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Jamelah Reads The Classics

Jamelah Reads the Classics: Ulysses

by Jamelah Earle on Friday, January 30, 2009 02:23 am
Reading

It took me a little over a year of stops and starts and deliberately reading other books that were not written by James Joyce, but I have finished Ulysses. And now, what to say? This is one of those books, you know? You either have read it or will read it or you have no interest in reading it or you’ll read ten (or 90 or 500) pages and think whythefuck and move on with your life. Whatever works for you, really.

... read more and add your thoughts (26 comments)



Jamelah Reads the Classics: Ulysses, Part 2

by Jamelah Earle on Friday, February 8, 2008 11:57 am
Classics, Modernism
Progress: pathetic and sad.

Since the last time I wrote about my experience reading this book, I've been busy. I got distracted by... things. And my reading time ended up falling by the wayside, which means that when I finally got un-distracted and picked the book back up, I had pretty much forgotten everything I'd read. I mean, I know what I read, but I lost the rhythm of it.

In short, I'm starting over.
... read more and add your thoughts (10 comments)



Jamelah Reads the Classics: Ulysses, Part 1

by Jamelah Earle on Thursday, January 3, 2008 11:00 pm
Modernism
Technically, I'm supposed to be reading The Good Earth right now, at least if I were going in order with my list of classics, but I started out of order by reading The Maltese Falcon first, so I guess when it comes to chronology, all bets are off this time around.
... read more and add your thoughts (15 comments)



Jamelah Reads the Classics: To the Lighthouse

by Jamelah Earle on Friday, December 14, 2007 01:59 am
I've been having a hard time starting this post because I'm not really sure what to write about this book. Not because I didn't like it; on the contrary, I liked it quite a lot. Which is the problem. I liked it so much that I sort of feel that anything I write will be kind of pointless in comparison. But I'll try anyway. So. To the Lighthouse is about the Ramsay family (and assorted friends, acquaintances and guests) staying at a summer home in Scotland. Premise-wise, it doesn't sound very interesting, and on the surface, perhaps it isn't.
... read more and add your thoughts (6 comments)



Jamelah Reads the Classics: The Maltese Falcon

by Jamelah Earle on Thursday, October 4, 2007 01:33 pm
Classics, Fiction, Jazz Age, Mystery
Note: For the first time in the entire two-something-year history of Jamelah Reads the Classics, I am reading books out of order. According to my list, I should've kicked things off with To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf, but I'm not because I recently finished this one and I want to write about it right now. So I have to save Virginia Woolf for next time. If any are necessary, you have my apologies.
... read more and add your thoughts (4 comments)



Jamelah Reads the Classics: 20th Century Edition

by Jamelah Earle on Thursday, September 20, 2007 09:00 pm
Classics
One of the reasons I started my occasional series, Jamelah Reads the Classics, is because there are all these books in the world that I want to read -- I keep a running list in my head, appropriately titled Books I Want to Read Before I Die -- and it is very long. So long, in fact, that I know I will never get all the way through it before I inevitably stop breathing, even if I happen to live for a very very long time, which I probably won't because I have a thing for bad habits.
... read more and add your thoughts (24 comments)



Jamelah Reads The Classics: Agnes Grey

by Jamelah Earle on Wednesday, August 22, 2007 05:47 pm
British, Classics
I bet you were wondering when I was going to get around to part two of my official Brontepalooza, weren't you? Well, I assure you that I did not forget about the work of Anne Bronte, but I was kinda distracted with this language thing, you understand. Anyway, I am back with the reading things by people who have been dead awhile, so down to business we go. Jamelah Reads The Classics: Brontepalooza Part 2: Agnes Grey.
... read more and add your thoughts (2 comments)



Jamelah Reads The Classics: Wuthering Heights

by Jamelah Earle on Wednesday, May 9, 2007 07:45 pm
British, Classics, Fiction
Just because it's review week, it doesn't mean that all those reviews have to be of contemporary work. Right? Right. So, I figured I'd jump in with a 19th century Gothic novel, because that seems fitting. So, let's do this: Jamelah Reads the Classics: Brontepalooza Part 1: Wuthering Heights.
... read more and add your thoughts (9 comments)



Jamelah Reads the Classics: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

by Jamelah Earle on Wednesday, January 31, 2007 05:58 pm
Classics, Women
In case you were wondering, yes, I am still reading the classics. It's my calling. And Mary Wollstonecraft's polemic A Vindication of the Rights of Woman was next on my list, so here we are.
... read more and add your thoughts (1 comment)



Jamelah Reads The Classics: Oroonoko

by Jamelah Earle on Wednesday, November 8, 2006 09:29 pm
Africa, Classics
Aphra Behn's Oroonoko: or, The Royal Slave was originally published in 1688, and is one of the first novels in English. It tells the tale of Oroonoko (an African prince) and his love for Imoinda, before and after the two are sold into slavery in Suriname. The novel's story is told by a first-person narrator who listens to Oroonoko's story and writes it. After becoming a slave in Suriname, Oroonoko impresses the hell out of everyone because he's just so regal.
... read more and add your thoughts (2 comments)



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