Help me decide what to read next

Which one would be best?

  • The Legend of King Arthur Complete Collection

    Votes: 4 9.3%
  • No Country For Old Men

    Votes: 3 7.0%
  • The Scarlet Letter

    Votes: 3 7.0%
  • Shakespeare's Macbeth

    Votes: 6 14.0%
  • Beowulf

    Votes: 5 11.6%
  • Don Quixote

    Votes: 10 23.3%
  • Sherlock Holmes Complete collection

    Votes: 12 27.9%

  • Total voters
    43

AYM

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Placeholder

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> but I also want it to be fun and interesting.

Holmes is fun, and a bunch of shorts.

I'd read Aaronovich's Rivers of London. A-maz-ing!

Then Banks's Consider Phlebas. Straight in, no summary or spoilers.
 
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I am only choosing based off of books I own at the moment and these are all the options I want to choose from at the moment. Though I will add it to my reading list.

huh?
I see... In that case, my split between macbeth and quixote... You cant go wrong with old william, But Quixote is even older and the magnum opus of spanish literature... I say read them both. Start with wichever you want, hummm start with shakespeare.
 

CharlesEBrown

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If you're into the Arthurian stuff, I'd go to either the more historical ones like Bernard Cornwall, or the more fantastical ones like Cordway Jones, rather than going "back to the source" (as there are a lot of bad translations out there).

You can't go wrong with Shakespeare, but it often works best if you either have friends to read it with you as if putting on a play, or have a group to discuss it with (I would also say the same, though you didn't list any, for anything written by James Joyce).

Holmes is a good thought, but I've seen three very different "complete collections" so be careful if you go that route to see that you ARE reading a complete collection (including the one novella - Hound of the Baskervilles - and the tangentially connected "A Study in Scarlet" along with the Return of Sherlock Holmes, which is often omitted in collections.)

If you want an outside recommendation, George MacDonald Fraser's "The Flashman Papers" are some of the best anti-hero, borderline smut, comedy, historical fiction that sometimes intersects regular fiction ever published.
 

LiteraryWho

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Gotta go Holmes for short and fun, although be ready for novel length rants against labor unions and mormonism.
You mean based Doyle chapters?

You probably can't go wrong with any of those, depending on what you're looking for. If it's just for fun, Sherlock Holmes is probably your best bet, but if you're looking to inform your writing on early American culture (for that Historical Fiction you're working on), then the Scarlet Letter is the obvious choice (etc. for the others).
 

CharlesEBrown

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You mean based Doyle chapters?

You probably can't go wrong with any of those, depending on what you're looking for. If it's just for fun, Sherlock Holmes is probably your best bet, but if you're looking to inform your writing on early American culture (for that Historical Fiction you're working on), then the Scarlet Letter is the obvious choice (etc. for the others).
A Study in Scarlet was one of Arthur Conan Doyle's few novels - it has Holmes in it very briefly (IIRC twice, kind of a "framing device"). A small section of that novel does criticize unions, and a larger section does attack, IIRC (read it in the 80s so may be blurring details), founder John Smith specifically and Mormonism in general for a good size chunk of the text.
 
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