I intend to re-read Don Quixote, I started it in mid high school and exams took over and I never got back to it. As I never finished it, I don't count it as an actual re-read lolThe first I read was the Starkie translation. When I decided to re-read it, I started with Starkie (still had it on my bookshelf) but after about 70 pages switched to the Grossman translation. They're both good but I preferred the latter.
Can you recommend a translation? Originally Posted by Lauren Summerhill
Not a book, but a poem -+1. I've always loved that poem.
I read Coleridge's Kubla Khan or A Vision in a Dream when I was 14 and still very innocent I re-read it as a ahem mature 20-year and saw all these symbolisms that i missed the first time around. At 14, I had no clue that the fountain and the caves could have meant anything other than the fountain and the caves. And who knew the sunny pleasure dome was referring to the olympic stadium? Originally Posted by Lovely Victoria
Ansley - I LOVE A Man in Full...its really weird; Tom Wolfe came up this weekend and I couldn't remember the name of that book that I loved by him and that's the one I was thinking of! Originally Posted by SydneybI'm so stealing Lauren's words...
Another Cormac McCarthy example of a movie capturing the book is the Coen brothers No Country for Old Men. They almost filmed the book. It didn't look like they did a screenplay.
Like you, I don't re-read books. And nearly every time I see a movie of a book I have read, I am disappointed in the movie.
Originally Posted by charlestudor2005
I think that The Guns of August is one of, if not THE, best history book ever written. It's certainly one of my favorites. In addition to being a real page-turner, it teaches (among many other things) one of the most important lessons of history -- that people are always fighting the last war.
A book I had not read, but in another thread on this board, was reported to be one of the best books read by the various readers that reviewed it, was Barbara Tuchman's The Guns of August. That's the book I chose to download to my Kindle. Originally Posted by charlestudor2005