Hi clubbers!! We’re excited to be posting our May meme question for the club!
Here’s the question this month, contributed by Vikk Simmons, who joined us in May 2012:
Which classic work has caused you to become a master in avoidance? It’s not necessarily because you’re intimidated but maybe there are works out there that just cause you to have the Dracula reaction: cape-covered arm up in front of face with a step back reaction?
Feel free to answer over at your blog any time in May, and leave the link to your post in the comments below.
Remember to check out this page for details or to share suggestions for future meme questions! And then check out one another’s posts!
Twitter hashtag: #ccmeme
I answered referring just to the books on my Classics Club list – there are others I’m avoiding – Ulysses for example.
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I haven’t been reading classic classics lately, so I answered the question from the deep well of sci fi classics, if anyone is interested to hear about that: http://www.bookpunks.com/duned/
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Here’s my answer: http://thebookwormchronicles.wordpress.com/2014/05/19/the-classics-club-may-meme/
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Here’s mine! http://howlingfrog.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-classics-club-question-for-may-is.html
Ulysses. And Clarissa.
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Although I was a French major (as well as an English major), I have never read Marcel Proust. I am completely intimidated by “Remembrance of Things Past.” The English translation is well over 4000 pages. Has anybody read it?
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I admit it. It’s personal: http://greatbookstudy.blogspot.com/2014/05/classic-club-meme-question-22.html
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The Illiad and the Odyssey
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Henry James with Turn of the Screw. I had to read it in university and I nearly went crazy. The book just did not get to the point which was the point. Since then I am turned off of ghost stories from Victorian era.
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Ooh. That is unfortunate, Danielle. Henry James wouldn’t be the place to start on Victorian ghost stories (or the place to end either, in my opinion). Edith Wharton loved and feared ghost stories and wrote some good ones. M.R. James is the classic Victorian short ghost story writer. I haven’t read Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman yet, but she’s on my list.
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Oooh wow, I can barely imagine! So funny how they work for some and not for others. I must have read that six times. All for uni, but still, I liked it quite a bit.
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