Results 1 to 17 of 17

Thread: Reading resolutions for 2013.

  1. #1
    Senior Member affy18's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: One-Eyed Jack's
    Posts: 8,652

    Reading resolutions for 2013.

    Again, useless lists because it's hard to keep up with these resolutions. Life gets in the way.

    I'm planning to read three behemoths throughout the entire year interspersed with smaller reads:

    - Moby-Dick (Herman Melville): I hope to finally be able to tackle this.
    - The Magic Mountain (Thomas Mann): I read the first 15 pages or so and couldn't continue. Hopefully I will read this THIS year.
    - The World as Will and Representation (Arthur Schopenhauer): I bought it last year and think will read it sometime during fall or so, I hope.

    PS: Oh, and also a re-read of The New Testament (at least two gospels + Paul's letters). I read Genesis a couple of months ago but don't feel the motivation to go through all of the Old Testament. It's too big a commitment.
    Last edited by affy18; 01-21-2013 at 10:22 AM.

  2. #2
    Christmas Time, You're So Fine! Bean's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 6,045
    I made it halfway through Moby-Dick two years ago! Which felt like an accomplishment to me. My reading choices sort of blow with the wind, so I can't even make resolutions in good conscience.

  3. #3
    Senior Member affy18's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: One-Eyed Jack's
    Posts: 8,652
    Quote Originally Posted by Bean View Post
    I made it halfway through Moby-Dick two years ago! Which felt like an accomplishment to me. My reading choices sort of blow with the wind, so I can't even make resolutions in good conscience.
    I read the first few pages during the summer and I loved what I read but it was SO not a summer read.

    I hope to read it sometime this spring.

  4. #4
    The Pirate Guy crazyfists3600's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Texas
    Posts: 12,224
    I was planning on three big ones this year too!

    Les Miserables/Victor Hugo
    Against the Day/Thomas Pynchon
    Moby Dick/Herman Melville

    My dad actually just gave me his copy of Moby Dick last month. He told me to read it, so now I have to.

  5. #5
    مشکلیں اتنیں پڑیں کے آساں ھو گّیں haqyunus's Avatar
    Join Date: Apr 2011
    Location: Here and there
    Posts: 4,019
    affy, I am curious to know that why couldn't you continue Magic Mountain? It is not that difficult book to read, specially at the surface level. One can find stuff of general interest (drama, humor, tragedy, passion, culture) too, relatable material even if one doesn't delve into it is actual historical, political or philosophical contexts/meanings. It is certainly not as accessible as Buddenbrooks (somebody please make a lavish period piece movie of it ) but it is not hard like some other authors (at least not till towards the end.)

  6. #6
    Exquisite taste Jali's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Spain
    Posts: 5,500
    Stendhal: The red and the black
    Dickens: The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, The old curiosity shop, David Copperfield
    Collins: The moonstone,The woman in white
    Hugo: Les misérables
    Maurier: Jamaica Inn
    Lawrence: Women in love
    I bought these books last year, I hope this year I can read all of them.


    Jali Awards Best Actress 1920-1925
    1920 Tora Teje, Erotikon // 1921 Pola Negri, The wildcat
    1922 Anna May Wong, The toll of the sea // 1923 Marion Davies, Little old New York
    1924 Marie Prevost, The marriage circle // 1925 Gloria Swanson, Stage struck

  7. #7
    Senior Member affy18's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: One-Eyed Jack's
    Posts: 8,652
    Quote Originally Posted by haqyunus View Post
    affy, I am curious to know that why couldn't you continue Magic Mountain? It is not that difficult book to read, specially at the surface level. One can find stuff of general interest (drama, humor, tragedy, passion, culture) too, relatable material even if one doesn't delve into it is actual historical, political or philosophical contexts/meanings. It is certainly not as accessible as Buddenbrooks (somebody please make a lavish period piece movie of it ) but it is not hard like some other authors (at least not till towards the end.)
    I didn't continue The Magic Mountain because I couldn't commit to it at the moment; certainly not due to its content. Actually, the first few pages were very involving and fascinating. I WILL read it this year, though.

