I've read big books and I cannot lie, but there's a special thing I can't deny about an itty-bitty short story in your face when you're busy and on the fly. I like novellas, come on fellas give 'em a try... but if you really, really have to read a big 500+ page book, then just remember the clock is ticking and it may not be a good one. Here endeth my comment that gave novels a bad rap.
Read the Count of Monte Cristo earlier this year. A different experience being with a book and a writer for so long. Excellent book. Happy reading to you.
East of Eden is Phenomenal! I read it because of you and now I want to read this mans entire work! It’s literally the PERFECT book! Great message, amazing characters, impressive language thats easy to read at the same time.. dude its my new bible!
I finished East Of Eden about a week ago, and loved it a whole lot. An epic tale. I recall reading White Teeth when it came out, maybe 2000’ish 🤔 (yes, I am like, 137 years old). Thanks for another tremendous vid.
Moby Dick reads like a blog called, THE WHALE, by username: Ishmael. I was very surprised by how readable it is, in short installments, and how much of it I read on my phone commuting to work. Random others: Underworld (Don DeLillo), House of Leaves (Mark Danielewski), The Throat (Peter Straub).
Im a slow reader. But when it comes to Robin Hobbs, I will fly through those hefty books. Her writing is so beautiful and the characters are so well developed that I don't want the stories to end.
I'm from Germany but watch many english and american Booktubers. You're the first one to ever mention John Irving. He is quite popular here so I was surprised to learn that his novels aren't reviewed at all.
Before starting Anna Karenina, that book was hauntingly big for me (around 963 to 980 pages in Everyman's library edition) but then I started it and it was such a ride because the translation wasn't as difficult as I expected it to be. Then I read Jane Eyre (520 pages, Penguin Clothbound aka worst classics edition) and again such an awesome book.
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn was the first book I read from the adult book section of the public library. I’m 74 so a very long time ago. I don’t remember it being that big and now I want to reread it after all these years. I also read World According to Garp and East of Eden, which is in my top five favorite books of all time. Two big books I’d recommend are Prince of Tides, and a very little talked about book call Boys and Girls Together by William Goldman. Very popular in the 60’s and I’m sure out of print, but also in my top five. My most reread book. Great video and love the glasses on you!
Oh...Prince of Tides...I was hooked from the first paragraph of the prologue. Two small sentences, but what an impact. I now own and have read his entire oeuvre.
a tree grows in brooklyn has been my favorite book since i read it freshman year of high school (formative time to read a story like that!). i feel very validated that you also find it so perfect lol. i’m reading east of eden next, and i hope i haven’t hyped it up too much for myself!
I know you said you haven't read 'em, but I got excited clicking on this for someone else to realize that War and Peace is incredibly readable and a lot of the time super funny. It feels more like The Office to me, a lot of the time, except it's 1830 Russia and everyone has a lot of opinions about Napoleon.
I agree! most of the chapters are a couple of pages long and the most recent translation by Anthony Briggs makes it an easy read. Its reputation as an intimidating book is undeserved.
A recent 500+ page book that I absolutely sped through (except for a few parts) was The God of the woods. Incredible storytelling! I couldn't possibly recommend it more.
Biggest book I’ve read is Jubilee Hitchhiker - a biography of Richard Brautigan by William Hjortsberg. 1400 pages of very small print. Took me the best part of 6 months.
I just added White Teeth to my physical tbr the other day telling myself “it is time now“ and now seeing your video was like the universe telling me, yes, it is REALLY time now, so thank you for that 😂
For me, a slow reader of small books, a big book is every book with more than 250 pages 😩🥵. I recently finished a book - September (by Rosamunde Pilcher)- with 630 pages and I'm exhausted.😅
Big books are the best. The older I get, the more I've grown to appreciate them. I actually find it easier to read more consistently when I'm devouring a big book, because I don't have to get acquainted with a new world the way you do when you're reading lots of shorter books. Currently reading I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb and my goodness.. this book is something else. HIGHLY recommend, i think you'd love it.
I stumbled upon your channel and boy am i glad i did!! Good to know that im not the only one who wears blue light glasses to put together a look. I must binge watch your videos you are absolutely stunning 😊
I am so glad that you have mentioned John Irving! He is the best and nobody is talking about him enough nowadays! His books are just safe space for me. I could read anything, but if I come back to him after other books, it is just a pleasure!
I was so hoping for "Gravity's Rainbow," to hear your thoughts; in all my years including some working in bookstores I've only encountered one other person who'd finished it.
