The 5 Most Difficult Books Ever! (Fiction)

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2024
  • In this video, we're talking about the most difficult books, and what exactly it is that makes them so hard to get through.
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    BOOKS MENTIONED:
    (These are Amazon Affiliate links, If you buy anything through these it will support the channel):
    📚 Infinite Jest - David Foster Wallace
    amzn.to/41BPymT
    📚 Gravity’s Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon
    amzn.to/3toq4wI
    📚 The Sound and the Fury - William Faulkner
    amzn.to/41BrRuV
    📚 Ulysses - James Joyce
    amzn.to/4azsf15
    📚 Finnegans Wake - James Joyce
    amzn.to/48vrtjN
    ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
    FURTHER READING:
    I found A LOT of commentary on these books, here are the things directly referenced in the video.
    🎞️ How to Read Gravity's Rainbow
    • How to Read Gravity's ...
    🎞️ How to Pronounce all of Finnegans Wake thunderwords
    • DON'T PANIC: it's only...
    🎞️ The Sound and the Fury Movie (watch the 1959 version, the James Franco version got TERRIBLE reviews)
    www.imdb.com/title/tt0053298/...
    📚 An online guide to each chapter of Ulysses
    www.ulyssesguide.com/11-sirens
    📍 Infinite Jest Map
    sampottsinc.com/ij/
    OTHER SOURCES:
    www.buzzfeed.com/louispeitzma...
    earlybirdbooks.com/difficult-...
    / 827.most_difficult_novels
    dbrl.bibliocommons.com/list/s...
    airshipdaily.com/blog/09242014...
    www.oprah.com/oprahsbookclub/...
    www.newyorker.com/culture/cul...
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    CHAPTERS
    00:00 Intro
    00:22 Infinite Jest
    01:12 Gravity's Rainbow
    02:15 Stream-of-consciousness
    02:44 The Sound and the Fury
    03:54 Ulysses
    05:57 Finnegans Wake
    ▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀▀
    Music from Epidemic Sound
    Stock Footage from Pexels, Unsplash

Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @MaximilianNightingale
    @MaximilianNightingale Před 5 měsíci +826

    I once read the first page of “Finnegan’s Wake” out loud to show someone how absurd it is, but when I got to the “koaxkoax” they said “Wait, isn’t that how the frogs speak in Aristophanes’ ‘The Frogs’.” They were correct. They had identified an allusion, though what it mattered in context remained a mystery.

    • @lewiscoacher7781
      @lewiscoacher7781 Před 4 měsíci +39

      ", ...though what it mattered in context remained a mystery." is literary criticism of some weight. Our
      ability to doubt efficiently is so far from the animal, in our minds, that we think the hesitations of the
      fishes have no meaning, since our efforts to encode them have been barren. "Woe unto them that
      taking tides for their inflections, have more purpose to perform a craft than finding their assignment."

    • @Bugsy_Brown
      @Bugsy_Brown Před 4 měsíci +28

      Shit now I have two books to read

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Před 3 měsíci +41

      When I was in college my lit professor brought in a recording of Joyce reading Finnegan’s Wake. It was totally different from seeing it on a black and white page.

    • @johnkrieger185
      @johnkrieger185 Před 3 měsíci +29

      I've read all of it. I have to agree with Nabokov (the author of "Lolita") that it's not that great. Eliminating plot and character for the most part and reducing a novel basically to word play is just taking away too much. The most difficult novel ever written, but not among the best.

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Před 3 měsíci +18

      @@johnkrieger185 I’ve never made it through Finnegan’s Wake. I did make it through Ulysses, while I was living in Dublin. That helped. I think it was worth it.

  • @heathermcdonald211
    @heathermcdonald211 Před 5 měsíci +589

    I read Gravity's Rainbow and I can honestly say the only thing I remember about it is that I finished.

    • @greatcoldemptiness
      @greatcoldemptiness Před 4 měsíci +15

      filtered. GR isn't hard

    • @codybroadfoot7386
      @codybroadfoot7386 Před 4 měsíci +82

      @@greatcoldemptiness​​⁠​⁠Why do some readers have to be such a pompous ass? Good for you. You read it and didn’t think it was hard. Great. Most people are going to find it very difficult to read and understand, because it is intentionally a difficult book, but that doesn’t make them stupid or a bad reader. OP just made a joke and you decided to be a jerk for no reason. Hope you’re proud of that.

    • @codybroadfoot7386
      @codybroadfoot7386 Před 4 měsíci +20

      @@Cheeses_K_Riced No, it’s just rude and there’s no reason for it.

    • @teabearchurchill5600
      @teabearchurchill5600 Před 4 měsíci +9

      Same thing, except with Ulysses.
      I read it for college.

    • @codyclaeys2008
      @codyclaeys2008 Před 4 měsíci +8

      ​@greatcoldemptiness no reader has the same reading pace or comprehensiveness as another reader

  • @nbenefiel
    @nbenefiel Před 3 měsíci +117

    I read Ulysses while living in Dublin. I think you need a knowledge of Dublin and it helps if you’re familiar with Irish music. My friends and I did Bloomsday one year. We hit every pub mentioned in Ulysses, one drink allowed in each pub. By the time the pubs closed, always after the last bus, we staggered home. It was definitely a once in a lifetime experience.

    • @sid1gen
      @sid1gen Před měsícem +2

      You should do the route of don Quixote and/or the route of El Cid, next.

    • @kevinschultz6091
      @kevinschultz6091 Před měsícem +3

      yeah, I've actually heard you can (or at least one point could) use Ulysses as a sort of tour guide for Dublin.

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Před měsícem

      @@kevinschultz6091 No so much now, but back n my day you could. Dublin had really changed.

    • @vanhouten64
      @vanhouten64 Před měsícem

      They're all still in business, a hundred years later?

    • @nbenefiel
      @nbenefiel Před měsícem

      @@vanhouten64 I did Bloomsday in 1972. Most of Joyce’s pubs were still going. I don’t know how many of them are still there.

  • @EastSider48215
    @EastSider48215 Před 3 měsíci +160

    The Sound and the Fury is a terrific book and well worth the effort to read and comprehend.

    • @miquebts
      @miquebts Před 2 měsíci +9

      That book is beautiful

    • @izzytoons
      @izzytoons Před 2 měsíci +11

      I agree. Did a Faulkner seminar in which we read 17 of his 20 or so novels. Sound & the Fury and Absalom, Absalom were my personal favories, though I could not blame anyone for having completely different ones. And I love the short story, The Bear. Spent a couple of years with a lot of Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, & Dos Passos... and in the library's closed stacks with all the literary criticsm about them and their works was. A couple of the best years of my life. Told myself I would read Finnegan's Wake for retirement. Well, I'm here and I know that's not going to happen. As much as I love Joyce...

    • @evelynmayton470
      @evelynmayton470 Před 2 měsíci +7

      The Sound and the Fury is genuis.

    • @EastSider48215
      @EastSider48215 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@evelynmayton470: I could not agree more!

    • @Magrafo_
      @Magrafo_ Před 2 měsíci +3

      I couldn't pass page 30. I might give it a try again some day.

  • @diamonddavewonfor
    @diamonddavewonfor Před 5 měsíci +291

    There is a book club in California that read "Finnegan's Wake".
    It took them 28 years.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Před 4 měsíci +80

      That's nothing. A man who was convicted for speaking too slowly has just died in prison. He was halfway through his sentence.

    • @johnkrieger185
      @johnkrieger185 Před 3 měsíci +10

      I read it over several months. I just set a goal of reading, I think, 10 pages a day. I also read "A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake" and another guide at the same time.

    • @jjrossphd
      @jjrossphd Před 3 měsíci +3

      So they actually finished it? Surely you jest.

    • @pedroparamo7351
      @pedroparamo7351 Před 3 měsíci +14

      Trump said in an interview he read "Ulysses" and "Finnegan's Wake" when he was 12. I believe him.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 3 měsíci +30

      @@pedroparamo7351 Trump probably couldn't understand the five simplest books ever written.

  • @BrettWMcCoy
    @BrettWMcCoy Před 5 měsíci +315

    On the other hand, "Dubliners" by James Joyce, a collection of short stories, is very readable and quite good. It's hard to believe it's even the same author as Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake.

    • @Alexander-tj2dn
      @Alexander-tj2dn Před 4 měsíci +17

      True, Dubliners is a marvelous book.

    • @kevinlakeman5043
      @kevinlakeman5043 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Portrait of the Artist As a Young Man is a pretty straight forward read, as well.

    • @johnkrieger185
      @johnkrieger185 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@kevinlakeman5043 Except towards the end, where it becomes more elliptical and resembles the first part of "Ulysses".

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Před 3 měsíci +6

      I've found Joyce's short stories much better than Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake.

    • @johnkrieger185
      @johnkrieger185 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@parkerbrown-nesbit1747 "The Dead" is a masterpiece. Some of the others may also be, but I would not put them on the same level as "Ulysses".

  • @zerozeroren
    @zerozeroren Před 2 měsíci +9

    I remember loving The Sound and The Fury So Much. Thank you for bringing it up, time for a good old reread

  • @HEDGE1011
    @HEDGE1011 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Great video; of these I’ve only read “Ulysses", but I loved your take on these...uh...classics.
    Thank you!

  • @danstracner9053
    @danstracner9053 Před 5 měsíci +160

    This was a lucid and well-written survey of difficult books. In graduate school, I spent an entire semester on “Ulysses,” starting by carefully reading Homer’s “The Odyssey.” If you’re reasonably familiar with that classic, Joyce’s cascade of allusions makes more sense. This was pre-internet, so I had to rely on published articles and guidebooks to decipher the multitude of other allusions and languages. It would be easier to solve the puzzles today by using online material. But (as others have pointed out), the real pleasure of reading this difficult book is Joyce’s masterful wordplay, which often is more accessible if read aloud. Doing so definitely increased my appreciation. Joyce’s quip about professors spending their lives on his book has turned out to be so true. As for “Finnegans Wake,” I agree with William Faulkner’s assessment: “This is a case of the artist getting too close to the divine fire and being electrocuted by it!”

