Ten Hard Books I Want to Read (deranged and strange)

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  • Опубліковано 3 лип 2024
  • Apologies, I am travelling as this is being posted and may not be able to respond to comments for a few days.
    Joining this trend late, it's a great idea and kudos to all the channels that preceded me. Have loved watching your videos on the subject.
    My Goodreads: / vince
    realized I misspelled "millennium". I've given myself fifty lashes as punishment
    00:00 Intro
    00:30 Two Recent Reads
    03:48 Book 1: Philosophy
    06:40 Book 2: Ancient History
    08:30 Book 3: Mythology
    09:37 Book 4: Magical Realism
    10:43 Book 5: Biography
    12:36 Book 6: History
    13:57 Book 7: Postmodernism
    15:07 Book 8: Historical Fiction
    16:00 Book 9: Theology
    17:05 Book 10: Poetry

КОМЕНТАРІ • 25

  • @ToReadersItMayConcern
    @ToReadersItMayConcern Місяць тому +2

    Yes! Happy to have you join in on our oddly widespread trend!
    This might be rude of me to say, but I find your list far more interesting than many others of such lists I've seen. Great job, man.

  • @pretentioussystem9367
    @pretentioussystem9367 7 днів тому

    Thanks!
    Eco's book is one of the hardest on the list I find.
    I wouldn't mind reading a version with commentary one day.
    It's somewhat possible to follow the plot. A lot of it is hidden behind references to multiple works of literature, symbolism, use of other languages (even a mashed up one), riddles, mysteries and uncommon words.
    Maybe I am just a fool.
    He definitely must have had fun writing it.
    I think he wrote it to show a lot of his peers the literary finger, how he leaves others with easy in the dust.
    I still haven't decided if I give my copy another try or move it fully to the 'did not finish' pile.
    Ok rant over 🙂
    Cheers and godspeed!

    • @TraumaticTomes
      @TraumaticTomes  6 днів тому +1

      From what I've heard of Eco's personal libraries, he seems like quite the character. I'm not surprised at the complexities he could conjure in his mind.
      If you think it's worth it, then picking it back up might not be a bad idea. All depends on how you're feeling. Rereads can be incredibly illuminating, for good or for bad.

    • @pretentioussystem9367
      @pretentioussystem9367 6 днів тому +1

      Right, his library only can be envied by most interested readers.😁
      Compared to it my few hundred books are just a drizzle in the ocean.
      Correctly for this reason I haven't given up on it as the revisiting experience might be just amazing with the correct commentary or time to research the references better.
      I will keep coming back to your channel to see what you make out of it. 🙂
      All the best!

  • @allesvergaengliche
    @allesvergaengliche Місяць тому +1

    Not sure that I’d call Borges similar to GGM per se, but they’re definitely on the same level in quality. I’ve been working my way through that exact Borges book for about six months and I’m over halfway through. Well worth dipping into here and there. They’re short stories so you can pick it up and put it down no problem. I’m about 1/3 into that Napoleon book too but I’ve set it aside for now.

    • @TraumaticTomes
      @TraumaticTomes  Місяць тому

      hey, similar in quality to GGM is good enough for me. can't wait to get to this one!

  • @prosebender
    @prosebender Місяць тому +1

    a sub for the sick shades, hehe. respectable list of hard books, and I'm looking forward to checking out more of your videos

  • @SammyJ..
    @SammyJ.. Місяць тому +1

    Great list, earned a new subscriber.
    If you want a good way to approach reading the Bible, check out Ascension’s Bible in a Year plan. Even if you don’t follow the podcast, the reading plan makes it very accessible. They also print their own edition of the Catechism.

    • @TraumaticTomes
      @TraumaticTomes  Місяць тому

      That's neat, I've been watching some of Ascension's UA-cam content recently but didn't realize the extent of their influence. While Bible in a Year seems ambitious for me, I'll have to look into the process. Thanks for the tip

  • @curtjarrell9710
    @curtjarrell9710 24 дні тому

    I'm looking forward to reading Herodotus, Borges and Name of the Rose in the next few years. Happy reading.

  • @amalft_
    @amalft_ 11 днів тому

    I laughed so hard when you said; now I am gonna talk about books I'm not gonna finish hahah you reminded me of myself !! 🤣

  • @Mark-fw8pd
    @Mark-fw8pd 23 дні тому

    My first vid of yours. I would steer you to John Julius Norwich - for preference 'The Normans in the South'.
    'The Normans in the South is the epic story of the House of Hauteville, and in particular Robert Guiscard, perhaps the most extraordinary European adventurer between the times of Caesar and Napoleon. In one year, 1084, he had both the Eastern and Western Emperors retreating before him and one of the most formidable of medieval Popes in his power. His brother, Roger, helped him to conquer Sicily from the Saracens, and his nephew Roger II went on to create the cosmopolitan kingdom whose remaining monuments still dazzle us today. The Normans in the South is the first of two volumes that recount an extraordinary chapter in Italian history.'

    • @TraumaticTomes
      @TraumaticTomes  22 дні тому +1

      Interesting, and thanks for watching. I've never encountered Norwich before, but his bibliography looks right down my alley. My one reading experience with the Normans was "1066: The Year of Conquest" by David Howarth. Decent book.

    • @Mark-fw8pd
      @Mark-fw8pd 22 дні тому +1

      @@TraumaticTomes After Howarth, you will find JJ Norwich's books full of curious details, and 'larger than life' characters. Well worth the time and effort.

  • @dylanescoo
    @dylanescoo Місяць тому +1

    Great list, although I don't think there's anyone quite like Borges. The man achieved perfection in style and elevated it to a new level, revolutionizing literary history worldwide. Everything that came after Borges must be necessarily compared to him because his Ficciones (and others of course) are the synthesis and antithesis of everything that came before, much like Shakespeare, Don Quijote, Tristram Shandy, or Flaubert.

    • @dylanescoo
      @dylanescoo Місяць тому

      btw there are entire passages in Latin in The Name of The Rose

    • @TraumaticTomes
      @TraumaticTomes  Місяць тому +1

      time to see if my National Latin Exam medals were worth it xD

  • @csspeakslanguages
    @csspeakslanguages 12 годин тому

    Are you incognito? Why?

  • @severianthefool7233
    @severianthefool7233 7 днів тому +1

    Are those bifocals