Book haul // Ancient classics, Victober picks, and biographies

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  • Опубліковано 22 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 47

  • @BobJacobs10
    @BobJacobs10 Місяць тому +1

    As a teacher of Latin, always great to see someone learning the language. Good luck! And nice book haul.

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  25 днів тому

      Thank you! I think my own former Latin teacher would be very surprised to find out I picked it up again

  • @jennyyeh4730
    @jennyyeh4730 Місяць тому

    Omg so jealous of the Thomas hardy set ! If you want something more cosy/less tragic, then I’d start with the woodlanders ! If not then the mayor of casterbridge.
    Far from the madding crowd is my favorite !!!

  • @given2501
    @given2501 Місяць тому

    9:20, omg they're available in my country as well but i went with the other maroon editions.

  • @katehowereads
    @katehowereads 2 місяці тому +3

    I am also very interested in daily life when it comes to history. I have loved watching the farm documentary series: Victorian Farm, Tudor Monastery Farm, Edwardian Farm, etc...They are so cozy! All on youtube.

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      I've been meaning to watch those, they sound excellent! Maybe something to watch over Christmas break

  • @renee_angelica
    @renee_angelica Місяць тому

    Gems in here! Love those Scott and Hardy editions 😍

  • @novelideea
    @novelideea 2 місяці тому +1

    I’ve heard great things about those translations of Homer!
    Yay! For Moby!! I think many people don’t enjoy the whaling facts in the story but I loved finding out the history and the danger. And Melville’s writing was fantastic! (I liked Bartleby also!)
    Beowulf was part of a class syllabus for me and I enjoyed the discussion, but I don’t think I would have read/ liked it otherwise!
    If you aren’t a “battles” in history lover you aren’t probably going to enjoy The Iliad. Though Homer, at least, isn’t as gory details oriented as Virgil in the Aeneid! Still, it’s almost all fighting.

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому +1

      I'm always really glad to hear from people who did enjoy Moby Dick, it seems to be one of the most disliked American classics! In terms of battles, I don't mind it too much in the books themselves as long as the writing is good, I think I'm just very bored by historical analyses of old timey battle tactics 😅

  • @RSelcov
    @RSelcov 2 місяці тому

    I've found that when a used book I've ordered on line is of substandard quality, especially if it does not fit the description that was advertised, I can get a replacement if I write an email to the seller. They don't even ask for the original copy to be sent back.

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      Considering I bought it for £3 I struggle to motivate myself to contact customer service (I ordered them from World of Books). If they'd been more expensive, I would have

  • @ksimpler
    @ksimpler 2 місяці тому

    Hi Celine! The Norton Anthology of Medieval Literature is excellent. The Beowulf included there should be the Seamus Heaney translation, which is wonderful. Also, I highly recommend the Anglo-Saxon poem, “Judith,” which should be in the collection. It’s a bit violent, but it’s great to see a female hero from that period. Also, there’s a wonderful translation of “Sir Gawain and the Green Knight,” which is great! Really, the entire collection is full of good stuff! Hope you enjoy it!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому +1

      "Judith" sounds fascinating! I'll mark it to read. It's directly after Beowulf so maybe I'll just keep reading when I finish it, ha. I really look forward to dipping into the collection!

  • @davidmccalip5759
    @davidmccalip5759 2 місяці тому

    Hello Celine! I hope you are doing well. Wow! Those Sir Walter Scott and Thomas Hardy books looked fantastic! And what a steal! That was a great purchase! I look forward to your next video. Have a great day!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      Thanks David! I'm very pleased with my finds, ha. Hope you have a great day too!

  • @jamesduggan7200
    @jamesduggan7200 2 місяці тому +1

    Yes, I do recall a strange excitement amongst my betters about that long biography of the man who wrote the dictionary and thought Shakespeare too racy. Much more exciting to me is Ken Kesey's classic novel, which as a film featured Jack Nicholson as Randall P. McMurphy. The co-star, Louise Fletcher, won an Oscar for her interpretation of head Nurse Ratched. Now you've read it do yourself a big favor and enjoy Tom Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, which is a biography more or less of the author, including the time he spent mopping the floors of a mental institution where the doctors happened to be testing Lysergic Acid Dimethalate (sp?). btw, I confess to falling in love with those gorgeous leather bound Hardy novels - Enjoy!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      Thanks James! I hadn't heard of Tom Wolfe's book, it sounds really interesting. I need to rewatch the movie of Cuckoo's Nest, it's been such a long time that I don't remember much of it, except some vivid images of Nicholson. I'll put it on the list for our next movie night

  • @josephcossey1811
    @josephcossey1811 2 місяці тому

    In 1966 Ken (Cuckoo's Nest) Kesey along with a group of cohorts called The Merry Pranksters took a trip across America in a converted school bus handing out samples of LSD along the way! One of the drivers of the bus was none other than Neal Cassady, close friend of Jack Kerouac and inspiration for the character of Dean Moriarty in Kerouac's classic novel On The Road.

  • @Maryjane022
    @Maryjane022 2 місяці тому

    Such a lovely books!!! Love it!📚💕😍😍😍

  • @dqan7372
    @dqan7372 2 місяці тому +3

    Just saw an Oxford don on UA-cam pronounce Martial as Marshall. And a tv interviewer addressed Kesey as Keezee. I've been pronouncing the latter incorrectly I guess. Fun haul!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      It's usually only when I'm filming these videos that I realise I have only ever read these names, never heard them spoken!