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +16

      I can't even imagine trying to tackle this one without the internet.

    • @leeeorama
      @leeeorama Před 5 měsíci +6

      For the non-scholar, I'd actually recommend NOT trying to catch the references and allusions, at least with the Bloom chapters. You can get a lot of mileage out of it just by inhabiting the mind of a character so fully, with writing that sometimes sings, and the fart jokes.

    • @StoicTheGeek
      @StoicTheGeek Před 5 měsíci

      Yes, it’s pretty common from what I’ve heard for English departments to run a course on Ulysses.

    • @boboffer-westort3216
      @boboffer-westort3216 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Before the Internet, we had annotated versions, which are actually still really nice: You can sit down & just read straight thru without having to open any device in parallel.

    • @tadhgcronin175
      @tadhgcronin175 Před 5 měsíci

      William Faulkner is great.

  • @123okpaul456
    @123okpaul456 Před 5 měsíci +1006

    Hegel's "The Phenomenology of Spirit" also deserves a mention.

    • @bdwon
      @bdwon Před 5 měsíci +60

      It's also non-fiction! So that's an advantage. 🙂

    • @alerlyking6803
      @alerlyking6803 Před 5 měsíci +57

      Yeah, I created a reading group for it at my University a year a two ago. Over 14 weeks of consistent focused meetings each week, we only got through the first 25 paragraphs of the introduction as a group. Really good time.
      Also, as someone who has now read a lot more of Hegel, I’d recommend new Hegel readers to read his lectures first then go through the little logic and big logic then go through the Phenomenology. A lot of the issue with going straight into the Phenomenology is that it uses a bunch of concepts (from his logic) that are left undefined in the Phenomenology.

    • @febatista2932
      @febatista2932 Před 5 měsíci +28

      Or anyting written by Derrida

    • @Gruso57
      @Gruso57 Před 5 měsíci +42

      I was thinking Being and Time by Heidegger to be harder because he references Hegel a bunch but at this point we are splitting hairs lol

    • @AlloAnder
      @AlloAnder Před 5 měsíci +13

      ​@@DiotimaMantinea-gc1uwdo you really think that. I read at least hundred pages of both books & I think Hegel is way, way harder

  • @VOCATUS123
    @VOCATUS123 Před 3 měsíci +16

    Ulysses and Finnegans Wake are both so worth the effort. Actually Joe Campbell co authored a book titled A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake that is very helpful. Thanks for making this video and encouraging us all to keep on reading!!

  • @DavideMazzetti
    @DavideMazzetti Před 2 měsíci +8

    I LOVE this video, especially the sections on Joyce. Quite apart from the actual content, your delivery is spot on. Difficult as they are, I love 'Ulysses' and' Finnegans Wake'. In comparison with 'Finnegan's Wake', 'Ulysses is fairly straightforward - but to be honest, I read them mainly for the fun of the language.

    • @collinbeal
      @collinbeal Před 4 dny

      The sea, the snotgreen sea, the scrotumtightening sea 😂

  • @lins4454
    @lins4454 Před 5 měsíci +167

    Once I asked my literature teatcher what was the hardest book he ever tried to read, he said immediatly "Ulysses, I took 6 years to finish and I still dont get it".
    And just for curiosity, here in Brazil we have a writter called João Guimarães Rosa, who is our James Joyce, he also spoke several lenguages and made a truly masterpiece called "Grande Sertão Veredas", maybe the greatest and hardest brazilian novel.

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 4 měsíci +16

      Wow that is so cool! I’ve never heard of that author before, I’m definitely gonna look him up, thank you for sharing 🙂

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 3 měsíci +19

      No one should ever even try to read "Ulysses" or "Finnegan's Wake." They are pure mental masturbation, and their only value is that they amused Joyce in writing them. The idea that one is writing something of such value that it is worth months or years of somebody else's time to read is such an example of overweening arrogance, pretension, and narcissism that it's disgusting and contemptible.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@DrawntoBooks You should do video on the five most difficult books that worth the trouble to read. "Das Kapital" would probably be on that list.

    • @thiagolucena3744
      @thiagolucena3744 Před 2 měsíci +3

      O comentário que eu tava procurando haha

    • @marialuizep.7872
      @marialuizep.7872 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@donnievance1942 hahahahah

  • @charlesajones77
    @charlesajones77 Před 5 měsíci +247

    My father used to say that Immanuel Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" was the hardest book he had ever attempted to read. This is a person who read the entire dictionary from start to finish. Multiple times.

    • @sonofacheron
      @sonofacheron Před 5 měsíci +24

      I’ve studied academic philosophy extensively and I struggle to get through a 10 page excerpt of Critique of Pure Reason . Although the work of Logical Positivist A J Ayer was the most incomprehensible

    • @Hic_Rhodus
      @Hic_Rhodus Před 5 měsíci +20

      I would say that Kant's writing is what makes the First Critique so hard to read. Rather than its explicit content and ideas. For example, you can get a good secondary reading and Kant's ideas tend to become quite comprehensible over time and with more experience. That doesn't mean the content is not also difficult. But Kant's approach certainly didn't help readers. Now Hegel by comparison is just crazy difficult on both the conceptual and the textual level. And not because he was a terrible or dry writer. Even if you do find a secondary work that makes Hegel somewhat more digestible... it normally comes at the expense of much of Hegel's own intentions and ambitions. Put 5 of the top Hegel scholars in the world into one room... and you will end up with at least 6 or 7 incompatible interpretations of what Hegel was trying to convey! 😄

    • @margaretcorfield9891
      @margaretcorfield9891 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Read this at college. Once I got past the initial style of writing, it was actually quite readable and definitely thought-provoking.

    • @shahsadsaadu5817
      @shahsadsaadu5817 Před 5 měsíci +3

      The best way to get through Germans is by learning German language and familiarising with classical German literature. In the words of gadamer, Germans really love their long drawn out sentences and soulful obscurities. And when you translate that to English, it becomes difficult.

    • @margaretcorfield9891
      @margaretcorfield9891 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @shahsadsaadu5817 I guess the reason I found it so decidedly readable was that I do speak German. It was my first language, though apart from the first 2 years of my life, I've lived in the UK. I read it at college too, which makes a difference. You're more inclined to really give things a go when everyone else around you is doing the same

  • @kevinbergin9971
    @kevinbergin9971 Před 2 měsíci +9

    "The demand that I make of my reader is that he should devote his whole Life to reading my works." James Joyce

    • @aqdrobert
      @aqdrobert Před dnem

      Butterfly: I got only two weeks, sir.

  • @ChristopherSibert
    @ChristopherSibert Před 2 měsíci +10

    Of all of these, I think _Ulysses_ is the only one I've attempted. I bought it and decided to read it, and probably got 100 pages in. Thank you, thank you!

    • @SugarSnapDragon
      @SugarSnapDragon Před měsícem

      It's the one that sounds most interesting actually.

    • @collinbeal
      @collinbeal Před 4 dny

      ​@@SugarSnapDragonit's very interesting. James Joyce doesn't pull any punches telling the story he wants to tell how he wants to tell it, a habit that saw Ulysses banned in the US for around 10 years (book burnings and all) until a Supreme Court decision said that the book was not p*rn*graphy.

  • @annaphallactic
    @annaphallactic Před 5 měsíci +299

    James Joyce was an author who was designed for audiobooks. I've read Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake twice, the first time in paper and the second time by audio, and the listening experience was so rich and satisfying.

    • @artemisXsidecross
      @artemisXsidecross Před 5 měsíci +25

      I listened to full unabridged audio version as well and this is a good way to begin his book. Homer's work was heard before ever making it to print.

    • @johnsouthwell1869
      @johnsouthwell1869 Před 5 měsíci +3

      is it in a Dublin accent, English Received Pronunciation, or general midwest American?

    • @dancegregorydance6933
      @dancegregorydance6933 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Wasn’t it written in a Dubliner accent?

    • @cjmacq-vg8um
      @cjmacq-vg8um Před 5 měsíci +2

      ... nice tip. but do you think joyce wrote it with the intention of technology being needed to understand or enjoy it?
      i've heard of all these books but only tried to read one; joyce's "Ulysses." i stopped trying after about 5 pages. and those first 5 pages i couldn't decipher with a captain marvel decoder ring. i bought it at a used book store on the cheap. man i love libraries and book stores. they have that great musty smell of intrigue, adventure and knowledge. i hate shopping but book stores and record shops, both practically extinct these days (thanks technology), are the only places i like to browse.

    • @tarico4436
      @tarico4436 Před 5 měsíci

      Deanna! What a magnificent staredown we just had. You won of course.

  • @oldpossum57
    @oldpossum57 Před 5 měsíci +84

    At the high school where I worked, there was a paper bound Finnegan’s Wake in the fiction section. It survived “weeding” by three long serving librarians. I hope it is still there. A librarian’s little joke.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 Před 5 měsíci

      I guess the dumb Southerners, if it's in the USA, did not consider it subversive.

    • @learningisfun2108
      @learningisfun2108 Před 5 měsíci +22

      As a former teacher-librarian who did weeding, I could never get rid of classics, no matter how old they were looking and knowing they’d never, ever be read by staff or students. I just couldn’t. It seemed like a crime, morally wrong, a loss of our history.

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 Před 5 měsíci

      “Weeding” would take more stamina than I could muster. Often the books discarded from the library found their way to my classroom, where I had my own collection of 250+ Book Club book sets. Book Club , which can be as challenging and transformative as you want, can be the best of pedagogies if taken seriously. My colleagues finally adopted it, and watered it down to the point that it wasn’t worth much. Book Club also allows you to compensate for the shortcomings of a official core literature, in our case almost exclusively DWEM.@@learningisfun2108

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones Před 5 měsíci +11

      ​@@learningisfun2108and maybe, just maybe, some dreamy-eyed kid would pick up that Dead Souls or Anna Karenina, or even Master and Margarita.

