Who wants to read Les Misérables with me? The movie musical is coming out in December and we must be ready! :excited:
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Who wants to read Les Misérables with me? The movie musical is coming out in December and we must be ready! :excited:
I'm in! (shh I've already read it)
Oooh, I definitely should read The Hobbit again.
I would read the Hobbit with you guys. I'd read the hell out of it!
I say a book a month and I say I am down.
Ok September is almost over so Les Miserables can be our October book. It's public domain now so you can download it for free via Project Gutenberg if you want a digital version.
The Hobbit should literally take everyone like 1 week max to finish so that would be good for December since most people will be busy during that time I think.
Make a version for new (ish?) books and I'd be interested, but I tend to do the classics in spurts where I read nothing else for a while and then stop for three to five years.
I vote 1984 for November!
Newly published:
The Rook by Daniel O'Malley, published this year
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline, published late last year
Redshirts: A Novel With Three Codas by John Scalzi, published this year
Year Zero by Rob Reid, published this year.
Older, but written by authors who are still alive
Lord Valentine's Castle by Robert Silverberg (which says it was published this year, but that is a filthy stinking lie, I'm sure I read it before the turn of the century)
Old Man's War by John Scalzi
John Dies At The End by David Wong (of cracked.com)
Wolf Of The Plains by Conn Iggulden
Windshifter by Pike
Still, what would draw me to such a club isn't reading my own suggestions, but discovering new books the way I did with God Hates Books when GHF was still around. GHB introduced me to Anathem, Joe Abercrombie's books, and The Lies of Locke Lamora, all of which were great.
I hated with an absolute passion Ready Player One. It's one of the worst books I've read in awhile and yet somehow, adored by the masses and by critics. I can't even with that book.
But yes, I do agree that one of the best parts of a book club is getting suggestions. I lurk through a bunch of book club blogs/groups just to get suggestions for new books.
We can gather up all the suggestions and then make a poll to vote on the November book.
Has anyone read The Thirteenth Tale?
I read it a few years ago. I remember it being good, but it's very Bronte-esque and I've never been a huge fan of the Bronte sisters.
If the hobbit is read I will join as I've been meaning to read that.