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Showing posts with label Classic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classic. Show all posts

Thursday, January 11, 2024

Crime & Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsk

Crime & Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsk

  1. Nothing in the world is harder than speaking the truth and nothing easier than flattery.

  2. Let my life go, if only my dear ones may be happy!

Crime & Punishment Ebook|83x125 Fyodor Dostoevsk|83x125 Crime & Punishment audiobook image|125x125 Alan Munro|125x125

My thoughts on Review spoilers, and ratings may be relevant before you venture below--- the spoiler line ---. Click the [Back] button there to return here if you take a look. Review 675± words.

Rating : 4/5 rating

Recommend this classic work of literature. Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov “Rodya,”aka “Rodka” is our protagonist. He's ill throughout most of the novel. The book is primarily about his inner conflict. We come in, he has dropped out of college. You don't know until later but he has had Napoleon on the brain. He developed some ideas about ordinary & extraordinary folks. While still in college he publishes a theory on the topic. Later in the novel this becomes somewhat relevant. When we encounter him, he appears odd. Before long you can assume he's crazy. But is he? Because often he seems entirely rational. This becomes a theme in the book

Dostoyevsky examines a whole host of psychological ideas in this novel. Primarily expressed by our antagonist of sorts, police inspector Porfiry Petrovich, and our protagonist Raskolnikov.

While the story is a bit slow, the ideas can be rather thought provoking.

I learned long ago that classics are simply worth reading. 'Who's list of classics' can make the "all classics are worth it" a challenge.

And now, I've done my job. I recommended the book, told you generally what it is about. If you haven't heard of the novel, maybe pick up a comic book. When's the new season of Sponge Bob?

I had always heard of Fyodor Dostoyevsky & Tolstoy. This Crime & Punishment read is, for me, directly related to Jordan Peterson. It makes sense he would really like this book. After he had mentioned it in a dozen videos, I thought, "This is on his mind a lot." I decided to read it.

Turns out, it is rather deep, "psychologically" and a lot of it makes more sense than any modern day psychological association's general philosophies.

Generally : ----- Spoiler Line -----
Raskolnikov is struggling over whether to kill the local pawnbroker. He's essentially planned it and believing himself extraordinary, thinks he can get away with it. Why he wants to kill her... Perhaps that's much of what the novel is about.

Of Note :
It seemed to me, the most interesting bits of the novel centered on the antagonists, primarily Porfiry Petrovich, but the whole host of characters and why Dostoyevsky has them in this novel helps him flesh out the plot lines and manages to keep it interesting enough.

Likes / Dislikes :
I liked it when we would encounter long tirades by folks like Petrovich. Razumikhin's chattering can be rather amusing also, much like the ranting io Dox Quixote at places. Alan Munro did the reading for me, and he was absolutely brilliant. I stopped to read the book at points wondering if the dialogue was actually written as Mr. Munro was reading it.

My dislikes are petty. Even childish. I was moaning and groaning because I'm not Russian. The characters were not Bob, Ed, Cathy, John. Rather Dmitri Prokofych Razumikhin, Porfiry Petrovich, Ilya Petrovich (unrelated to, I think) Katerina Ivanovna Marmeladov, Pulcheria Alexandrovna Raskolnikov, Andrei Semyonovich Lebezyatnikov, Alyona Ivanovna. Believe it or not, culture is important. Trust me. I've lived in a foreign country for years then moved to another country. They call it "Culture Shock". You can get it from books as well.

The Technical : Critique Info
This is a classic for a number of very good reasons. What comes to mind in a "it's like" thought is War & Peace, 1984, When the Sleeper Wakes, even The Thing From the Lake, although 'why' is mysterious even to me. These are just books that pop into my mind when thinking, "This is like". Perhaps I'm thinking 'mood'?

Conclusion :
It's a classic, can keep you interested throughout, and is thought provoking. Read it.

My oldest brother Bob, who died too young, was going to get himself another college degree by reading. There was some program, if you read this certain list of "Classics" the place would give you a degree in, I forget, but I always thought it likely a very good education if you only sat down and read 100-200 books much like this one.

 

Read on: January 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 10, 2024
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✒ Written by: Fyodor Dostoevsk
🗣 Read by: Alan Munro
🔊 Format: Digital Audiobook & Ebook
🕑 Run Time: 20:43:00
📚 Length: 516 pages (Varies by edition)

Saturday, June 27, 2020

The Left Hand of Darkness

By Ursula K. Le Guine

Read in 3 session on June 20, 25, & 27, 2020. Recommended.  4.5 stars rounded down.

Charlie Jane Anders’ Afterword comments on the Left Hand of Darkness immediately brings to my mind, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift.

The one thing I remember so vividly about Gulliver’s Travels is that in addition to it being a travelogue, it was even more a handbook on Governments and political etiquette. 

In so many ways, The Left Hand of Darkness is Gulliver’s Travels... aka "Genly’s Travels."

I think many folks were moved by Le Guin’s “Abisexual” alien humans.  It might have impacted me more had I not been so impacted by Octavia Butler’s “Dawn” decades ago.  That book literally haunted me for decades.  Still does. 