    • @horsermchead2504
      @horsermchead2504 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @learningisfun2108 I mean even if the school gets rid of it that doesn’t mean no one can ever read it

  • @deegeraghty9426
    @deegeraghty9426 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Brilliant analysis of hard to read books. Thanks. Enjoyed Dubliners. Finnegan's Wake was impossible. Enjoyed James Joyce's Ulysses drama on BBC radio 4.

  • @cockeyedoptimista
    @cockeyedoptimista Před 3 měsíci +1

    Very funny, charming, educational, wonderful video. So glad CZcams showed it to me. That's what I get for joining my library's reading challenge, I guess.

  • @dbob3405
    @dbob3405 Před 5 měsíci +35

    After the first read through, Sound And Fury is not that bad. I have gotten to the point where I can tell where we are and who is telling the story in about any part. The beauty of the writing is what got me through the first read. The writing is intoxicating. It is one of the books that has shaped the way I think about reality since I first read it almost 50 years ago.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I got about half way through V and knew I was missing something important and started over. I had missed the point entirely the first time but had still enjoyed it. It has a lot of very funny parts. It was like reading an all night BS session in college back when everybody was high on something.

  • @lde-m8688
    @lde-m8688 Před 5 měsíci +32

    I struggled with The Brothers Karamozov. It is not that it's some unreadable thing, but it is difficult ( much more so that Crime and Punishment), and it's just so damn dark. It's worth it in the end, but boy, was that a trudge for me.

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 4 měsíci +6

      I’m reading this right now actually. I love Russian literature, I agree it is dark though, and a trudge, some nights I just can’t even pick it up. But I still love it!

    • @lde-m8688
      @lde-m8688 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @DrawntoBooks Mine was made worse as it was a read for high school. I re-read it on my own which was better. This teacher's summer reading was "The Agony and the Ecstacy" if that tells one anything. 🤣

    • @JLar-bb5hl
      @JLar-bb5hl Před 4 měsíci

      I spent half a year - at least - on C+P. Was it worth it? No.
      Now I am going through Dr. Zhivago, which is lighter, but anything but a page turner, I must say.

    • @teddyshea3921
      @teddyshea3921 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Brothers Karamozov- the one book I found too depressing to finish.

    • @gypsydavy708
      @gypsydavy708 Před 4 měsíci +1

      I struggled with "The Idiot." Not impossible to understand just boring.

  • @kensilverstone1656
    @kensilverstone1656 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Concise and very informative.

  • @obradlutovac3663
    @obradlutovac3663 Před 2 měsíci +57

    "The Castle" by Kafka should be on any most-difficult-to-read book list. That novel will most certainly put your patience to the test.

    • @Porpentina
      @Porpentina Před 2 měsíci +4

      Took me two years to finish, and I love Kafka. 😅

    • @badtvbad1
      @badtvbad1 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I think it is fitting that it is unfinished.

    • @kevoreilly6557
      @kevoreilly6557 Před 2 měsíci +12

      The joke : The Castle is such an elusive a read that even Kafka didn’t finish it …

    • @luciantroaca5126
      @luciantroaca5126 Před 2 měsíci +1

      When I finished it I wrote in my diary that after such a hermetic book I need something opposite, so I picked 'Who Killed Palomino Molero' by Llosa. And yes, they are both splendid and thought provoking books with opposite grades of difficulty

    • @Magrafo_
      @Magrafo_ Před 2 měsíci +12

      Not difficult at all. Quite entertaining, actually.

  • @williamdirks5805
    @williamdirks5805 Před 5 měsíci +74

    Gravity's Rainbow may be confoundingly difficult in some ways. But I recall parts that were utterly beautiful, and others that were utterly, utterly hilarious. A character looks out over a city at sunrise and sees "crystals growing in the morning's beaker." Some great writing.

    • @hfjdksalable
      @hfjdksalable Před 5 měsíci +16

      Yea it's kind of sad the poster wrote it off without giving a try. Also kind of weird they rated the difficulty without reading it now that I am thinking about it.

    • @fedemonsalve1
      @fedemonsalve1 Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@hfjdksalablebecause most “booktubers” just like talking about how much they like books

    • @ericmiller6056
      @ericmiller6056 Před 4 měsíci +7

      And those crystals are the condensation trails of V-2 rockets coming at him. Beauty and terror as identical.

    • @philpollack8140
      @philpollack8140 Před 2 měsíci +3

      There once was a rocket called V2, to pilot which you did not need to. You just pushed a button and it would leave nothing but stiffs and big holes, and debris, too. (That's what I remember from the 1.5 years I spent reading Gravity's Rainbow.)

    • @anthonybrakus5280
      @anthonybrakus5280 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@philpollack8140oh, bro... You forgot the part about the banana peal? That's tragic. 😂🤣

  • @wisewumman
    @wisewumman Před 5 měsíci +122

    "The Sound and the Fury" was one of the most amazing reading experiences I had in high school. It remains one of the most important milestones in my life for myriad reasons. I love that exasperating but ingenious deconstruction of the "normal" storytelling process. I'm so glad I stuck with it until the entire picture began to develop like a Polaroid photo. And, yes, I love both Joyce books, too.

    • @lisafall3561
      @lisafall3561 Před 4 měsíci +3

      The sound in the fury makes much more sense if you have read Faulkner‘s other books set in Yuknapatawpaw county.

    • @user-lb4vh7xw9i
      @user-lb4vh7xw9i Před 4 měsíci +7

      A masterpiece. Not difficult at all. It is somehow a shame to call this book this way.

    • @wisewumman
      @wisewumman Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@user-lb4vh7xw9i I agree that it's a masterpiece. But I've noticed that lots of people agree with her that it's a difficult read. I loved it myself.

    • @barrysimon7187
      @barrysimon7187 Před 4 měsíci +4

      I read this in college. And once I got the rhythm of the stream of consciousness chapter, I fell in love with it.

    • @castelodeossos3947
      @castelodeossos3947 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Found it not difficult so much as bothersome to read. His 'Absalom, Absalom', however, is on my list of the ten best novels I've ever read. Got so drawn into it that it was like swimming underwater, holding my breath. Had to take a break every now and then, to get air. And then back in. (His 'As I Lay Dying' is far better IMHO than TSatF, and is funny to boot.)

  • @davidhancock6629
    @davidhancock6629 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Infinite Jest is my favorite novel of all time. My first time through I had never read anything like it before and I was enthralled. Like Gravity's Rainbow, it rewards you the second time through. These authors chopped up the narrative in a way that significant details are presented before sometimes many pages later you are provided a reason to recognize their significance. While overall I enjoyed GR, the obscene scenes in that book are over the top for me. I got most of the way through Ulysses and enjoyed it for the most part, but I had help from an explanatory text that I read at the same time. I appreciated Joyce's experimentation, helping usher in modernist literature. Truly, Ulysses has humor as you say - but so does Infinite Jest, in spades - and Gravity's Rainbow as well. I like works of art that make me think, that don't reveal their mysteries so easily, that I can return to again and again and find new things each time. I am now intrigued to check out Finnegan's Wake.

    • @condor2279
      @condor2279 Před 2 měsíci

      I liked how the entire climax & denouement of Infinite Jest happens off-screen, and he gives you enough knowledge to fill in the blanks and work out what happened. It's really unique how he did it.

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem

      You might enjoy Nabokov's Pale Fire, and Michel Tournier's The Ogre

  • @jps55912
    @jps55912 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I've begun Finnegan's Wake a few times. I haven't made it past page 77. I will. In my retirement I hope to start and finish it. Thanks for your insight. Very helpful!

    • @izzytoons
      @izzytoons Před 2 měsíci

      "In my retirement I hope to start and finish it." That's what I said back in 1980. Well, I'm here, and I have to admit it's not going to happen...

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem +2

      There are much better ways to pass your time in terms of books. Michel Tournier's The Ogre, for example. Everything by Tolstoy and Dostoevsky (to list the most obvious).

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Před měsícem

      @@talastra Agreed. I just posted a similar comment before seeing yours.

  • @johnLee-bb2do
    @johnLee-bb2do Před 5 měsíci +29

    I read Gravities Rainbow. I was astounded at the breadth and depth of his knowledge of WW2 history and facts. I enjoyed it very much. I thought remembrance of things past was much more difficult.

    • @trise4
      @trise4 Před 5 měsíci +3

      One of my favorite books.

    • @shellymars9961
      @shellymars9961 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Yes, I'm very surprised Remembrance of Things Past is not on this list. The Sound and the Fury is casual beach reading compared to Proust.

    • @shannongfm9945
      @shannongfm9945 Před 4 měsíci

      It’s a terrific novel.

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Před 4 měsíci

      *Gravity's

    • @laemotica8405
      @laemotica8405 Před 3 měsíci

      Remembrance of Things past is beautiful, but very hard to read.

  • @hermannbarbato
    @hermannbarbato Před 5 měsíci +32

    I think you should also have mentioned "The waste land" by T.S. Eliott. It is basically a poem-novel featuring time shifts, language shifts, full of literary references both modern and ancient.
    It is basically Joyce, but in verses.

    • @gaileverett
      @gaileverett Před 4 měsíci +12

      The only thing at all difficult about The Waste Land is knowing the allusions. Much, much easier than Joyce and much, much shorter. He even gives you notes!

    • @parkerbrown-nesbit1747
      @parkerbrown-nesbit1747 Před 3 měsíci +3

      The Waste Land is so much better written!
      I was a member of the National Forensics League in high school, and read a section of this for poetry interpretation competition. It always scored high with the judges (most of whom were English teachers).

    • @ritaweygint4038
      @ritaweygint4038 Před 3 měsíci +4

      I love that poem; it is amazing. Made a huge impression on me.

    • @alexf7377
      @alexf7377 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Waste Land and Ulysses were published in same year of 1922. Both authors admitted a debt to Wagner (each work containing numerous references) and were striving to make literature have the same visceral power as Wagner's music.