  • @michaelgarcia2973
    @michaelgarcia2973 2 місяці тому

    I love reading Classics...I watched the 2018 film Lizzie about Lizzie Borden and Chloe Sevigne played Lizzie Borden and Kristen Stewart played Bridget Sullivan great film.

  • @GrimLordofOregon
    @GrimLordofOregon 2 місяці тому

    Awesome book haul!

  • @crypsid
    @crypsid 2 місяці тому

    You're going to love Fraser's Marie Antoinette book. I read it earlier this year and was in the same spot of knowing a little bit about Marie's death, and absolutely nothing else about her life; needless to say, I was not prepared for how exciting that book becomes, especially in the last third.

  • @josephcossey1811
    @josephcossey1811 2 місяці тому

    The cover of your copy of De Quincy's Opium Eater is in fact an image of the tragic romantic poet Thomas Chatterton who committed suicide by arsenic poisoning at the age of 17. The painting is by the Victorian artist Henry Wallis and - somewhat spookily - was modelled by the young George Meredith who went on to become an eminent poet and novelist in his own right.

  • @NeilBruder
    @NeilBruder 2 місяці тому

    Oh I’m jealous, I’ve been looking for a copy of A Month in the Country for a while. If you’re interested there’s a great (UK based) lit podcast called Backlisted that has an episode about it. Worth a listen!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  Місяць тому +1

      Thank for the rec Neil! I hope you'll stumble on a copy soon as well 🙂

  • @josephcossey1811
    @josephcossey1811 2 місяці тому +1

    Ken (Cuckoo's Nest) Kesey once said that..."in a thousand years time when the rest of us have been long forgotten people will still be reading Richard Brautigan." A name that I find sadly neglected on booktube nowadays.

    • @jamesduggan7200
      @jamesduggan7200 2 місяці тому +1

      Brautigan is very good but I haven't read any of his work in generations. He did one on the Butterfly Effect with a title something like the Sombrero Hat Dance, I don't remember exactly, but the drop of a hat in Mexico led to chaos around the world.

    • @josephcossey1811
      @josephcossey1811 2 місяці тому +1

      Sombrero Fallout! One of Brautigan's quirkiest with a special guest appearance from Norman Mailer!

  • @judykovach6912
    @judykovach6912 Місяць тому

    Thomas hardy book… which one did do you read?

  • @josephcossey1811
    @josephcossey1811 2 місяці тому

    James Hogg's " Confessions Of A Justfied Sinner " was indeed hugely controversial at the time of publication and was later a big influence on Robert Louis Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde. A future comparison video perhaps?

  • @markLLorens
    @markLLorens 26 днів тому

    The castle of otranto the first Gothic horror novel written in 1794 Is pretty good and it's short.

  • @josephcossey1811
    @josephcossey1811 2 місяці тому +1

    Kesey pronounced Kee-zee. In my humble opinion the book is soooo much better than the film!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      Thank you! I really need to reread the book and possibly even rewatch the movie, I haven't read/watched either in over eight years

  • @theresas709
    @theresas709 2 місяці тому

    I really like Tom. Hardy.

  • @Montie-Adkins
    @Montie-Adkins Місяць тому

    I read Moby Dick for the first time this year and did not like it. It's interesting, and I liked the writing, but the big story point everyone has heard of and seen it made use of in various media is just a tiny portion of the book.
    But hell, this book has endured for a long time now, so perhaps it'll be for you.

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  Місяць тому +1

      I do really like Melville's style... hopefully I'll be one of the people who enjoys it! Sorry to hear it wasn't for you

  • @dougmoore5252
    @dougmoore5252 17 днів тому

    Dante

  • @shaunholt
    @shaunholt 2 місяці тому +1

    I've read a bit of the ancient Greeks - Plato, Aristophanes, Aeschylus. Euripides and Herodotus are on my to-read list. My favorite has been Sophocles. I'm about 50% through the Iliad and like it even though most of it is just, "And Damentris was killed by Klaxius. And Findel was slain by Murion. Gadalacus killed Pintos and Raymeon, before being himself slain by Hetos of Crete. It's just like.... Okay... No clue who any of those guys are, but okay, sure.
    I tried Sons and Lovers by Hardy and couldn't get into it. I could see that maybe it had some value, but would've required far more patience and thought than it was worth. I'm unlikely to re-try it or anything else by him. Not my cuppa tea.
    And I greatly enjoyed One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Pretty much everything by Kesey is on my to-read list because of it. I've got Sometimes a Great Notion, as well as a signed copy of Sailor Song.
    Haunting of Hill House I rage-quit after about 20 pages because of repetition of something. I forget what. Maybe it was "she thought". The second or third chapter had like four per page. Drove me crazy.

    • @jamesduggan7200
      @jamesduggan7200 2 місяці тому +1

      It's an interesting narrative structure: It begins with a conclave of literate people enjoying Christmas together that then shifts into the letter of a nanny who some years earlier had an experience at Hill House that made her uncomfortable to relate in full. I don't know why James felt so comfortable jumping into her head but most people seem to be satisfied with his interpretation of her as a young woman.... [edit] Oh I am so sorry, please forgive me for conflating Turn of the Screw with Haunting of HIll House. oops!

    • @TheEclecticLibrary
      @TheEclecticLibrary  2 місяці тому

      Glad to hear you've enjoyed Sophocles! He's high on my list. I have quite vivid memories of Euripides' Medea, which we read in our high school class. I read Cuckoo's Nest years ago but never ventured any deeper into Kesey's work, that'll have to be added to my to read list!