Saturday, July 20, 2019

The Count of Monte Cristo

Count

The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas


My rating: 5 of 5 stars


Links may lead to spoilers



The story of The Count of Monte Cristo is a marvelous adventure that likely rates with Homer's epic poem the Odyssey. Edmond Dantès is Dumas's protagonist. There are a number of antagonists and contagonists. Indeed, the number of significant characters in this volume challenges my ever more feeble memory.

Dantes is a young and talented sailor, but ignorant of politics. His primary concern is his aged father and his soon to be fiance, Mercedes. Nothing is of much importance to him beyond father, fiance, and perhaps the possibility that M. Morrel may promote him to Captain of the Pharaon, which would greatly enhance his future prospects for providing for his father and future wife. Unfortunately young is often naive. Additionally, happiness and success too often produce enemies unknown. Such as Dangler's, the supercargo on the ship Pharaon, which Dante's sails home to Marseilles after her Captain Leclere unexpectedly dies on their voyage to Smyrna, Trieste, and Naples.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Frankenstein

Frankenstein

Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley


My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I loved it and HIGHLY recommend Frankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. Don't wait 65 years to read it, it is surely better than near anything you might read this year. Try Frankenstein instead.

This review is of Frankenstein (Amazon Classics Edition) ebook ($2.99) and companion Whispersync Audiobook ($1.99) narrated by Nico Evers-Swindell, who I hope to comment on later.

I believe the book is a classic in the same class as Robinson Crusoe, and Gulliver's Travels, both books with deep and significant examinations of human behaviors, emotions, ethics, and morals. Frankenstein in the same vein examines the darker side of human ethics, compassion, morality, and our responsibilities to our society and neighbors.

My impression upon completing the novel is that nothing in my experience related to "Frankenstein" had prepared me for what is actually written in the book. After writing 2500 words of draft review, and revisiting several sections of the book I realize I may not have been giving it my full attention at all times. I was regularly surprised at the directions the story took and was gobsmacked when the "dæmond" demanded an audience with Victor Frankenstein, and with the content.

Friday, April 19, 2019

Emma

EmmaEmma by Jane Austen

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I believe this novel, Emma, by Jane Austen rates 3 stars but still recommend I as a 5 star classic. I might have given it 4 stars if I hadn't thought more than once to abandon it entirely. My frustration isn't entirely an issue with the book. I was trying to listen to the book while doing other things.

I'm reviewing two versions of the audiobook and the ebook by Feedbooks. Volume 1 of this 3 volume book I primarily listened to the audiobook read by Juliet Stevenson. Ms. Stevenson is a fine narrator but the speed of her reading and my unfamiliarity of Jane Austen's style, verbiage, and vocabulary of the era, along with a large Dramatis personæ with regularly changing names via marriage or adoption left me feeling lost and confused. Such was my first 5½ hours with the audiobook.

I obtained another copy of the audiobook read by a full cast of the "online stage". I don't generally like dramatic readings of books but it was an unabridged edition and I thought I'd try it since I was struggling with Ms. Stevenson's reading. My next 10 hours and two volumes was more pleasant. I didn't struggle so much with the dialog with different artists reading the dialog, which is a largest portion of the novel.

Friday, March 29, 2019

Gulliver's Travels


Gulliver's TravelsGulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift


My rating: 4 of 5 stars

3.5 stars yet highly recommended. This book is so much more than what I remember reading as a child.

I would still say children may enjoy Gulliver's adventures with Gulliver as a giant man among the tiny people of Lilliput. Children won't help but smile imaging Gulliver as a very tiny human stranded in a land full of giants and fighting off mice who might devour him. These vivid images have been the delight of children for at least a dozen decades.

Then again, Gulliver's Travels is very clearly a book for grown-ups. It probably should be mandatory reading before graduation of high school or college.

I've considered how I might best review this book. I believe the best would be to aim you at a great review with which I wholeheartedly agree. So in that line, here's a really great review by "Stephen" at Goodreads.

Secondly I thought I should review "by example or illustration". I selected Part 3, Chapter 6, [A further account of the academy. The author proposes some improvements, which are honourably received.]

Sunday, March 10, 2019

Public Folder our path for Reading Classics

Our Reading Classic Program & Original HTML Reviews

Sagely Fox has an alternate 'private' site where you may:

The original purpose for this 'private' site was to store our 'Free Reading Classics Program' E-books and Audiobooks! But it has become slightly more over time.

The Reading Classics Program

There you can download epub e-books and audiobooks, usually the audio in zipped files containing the book's mp3 files. Some links are simply to where you may access the e-book and/or audiobook online for yourself. There are two ways to access The Reading Classics Program. You may either scroll down to the list of available downloads on the 'private' Index/Public Files page or you may click on The Reading Classics Program heading at the top of the Index/Public Files page to directly access the directories.

You're free to download any document or file in the Sagely Fox Public Files or share them with your friends. You'll not be doing anything illegal. They are all public domain files.

