It’s been
two months since I started The Classics Club Project, hosted by Jillian, of
which I’m proudly announce that I have read six of 100 books from the list, and
right now am in the middle of the seventh. Yayyy!!
On March, 8th
I posted my original list of 100 classics for five years reading. However on
the progress, I can’t help to—somehow—add more and more books to the original
list. The expanded list has now reached thirteen. At this moment I won’t change
the original list yet, and will just add any books I find interesting to the
expanded list time to time. When the expanded list should reach 50, then I will
update the original list. So far, this is my progress report:
March
The first
book I read after joining the project was L’Assommoir (The Drunkard) by Emile
Zola. I spent two whole weeks to finish it, and that’s why I only read one book
that month. L’Assommoir has been shockingly affected me, that I could not turn
into any other classics for sometime. I only grabbed some light readings until
April came…
April
The second
book for the project was The Great Gatsby. Although it’s only 200 something
pages, I really enjoyed it that it took me a week or so to finish it. I often
re-read a paragraph that I didn’t quite get the meaning or I just loved the
scene. Overall, The Great Gatsby has been the most enjoyable reading for the
project so far.
After that I
read A Midsummer Night’s Dream of Shakespeare, which—I must confess—I didn’t
quite enjoy. It’s been the first Shakespeare I read, and I have mistakenly picked
the comedy one while I know I never quite fond of comedy or satire.
End of April
I went into Alexandre Dumas’ The Man In The Iron Mask. Despite so many obstacles to read it, I found the book quite enjoyable.
May
This month I
managed to finish two more books: Nobody’s Boy by Hector Malot and The Adventures
of Sherlock Holmes. Actually I have expected quite much from Nobody’s Boy, I
thought it would be quite emotionally, however I’m quite disappointed that
Malot seemed to write it for children or pre-teen. The story is good, but I
cannot deeply moved by it.
I have a
personal habit of posting my classics book review on the birthday of the
author. It’s like my personal gift for those great authors. For May, I read TheAdventures of Sherlock Holmes for an event I have hosted together with Melisa
for Indonesian classics reading community (Baca Klasik). And as Arthur Conan
Doyle’s birthday is on 22 May, I will post my review only on that date,
although I have finished the book last week.
Right now I
am in the middle of The Color Purple, participating in the readalong hosted by Bettina.
As the readalong will end on May 31st, I will surely finish this
book by this month. So far I like it, not as shockingly as L’Assommoir perhaps,
but very touching.
Well, that’s
it. Six books for two months, and if I can keep up the pace, I’ll finish my 100
books list by three years! That’s why an expanded list seems reasonable, no?
Yes, I'm having trouble keeping my list to 50, and an expanded, or auxiliary list seems like a good idea!
ReplyDeleteI'm just wondering, how many our expanded list would be after 5 years?...
DeleteGoodluck on the "The Classics Club Project"-nya.
ReplyDeleteAku tunggu ulasan lengkap The Color Purple :D
Thanks Oky, The Color Purple akan terbit 31 Mei 2012!
Delete100 buku dalam 5 tahun dan harus baca versi Bahasa Inggris-nya ya? enaknya ikut gak ya??? :P
ReplyDeleteTidak harus baca versi Inggrisnya kok, aku juga ada terjemahan di list-ku. Dan jumlahnya tidak harus 100, coba cek di blognya Jillian (hostnya) deh untuk lebih jelasnya.. Moga2 kamu juga bisa ikutan, dari Indonesia udah ada 5 orang peserta lho!
DeleteGreat progress, Fanda! :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks Jill! And thanks also (a lot) for creating such awesome project!
DeleteNicely done! I've read one full book and two halves. I've got to get down to some serious reading!
ReplyDeleteWe must thank Jillian for this project! At least for me, it gives me motivation to get more serious to read classics
Delete