For this year's 2022 Back to the Classics Challenge I didn't make it to all 12 categories. So here is a recap of the 9 classics I did read:
Choose a 19th Century Classic: Frankenstein by Mary Shelley - My favorite book from this year's classic's challenge. A wonderfully written gothic masterpiece. It's also a novel of ideas in which the author takes on the 18th Century Age of Enlightment and Scientific Progress by creating a doctor, Victor Frankenstein, who decides he can create the perfect man with tragic results.
Choose a 20th Century Classic: Rebecca by Daphne DuMaurier - The writing was excellent but I did not care for the heroine, the second Mrs. DeWinter. Beneath her timidity and shyness I found her to be snobby in many ways, inwardly cringing at those she considers forward and low class. Where Mrs DeWinter's judgment fails her is with her husband Maxim DeWinter. Once he reveals his secret she is more okay with it then she should have been in my opinion.
Classic by a Woman Author: Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen - No book will equal Pride and Prejudice for me but Sense and Sensibility I really enjoyed. Persuasion is probably the better book but I was somewhat bored. Next year on to Emma!
Choose a Classic Mystery or Crime Novel: Laura by Vera Caspary - A classic crime noir novel from the 1940's. I enjoyed it and it's rare to find a mid-twentieth century crime noir novel written by a woman.
Choose a Classic Written before 1800: Coquette by Hannah Webster Foster - One of the earliest American novels to be published and based loosely on a true story. It's interesting from a historical perspective.
Choose a Classic from a Place You Would Like to Visit: Breakfast at Tiffany's by Truman Capote - People who have seen the film and Audrey Hepburn's charming and quirky performance as Holly Golightly are going to be suprised by Truman Capote's book. The Holly in the novel has a much harder edge than the screen version and of the two I prefer the screen version.
Choose a Classic Short Story Collection: Hungry Hearts by Anzia Yezierska - Published in 1920 Hungry Hearts is a collection of short stories set on the Lower East Side of NYC in the early 1900's focusing on immigrant Jewish American women and girls trying to build a better life despite the sweatshops, poverty and heartbreak. It's a moving collection of stories about how though the dreams one started out with may not match the reality, with hope and determination, new dreams are possible.
Choose a Non-Fiction Classic: Walking by Henry David Thoreau - I have been meaning to read Thoreau for years and Walking is a very short book about walking, the natural world and humanity's place in it. It's a good introduction to Thoreau although the classic he is known for is Walden.
Choose a Wild Card Classic: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning by Alan Sillitoe - Published 1958, the year I was born, a classic of mid-twentieth century British fiction. This novel was one of the most prominent works to come out of the Angry Young Man movement dealing with the lives of the working class in Britain in the years after World War II. This novel is realistic, gritty, very disturbing in certain parts but also the writing is first rate.
If Karen at Books and Choclate decides to host the Classics Challenge next year I'm up for it. I owe this challenge so much because most of the classics I have read since taking the challenge 5 years ago I would probably never have gotten around to reading.
Congrats on reading nine classics this year! You read some really good ones. I know I always enjoy reading your posts. :D
ReplyDeleteThanks Lark, and I always enjoy reading your posts too and I have a copy of Sundown Motel by Simone St James which you reviewed and I will be reading next year. The cover alone is so striking. Hope you have a great Christmas and all the best for the New Year!
DeleteYou did a great job with this challenge. I have never done well at it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Tracy and I think whether we read all 12 books on the list or 5 or two, the important thing is we read a few great books. I do hope Karen hosts the challenge again but it is alot of work but I thank her for hosting it all these years. I would never have read these Classics without the challenge
DeleteCongrats on getting 9 classics read for the challenge. I am still working at my list, up to the 11th hour. I totally agree about Breakfast at Tiffany's, which disappointed me not so much because of the differences from the movie but because it felt so dated. I really expected the writing to be stronger. Frankenstein is truly an incredible work, groundbreaking and insightful in a very scary way. I loved Rebecca the first 4-5 times I read it, but I sort of don't feel the need to reread it again. I agree--the heroine is not nearly as interesting as the first Mrs. DeWinter.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jane and I hadn't thought about it but I agree the writing in Breakfast at Tiffany's was okay but I wasn't wowed. The classics can suprise us. Sometimes we are blown away by novels like Frankenstein but then other classics, not so much.
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