    • @2msvalkyrie529
      @2msvalkyrie529 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Yes ! Just the opening three lines ;
      ' April is the cruellest month
      Breeding lilacs out of the dead land / Mixing memory and desire....

  • @dabpog
    @dabpog Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great list and commentary. I did manage to get through Ulysses on the third try, but only by taking two days and reading it straight through. Finnegans Wake lost me around the middle of page 2.

  • @steveowens398
    @steveowens398 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Thanks for your detailed review! I'd throw an honorary mention to 'Dhalgren', by Samuel R. Delaney. It's far more understandable than the one's you've listed, but to gain that understanding you have to suffer through some significant psychological torment, including embarrassing and uncomfortable dinner parties in nearly empty housing developments. It borrows from Finnegan's Wake by starting with the last half of a sentence and ending (after perhaps a thousand pages) with the first half of the same sentence. I read it every few years - it is a painful literary masterpiece.

    • @appaatemomo-freePalestine
      @appaatemomo-freePalestine Před 2 měsíci

      I read dhalgren last year, it took me like seven months and I feel like an absolute idiot for not understanding it.

    • @richardkatz2811
      @richardkatz2811 Před 2 měsíci

      read delaney's times square red--times square blue and dahlgren makes more sense

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem +1

      @@appaatemomo-freePalestine Maybe, but the porn was hot; I'm pretty sure that's why it was Delany's best-selling novel. Also, yes. Free Palestine.

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem

      Try Nova and Einstein Intersection (both quite short)@@richardkatz2811

    • @appaatemomo-freePalestine
      @appaatemomo-freePalestine Před měsícem +1

      @@talastra Fair, though the sex scenes were definitely a mixed bag for me. Thanks for your support for Palestine

  • @affanshikoh5069
    @affanshikoh5069 Před 5 měsíci +42

    This may sound a little crazy, but I tried to pour through Joyce's Finnegans Wake a month ago while taking help from my 13-year-old cousin. I seriously took every input he gave, and tried to view each paragraph, heck, each word through that lens. We couldn't get past page one but we did make a couple of fun discoveries on the way 😂😂

  • @sewaprolo
    @sewaprolo Před 5 měsíci +121

    House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski definitely needs an honorable mention.

    • @melvinshaw7574
      @melvinshaw7574 Před 5 měsíci +16

      I love House of Leaves, but I suspect its reputation is a bit harshly earned. It can definitely be read a fair number of ways, but once you sit down and make an actual choice on how you approach it, it becomes a lot more manageable. I think for most it's the simple fact that you want to read it straight-through as a novel, but the format goes out of its way to distract you from that.
      I found myself somewhat disappointed then when I realized how little most of this narratives have to do with the resolution.

    • @shutdownseti2493
      @shutdownseti2493 Před 5 měsíci +16

      House of Leaves is demonstrably less complex or "difficult" than any of these books

    • @sewaprolo
      @sewaprolo Před 5 měsíci +19

      That's why I said honorable mention, only. Honestly, you "readers" are the most arrogant lot out there.

    • @Bookspine5
      @Bookspine5 Před 5 měsíci

      Great read.

    • @Yesica1993
      @Yesica1993 Před 5 měsíci

      I had been curious about it from the time it first came out. But I did wonder if it was more "style over substance." I just don't have the mental energy for that. I am willing to deal with an unconventional writing style if the story is well done and has a strong conclusion. But to go through a bunch of hassle just to be disappointed in the end? Ugh.@@melvinshaw7574

  • @stefanstern3542
    @stefanstern3542 Před měsícem

    Oh, I REALLY enjoyed this!

  • @krommer66
    @krommer66 Před 2 měsíci +6

    It's "Finnegans" not "Finnegan's." There's a reason why it's written that way.

  • @WeWiLLRefuse
    @WeWiLLRefuse Před 5 měsíci +15

    Such a great video! We had to read Ulysses for class this semester, and while I found it to be a puzzle, it was quite good! I love Thomas Pynchon, I would highly recommend Mason & Dixon by him

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Thank you! I think Ulysses would be fun to read in a class, it was probably really nice to have people to talk to about it while reading. Mason & Dixon sound interesting, thanks for the rec, I'd like to read him, just not Gravity's Rainbow 😬

    • @Snardbafulator
      @Snardbafulator Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@DrawntoBooks All Pynchon, including his "lighter" novels The Crying of Lot 49, Vineland, Inherent Vice and Bleeding Edge, partakes of all the stuff that Pynchon haters hate about Gravity's Rainbow (and Pynchon haters hate _a lot)._ Including buckets of sexual ick and extremely tacky humor. Awesome ;)

    • @sakshamdwivedi4273
      @sakshamdwivedi4273 Před 5 měsíci

      what uni ?? what course??

    • @WeWiLLRefuse
      @WeWiLLRefuse Před 5 měsíci

      @@sakshamdwivedi4273 it was Modernist era class

  • @Sayantika_Sarkar
    @Sayantika_Sarkar Před 5 měsíci +3

    Melanie, I stumbled upon this video while browsing CZcams. Your presentation of these books is so enjoyable! Subscribed and eagerly awaiting more content from you. 📚🎉

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Oh my gosh, this is the nicest comment, thank you so much!

  • @alyoshakaramazov8469
    @alyoshakaramazov8469 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I’ve read two of the five, and started FW. Ok, I’m a chemist, not a lit. person. But I would love to join your book club!

  • @reedr7142
    @reedr7142 Před 2 měsíci

    Love your sound affects.

  • @caronstout354
    @caronstout354 Před 5 měsíci +39

    I would add "Riddley Walker", a post-apocalyptic novel written in a devolved form of English that is difficult to understand at first, but gets easier as you continue to read it...

    • @PsilocybinCocktail
      @PsilocybinCocktail Před 2 měsíci +4

      I first encountered it as a play in Manchester back in the Eighties, starring a young David Threlfall, which made the book easier to understand.

    • @nevilleenglish
      @nevilleenglish Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@PsilocybinCocktail I went to see that at the Royal Exchange as well.

    • @MrUndersolo
      @MrUndersolo Před 2 měsíci

      Glad someone mentioned this one.
      My copy's on a shelf... gathering dust...

    • @urobs17
      @urobs17 Před 2 měsíci +4

      I really enjoyed "Riddley Walker," read it twice so far and the second time was much more comprehensible than the first. A fun fact is that the author, Russell Hoban, wrote a series of children's picture books about a badger named Frances ("Bedtime for Frances" is one - that should give you a sense of the intended audience). When I read "Riddley" the first time, I was astonished that the same man had written both. Check them out, especially to read to a child aloud.

    • @seansmith3058
      @seansmith3058 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Fantastic book.

  • @hiphopatitis
    @hiphopatitis Před 5 měsíci +23

    5. Infinite Jest - David Foster Wallace 0:24
    4. Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon 1:12
    3. The Sound and the Fury - William Faulkner 2:13
    2. Ulysses - James Joyce 3:53
    1. Finnegan's Wake - James Joyce 5:54

  • @NARushton
    @NARushton Před 3 měsíci +2

    Before I watched this I knew Joyce would be numbers one & two.
    Also, I love that you have a copy of Gustav Dore's illustration from Don Quixote on your wall!

  • @livingexiled
    @livingexiled Před měsícem +1

    Perfect countdown. I have never been able to get more than 50 pages in to Finnigan’s Wake.

  • @horacioferro3571
    @horacioferro3571 Před 5 měsíci +43

    I think the key to "read" Finnegans Wake is in what you said about the Sirens chapter of Ulysses. Joyce is not using language to convey meaning, but to convey music, in all its parameters: melody (sentences), harmony (clusters of words), timbre (the different languages, rhythm (word spacing & punctuation), etc. So, the book works more as a symphony, than as a novel. You don't listen to Beethoven's Fifth to rationalize every note that is being plucked, but to submerge in the mass of sounds & flow with the music. That approach to Finnegans Wake make it very enjoyable, in spite of you understanding what is going on (which does not mean that it's utter nonesense, but rather that the motifs are scattered all along the work). It was something not unusual in its time: Kandinski made music with his paintings, Schoenberg was thinking his music in terms of colors, &c. As you said, Joyce is, in his core, very playful, & if you let go with the flow of it, eventually will be able to play with him in the game he's proposing. It's quite intimidating at first, for certain.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Před 3 měsíci +1

      He is writing a normal novel, with all the imagery there, you have to understand it like any other book. It is not a symphony, This is simply false. It is only true for Book II ch 2, that's it, that represents the most abstract and deepest part of sleep.

    • @horacioferro3571
      @horacioferro3571 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@annaclarafenyo8185 ok.

    • @anthonybrakus5280
      @anthonybrakus5280 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I think that your comment is very intriguing. Not sure that I agree 100% but I like the thought. I feel like I am letting go of many other forms of knowing this work if I try to fit it into any type of category. I especially balk at the "dreaming" idea. Okay, yes it represents stream of consciousness and the dream realm is it's playground but this book is so much more than that. The symphony is only a tiny part of the experience, but the idea definitely resonates in the work. I will file it for later reference as I continue to coax meaning from the pages. Thank you.

    • @horacioferro3571
      @horacioferro3571 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@anthonybrakus5280 Yeah, I mean, of course musicality is only an aspect of how Joyce employs words, but it's a major one, imo.
      It's also very evident for me, as another commenter pointed out (alas in what I perceived as a very rude manner, that's why I parried that conversation), that there is a syntactic/narrative progression of the work (otherwise it would be utter nonesense), but that's also the case in musical composition. The concept of 'programmatic music', developed by romantic composers delves deep into that idea: take, for instance, Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture", where by the mere modulations of the melodies for the Tzar's Anthem & the Marsellaise, he depicts not only the Franco-Russian war, but also which faction is winning or losing at each point of the work. Cesar Frank's "The Accursed Hunter" is another exemplar case of orchestral music having a heavy narrative inclination.
      My point is that it's clear that Joyce's main composition concern was not using words for clarity of exposition or anything akin, so trying to brute force comprehension as if the work were a very compact riddle (which seems to be a common approach among those frustrated with this book) is by no means the best way to read it, let alone enjoying it.
      A musical approach is the one that was useful for me, & I find that the clues suggesting such an approach are quite evident in the book, but in the end it is only an example of how to approach the book not from a syntactic/narrative centered position.
      I'm sorry if my words become entangled at some point. I'm afraid it's not a very easy idea I'm trying to convey, & English is not my native language. I would struggle to express this point in Spanish as well.
      Regards!