Learn More Here...

The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1808)


The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1808)

The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe


My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Four Stars, recommended as a classic.

In summary this is written as an autobiography of an English youngster, born in the year 1632, in the city of York, anxious for adventure against his family's advice. He sets upon the sea to satisfy his adventure yearnings. He endures some hardships, some enslavement, and some fortune obtaining a plantation in South America. To enhance his fortune he voyages to find laborers to work on his plantation, slaves. (He had been a slave to moslems for some years during his adventures, this isn't a controversial point in this 1600s novel)

During his voyage he is shipwrecked and is the sole survivor on a deserted island for some 27 years when circumstances change to allow him to return to England. There after are some other minor adventures, re-obtaining his properties and monies he had entrusted to others before he vanished at sea.

The meat of the novel is his adventures as a sole survivor on a deserted island.

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Don Quixote


Don Quixote

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I found a list with the top ten best classic books and Don Quixote was at the top. I read the Kindle edition and listened to an Audible edition, alternating and sometimes reading and listening simultaneously.

Any blurb anywhere (Goodreads, Wikipedia, Amazon, book cover) can give you a more in depth summary of the stories. Everyone, even those who have not read the book know of the gallant Knight Errant... The Renowned Don Quixote De La Mancha attacking windmills with his faithful squire Sancho Panza right behind him.

The book is so much more. First thing I would note is the fact I laughed to tears, stopped reading (and laughing), then laughed some more. 

If laughing until you cry isn't encouraging, the wisdom and quantity of puns streamed together by Sancho Panza is surpassed in wisdom by Proverbs which also makes more sense -- but does not have the reach of Sancho who may have expressed every pun under the sun.

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

2019 Goodread's Challege

I've upped my prediction to 30 and included the top ten classics in my challenge.  I've offset that ambition with 8 or so books from the Debt Collector's season that are all very short books.  But then compared to the classics I'll be attempting... the number of pages I'm attempting is the largest every, I think.

I was told to make plans... don't plan results.  So the plan for the 2019 Challenge of 30 books is as follows:

Sunday, January 6, 2019

The Art of War

The Art of WarThe Art of War by Sun Tzu

My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I read The Art of War by Sun Tzu translated by Lionel Giles in 1910 as it had been suggested to me in a variety of ways for decades and this afternoon I thought, just do it and get it off this list of things other people think I should do.

Chapter one caused me to remember As A Man Thinketh by James Allen. For the record that actually is one of the best "self-help", "spiritual-growth", "wisdom-obtaining" books in the last century and I suspect there have been 2000 books written every year since that says what "As A Man Thinketh" says, except they didn't say it as well or as concisely.

After chapter one of The Art of War my natural habit of "thinking" kicked in to high gear and I started asking myself, "What?" and "Really?"

Friday, December 14, 2018

The Man Who Saw the Future


The Man Who Saw the Future

The Man Who Saw the Future by Edmond Hamilton

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Looking through my unheard audiobooks I ran across one of my old favorite writers, Edmond Hamilton. I had a Librovox recording of "The Man Who Saw the Future". I went online and found a Project Gutenberg edition of the book published on February 13, 2009, illustrated by Leo Morey — so I could read along with the narration by Gregg Margarite, one of my favorite ebook narrators.

"The Man Who Saw the Future" by Edmond Hamilton was first made into an ebook from Amazing Stories of February 1961, but the story was first published in Amazing Stories of October 1930.

In Edmond's story Henri Lothiere, an apothecary's assistant of Paris in 1444 is a curious soul at a time when being curious could get a person killed. It starts with the Jean De Marselait, Inquisitor Extraordinary of the King of France reading the charges against Henri, an alleged sorcerer.

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Triplanetary


by E. E. "Doc" Smith

Every speaker in the space cruiser blared out the warning as he evacuated his lungs entirely empty. “Vee-Two Gas! Get tight!” Writhing and twisting in his fierce struggle to keep his lungs from gulping any noxious atmosphere, and with the unconscious girl draped limply over his left arm, Costigan leaped toward the portal to the nearest lifeboat.

Triplanetary (The Lensman Series Book 1)My rating: 3 of 5 starsnodapprove-3

Triplanetary
by E.E. "Doc"Smith, Read in 2016 on 6/1 to page 71, on 6/22 to page 110, on 7/7 to page 211, on 7/16 until complete.

Before I begin rambling, I liked it. I recommend it to classic science fiction space opera fans. Triplanetary is the first of the Lensmen series by E.E. "Doc" Smith. A wonderfully successful series.

Triplanetary Rating Chart 3x5Triplanetary is Earth-centric in this galactic adventure. If memory serves (more on that later) the planets of the Triplanetary service are Earth, Venus, and Mars. It's a shoot-em up space adventure with rather clear good guys and bad guys. There are a number of threats that are also lingering as foretelling.

The hero-saves-damsel-in-distress-and-falls-in-love is 1930's contrived as are some Doc Savage-like escapes. You don't know who Doc Savage is? Shame on you!