Ooo, my first big book was The Witching Hour by Anne Rice. I read a repress of the original hardcover which is 976 pages long. There were a couple slow parts here and there but for the most part I breezed thru it because it was so wild and captivating and fun. I’ve read it three times in my life since. - Great video. I always look forward to your content and click on new posts immediately.
You have such a refreshing personality, Ana! I truly suggest you read Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry. It is in fact a big book (~850 pages). It’s a western epic, but it is the most exciting journey I’ve ever been on and the characters are incredible. I want to eat it like a big paper sandwich so it lives in me forever and I hope it does the same for you.
i dont read long books too often but when i do it's just brilliant the way you connect to the characters and the world is just so much more intimate! i read 'Light in August' by Faulkner which if you like Steinbeck i think you will looove he's truly a master writer!
Fortress of Solitude! A Bildungsroman doorstopper that eerily captures the feeling of being a child in 1970s Brooklyn. (Never been to Brooklyn, wasn’t around in the ‘70s). I like your picks. I am going to start East of Eden today.
Loved this video! I'd like to read all of these apart from A Little Life. Some of my favourite big books that you might like are Middlesex by Jeffery Eugenides, The Women's Room by Marilyn French, and The Secret History by Donna Tartt
The Gold Bug Variations. 600+ pages. Very challenging at times (Molecular Biologists discussing DNA, Bach, Art and then falling in love playing intellectual games). But so worth a bit of patience and perseverance. Beautifully sculpted characters.
Seconding some comments I'm seeing that mention The Wind Up Bird Chronicle by Murakami which is also 600+ pages! So still a biggun and I think a better intro to his work than 1Q84.
all of sarah water's books are looong but so readable im currently reading 'The Fingersmith' which is so quick to read and exciting and i would really recommend 'The Little Stranger'
Last week, finished for the first time 'The Count of Monte Cristo'. 1243 pages. Am I glad I read it; did I enjoy it? Yes. Will I ever read it again? No. My next big never read book, pegged for next year, is 'Bleak House' 989 pages.
Here's the reading times according to the kobo website, which is based on word count. Page counts can be deceptive. A tree grows in Brooklyn, 12-13 1Q84 33-36 The world according to Garp 15-16 A little life 24-26 White teeth 13-14 East of Eden 18-19
Ok this is the third or fourth video now that I’ve seen in just the last few days singing East of Eden’s praises so it’s gonna shoot to the top of my tbr pile 🤍🤍🤍
I just finished a big book that I’ve been working on for a while. Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction, edited by Leigh Grossman. An anthology designed as a text book for science fiction survey. The Kindle edition clocks in at 5,645 pages. (I understand that there is a much abridged paperback edition with less than 20% of the content that will still probably break your wrist.)
Im reading Stephen King's The Tommyknockers right now.... on page 482 out of 550. I enjoyed most of the book. But the end of the book was Slow in certain parts. I shall find out with these last 70 pages.
I loved 1Q84, and Murakami for that matter. I haven't seen the 3 book edition in English, but the book was released in 3 parts in Japan. Another long books that absolutely amazing is Stephen King's 11/22/63...I couldn't put It down...sooo good.
Wow. You're really doing it, aren't you? I read 1Q84 and White Teeth, those are fab. I read Anna Karenina and War & Peace and surprisingly.... those were easy to read. ESPECIALLY Anna K. War and Peace is easy but I highly recommend watching at least one of the miniseries before. I watched the 2016 BBC version and I really enjoyed it. It took me about a week to finish War and Peace but I was surprised that I got through it. Yes, it can be a slog in some parts because I hate reading about war... I just can never get into it but the more social aspects of the book kept me drawn in. At a certain point I was happy to spend that time in War and Peace at the end of a long day. Another long book that doesn't feel like it that everyone either loves or hates these days.... The Secret History. I'm always surprised to realize that book is over 500 pages because it doesn't feel like it at all.
Great bookends: "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" and "East of Eden" and yes! ... " ... do I NEEEEED to say it?" ~ha ha, for us regulars, you did not! 😆 Since we're on the subject of books that hold interest on each and every page, may I suggest "Mala's Cat" by Mala Kacenberg? Not a boring page in the entire memoir.
I like to use my copy of War and Peace as a yoga block when needs be (haven’t read it but listened to it on audiobook in 2020). Also read East of Eden in 2022 and it’s also my favourite book of all time! (Must admit that although I am a 36 year old woman, I think I picked it up because of Emma Chamberlain, lol.)