    • @anthonybrakus5280
      @anthonybrakus5280 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I think I understand what you are saying. I definitely find the same kind of revelatory nuance in musical ideas. I really learned a lot about the mathematical abstractions present in Bach's work. I read another masterpiece of Western art called "Goedel, Escher, Bach An Eternal Golden Braid" which spelled out the clear relationship of math ideas with Bach's work. He introduced the concept of homeomorphism and showed how a piece by Bach is homomorphic to a concept in number theory. It's truly a once in a hundred years type of work.
      I have a small selection from my library that I keep on the night stand next to my bed for quick access... Finnegans Wake, The Road to Reality, The Bible, Complete Shakespeare, Goedel, Escher, Bach and a few others that change depending on what I am currently interested in (usually math or physics related). I'm a musician and love music. I have studied a lot of compositional theory, but I wish I knew more about historical theory and artist's intention. The ideas you shared about 1812 Overture are wonderful. Some day I will make the time to learn more in that area. Thanks again for sharing your thoughts with me. I am always glad to learn and the things you have so far talked about are quite fascinating. 👍🏾

  • @TimDchubs1
    @TimDchubs1 Před 5 měsíci +68

    On my fourth read-through of Finnegans Wake currently. The first time took about a year with an average of roughly two pages a day. Felt I understand about 20 pages worth of it, but what I did get was stunningly beautiful, a way of linking what things feel like to experience with the abstract concepts and symbols the words represent.
    The second read-through blew my head off. I've never found so much in a single work to enjoy in any piece of art, not just literature.
    On the third read-through I compiled my own version of the text out of some of the more poetic and comprehensible passages, which comes in around a hundred pages.
    For the fourth read-through I'm now supplementing it with the Naxos recording read by Barry McGovern and Marcella Riordan. At this point it's just an endless wormhole of ideas and inspiration. Hope you get into it one day as it's well worth it!

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +7

      Wow, four times, that's so cool that you love it so much! I read that it's the kind of book that you can explore for your whole lifetime, I'm just super impressed you understand any of it

    • @TimDchubs1
      @TimDchubs1 Před 5 měsíci +16

      @@DrawntoBooks What I've found helpful is not actively trying to understand it. Just try to hear the music in the language itself and let it wash over you. The less you struggle to understand the more clear it becomes with repeated exposure. It's a kaleidoscope, so whatever patterns your mind is able to grab in the moment is what you'll see. Cheers!

    • @lymphomasurvive
      @lymphomasurvive Před 5 měsíci +1

      Get Joseph Campbell’s Skeleton Key to Finnegan’s Wake.

    • @buddharuci2701
      @buddharuci2701 Před 5 měsíci

      Was it not Ulysses for which Campbell wrote skeleton key? (What do I know?) May I add, read in a group and read aloud. No requirements for group membership, but the more varied the experience of the members, th3 more fun it will be.

    • @artemisXsidecross
      @artemisXsidecross Před 5 měsíci

      @@TimDchubs1
      👍

  • @reriuqne0-ny1er
    @reriuqne0-ny1er Před 2 měsíci +3

    Ulysses and Finnnegans Wake are really worth reading. I never regretted spending two summers reading them.

  • @mournblade1066
    @mournblade1066 Před 3 měsíci +8

    I figured House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski would be on this list when you mentioned footnotes within footnotes.

    • @Teelirious
      @Teelirious Před 2 měsíci +3

      I thought it would be, too, and was delighted it was not. I feel HOL's 'confusion' is well-designed to be pregnable. Does become a choice of rabbit holes to follow at points, but thoroughly comprehendable.

    • @condor2279
      @condor2279 Před 2 měsíci +1

      It's not even close to Infinite Jest's difficulty, let alone belonging on the same list as Ulysses and Finnegan.

    • @condor2279
      @condor2279 Před 2 měsíci

      Great book though.

    • @timapple6586
      @timapple6586 Před měsícem +1

      The 'footnotes within footnotes' bit made me immediately think of Umberto Eco. Imagine my dismay when, after thoroughly enjoying the movie 'The Name Of The Rose', I rushed out and bought the book. The last page should be a frameable college diploma.

  • @scb0212
    @scb0212 Před 5 měsíci +9

    Samuel Beckett's "Trilogy" - Stream of consciousness, but icy and clipped, with that consciousness slowly dissolving throughout. Joyce's protege, but the minimalist to JJ's maximalist. Beautiful prose!

    • @artemisXsidecross
      @artemisXsidecross Před 5 měsíci

      👍

    • @johnkrieger185
      @johnkrieger185 Před 3 měsíci

      First book was great, second less so. I can't believe the third was written for any other reason than to make a trilogy.

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před 2 měsíci

      Fail better!@@johnkrieger185

  • @graysonmcguire3510
    @graysonmcguire3510 Před 5 měsíci +56

    Lists like these always make me appreciate the writing of Virginia Woolf, even when she isn't mentioned. Despite how notoriously difficult stream-of-consciousness writing is to read, I have always found Woolf's writing very readable while still having as much substance as anything by Faulkner who is the only other stream-of-consciousness writer I regard at being at her level (I have yet to read Joyce).

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +14

      That's why Woolf is great, and also why she doesn't end up here. Because she writes the style so efficiently that it doesn't confuse, it just enhances the story.

    • @paulhammond6978
      @paulhammond6978 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@DrawntoBooks idk - It might be that I came to Joyce first, and therefore am more used to his style with stream of consciousness, but I do find Woolf's style more confusing than Joyce's - I have just recently read "To The Lighthouse" and the fact that you keep switching whose head you are in there made it quite difficult for me to get through.

    • @user-rx6ze5uu7n
      @user-rx6ze5uu7n Před 4 měsíci +4

      Funny story. I once almost got into a fistfight over Woolf (I said, “faux intellectual twaddle”) vs Faulkner (she said, “baby talk gibberish “).

    • @pedroparamo7351
      @pedroparamo7351 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Nabokov hated Faulkner's book. And what if he was right?

    • @pedroparamo7351
      @pedroparamo7351 Před 3 měsíci +1

      books

  • @lordflowerbear6597
    @lordflowerbear6597 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I have read all 5 of these books... I find your evaluations truthful..... 👍👍😉

  • @linguaphile42
    @linguaphile42 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I read The Sound and the Fury as a high school senior with the book in one hand and the Cliff's Notes in the other to explain it. Not sure I would have stuck with it otherwise, but it was so magnificent, and started me on a Faulkner journey. Read most of his works and even made a pilgrimage to Oxford, MS, to see his home. He's my favorite American author. Intruder in the Dust is a very accessible intro to his works if anyone is interested.

    • @user-bn7bk5mw4s
      @user-bn7bk5mw4s Před 3 měsíci +1

      As I Lay Dying drove me damn crazy. All Faulkner is difficult. I LOVE Absalom Absalom but it's difficult also. JOYCE IS PERVERTED and I love literature but I see it that way

    • @user-rx6ze5uu7n
      @user-rx6ze5uu7n Před 2 měsíci +2

      I made the same pilgramage. At Faulkner's tombstone, among the empty whiskey bottles, someone had left a pocket watch, face down. I turned it over, thinking.....no....but sure as heck, the hands had been pulled off. Brilliant token of respect.

    • @linguaphile42
      @linguaphile42 Před 2 měsíci

      @@user-rx6ze5uu7n It isn't even past 🙂

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem

      The Reivers is straightforward. I remember the Snopes books not being like AA, TS&TF, LIA, AILD@@user-bn7bk5mw4s

  • @chrissmurray255
    @chrissmurray255 Před 5 měsíci +62

    After reading one of Stephen Hawking's books, I looked at the 'Further reading" section at the end. It recommended a book by Roger Penrose, which I subsequently bought. It was a lengthy book, and the first sentence in the preface read ( I'll never forget this) - "In order to appreciate the work in this book, it is necessary to have a firm grasp of mathematics, so the first seventeen chapters of this book are dedicated to mathematics".
    After returning to the store that same day, I pointed this sentence out to the girl who sold me the book...and I had no trouble getting my money back.

    • @user-hx1ob7sl8o
      @user-hx1ob7sl8o Před 4 měsíci +3

      🤣

    • @IainDelaney
      @IainDelaney Před 4 měsíci +5

      I'll bet that was "The Emperor's New Mind"

    • @davidcopson5800
      @davidcopson5800 Před 4 měsíci +9

      A nice story, but it doesn't add up.

    • @chrissmurray255
      @chrissmurray255 Před 4 měsíci

      Gasp, a maths pun - and a good 1 2. @@davidcopson5800

    • @anthonybrakus5280
      @anthonybrakus5280 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Are you talking about The Road to Reality? I keep a copy handy on my bedstand right next to Finnegans Wake😂
      It really is worth the time, especially if you want to understand what modern physics is for real, not just conceptual abstractions.
      Emperors New Mind is a good one too. Dr. Penrose is a great science communicator, but he does ask a bit from his audience. Like: study math intensely for a few years. That kind if thing😂

  • @zebfross
    @zebfross Před 5 měsíci +17

    These books are pretty nuts. Remembrances of Lost Time was the most difficulty book I've ever read personally; there's sentences that go on for entire paragraphs.

    • @esmerylan
      @esmerylan Před 2 měsíci

      I've still never read it, but I read a fascinating book by Lydia Davis where she talks about translating it, and all the challenges Proust's French poses for making it both understandable in English and true to the spirit of the original. Basically, he's as difficult to read in French as in translation!

