Summer is a great time to tackle big reads or to re-read some books that need a second chance or that were forced upon you to be read in a certain time frame that you could have been enjoyed if you were allowed to go at your own pace. Passive-aggressive rantings aside, here is a list of books I would like to re-read sometime:
- Lolita by Vladmir Nabokov: the best impulse read I've ever bought in my entire life. Snagged this before boarding a flight in 2008 and read it on vacation. My edition is all banged up as a result, but it's one of those books that I put down and never picked up again. Might read it once I'm done my current novel.
- The Lonely Londoners by Sam Selvon: I don't think any novel has made me laugh as much as this one. I burst out laughing in the library during finals, I burst out laughing in my room at 1 in the morning, I burst out laughing in a lecture hall. I had to read this one for a seminar, so I was a bit rushed and had to think a lot about it, although I can appreciate it for just what it is without thinking too critically about it.
- The Rules of Attraction by Brett Easton Ellis: I think I mentioned this before, but this novel is one of my guilty pleasures and I'm not even sure why. I think it's because I like reading it just for the sake of reading it. It's an easy read, it's hilarious, it's heartbreaking, it has a really good ending that makes you want to throw the book fifty feet away.
- Ulysses by James Joyce: I read this last summer and to be honest, I didn't get it, but most people don't. I loved parts of this novel, and I actually have a quote from the novel stuck to my wall. I feel like the next time I read this, I will need to have read Homer's Odyssey to better understand it and to appreciate the parallels.
- Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë: Rushed this one for class as well. Very few books I've read are as beautifully written as Jane Eyre. I have some reservations about the plot itself, but there is a part of the novel (somewhere at the end of the first quarter) that I absolutely love because of the dialogue between Jane and Mr. Rochester: the marriage of intellect and vacillation in their discourse that leads up to the proposal makes it probably my favourite love story ever (just kidding, I love it because of its Marxist undertones).
- Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe: I didn't get this one either and I had to read it for an AP lit class in high school. I couldn't even tell you what it's about. One of these days.
- The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky: A big read from 2009. I spent half of my summer reading this, from taking with me on a three-hour bus ride to keep me company to reading it outside of my classrooms so I wouldn't have to talk to other people. Also, a really good way to intimidate other English students.
- Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre: I need to re-read this to confirm that the ending does not involve accidentally selling out your friends to the Nazis, as my professor had insisted upon last semester.