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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) The Greatest Novel (Read 26885 times)
Markovich
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #12 - 11/08/11 at 08:50:59
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I join in the opinion that The Lord of the Rings isn't a novel; for one thing there is no character development. But this work does seem to have a strong hold on many people's imaginations.

Yet I don't understand why. I started reading it snd became increasingly bored on the one hand, and on the other irritated by the continual modifications Tolkien kept making to the magical rules supposedly governing his imaginary world. The precise point at which I put it down, never to pick it up again, was where the pilgrims visit Giladriel (spelling?) and benefit from her heretofore untold powers. Frankly I was disgusted.

More critically, the evil that it conjures is a cartoon of evil; unlike in great works that consider evil, the evil here has no complexity and no association with ourselves. It is utterly unsympathetic. It's a stand-in for something that Tolkien believes to be evil; well big deal.

I do think that The Hobbit is a novel, and a pretty good one, though one not deserving of mention here. Bilbo's character develops during the story, for one thing.

As far as fantasies go, I think that Dune rates very highly, more than anything Tolkien ever wrote, in my opinion.
I'd call it a novel, as well.
  

The Great Oz has spoken!
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Stigma
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #11 - 11/08/11 at 07:18:21
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My favorite novel at the moment is Nick Hornby: About a Boy.

Before you shoot me, I actually made a decision to read more serious novels a couple of years ago. Got through Auster's New York Trilogy, Camus: The Plague, Golding: Lord of the Flies, Dostoevsky: The Gambler and Saramago: All the Names before I realized I was boring myself to death and stopped  Embarrassed Is there any certified Great LiteratureTM out there with enough humour and/or suspense for me to read without falling asleep?
  

Improvement begins at the edge of your comfort zone. -Jonathan Rowson
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Smyslov_Fan
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #10 - 11/08/11 at 06:36:32
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I was thinking of Crime and Punishment. Ulysses is usually mentioned pretty early on in these discussions too. 

But I'm going to have to think about it some more.
  
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MNb
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #9 - 11/08/11 at 01:06:50
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IMJohnCox wrote on 11/08/11 at 00:08:28:
I don't think I'd call fantasy a novel, more a genre of its own.

Do you imply that "novel" is also a genre? Not that I would ever nominate fantasy stuff as the Greatest Novel ever, even if I sometimes enjoy it quite a lot.
  

The book had the effect good books usually have: it made the stupids more stupid, the intelligent more intelligent and the other thousands of readers remained unchanged.
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Wwqlcw
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #8 - 11/08/11 at 00:57:32
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GMTonyKosten wrote on 11/07/11 at 15:34:31:
Wwqlcw wrote on 11/07/11 at 15:08:33:
The Master and Margarita.

Loved the first half of the book, hated the second half! Was it really all written by the same person?!


What translation did you read (or did you read it in Russian?  It's a sufficient reason to learn...).  Anyone other than Mirra Ginsburg does a horrible job.  If Michael Glenny, I can see why you hate it.  Ginsburg may not have been working from the canonical text, but she translates it as sheer poetry.
  
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IMJohnCox
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #7 - 11/08/11 at 00:08:28
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I would go for Anna Karenina, which I also suspect would be the winner of a global poll, certainly if one allowed for a bit of time weighting. It made me wonder why anyone else bothered writing novels when I read it, and I haven't changed my feeling.

Is Lord of the Rings a 'novel', exactly? I don't think I'd call fantasy a novel, more a genre of its own.
  
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MNb
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #6 - 11/07/11 at 23:04:58
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Willempie wrote on 11/07/11 at 22:11:24:
Eco: The name of the rose

Now that one was a disappointer, just like the Fouceauld thing.

I hesitated between Karakter and Bint.
  

The book had the effect good books usually have: it made the stupids more stupid, the intelligent more intelligent and the other thousands of readers remained unchanged.
GC Lichtenberg
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Willempie
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #5 - 11/07/11 at 22:11:24
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Lord of the rings.
Runner up's: 
Oberski: Kinderjaren (Child years), one of the best Dutch books and of the very few I actually enjoyed. I dont know if it is translated in other languages, but if so I'd recommend it to everyone.
Eco: The name of the rose
Chang: Wild swans of China

Others will come to mind later.

Btw Mnb I liked Bordewijks Bint better.
  

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MNb
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #4 - 11/07/11 at 16:08:21
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http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meneer_Visser's_hellevaart

I am totally in love with the monologue interieur on the toilet scene.

Number 2:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Avonden

Number 3:

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karakter_(boek)
  

The book had the effect good books usually have: it made the stupids more stupid, the intelligent more intelligent and the other thousands of readers remained unchanged.
GC Lichtenberg
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GMTonyKosten
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #3 - 11/07/11 at 15:34:31
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Wwqlcw wrote on 11/07/11 at 15:08:33:
The Master and Margarita.

Loved the first half of the book, hated the second half! Was it really all written by the same person?!
  
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Wwqlcw
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #2 - 11/07/11 at 15:08:33
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The Master and Margarita.
  
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Laramonet
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Re: The Greatest Novel
Reply #1 - 11/07/11 at 12:51:07
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For me, The Lord of the Rings. I'm sure some other candidates will come to me but that's my choice.
  
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Markovich
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The Greatest Novel
11/07/11 at 05:36:08
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Nominate here the greatest novel ever written. 

I say, Moby Dick.
  

The Great Oz has spoken!
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