    • @Norvaal3
      @Norvaal3 Před měsícem +1

      I read an excerpt of it in World Lit, and that was enough for me. It was the dullest thing I ever read; how can someone write such a long book about trying to fall asleep?

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody Před měsícem +2

      I read the first one. Swann's Way. Definitely some long sentences. But it had its moments, and great prose. Still, it wasn't fun enough to make me want to read the other six or so books. I almost never read a whole book series because I never get drawn in that much. Although I did read the Book of the Dun Cow trilogy.

    • @zebfross
      @zebfross Před měsícem +1

      @@theboombody I'm finishing the Dark Tower series now; it's probably the first series to really hook me in, but some books are better than others. If you're real adventurous, Gormanghast is a bit slow but worth the time because it has such flashes of brilliance

  • @steveshea6148
    @steveshea6148 Před měsícem +2

    You're actually making me want to read Ulysses, something I've never desired before this point, and I'm almost 60.

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před měsícem +1

      You should try it! There's also guides that can help make the experience even richer.

    • @noradean8686
      @noradean8686 Před 27 dny +1

      51 and have the book,also am irish,so am determined now to read it, will let you know how I get on ,let me know if you do also xx

    • @steveshea6148
      @steveshea6148 Před 27 dny +1

      @@noradean8686 I will!

    • @noradean8686
      @noradean8686 Před 26 dny

      @@steveshea6148 let's begin 👍👍

    • @noradean8686
      @noradean8686 Před 24 dny

      A maraton begins 😂

  • @flanamac7993
    @flanamac7993 Před 3 měsíci

    I saw Finnegan's Wake in a small Irish Independent film. The context helped my understanding immensely.

  • @lewiscoacher7781
    @lewiscoacher7781 Před 5 měsíci +16

    There's no explanation for why I read Gravity's Rainbow the first time. Without a chart of the characters,
    I was adrift for most of it, even as I was catching hold of some of the better vignettes. The second
    reading was a revelation as it became as easy as pie to fit not only the characters together, but
    their organizations as well. Pynchon runs a pretty tight ship. On the third reading I had the pleasure
    of remembering these small stories within the story, as they were coming up for review. In one of
    them, the tragedy of an isolated submarine and its skeleton crew sees them "so lonely that their
    only hope was that they might die of it."
    Something that could be useful to anyone reading GR would be an index, but who ever heard of that
    in a novel? Still, if one could look up the entry at Byron The Bulb, the risk of addiction to GR would go
    way up. It is an intensely humane and ghastly and hilarious story.
    EDIT: The adjectives chosen by the Pulitzer board are an embarrassment; they're finding "unreadable"
    a book they haven't read. The "turgid" crack reminds me of William Hazlitt's lamentable misfire while
    criticizing Samuel Johnson: "He always writes on stilts," indicating that William looked into Johnson
    about as diligently as the board looked into Pynchon.

    • @granthurlburt4062
      @granthurlburt4062 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I agree. Not nearly as difficult as Ulysses or F. Wake. There was a story. One needs to realise it has vignettes, many brilliant. Like the conversation between two skin cells discussing what it will be like to rise to the surface and die. I'm read it only once and need to give it another shot. I admire you for giving it three tries. Couldnt get through Mason and Dixon. Vineland was readable but not fascinating. Same goes for Inherent Vice. At least its a story. I shall have to tryn "Against the Day'.

  • @economicerudite4924
    @economicerudite4924 Před 5 měsíci +41

    Hegel deserves to be on the list. I haven't read Phenomenology, but I have read Elements of the Philosophy of Right and it felt like an achievement to be able to dissect and analyse it.

    • @bencross6963
      @bencross6963 Před 5 měsíci +5

      revisiting phenomenology after reading joyce, hegel seems to me to be downright explicit. of course there are concepts which are difficult to grasp, but the language itself, i would argue, is as clear as it could reasonably be expected to be

    • @emilebel6804
      @emilebel6804 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I wouldn't call it hard in the same way. Hegel is hard because he's unconventional in a way but he's not ambiguous. Once you become acquainted to hegelian philosophy it all becomes pretty clear, not so hard. But I think it's very hard to do it on your own just by reading his works. You have to follow a course on it. At least that's how I became familiar with it. When I started the course, I really thought it would be the hardest of my classes, but now it turns out it might be one of the easiest.
      If you're interested I might give you infos and explain stuff to help you in your reading.
      Edit : it's also a matter of practice. As my teacher says, it's a bit like a new language you have to learn.

    • @fluffysheap
      @fluffysheap Před 2 měsíci +2

      Philosophy isn't really fiction

    • @economicerudite4924
      @economicerudite4924 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@fluffysheap The word ‘(Fiction)’ in the title has been added since I made my comment.

  • @bnconbrio
    @bnconbrio Před 2 měsíci +3

    I love Infinite Jest and have read it 3 times, and it is a very difficult read. Extremely funny, prescient and unique. The footnotes are really part of the book, not afterthoughts. We lost a great one when DFWallace left this life.

    • @freefalldance
      @freefalldance Před 2 měsíci +1

      Could not agree more. We are poorer for his absence.

  • @nowistime8070
    @nowistime8070 Před 3 měsíci +1

    you really know how to tell a story! very captivating

  • @RendallRen
    @RendallRen Před 5 měsíci +13

    Once upon a time, I was tripping on LSD and idly flipped through Ulysses. Up to that point out had been impenetrable. I was not sure that I was really reading what I was reading because it was funny and lucid. Some kind of S&M scene between a husband and wife. So, I bookmarked the page and resolved to look at it again when I was sober. I was astonished that it was definitely there and just as weird and wonderful as it was when I had been tripping.

  • @ahnmensch3115
    @ahnmensch3115 Před 5 měsíci +52

    I'm currently reading Finnegans Wake, and it is much easier to read than I initially thought. It is pretty much impossible to understand everything thats going on, but if you are willing to go through a few pages without much comprehension, then you'll still be rewarded with a ton of poetic language and very witty puns. It's only as hard as you want it to be, I guess, depending on how deep you want to go.

    • @kingmatzuka
      @kingmatzuka Před 4 měsíci

      Exactly, it's a book to "read" not a book to read.

    • @Polyphemus47
      @Polyphemus47 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I've been reading it for over 20 years, now. I'm about halfway through.

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Ahmensch3115 Yes, that is how to read and enjoy Finnegan's Wake. Like dipping into a poetic river of often fun images and symbols, many basic at their heart: like Rivers, Circles of Life, etc., chickens and eggs, birth and seeds, and so on...

    • @nledaig
      @nledaig Před 3 měsíci

      Yes it's fun@@carlcushmanhybels8159

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Just as we couldn't 'catch and hold' any River, and wouldn't really want to. FW: Better to enjoy the River flow, dipping in where and when one can.

  • @Kolana42
    @Kolana42 Před 2 měsíci +1

    LOL So true! I honestly tried to read "Infinite Jest" and just gave up. Same with books by Ayn Rand - I just couldn't get into her style of writing. Good video thanks!

  • @ssweeny9415
    @ssweeny9415 Před 2 měsíci +2

    My BA is in English. Read a lot of stuff just bc it was assigned and would be on the final. Joyce’s “Ulysses” was the only book I ever bought “Clift’s Notes” for. Go through the final. Amen.

  • @jguitar23
    @jguitar23 Před 5 měsíci +14

    I really enjoyed reading Derrida although it's not easy to read full page sentences with heavy footnotes. It was a real mental training to juggle the complex details he includes and relationships between them.♡ Thank you Derrida♡

    • @llywrch7116
      @llywrch7116 Před 5 měsíci

      Having twice attempted to read Derrida's _Of Grammatology_, I consider that book unreadable. As I do Foucault, & numerous other French "literary critics".
      But in another way, I would also consider the works of Marquis de Sade unreadable. The man has managed to take a subject that should be endlessly interesting -- bizarre & kinky sex -- & made it BORING. Anyone who defends de Sade as having intellectual value is not talking about what's de Sade wrote, but what they want him to have written. (And said person likely didn't read de Sade.)

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 Před 5 měsíci

      @@llywrch7116 Could Sade been trying to keep from running afoul of the censors? Just a thought. Derrida also could have been trying to preserve his legacy...by being obscure.

    • @llywrch7116
      @llywrch7116 Před 5 měsíci

      @@JJ-tu1kg He's a theorist of literature. Beyond that, f*** if I can figure out what he says.

    • @llywrch7116
      @llywrch7116 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@raylopez99 De Sade definitely ran afoul of the censors. Spent time in the Bastille for his books.
      As for Derrida, the French historian Emmanuel Ladurie once commented in a Q & A session, "Ambiguity has its uses. Look at Derrida."

    • @JCSuperstar777
      @JCSuperstar777 Před 5 měsíci +1

      That some literature faculty continue to assign and even revere Derrida is one of the great mysteries of life on earth. What a waste of time; in graduate school, however, you don’t know any better, and haven’t learned to think for yourself about such authors and their alleged importance. So you struggle to get through one or another such book, and at the end of the day all the jumbled, turgid, incomprehensible prose is gone forever from memory.

  • @bakedbearcolorado
    @bakedbearcolorado Před 5 měsíci +11

    I bailed on Infinite Jest, Gravity's Rainbow, and Finnegan's Wake. Life is already too short to read all the books I would like to read. I read Ulysses because it was assigned in an Irish Renaissance class and was glad for the experience. The Sound and the Fury I would not put on the list. I loved how the succeeding narratives filled in the blanks left by Benjy. It remains one of my favorites.

    • @Snardbafulator
      @Snardbafulator Před 5 měsíci

      The Sound and the Fury is my favorite Faulkner, although I had to read it in a class.
      They endured.

