ever fascinated man--religion, society, class, sensuality, morality, mortality, honor, love, lust, greed, kinship, sin, retribution--you name it this has got it.

After having read modern novels with their crystal focus and edited crispness, The Brothers Karamazovoverflowed my mind with outlandish tangents, intense-to-a-fault pondering and blatant pontificating. But no matter how taxing and dated the style or subject matter, the underlying soul, the integrity of the writer's search won me over time and again. Dostoevsky is the kind of noble soul who would feel shame for the natural flaws in him, flaws that we easily rationalize and even feel proud of in ourselves. He also embraces these flaws in others with such insouciance that I want to go hug him and buy him vodka. With his characteristic concern, fascination, understanding, and philosophy about the pull and push of human instincts, Dostoevsky creates a macabre universe of characters that appall and rivet us and ultimately reveal humanity in all its paradoxical splendor.

At the center of the The Brothers Karamazov is the patricide, the events that foreshadow it, the three sons--Dmitry the sensualist, Ivan the amoral intellectual, and Alyosha the searching mystic, the lengthy trial, and resolution. Affecting the lives of these three starkly different brothers are their illegitimate brother the deranged, confused Smerdyakov, the elegant Katerina, and the vixen Grushenka. There also other important characters, like the prosecutor, the defense lawyer, Rakitin the cynical friend and the priest who guides Alyosha.

On a larger level, Dostoevsky uses Dmitry to stand for Russia's inherent national character of being caught between passion and honor, whereas, Alyosha stands for the ideal, spiritual, all healing Russia and Ivan stands for the other extreme of cold, dispassionate intellectual rationale. Dostoevsky also takes surprising jabs at American society and psychology as a discipline during the trial scenes that I hadn't found in his other works. All in all, this is an ambitious, monumental work to say the least. If you already like Dostoevsky, you might appreciate this work. If you haven't read any of his other stuff, you may want to start with , "Crime and Punishment" or "The Idiot" before coming to this heady novel.

{It is awkward to have to post a review under classics just because the book is pre-WW. Review of books should all belong in one section regardless of the era of the book.}

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Udhaya,
has it struck you that the Russian writers seem to have some uncanny knack for interesting insights on very ordinary human incidents? They also seem to exude 'collectively' some mystery about them and their characters, its as if the characters actually need not exist but they do.. by the author's choice only and scanbe considered as aproximate realisations of a human mind that just has a different way to respond to trifling human situations...
We should be starting threads on discussion of genres of writing...

Vijay
Vijay

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Is there any site where I can read 'Of human Bondage' by Somerset Mau' full and free?

help please

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Do I have any site where I can 'Of human bondage' by Somerset Maugham free and full?

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
http://www.bibliomania.com/Fiction/Maugham/Human/index.html (http://www.bibliomania.com/Fiction/Maugham/Human/index.html
)

Here is the complete electronic version of the book you asked for.

Happy reading.

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
They collided, and it proved that no two objects can be at the same point in space simultaneously

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
The previous one was PGW quote

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
Re Wodehouse: Uncle Dynamite:
Poor Constable Potter was at the reciving end of this: "You thought I was Major Barbazon-Plank! no, I said Barbazon-Plank, the Major, to distinguish myself from my illustrious brother Barbazon-Plank, the Minor. And by curious coincidence, he joined the army and reached the exalted rank of a Major, thus becoming Major Barbazon-Plank, the Minor. And I went to Africa and did some prospecting and ended up owning a few gold mines, thus becoming, Miner Barbazon-Plank, the Major." (para phrased, not an exact quote).

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
i thought this discussion was about classics....
i don't mean to belittle PGW.. but i was wondering when there is seperate discussion forum for him...why he is being discussed again here...??

for Maughm fans... have you read this book.."Razor's Edge" by him??
Terrific!!!!

Oldposts
2nd January 2005, 11:53 AM
hello,

sir i want list of tamil names starts with "su"
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raulffreddy
28th February 2005, 05:33 PM
hi
whats happening in this page.... yuo are talking alone or is there anybody answering you... i got confused when i saw this page.
anyway,
i wanted to recommedn those visiting this page to read bronte's wuthering heights... donno whether it is amongs classics, but it's just brilliant. we would go to the heights along with the author. pearl s buck's gods men also provides good reading.

Badri
1st March 2005, 07:43 AM
i wanted to recommedn those visiting this page to read bronte's wuthering heights... donno whether it is amongs classics

Well, what is a classic? I am sure Wuthering Heights is. It is a thrilling read...I can still remember those immortal words..."I am Heathfield"

SSathiya
11th May 2005, 07:04 PM
i wanted to recommedn those visiting this page to read bronte's wuthering heights... donno whether it is amongs classics

Well, what is a classic? I am sure Wuthering Heights is. It is a thrilling read...I can still remember those immortal words..."I am Heathfield"

Im going to read wuthering Heights after i finish my current novel.( Dr.jekell and mr.hyde) I hope its good as you say it is.

Querida
5th August 2005, 03:29 AM
Wuthering heights was such a good read much better than her sis's Jane Eyre which i found sooooo very slow going...

found out a great site to read the whole text online, classics by George Eliot, Dickens, Chaucer, Nathaniel Hawthorne just to name a very few....
check it out for sure! This has saved me alot of money for literature classes and waiting lines in libraries...

http://www.online-literature.com/

http://www.bibliomania.com/0/0/19/37/frameset.html

lordstanher
6th August 2005, 11:10 PM
Abt classics, wud "Dr. Zhivago" by Boris Pasternak classify as one?? Ne-one who read this book?? I heard the story once tho.....

soccer_gal
7th August 2005, 05:09 AM
My favourite classics are A Little Princess and The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett. Those are both such wonderful and touching stories.