This video features my two favorite books/ authors. Garp and White Teeth. I read all of Irving and Smith’s novels when I was in my 20s and then read all of them again when I turned 30 but this time in chronological order. Might be an unpopular opinion but really recommend Until I find you by John Irving. Both times I read the ending just destroyed me. It has the kind of payoff a 1000 page book ought to have.
Ana, I would love to hear your opinion on The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck. I also loved East of Eden but The Grapes of Wrath blew me even more away. Stunning writing.
im reading the oxford annotated bible with apocrypha and then im following it up with the norton complete shakespeare. pls dont talk to me about big books 😭
All those books are Fantastic!!! But where’s M. Atwood’s The Blind Assassin?? 😏P.s. never heard of Murakami’s book. Kafka on the Shore is also amazing read and big one
Hi Ana, I loved the video!! I feel quite passionate about the Cairo Trilogie by Nagib Mahfuz, who is an egyptian author that won a nobel prize. So far I have only read the first of three books called "Palace Walk" (I read it in German: "Zwischen den Palästen"). It tells the story of a family, living in Cairo during 1917 to 1990, while Egypt was still occupied by the British. The life of the family is shaped by the father and head of the family who is patriarchal tyrant at home, but is singing and drinking with his friends after work as well as dating belly dancers. The story basically tells us about his double life and how all the family members deal with his tyranny at home. The only thing that was scary about this book was my reaction to it, as his behavior made my very angry multiple times. But that's also what I loved about the book. I would love to know your opinion (or other people in the comment section) on the literature of Nagib Mahfuz, even if you don't like it. If you ever find time to read any of it :)
Sadly, I still haven’t read East of Eden but I’m always trying to foist on people Weaveworld by Clive Barker & Book of the Dead by Leslie Marmon Silko, also a bit large for these days of meme-ery🎉
The Count of Monte Cristo is my favourite book of all time, a book over 1,000 pages, and super easy to read!
GREAT BOOK!!!
I’m scared of you🤣
just started reading
Same here! And the suspense is so worth it
It's the besssttttttttttttt 🩷🩷🩷
"Because you know what? I haven't read 'em, OK?" is beautiful
I've read big books and I cannot lie, but there's a special thing I can't deny about an itty-bitty short story in your face when you're busy and on the fly.
I like novellas, come on fellas give 'em a try...
but if you really, really have to read a big 500+ page book, then just remember the clock is ticking and it may not be a good one.
Here endeth my comment that gave novels a bad rap.
Read the Count of Monte Cristo earlier this year. A different experience being with a book and a writer for so long. Excellent book. Happy reading to you.
East of Eden is Phenomenal! I read it because of you and now I want to read this mans entire work! It’s literally the PERFECT book! Great message, amazing characters, impressive language thats easy to read at the same time.. dude its my new bible!
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and The World According to Garp are excellent for fall reading.
The Count of Monte Cristo is book no one ever regretted reading....
I finished East Of Eden about a week ago, and loved it a whole lot. An epic tale. I recall reading White Teeth when it came out, maybe 2000’ish 🤔 (yes, I am like, 137 years old). Thanks for another tremendous vid.
1:58 A Tree Grows In Brooklyn
5:51 1Q84
8:31 The World According To Garp
10:41 A Little Life
12:31 White Teeth
13:24 East of Eden
Moby Dick reads like a blog called, THE WHALE, by username: Ishmael. I was very surprised by how readable it is, in short installments, and how much of it I read on my phone commuting to work.
Random others: Underworld (Don DeLillo), House of Leaves (Mark Danielewski), The Throat (Peter Straub).
Also consider Larry McMurtry’s Lonesome Dove. It’s a biggun and it’s incredible.
On my List!!
Been there. Poked that.
I read and loved East of Eden and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn! Just added the others to my wishlist - thanks!
Great video and book suggestions. My own favourite long book? Kristin Lavransdatter by Sigrid Undset, head and shoulders above the rest.
Read Kristin Lavransdatter this year and loved it! I came here to recommend it too.
My favorite part of long books is the feeling of weight in my hand when I hold them
War and Peace. Seeing Natasha grow up was unforgettable and prepared me for being a teacher.
Im a slow reader. But when it comes to Robin Hobbs, I will fly through those hefty books. Her writing is so beautiful and the characters are so well developed that I don't want the stories to end.
I'm from Germany but watch many english and american Booktubers. You're the first one to ever mention John Irving. He is quite popular here so I was surprised to learn that his novels aren't reviewed at all.
