Sunday, February 15, 2015
Balzac by a Hair!
Our next book will be Honoré de Balzac's Eugénie Grandet. Let's plan to begin the discussion April 1st, before everyone gets busy with Passover or Easter or taxes or the cruelest month or whatever.
I look forward to the book--I've hardly read any Balzac--and to hearing what you have to say. Thanks to all who voted. Don't forget, anyone can participate.
I look forward to the book--I've hardly read any Balzac--and to hearing what you have to say. Thanks to all who voted. Don't forget, anyone can participate.
Tuesday, February 03, 2015
Let's discuss discussions
Here's something else to consider. We seem to have fallen out of the habit of discussing the books in the forum. Do we want to revive that practice with the next book? Should we start taking our talks over to a, say, private group at Facebook?
Any other suggestions?
Any other suggestions?
Monday, February 02, 2015
Our Next Book
Susan asked me to propose some titles for the next Slaves
read-a-long, and I’m happy to oblige.
I chose books I haven’t read in a genre I don’t know well
but want to know better: short 19th Century novels. (Here’s hoping
Rohan hasn’t read them all…) These books are all about 200 pages and represent
five different European languages. Like almost all novels of the period, it
seems, they are primarily about the predicament of women at the time.
Vote for your choice in the comments, let’s say by Valentine’s
Day. We’ll aim to discuss the book starting April 1st, no foolin’.
Honoré de Balzac—Eugénie
Grandet (1833)
“Who is going to marry Eugénie Grandet?” That’s the question
at the heart of this novel, one of the first in the sprawling canvas of
Balzac’s Comédie humaine. Eugénie’s father, a wealthy miser, has his own
answer to the question. But when Eugénie’s orphaned and penniless cousin
arrives, she counters with a different one, such that the father’s cunning is
matched against the daughter’s determination.
Anne Bronte—Agnes Grey
(1847)
Agnes Grey eagerly takes up her post as governess, only to
be disabused of that confidence by her unmanageable charges. The novel promises
to be about work, though romance is present too, when Agnes meets the local
curate.
Theodor Fontane—Irretrievable
(1892) (Also translated into English as No
Way Back)
Set in Holstein about thirty years before its date of
publication when the area still belonged to Denmark, Irretrievable tells
the story of a mismatched couple who have been married for 23 years—Count
Helmuth Holk is fun loving; his wife Christine is solemn. The two slowly drift
apart, a movement exacerbated when the Count is called away to the court. As
the copy of one of two recent editions into English puts it, the couple “find
themselves in a situation which is nothing they ever wished for but from which
they cannot go back.”
Benito Pérez Galdós—Tristana
(1892)
Don Lope pays off a friend’s debts, at the same time
assuming responsibility for the friend’s orphaned daughter, Tristana. He takes
her into his home—and into his bed. Tristana accepts the arrangement willingly
enough, at least until she meets a handsome young painter. Soon she surpasses
the Don in defiance of convention.
Ivan Turgenev—Home of
the Gentry (1859)
“Another’s heart is like a dark forest,” we learn in this
novel about a man named Lavretsky who returns to his native Russia after his
marriage falls to pieces in Europe. Unsure what to do with himself, Lavretsky
visits the estate of his widowed cousin and her two small children. Regret,
indecision, and, as the passage about the wilderness of the heart suggests,
heartbreak ensue.
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