Anyone like literature?
Anyone like literature?
Does anyone on this board like literature? I LOVE literature! I especially like Leo Tolstoy, William Wordsworth, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, John Donn, etc. I love them all basically!
Not that much but I like some
Literature as in poetry, short stories, novels, and other kinds from basically before 1950 or the modern era.
Well, literature is quite a broad topic, but I love literature as you specified it as well.sheltiez wrote:Does anyone on this board like literature? I LOVE literature! I especially like Leo Tolstoy, William Wordsworth, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, John Donn, etc. I love them all basically!

I really just read old books.

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I encourage your next library trip to include an attempt to find a copy of M. H. Abrams' A Glossary of Literary Terms and look up 'literature.'sheltiez wrote:Literature as in poetry, short stories, novels, and other kinds from basically before 1950 or the modern era.
It would appear that your interest awaits the Romantic and Victorian periods of English literature. Is there a specific work you would like to discuss?
Last edited by 31899 on Mon Jul 30, 2012 12:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I meant all literature not just the Romantic and Victorian periods. Everything from the "Epic of Gilgamesh" to Robert Frost.
I think what 31899 is trying to say, is that 'literature' is the art of writtten work, regardless of publication, time period, or format.
I like reading, but literature in school this past year was really boring and hard to get through. I guess it is because the story selections I didn't have any taste for.

Yeah. "literature" includes everything written from the Epic of Gilgamesh up to the modern day. I usually hear it in the context of the written word, but technically, it might cover all media as well as all time periods. (Come to think of it, would you count the works of William Shakespeare in there?)Maximus Meridius wrote:I think what 31899 is trying to say, is that 'literature' is the art of writtten work, regardless of publication, time period, or format.
I think "classical" might help you here. I do like me some Mark Twain...
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The oldest i have read is i think Beowulf.
Define "literature."sheltiez wrote:Does anyone on this board like literature? I LOVE literature! I especially like Leo Tolstoy, William Wordsworth, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, John Donn, etc. I love them all basically!
According to many of my teenage friends, literature is basically all novels.
According to many of my adult friends, literature is all the classics (Verne, Twain, etc.), with a few exceptions...
So, my question is, what do you mean by "literature?"
They/Them










Already been answered.The Once-ler wrote:Define "literature."sheltiez wrote:Does anyone on this board like literature? I LOVE literature! I especially like Leo Tolstoy, William Wordsworth, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jane Austen, Charles Dickens, John Donn, etc. I love them all basically!
According to many of my teenage friends, literature is basically all novels.
According to many of my adult friends, literature is all the classics (Verne, Twain, etc.), with a few exceptions...
So, my question is, what do you mean by "literature?"

sheltiez wrote:Literature as in poetry, short stories, novels, and other kinds from basically before 1950 or the modern era.
I love classic literature. Ever since I got my Amazon Kindle I've been diving into Classic Lit and I've been loving it. I just finished "Great Expectations" (By Charles Dickens) And have just started Howard Pyle's "The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood." After finishing "Robin Hood" I am going to read "The Cat of Bubastes" by G.A. Henty.
I read "Great Expectations" in high school and definitely liked it. I also read "The Cat of Bubastes" years ago (can't remember when exactly) but it was really good, Taps. I enjoy Jane Austen, and am also recently getting into the Sherlock Holmes stories.Taps wrote:I love classic literature. Ever since I got my Amazon Kindle I've been diving into Classic Lit and I've been loving it. I just finished "Great Expectations" (By Charles Dickens) And have just started Howard Pyle's "The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood." After finishing "Robin Hood" I am going to read "The Cat of Bubastes" by G.A. Henty.

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I had to read Great Expectations my senior year, and I did not like it at all. It was incredibly depressing.
Since then, I've heard a lot of people say they like it, so maybe I missed something. 


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Great Expectations was super depressing. But pretty much every book by Dickens is depressing.

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Really? At my high school they have you read it in ninth grade. (Maybe that was why nobody really liked it.Laura Ingalls wrote:I had to read Great Expectations my senior year, and I did not like it at all. It was incredibly depressing.Since then, I've heard a lot of people say they like it, so maybe I missed something.

The only book I've read that can truly be considered a "classic" is "To Kill A Mockingbird", and even then, it's a modern classic. (I love and adore that book, but that's beside the point.) I've seen classic book covers and read their descriptions, and they don't sound very good to me at all. (Here's the part where someone exclaims at the atrocity of my finding classic books boring-looking.


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Not to show off or anything, but I found Great Expectations to be quite an easy read, and entertaining almost the whole way through. The original ending was depressing, but there was also an alternate ending Dickens wrote that was a bit happier.