The World According to Garp! Absolutely my fav. I haven't read it in a long time. I guess I will be checking it out at the library again!
Before starting Anna Karenina, that book was hauntingly big for me (around 963 to 980 pages in Everyman's library edition) but then I started it and it was such a ride because the translation wasn't as difficult as I expected it to be. Then I read Jane Eyre (520 pages, Penguin Clothbound aka worst classics edition) and again such an awesome book.
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn was the first book I read from the adult book section of the public library. I’m 74 so a very long time ago. I don’t remember it being that big and now I want to reread it after all these years. I also read World According to Garp and East of Eden, which is in my top five favorite books of all time. Two big books I’d recommend are Prince of Tides, and a very little talked about book call Boys and Girls Together by William Goldman. Very popular in the 60’s and I’m sure out of print, but also in my top five. My most reread book. Great video and love the glasses on you!
Oh...Prince of Tides...I was hooked from the first paragraph of the prologue. Two small sentences, but what an impact. I now own and have read his entire oeuvre.
This channel is the most original on TH-cam!!!
a tree grows in brooklyn has been my favorite book since i read it freshman year of high school (formative time to read a story like that!). i feel very validated that you also find it so perfect lol. i’m reading east of eden next, and i hope i haven’t hyped it up too much for myself!
You're a star .. youuu...i love watching you perform as much as enjoying the content on books...
I know you said you haven't read 'em, but I got excited clicking on this for someone else to realize that War and Peace is incredibly readable and a lot of the time super funny. It feels more like The Office to me, a lot of the time, except it's 1830 Russia and everyone has a lot of opinions about Napoleon.
I agree! most of the chapters are a couple of pages long and the most recent translation by Anthony Briggs makes it an easy read. Its reputation as an intimidating book is undeserved.
A recent 500+ page book that I absolutely sped through (except for a few parts) was The God of the woods. Incredible storytelling! I couldn't possibly recommend it more.
You are one of my favourite people on the internet. Thank you for being here, there and everywhere. Love your videos so much!
1Q84 is my favourite book of all time. I’m so glad you mentioned it ❤️
i’ve gotta add the shards by bret easton ellis here !! it’s so fun and addictive that you forget it’s over 500 pages long
I love when a book is delicious. I definitely have East of Eden on my list. I own it actually.
Biggest book I’ve read is Jubilee Hitchhiker - a biography of Richard Brautigan by William Hjortsberg. 1400 pages of very small print. Took me the best part of 6 months.
I just added White Teeth to my physical tbr the other day telling myself “it is time now“ and now seeing your video was like the universe telling me, yes, it is REALLY time now, so thank you for that 😂
For me, a slow reader of small books, a big book is every book with more than 250 pages 😩🥵. I recently finished a book - September (by Rosamunde Pilcher)- with 630 pages and I'm exhausted.😅
Jane eyre, long but very readable and great story
Lady, you always look fabulous in your videos, with or without glasses.
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, I cried too. East of Eden, I cried harder! Cheers, 💕
About 5 years ago I read Shadow Country by Peter Matthiessen (890 pgs). I couldn't put it down. So good, less than a year later I read it again.
I read A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and was surprised at how much I enjoyed the story and experience of reading it! Great list!
Big books are the best. The older I get, the more I've grown to appreciate them. I actually find it easier to read more consistently when I'm devouring a big book, because I don't have to get acquainted with a new world the way you do when you're reading lots of shorter books.
Currently reading I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb and my goodness.. this book is something else. HIGHLY recommend, i think you'd love it.
I stumbled upon your channel and boy am i glad i did!! Good to know that im not the only one who wears blue light glasses to put together a look. I must binge watch your videos you are absolutely stunning 😊
I am so glad that you have mentioned John Irving! He is the best and nobody is talking about him enough nowadays! His books are just safe space for me. I could read anything, but if I come back to him after other books, it is just a pleasure!
i read a little life really quickly because i hated it so deeply i needed to finish it as quickly as possible lol
Just finished east of Eden and god it’s one of the only books where I really did want to take my time reading every page but I truly raced through it…
I was so hoping for "Gravity's Rainbow," to hear your thoughts; in all my years including some working in bookstores I've only encountered one other person who'd finished it.
Ana, your energy is what I’m in for. You’re so fun and so cool. I could watch your videos on a loop.
Love love. ❤️
I love 1Q85! Love! Do a whole Murakami video…The Wind Up Bird Chronicle at least🙏
The wind up bird chronicle is fantastic, love this.
I have been reading Braiding Sweet Grass, for what felt like, 82 years.
lol pray for me i’m only 30 pages in 🥲
Ooo, my first big book was The Witching Hour by Anne Rice. I read a repress of the original hardcover which is 976 pages long. There were a couple slow parts here and there but for the most part I breezed thru it because it was so wild and captivating and fun. I’ve read it three times in my life since. - Great video. I always look forward to your content and click on new posts immediately.
You have such a refreshing personality, Ana! I truly suggest you read Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry. It is in fact a big book (~850 pages). It’s a western epic, but it is the most exciting journey I’ve ever been on and the characters are incredible. I want to eat it like a big paper sandwich so it lives in me forever and I hope it does the same for you.
Came across your channel and instantly subscribed within 5 mins. Love your wit! 🩶
i dont read long books too often but when i do it's just brilliant the way you connect to the characters and the world is just so much more intimate! i read 'Light in August' by Faulkner which if you like Steinbeck i think you will looove he's truly a master writer!
Fortress of Solitude! A Bildungsroman doorstopper that eerily captures the feeling of being a child in 1970s Brooklyn. (Never been to Brooklyn, wasn’t around in the ‘70s). I like your picks. I am going to start East of Eden today.
Wow. I love your generosity and intelligence. Thank you for all the videos.
The longest book I ever read was "Gone with the Wind" and it was a chonker...but the story was very good and I couldn't put it down.
Loved this video! I'd like to read all of these apart from A Little Life. Some of my favourite big books that you might like are Middlesex by Jeffery Eugenides, The Women's Room by Marilyn French, and The Secret History by Donna Tartt
one of my fav toe smashers: the goldfinch💛
Valley of the Dolls would have to be my rec! I could NOT put that down...i was entranced by those lovely ladies' lives!
The Gold Bug Variations. 600+ pages. Very challenging at times (Molecular Biologists discussing DNA, Bach, Art and then falling in love playing intellectual games). But so worth a bit of patience and perseverance. Beautifully sculpted characters.
East of Eden one of my favorite books !
Seconding some comments I'm seeing that mention The Wind Up Bird Chronicle by Murakami which is also 600+ pages! So still a biggun and I think a better intro to his work than 1Q84.
Feeling like a true fan for immediately knowing the last one was gonna be east of Eden!
all of sarah water's books are looong but so readable im currently reading 'The Fingersmith' which is so quick to read and exciting and i would really recommend 'The Little Stranger'
Last week, finished for the first time 'The Count of Monte Cristo'. 1243 pages. Am I glad I read it; did I enjoy it? Yes. Will I ever read it again? No. My next big never read book, pegged for next year, is 'Bleak House' 989 pages.
The intro just made me fall in love
anaa!! you're at 52k alreadyy? i remember when you were still expressing your wish for 10k at least for months haha congrats girll
i made a video yonks ago where i feature multiple big books i love but to name a few Lonesome Dove, A Place of Greater Safety. Love a big ol' tome.
A True Novel by Minae Mizumura is slow paced but such a great read. You get pulled into the world of the characters and it all feels so real
I finished Lonesome Dove this summer, that was quite a journey!
Here's the reading times according to the kobo website, which is based on word count. Page counts can be deceptive.
A tree grows in Brooklyn, 12-13
1Q84 33-36
The world according to Garp 15-16
A little life 24-26
White teeth 13-14
East of Eden 18-19
Ok this is the third or fourth video now that I’ve seen in just the last few days singing East of Eden’s praises so it’s gonna shoot to the top of my tbr pile 🤍🤍🤍
Try Ken Follet also. Fabulous reads that you don't want to end, even though some books are over 1,000 pages.
The Way the Crow Flies by Ann-Marie McDonald is a long one (800ish pages), but I absolutely couldn’t put it down - one of my favourites.
yesss. I've only recently found your channel but I LOVE it. amazing nail polish btw !!
I just finished a big book that I’ve been working on for a while. Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction, edited by Leigh Grossman. An anthology designed as a text book for science fiction survey. The Kindle edition clocks in at 5,645 pages. (I understand that there is a much abridged paperback edition with less than 20% of the content that will still probably break your wrist.)
John Irving's latest book, "the Last Chairlift", is extraordinary... and a doorstop
Im reading Stephen King's The Tommyknockers right now.... on page 482 out of 550. I enjoyed most of the book. But the end of the book was Slow in certain parts. I shall find out with these last 70 pages.