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Agree, life is too short for all these dang books!
      Also, hello fellow Coloradan 😄

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem +1

      It was Faulkner's favorite book of his, by which I mean, he felt like he came closest to succeeding hin his aims with it.@@Snardbafulator

  • @caseyboughton6641
    @caseyboughton6641 Před měsícem +1

    Hah - great vlog! These books are some hairy, impenetrable slogs for sure. In my life I've gotten to ~page 42 of Gravity's Rainbow, 50 of Finnegan's Wake, 76 of Ulysses and 120 of Infinite Jest. I will say the footnotes of Infinite Jest are funny, in some parts. And Ulysses can be entertaining in the interstices between all the aimless slogging around Dublin. Appreciate the Faulkner advisory - haven't tried Sound and Fury, can attest that Absalom! Absalom! became a better read after the first few chapters, when I realized character profiles, chronology summary and map of Yoknpatawpha County were in the back of the book (and read them)! You are embedded in some epic reader battles there - thanks for your trenchant observations, quite entertaining!

  • @extramile734
    @extramile734 Před 2 měsíci

    You have inspired me to only read about authors. Thank you.

  • @VictoriaGMota
    @VictoriaGMota Před 5 měsíci +3

    I can't believe you only have a thousand followers! The video quality is so good, and I love the fact that you include subtitles; it's really helpful as an English learner.
    Great video 💗

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +3

      Thank you so much! Yesterday I had 250, this is crazy 😭 But I really appreciate your comment on the subtitles, I wondered if it was worth it, so I'm really glad it helped someone!

    • @izzytoons
      @izzytoons Před 2 měsíci

      @@DrawntoBooks Yes. Very good. It's been a long time, but I did get an M,A, in English way back 1984, and I thoroughly enjoyed your review. It took me back. Insightful and engaging.

  • @Serai3
    @Serai3 Před 5 měsíci +17

    Here's the key to Finnegan's Wake: read it aloud. You'll be surprised at how much you get when you hear the words spoken.

    • @artemisXsidecross
      @artemisXsidecross Před 5 měsíci +1

      👍

    • @Kjt853
      @Kjt853 Před 5 měsíci +1

      I once tried reading it and didn’t get far. Then I heard a recording of a passage (read, I think, by Joyce himself), and oddly enough, it made perfect sense!

    • @stephencarroll230
      @stephencarroll230 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I knew someone that read it aloud on the street. Most people thought he was a preacher, until they listened more carefully!

  • @bobsteiner9209
    @bobsteiner9209 Před 14 dny +1

    My father rarely spoke of his college days in the engineering school at Stanford. Everything to do with engineering came easy to him, but he also took a required English class that he mentioned more than once over the years. He was so proud to have gotten through "Ulysses"!

  • @phil2u48
    @phil2u48 Před 2 měsíci +15

    I began “Ulysses” in high school on a sort of dare from my English literature teacher; I finished it the summer between junior and senior years in university. 😂 . I actually read it again a few years ago while on extended vacation and found it to be much more comprehensible. Speaking of university days, I knew a young woman who was a drama student and she memorized “Molly’s soliloquy” for her MFA performance piece.

  • @timothytikker1147
    @timothytikker1147 Před 5 měsíci +15

    Russel Hoban's novel _Riddley Walker_ deserves mention here. It's written entirely in first person from the title character's viewpoint, but in a hypothetical British dialect of the far distant future. It's definitely a challenging read, though ultimately very rewarding.

    • @nodroGnotlrahC
      @nodroGnotlrahC Před 5 měsíci +5

      I love that book. Most of his work in fact. Vastly underrated writer IMO. :-)

    • @timothytikker1147
      @timothytikker1147 Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@nodroGnotlrahC it's a masterpiece. No other work of fiction has had such a powerful effect on me. Amazing originality and imagination of concept!

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Thanks for adding dear old Really, once you are four or five pages in, you will pick up Riddley’s speech, and his spelling which is phonetic. The dialect lets Hoban create all sorts of wordplay. He has invented quite an interesting world, with Neolithic farms, except for all the metal to be had everywhere; two religions; mythologies. The place names are all based on Kent, the farm practices on Butser Ancient Farm, the puppet show on Punch, the central legend of Elsa based on a wall painting in Canterbury, the green man is more common in old British churches than the cross.
      Readers should also enjoy Hobans book for older children, The Mouse and his Child.

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před 2 měsíci

      You might like Clockwork Orange then.

    • @oldpossum57
      @oldpossum57 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The first time I read it, I didn’t know there was a glossary of Nadsat at the back. I managed pretty well. The film is excellent as well. The angry middle aged white guys that descended on the Capitol J6 make me think of Alex and his droogs.@@talastra

  • @a.gunter2893
    @a.gunter2893 Před 5 měsíci +11

    I took a graduate class that just studied Ulysses. The best way I figured out how to approach it was to first follow along with an audio book, then I read it again while looking at the Gifford Annotations and the Hastings Guide. Then I began to see character motivations, heartbreaking loss, Stephen's entire journey, and I wrote a short screenplay dissecting Molly's "Penelope" episode, and then presented a different paper on why the "Circe" episode was written as a play. Ulysses is my second favorite novel.

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +1

      What's your first?

    • @tarico4436
      @tarico4436 Před 5 měsíci

      @@DrawntoBooks Finally!! I have often thrown out there similar stuff that the OP did here, and almost never is there the proper response. When someone finishes a comment with "...And then she finished second. To another women by the way. A women you may have heard of" the correct thing to do is ask for the name of the winning women! Good job, Drawn2Books.

    • @a.gunter2893
      @a.gunter2893 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@DrawntoBooks Dune by Frank Herbert. I've loved that book since I was fourteen years old and I've read it five times in my life. I'm on the older side. 😉

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před 2 měsíci

      The golden age of science fiction is need 14@@a.gunter2893

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před 2 měsíci

      sometimes 13

  • @FallenWarriorXV
    @FallenWarriorXV Před 2 měsíci +1

    Attempted Finnegans Wake and gave up after one page. Might have to give it another shot sometime.
    I do sincerely like Faulkner's writing though.

  • @justingil27
    @justingil27 Před měsícem

    Fantastic video :)

  • @jonathonglover6488
    @jonathonglover6488 Před 5 měsíci +5

    This was a lot of fun. Thank you!

  • @northierthanthou
    @northierthanthou Před 5 měsíci +9

    I tried reading Gravity's Rainbow one summer, got halfway through and was totally lost. That Xmas my bonus was a big bag of the wacky tabaccy, and I subsequently finished GR in about 3 weeks. It's a blast. Easier to read in the chunky paperback edition than the massive tomes you usually see.

  • @Raykibb1
    @Raykibb1 Před měsícem

    Gertrude Stein was my first experience with a “stream of consciousness” type novel in college, and it was way out there. I love the “Sound and Fury” as my teacher had a great way of explaining the way the book was written in the four stories. She made it so much easier to read and understand.

  • @StephenSeabird
    @StephenSeabird Před 27 dny

    Thank you for saying this about Gravity's Rainbow. It was recommended to me by a guy I met in Amsterdam in 1976. I've attempted it a few times, and kept giving up, but thought, 'Maybe it's me...?'

  • @xilebat
    @xilebat Před 5 měsíci +28

    Somewhere at the bottom of the Baltic Sea lies a copy of "House of Leaves", thrown off a cruise ship by a PHD in biochemistry fully capable of completing and understanding it.
    He's as green as it gets and still he dispatched it to the deep.

    • @sid1gen
      @sid1gen Před 3 měsíci +5

      I really liked this. It also reads like a poem. And I don't blame the biochemistry PhD: the sea will claim its own; those that were meant for the deep, like a house of leaves, to the deep will reach

    • @Karin_Allen
      @Karin_Allen Před 3 měsíci +1

      I loved House of Leaves! It's an amazing story about relationships among families, friends, lovers, and people who never truly meet - and it's bursting at the seams with Easter eggs. But I have to admit that it helps to take notes when you're reading it. 😉

    • @FitziCal
      @FitziCal Před 2 měsíci +1

      Very illegal to throw things off of cruse ships

    • @grapefruitm00n
      @grapefruitm00n Před 2 měsíci +1

      I actually found House of Leaves very easy to understand. Now granted, it's a thick and involved read but it all made sense to me. But that's my take

    • @xilebat
      @xilebat Před 2 měsíci

      So you're the one. 😀@@grapefruitm00n

  • @EdCardinal-MindThump
    @EdCardinal-MindThump Před 4 měsíci +3

    Nice list. I've read and studied 4 out of 5 (Including my university senior thesis on Ulysses, independent study on Gravity's Rainbow, a graduate class on Finnegan's Wake, and The Sound and the Fury just for fun). Infinite Jest is on my short list to read soon.

  • @SlackerBabel
    @SlackerBabel Před 3 měsíci

    Honorable mention for Ferrum Endjinn, and the ending of Creatures of Light and Darkness? Roadmarks was also tricky.

  • @jaydee8959
    @jaydee8959 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Love this vid, when I first saw it , i wondered where she was going to put Finnigan's Wake and guess what, she put it in the correct place... the top. When one is reading Immanuel Kant's "Critique of Pure Reason" you just get the feeling that you are reading someone a lot smarted that you are but when reading Finnigan's Wake you start to doubt your own sanity. !!!

  • @Calcprof
    @Calcprof Před 5 měsíci +100

    Both Gravity's Rainbow and Infinite Jest are hilarious. The Sound and the Fury is not as hard as its reputation. Joyce is funny -- and Molly Bloom soliloquy at the end of Ulysses is incredible.

    • @Tolstoy111
      @Tolstoy111 Před 5 měsíci +3

      Funny you say that - I actually agree with Nabokov that the last section of Ulysses is the weakest of the 18.

    • @samw5767
      @samw5767 Před 5 měsíci +7

      For sure! IJ riffs on GR. In my own mind, I've conflated them into 'Bananas Foster Wallace'.

    • @giuoco
      @giuoco Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@Tolstoy111it’s beautiful and makes the whole novel worth it. It rids itself of all the confusing stylistic choices, and becomes 100% Raw and honest and we finally see what this whole book was about… why were followed these guys wandering the streets for 17 episodes.

    • @Calcprof
      @Calcprof Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@samw5767 Bannana Breakfast!

    • @epbrown01
      @epbrown01 Před 5 měsíci

      @@CalcprofOh, crap. I just realized who Donald Trump and Elon Musk sound like.

  • @honder1866
    @honder1866 Před 5 měsíci +9

    “The Golden Bowl” by Henry James was probably the most difficult novel I read in college. Probably not as difficult as these 5, but it was still very challenging.

    • @johnsterman77
      @johnsterman77 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I’ve enjoyed sending sentences from James’s novels to a friend who’s an English professor at a prestigious college and asking him to explain what they, the sentences, mean. I’ve never gotten answer.

    • @iankemp1131
      @iankemp1131 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I would have said James. I remember looking at one of his novels and finding it took me ages to read even a single page. I can normally speed read. The language was just so opaque.

  • @mroberts2002
    @mroberts2002 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Crikey - I own all of those books and have not been able to read any of them. I feel a little bit comforted by your analysis. Thank you.

  • @kirknelson235
    @kirknelson235 Před 2 měsíci +16

    I wrote three books that anyone can understand. I try not to confuse my readers.

    • @peka__
      @peka__ Před 2 měsíci +3

      But are the books successful?
      And if they are - are they, because or although anyone can understand them?

    • @yar3333
      @yar3333 Před měsícem

      @@peka__how do you measure success of a book? And do you mean exclusively today's success?..

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem

      Maybe this isn't an obnoxious reply, but as a writer, I so do not appreciate that this is where you decided to start.@@peka__

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před měsícem +1

      Congratulations on finishing your books :)

    • @peka__
      @peka__ Před měsícem

      @@yar3333
      I would measure the success of a book by the number of its readers or the lasting impact it has on each.
      A book that anyone can understand sounds pretty uninspiring - so I'd like to know how successful it was.

  • @petersawyer3328
    @petersawyer3328 Před 5 měsíci +12

    Finnegans Wake is an obscure, willfully difficult waste of time. Its also unique and rock n roll! Hearing it on audiobook , read by an irish person is a great experience. I have listened to parts of it many times. I don't understand most of it but it is pleasant to hear. It doesn't matter to me which bit i hear or read or what order it is in.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 Před 5 měsíci

      Good points. Reminds me of how in Asia certain wealthy people collect hardback books...so they can put them on bookshelves to impress visitors, never intending to read them.

    • @sunkintree
      @sunkintree Před měsícem +1

      @@raylopez99Everyone does that in the west. That's why you talk to people about books rather than giving them a thumbs up when you see it on their shelf. If they can't say anything about it you know who you're dealing with

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 Před měsícem

      @@sunkintree true...a f'en ilierate...a 'visual lerner' of the Yt variety!

  • @Qwerty12335
    @Qwerty12335 Před 5 měsíci +11

    Other honorable mentions.
    Beckett’s trilogy: Molloy, Malone dies, the unnameable
    William Gaddis: the recognitions, jr
    Robert musil: the man without qualities
    Proust: remembrance of things past
    Any of the four Chinese classics, especially the story of the stone
    Tale of the genji

    • @funoolesbian4225
      @funoolesbian4225 Před 3 měsíci

      I'd add Late Henry James to the list as well. I am reading the Recognitions atm and don't get the difficulty hype. JR on the other hand, looks genuinely obtuse,

    • @castelodeossos3947
      @castelodeossos3947 Před 3 měsíci

      @@funoolesbian4225 Funny, I was once obsessed with SBeckett, especially his 'Trilogy', yet am unable to read James. Have tried again and again and am simply unable to slip in, as it were.

    • @funoolesbian4225
      @funoolesbian4225 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@castelodeossos3947 i swear (late) James is the real modernist final boss. Finnegans Wake is a DLC side quest

    • @bodahe
      @bodahe Před 3 měsíci

      I was going to suggest all strange away by Beckett, it's short and not necessarily difficult to get through, but from what i remember the language use was quite special(its been a few years since I read it). It always pops into my head when people talk about books that are difficult, even though I really enjoyed it. 😂 I just think a lot of people might not bother after the first page or so.

    • @talastra
      @talastra Před 2 měsíci +1

      Clockwork Orange

  • @edg31911
    @edg31911 Před 2 měsíci

    Subscribed for your picture in the background.

  • @lindaross783
    @lindaross783 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I enjoyed your review very much. Thank you. Joyce has given me a headache. I stick with Dubliners for easy read.

  • @matthiasschulz3569
    @matthiasschulz3569 Před 5 měsíci +7

    Another thing that makes The Sound And The Fury difficult to read: Two characters have the same name, and it being all stream of consciousness, it is really hard to figure out a) that there are two Quentins, and when you know, b) which Quentin is talked about at the moment.

    • @user-rx6ze5uu7n
      @user-rx6ze5uu7n Před 2 měsíci +1

      Also two Jasons, and Benji's name was originally Maury, after Mrs. Compson's dissolute brother. His name was changed to Benjamin at age two or three when his mental impediments became too obvious to ignore.

  • @steved1135
    @steved1135 Před 5 měsíci +30

    That was really fun. You're an intelligent, and natural critic. Great picks for the top five. I have to admit, I love how DFW uses footnotes. As most, I initially found it annoying, but then I grew to enjoy getting lost, and having difficulty getting back into the headspace of the story proper. I actually try to seek out new authors who can do this now. David Mitchell comes close.

    • @DrawntoBooks
      @DrawntoBooks  Před 5 měsíci +4

      Thank you very much! DFW was such an interesting guy, I actually love the idea too, I wonder now with kindle books if that changes the reading experience drastically.

    • @affanshikoh5069
      @affanshikoh5069 Před 5 měsíci

      Not footnotes exactly, but Sci-Fi author Frank Herbert uses a lot of Appendixes to further explain various aspects of plot, character genealogy, and terminology employed in his Dune saga. I found myself going back and forth to understand the highly dense first book which had a lot of concepts I had to wrap my head around. Super fun time

    • @jacobus57
      @jacobus57 Před 5 měsíci

      Or DFW was a pompous twit who confused obscurity and density with depth and complexity.

    • @eclat4641
      @eclat4641 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@affanshikoh5069just finished reading last night 😊

    • @ohno8649
      @ohno8649 Před 5 měsíci

      I’m sorry but could you specify what you mean by “enjoy getting lost?” I personally don’t find confusion to be a positive for storytelling, even if it’s revealed at the end what it all is.

  • @paolomargini7904
    @paolomargini7904 Před měsícem

    When I read your title I correctly guessed that the last two you mentioned had to be in the list. I held both of them in my hands, I browsed reading here and there but never made it for a complete reading.
    I have to say that maybe the best writer in German language, apart from Goethe, was not even a German but a Bohemian, Franz Kafka. The chapters of two of his novels, The Trial and The Castle are blocks of fully printed pages with no full stops nor periods ending with half lines. Still you car read it well and understand any word, so that many times the reader gets breathless for the precision of how the thougts of the hero are described.

  • @ilianexsisojourner1704
    @ilianexsisojourner1704 Před 2 měsíci

    I KNEW Ulysses would be on the list! We had to read the Gabler Edition in college - 680 pages - and it was sheer torture.

  • @ericneff9908
    @ericneff9908 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Loved this video. I was surprised by the inclusion of The Sound and the Fury. It's a favorite of mine, and while I found it challenging, I didn't find it particularly difficult. (This from a guy who attempted Ulysses and Gravity's Rainbow, and just couldn't do it.)

    • @cr1197
      @cr1197 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Same. I think the book gets a reputation for being inscrutable since it starts out with Benjy's perspective, and probably puts a lot of people off from the get-go with that. The rest isn't notably difficult.

    • @ericneff9908
      @ericneff9908 Před 5 měsíci

      @@cr1197 I agree, which is a shame, because his voice is so poignant. You just have to take your time.

  • @architecturecodex9818
    @architecturecodex9818 Před 4 měsíci +5

    Enjoyed the video. I read Ulysses. My reaction - "heh" but I did like the wife's monologue at the end. Not on your list is "Last of the Mohicans" by James Fenimore Cooper. I found the language more inscrutable than any Shakespeare, which I don't find inscrutable at all. I finally understood a scathing and hilarious critique of Copper by Mark Twain.

    • @tonicastel2390
      @tonicastel2390 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I agree with “Last of the Mohicans”. I laughed because Cooper writes as if he were a Classical Roman, structuring his sentences like Cicero.

    • @darleneengebretsen1468
      @darleneengebretsen1468 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Last of the Mohicans was overly flowery, overly wordy, and the characters' actions were often stupid. It made a much better movie than it did a book. I don't like Cooper's other books either.

    • @sunkintree
      @sunkintree Před měsícem

      @@darleneengebretsen1468when people say a book or prose is "flowery and overly wordly" they need to back it up with a list of some books that they have enjoyed. Personally, when I hear such things, I just assume your reading is like Ready Player One, and other such stuff.
      Maybe that's wrong? Point is, I have no idea what is considered good prose to you. And most people who say such things really do fall into the camp I stated.

  • @owenbarnes773
    @owenbarnes773 Před 2 měsíci

    holy shit ... i started Gravity's Rainbow three times (gave up before the first 100 pages each time)
    ... thanks for the warning on the others
    and kudos to you - great review ... thank you

    • @ryandoherty4291
      @ryandoherty4291 Před 2 měsíci

      I’m about to start it again for the third time, and I intend to finish it this time.

    • @owenbarnes773
      @owenbarnes773 Před 2 měsíci

      @@ryandoherty4291 best of luck with your mission Ryan

  • @doctorforkidz5129
    @doctorforkidz5129 Před 2 měsíci +2

    My first thought when I saw the title of this story was "Gravity's Rainbow". I tried three separate times over ten years. Couldn't make it to that 100-page threshold.