Strands#265 Did You Hear That?
Quizzes & Puzzles22 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by CrazyCazzy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Of your examples, Jane Eyre !! One of the best books ever written and a magical love story. Also 'A Tale of Two Cities' - again a superb love story, but the dreaded 'Dickens'. My 2 favourites anyway.
If you choose Jane Eyre, get the BBC double video with Timothy Dalton and Zelah Clarke, 1983. A very good and close adaptation of the novel. Tears to your eyes every time.
Of Mice and Men is thought of as a novella. Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath is far more substantial.
Da Vinci Code - a lot of fun but lacks literary merit. All those conspiracies would probably make a better historical criticism.
Jane Eyre is a good book to study. You could do a compare / contrast with Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys which builds on the story of Martha.
A moral book could be Albert Camus' The Outsider (or The Stranger), Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment or Franz Kafka's The Trial. I'd stay away from the fantasy if you want to impress your examiners.
Good Luck.
Joseph Conrad-Heart of Darkness (novella). He is regarded as one of the most influential writer in English (and English was his third or fourth language). The morality 'problem' was his main topic anyway, but nowhere so explicitly depicted as in this book.
You may be able to discuss the whole Western 'civilization morality' problem through this book.
See 'Apocalypse Now' and 'Heart of Darkness' (TV movie-Tim Roth, John Malkovich). Read TS Eliot's 'The Hollow Men�, read Tacitus etc etc.
'The Da Vinci Code'-definitely not-'pseudo literature.'
Fantasy isn't necessarily non-literary, but maybe some of the work referred to as 'magic realism' would be appropriate. Try Angela Carter, Isabel Allende, Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
For your purpose I'd choose something that you can write a lot about rather that the book that you enjoy the most, and maybe something unusual - the examiners might get hundreds of Austens/Brontes/Dickens. Margaret Atwood may also be worth looking into, and there are quite a lot of introductions to her work in print and on the net. Try Handmaid's Tale, Surfacing, Edible Woman, Alias Grace.
Ooh! And Toni Morrison. I think I'd go with her!