I loved 1Q84, and Murakami for that matter. I haven't seen the 3 book edition in English, but the book was released in 3 parts in Japan. Another long books that absolutely amazing is Stephen King's 11/22/63...I couldn't put It down...sooo good.
Wow. You're really doing it, aren't you? I read 1Q84 and White Teeth, those are fab.
I read Anna Karenina and War & Peace and surprisingly.... those were easy to read. ESPECIALLY Anna K. War and Peace is easy but I highly recommend watching at least one of the miniseries before. I watched the 2016 BBC version and I really enjoyed it. It took me about a week to finish War and Peace but I was surprised that I got through it. Yes, it can be a slog in some parts because I hate reading about war... I just can never get into it but the more social aspects of the book kept me drawn in. At a certain point I was happy to spend that time in War and Peace at the end of a long day.
Another long book that doesn't feel like it that everyone either loves or hates these days.... The Secret History. I'm always surprised to realize that book is over 500 pages because it doesn't feel like it at all.
Just started East of Eden! If I’m intimated by a big book, I look at it as reading two or three shorter books in a series. A series in one volume. 🤷🏻
Great bookends: "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" and "East of Eden" and yes! ... " ... do I NEEEEED to say it?" ~ha ha, for us regulars, you did not! 😆 Since we're on the subject of books that hold interest on each and every page, may I suggest "Mala's Cat" by Mala Kacenberg? Not a boring page in the entire memoir.
Every day I will spend 1 hour to read all those books. It will reduce stress and fatigue.
the book that changed everything for me was Magnetic Aura from Borlest
Barkskins by Annie Proulx. 717 pages and I was swept through!
I just KNEW East of Eden will be on this list! (and yet I still haven’t read it, it still is in my book pile of shame)
i needed this video ☕
I like to use my copy of War and Peace as a yoga block when needs be (haven’t read it but listened to it on audiobook in 2020). Also read East of Eden in 2022 and it’s also my favourite book of all time! (Must admit that although I am a 36 year old woman, I think I picked it up because of Emma Chamberlain, lol.)
The Power Broker - stunning. 1163 pages.
This video features my two favorite books/ authors. Garp and White Teeth. I read all of Irving and Smith’s novels when I was in my 20s and then read all of them again when I turned 30 but this time in chronological order.
Might be an unpopular opinion but really recommend Until I find you by John Irving. Both times I read the ending just destroyed me. It has the kind of payoff a 1000 page book ought to have.
Anna Karenina and War & Peace are amazing, soul changing, doorstopping novels!
Ana, I would love to hear your opinion on The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck. I also loved East of Eden but The Grapes of Wrath blew me even more away. Stunning writing.
im reading the oxford annotated bible with apocrypha and then im following it up with the norton complete shakespeare. pls dont talk to me about big books 😭
Why are you torturing yourselfffff?
Thumbnail: I'm getting Big Swiss font vibes.
1Q84: Knocked Pillars of the Earth off of the #1 best book I have ever read.
Lonesome Dove by McMurtry is another big book worth checking out
Have you read any novels by Jonathan Franzen yet? Truly incredible! Definitely one of the best American writers ♥️
This is adorable 🥰😇📚
The Brothers Karamazov babe ❤
It killed me!!! What a book!!!
Yeeeeees easily my fav book! Unashamed to say I have two copies from two different translators bc I love it so much
All those books are Fantastic!!! But where’s M. Atwood’s The Blind Assassin?? 😏P.s. never heard of Murakami’s book. Kafka on the Shore is also amazing read and big one
Hi Ana, I loved the video!!
I feel quite passionate about the Cairo Trilogie by Nagib Mahfuz, who is an egyptian author that won a nobel prize. So far I have only read the first of three books called "Palace Walk" (I read it in German: "Zwischen den Palästen"). It tells the story of a family, living in Cairo during 1917 to 1990, while Egypt was still occupied by the British. The life of the family is shaped by the father and head of the family who is patriarchal tyrant at home, but is singing and drinking with his friends after work as well as dating belly dancers. The story basically tells us about his double life and how all the family members deal with his tyranny at home. The only thing that was scary about this book was my reaction to it, as his behavior made my very angry multiple times. But that's also what I loved about the book. I would love to know your opinion (or other people in the comment section) on the literature of Nagib Mahfuz, even if you don't like it. If you ever find time to read any of it :)
I love this look on u!
I just had to like and subscribe 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Sadly, I still haven’t read East of Eden but I’m always trying to foist on people Weaveworld by Clive Barker & Book of the Dead by Leslie Marmon Silko, also a bit large for these days of meme-ery🎉