  8. #8
    You're about to find out who I am! dlong5665's Avatar
    Join Date: Mar 2012
    Posts: 3,221
    I just nee to read more.

    But I do hope to takle two or three classics along the lines of Anna Karenina or Jane Eyre. Plus I am finally going to dive into the wonderful world (and mind) of Stephen King.

  9. #9
    The Pirate Guy crazyfists3600's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Texas
    Posts: 12,224
    Jane Eyre is marvelous!

  10. #10
    Mmember Mmelissa's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 1,165
    Quote Originally Posted by Jali View Post
    Stendhal: The red and the black
    Dickens: The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, The old curiosity shop, David Copperfield
    Collins: The moonstone,The woman in white
    Hugo: Les misérables
    Maurier: Jamaica Inn
    Lawrence: Women in love
    I bought these books last year, I hope this year I can read all of them.
    I've been meaning to re-read these two. I went through a Wilkie Collins thing in high school, he's such a weird, wonderful writer.

    My personal resolutions are to do the 50 books written by poc challenge again (I already did it once before and it introduced me to some great writers like Maya Angelou (read her complete autobiographical series), Edward P. Jones, Helen Oyeyemi and Eileen Chang). I also want to read more books that I already own (I have something like 40 which are languishing on my shelf, unread) and more re-reading. How all these things will work with each other will be...interesting.

  11. #11
    Basically I just want to get through and enjoy as much of my Goodreads to-read list as much as possible. But I'm most looking forward to tackling Wolf Hall, A Confederacy of Dunces, Ragtime, Middlemarch and the two Collins novels mentioned above.

    I don't think I'll ever get through finishing Atlas Shrugged though.



  12. #12
    Senior Member Jeff Beachnau's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Posts: 3,316
    This past year I've read a bunch of the classics, so I'm hoping to keep it up. Here are some of my plans for this year

    Scaramouche - Rafael Sabatini
    Moby Dick - Herman Melville
    The Call of the Wild - Jack London
    The Prince and the Pauper - Mark Twain
    Ivanhoe - Sir Walter Scott
    Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky
    It - Stephen King
    I'm with Coco
    Actual Items


    In the Year 2000
    As more and more people start having sex with robots, it will become increasingly embarrassing to buy a can of WD-40.

  13. #13
    My religion is hedonism Aurelius's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: With Rania from Giordania
    Posts: 11,818
    As every year, stick to non-fiction (mostly, I need to finish a book I started while on vacation), except on vacations.



    I will marshall all the forces of darkness to hound you to an assisted suicide - Peter Capaldi, In The Loop

  14. #14
    Eternal Lurker
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Where you live
    Posts: 4,905
    Non-fiction for the win!

    Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities
    Natalie Zemon Davis, The Return of Martin Guerre
    Patrick J. Geary, The Myth of Nations
    Antonio Gramsci, Prison Notebooks

  15. #15
    primavera mexicana Aldo's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: グアダラハラ (メキシコ)
    Posts: 2,624
    Last year I read 11 books -by far my best ever- and this year break my record again, so at least 12 books. I want to continue reading the basics of the Latin American Boom and some Joyce. So:

    - Vargas Llosa: La ciudad y los Perros
    - Cortázar: Rayuela
    - Rulfo: El llano en llamas
    - Homer: Odyssey
    - Joyce: Ulysses

    Plus some architecture texts on Luis Barragán and Burle Marx.

  16. #16
    Read a book. Any book.

  17. #17
    The Pirate Guy crazyfists3600's Avatar
    Join Date: Dec 2007
    Location: Texas
    Posts: 12,224
    Quote Originally Posted by Rage Colored Glasses View Post
    Read a book. Any book.
    LOL

    I read 25 last year, so my goal this year is 30. I've already read 5 (two Chabon's and three Harry Hole novels) so I'd say I'm off to a good start. My only fear is that Les Miserables is going to cripple a lot of my time, considering that it is SO EFFING LONG.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •