What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
Forum rules
Please read and follow this sub-forum's specific rules listed HERE, as well as our sitewide rules listed HERE.
Link to the Secret Ninja Sessions community ustream channel - info in this thread
Please read and follow this sub-forum's specific rules listed HERE, as well as our sitewide rules listed HERE.
Link to the Secret Ninja Sessions community ustream channel - info in this thread
What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
Nearly done with Catch 22 and reckon could do with a spell on the classics...any suggestions that aren't Neuromancer or To Kill A Mockingbird?
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?

tr0tsky wrote: InI man nuh go to nah rasclot independent ethnic butchers seen.
Selassie-I man shop in Morrisons.
- Steve_French
- Posts: 863
- Joined: Wed Sep 16, 2009 8:04 pm
- Location: Bath
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
baron_von_carlton wrote:
Good shout
Tried to read that, wasn't for megoodeh wrote:
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?

Paypal me $2 for a .wav of Midnight
https://soundcloud.com/artend
https://soundcloud.com/artend
Dead Rats wrote:Mate, these chaps are lads.
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
dubliners
naked lunch
gravity's rainbow
notes from the underground
ham on rye
the stranger
the great gatsby
heart of darkness
naked lunch
gravity's rainbow
notes from the underground
ham on rye
the stranger
the great gatsby
heart of darkness
-
volcanogeorge
- Posts: 2110
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 8:58 pm
- Location: Newcastle via Lincoln
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
crime and punishment
on the road
on the road
Soundcloud
"Gettin' paid like a biker with the best cranks, spray it like a high ranked sniper in the West Bank"
√BEETS
"Gettin' paid like a biker with the best cranks, spray it like a high ranked sniper in the West Bank"
√BEETS
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
x100000000000000000cloquet wrote: naked lunch
My name is Dom and I like making ambientish music and drinking tea. Nice to meet you.
Soundcloud
Kid Lazarus - Kochari - Free music
Soundcloud
Kid Lazarus - Kochari - Free music
- mo_respect
- Posts: 706
- Joined: Mon Sep 10, 2012 4:17 pm
- Location: the wild wild west
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
The Brothers Karamazov
The Gambler
Nausea
Metamorphosis
The Gambler
Nausea
Metamorphosis
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
Shum wrote:
A satirical view of capitalism/global expansion, brilliant.
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
Someone mentioned 1984 already but most of Orwell's I would class as "Classics."
Lord of the rings.
Trainspotting.
Clockwork Orange
Hitchhikers guide....
Ive recently read alot of Brett Eaton Ellis books. Some might say they are cult or modern "Classics." I'm probably confusing matters
Lord of the rings.
Trainspotting.
Clockwork Orange
Hitchhikers guide....
Ive recently read alot of Brett Eaton Ellis books. Some might say they are cult or modern "Classics." I'm probably confusing matters
BLOG - http://wearelucid.net/
I'm not a fan of [genre]. It was much better back in [year]. I have fond memories of [year] [genre] when I used to [activity]. Good times."
House/Garage Mix - Joy O, Lakosa, Dusky, Alex Coulton, Dusk & Blackdown
Soundcloud
I'm not a fan of [genre]. It was much better back in [year]. I have fond memories of [year] [genre] when I used to [activity]. Good times."
House/Garage Mix - Joy O, Lakosa, Dusky, Alex Coulton, Dusk & Blackdown
Soundcloud
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
they'd just be called 'modern classics' i think!defoxster wrote:Someone mentioned 1984 already but most of Orwell's I would class as "Classics."
Lord of the rings.
Trainspotting.
Clockwork Orange
Hitchhikers guide....
Ive recently read alot of Brett Eaton Ellis books. Some might say they are cult or modern "Classics." I'm probably confusing matters
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
I think 'trainspotting' would also fall into that categorynoam wrote:they'd just be called 'modern classics' i think!defoxster wrote:Someone mentioned 1984 already but most of Orwell's I would class as "Classics."
Lord of the rings.
Trainspotting.
Clockwork Orange
Hitchhikers guide....
Ive recently read alot of Brett Eaton Ellis books. Some might say they are cult or modern "Classics." I'm probably confusing matters
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
Last thing I need in my life is more Bret Easton Ellis books, trust 
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
I am an avid reader of literature. I started when I was very young, like most, with Sci-Fi, but then worked my way back to the great literature of mankind. So don't consider this as another attempt at me professing my HIPSTERNESS, I'm serious!
Fairly recent
The Man-Eaters of the Kuaom
Solaris
I Am Legend
The Road
Are some of my favourites
Classics
Dr. Zjivago (pasternak)
We (Zamjatin)
La Nausée (Sartre)
Die Verwandlung (Kafka)
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Wilde)
Great Expectations (Dickens)
Pride and Prejudice (Austen) => I know, Gay.
But my favourite literature are the Russian greats (much like the Sovjet filmmakers, they are horribly underrated)
These are my true recommendations.
Crime & Punishment (Dostojevski)
The Brothers Karamazov (Dostojevski)
War & Peace (Tolstoj)
Fathers & Sons (Turgenjev)
Oblomov (gontsjarov) => BEST BOOK I HAVE READ TO DATE
Dead Souls (Gogol)
I'll leave you with those. Check out the Ruski's, they know how to write gloomy yet hopeful works.
Fairly recent
The Man-Eaters of the Kuaom
Solaris
I Am Legend
The Road
Are some of my favourites
Classics
Dr. Zjivago (pasternak)
We (Zamjatin)
La Nausée (Sartre)
Die Verwandlung (Kafka)
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Wilde)
Great Expectations (Dickens)
Pride and Prejudice (Austen) => I know, Gay.
But my favourite literature are the Russian greats (much like the Sovjet filmmakers, they are horribly underrated)
These are my true recommendations.
Crime & Punishment (Dostojevski)
The Brothers Karamazov (Dostojevski)
War & Peace (Tolstoj)
Fathers & Sons (Turgenjev)
Oblomov (gontsjarov) => BEST BOOK I HAVE READ TO DATE
Dead Souls (Gogol)
I'll leave you with those. Check out the Ruski's, they know how to write gloomy yet hopeful works.
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
i meant all of the abovecloquet wrote:I think 'trainspotting' would also fall into that categorynoam wrote:they'd just be called 'modern classics' i think!defoxster wrote:Someone mentioned 1984 already but most of Orwell's I would class as "Classics."
Lord of the rings.
Trainspotting.
Clockwork Orange
Hitchhikers guide....
Ive recently read alot of Brett Eaton Ellis books. Some might say they are cult or modern "Classics." I'm probably confusing matters
tbh, anything post-1900 is a 'modern' classic i think??\
aint dat da troofwub wrote:Last thing I need in my life is more Bret Easton Ellis books, trust
Re: What do you consider to be 'classic' books/literature?
ulysses
finnegan's wake
put you off reading for life
edit: not classics but i have recently read and reccomend
coetzee- waiting for the barbarians again and it was even better than i remembered
dick- Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said- i never really liked his books but this one was great
David Constantine- Under The Dam- Great language, images in the mind and stuff!
Asimov- Foundation series- sci fi at its best
Neal Stephenson- Snow Crash- sci fi even better
Vonnegut- Slaughterhouse 5- weird but in a good way, not quite sure i got it, might reread.
Diana Wynne Jones- 8 Days of Luke

finnegan's wake
put you off reading for life
edit: not classics but i have recently read and reccomend
coetzee- waiting for the barbarians again and it was even better than i remembered
dick- Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said- i never really liked his books but this one was great
David Constantine- Under The Dam- Great language, images in the mind and stuff!
Asimov- Foundation series- sci fi at its best
Neal Stephenson- Snow Crash- sci fi even better
Vonnegut- Slaughterhouse 5- weird but in a good way, not quite sure i got it, might reread.
Diana Wynne Jones- 8 Days of Luke
Last edited by hutyluty on Wed Sep 12, 2012 9:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

