INCOMPLETE
Sarah at Sarah Reads Too Much is hosting the Back to the Classics Challenge again this year and this time around, I am signing up. Click on the button or the above link to go to the main challenge post for details and to sign up.
The idea is to read a "classic" from each of the following nine categories:
- Any 19th Century classic
- Any 20th Century classic
- Reread a classic of your choice
- A classic play
- A classic mystery/horror/crime fiction
- A classic romance
- A classic that has been translated from its original language to your language
- A classic award winner
- A classic set in a country that you (realistically speaking) will not visit during your lifetime -- countries that no longer exist or have never existed count.
INCOMPLETE
I am going to do the Back to the Classics Challenge in combination with Katherine's 2012 A Classics Challenge at November's Autumn.
A Classics Challenge will be very fun because it has a blog hop spin. Katherine will post a "prompt" on the 4th of each month, inviting posts related to the classic books participants are reading at the time. The goal is to read seven "classics" and participate in at least three monthly prompts.
MY BOOKS AND REVIEWS
I am going to pick nine books now, one for each of Sarah's categories. These may change as I go along. As with all my challenges, I am going to try to read books that are currently on my TBR shelf. Although, in this case, I include my virtual TBR shelf -- the audiobooks that have been on my iPod for a long, long time.
Once I've read the book, it is in red and includes a link to my review.
- The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain (19th Century; reviewed here)
- Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy by John le Carré's (20th Century; reviewed here)
- The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson (re-read; reviewed here)
- A Doll's House by Henrik Ibsen or She Stoops to Conquer by Oliver Goldsmith (play)
- Doctor Zhivago by Boris Pasternak (romance; reviewed here)
- Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset (translation)
- A Bell for Adano by John Hersey (award winner -- Pulitzer; reviewed here)
- Quo Vadis by Henryk Sienkiewicz (unvisited country -- Roman Empire)
NOTES
Last updated December 26, 2012. I have to throw in the towel on these two. I clobbered a couple of good ones for the Back to the Classics, but did a horrible job with the Classics prompt format.
I don't sign up for challenges because it makes reading a chore for me. However, I have set a goal of reading more classics this year since I enjoyed Jane Eyre so much last year. I have my eye on Wuthering Heights at the moment. Good luck on your classics challenges and Happy New Year.
ReplyDeleteBarbara: Have fun with Wuthering Heights! I am going challenge mad for 2012. They appeal to me more this year than others, for some reason.
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