Suggestions please
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 7963
- Joined: Sun Dec 07, 2008 4:53 pm
- antispam: no
- Location: this hill-shadowed city/of razors and knives.
- Contact:
Try Gutenberg. Full of old books you can download for free.
Rosencrantz: What are you playing at? Guildenstern: Words. Words. They're all we have to go on.
___________________________
Antiphon - www.antiphon.org.uk
___________________________
Antiphon - www.antiphon.org.uk
-
- Preponderant Poster
- Posts: 1232
- Joined: Sun Apr 17, 2011 11:27 pm
- Location: Kosmos
Hi there, k-j - a recommendation for you:
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Die Wahlverwandtschaften publ. 1809; English translation Elective Affinities publ. 1854.
Good luck.
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe: Die Wahlverwandtschaften publ. 1809; English translation Elective Affinities publ. 1854.
Good luck.
Everything looks better by candlelight.
Everything sounds more plausible on the shortwave.
Everything sounds more plausible on the shortwave.
Thanks Jane
I've been sort of curious about that one for a while. I've heard good things and awful things about it.
I hated Young Werther but have been loving the Faust I've been dipping into in the original.
I've been sort of curious about that one for a while. I've heard good things and awful things about it.
I hated Young Werther but have been loving the Faust I've been dipping into in the original.
fine words butter no parsnips
I think you've read Lovecraft, k-j, if I remember rightly?
Have you read Robert W. Chambers? He was a big influence on HPL. The first four stories in this are excellent and I'm sure you'll recognise some names in there.
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8492/8492-h/8492-h.htm
Have you read Robert W. Chambers? He was a big influence on HPL. The first four stories in this are excellent and I'm sure you'll recognise some names in there.
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/8492/8492-h/8492-h.htm
I was going to say Don Quixote, but something told me you'd read it ... so I found this - viewtopic.php?f=11&t=5868&p=40841&hilit ... tes#p40841
Great list. Turgenev's Bezhin Lea is one of those things I will never get out of my mind.
So ... did you ever get around to The Pickwick Papers? Dicckens does the picaresque, and Positively (so far as I remember) No Pathetic Orphans.
Great list. Turgenev's Bezhin Lea is one of those things I will never get out of my mind.
So ... did you ever get around to The Pickwick Papers? Dicckens does the picaresque, and Positively (so far as I remember) No Pathetic Orphans.
Thanks Nash, that looks great. Will download as soon as I get home from this trip.
David, yes I read Pickwick some years ago. It's good, quite funny in places and of course picaresque and blessedly free of sniveling urchins, but I think I might take a longish break from Dickens now having read Hard Times and Our Mutual Friend in the last year.
David, yes I read Pickwick some years ago. It's good, quite funny in places and of course picaresque and blessedly free of sniveling urchins, but I think I might take a longish break from Dickens now having read Hard Times and Our Mutual Friend in the last year.
fine words butter no parsnips
-
- Posts: 4
- Joined: Mon Apr 18, 2016 6:13 am
Many ebook sellers are there just search with the book name you will get a lots of sellers