Books I read in July 2024
29:47
My Penguin Classics Collection
18:05
Пікірлер
@KierTheScrivener
@KierTheScrivener 14 минут бұрын
Incredible analysis like always
@KierTheScrivener
@KierTheScrivener 26 минут бұрын
I just watched this year! And quite enjoyed it
@cmacb3
@cmacb3 28 минут бұрын
Thank you, Nicole. You always help me see the plays more clearly. I looked forward to your next video.
@nunotorres6314
@nunotorres6314 Күн бұрын
Great review! I'm translating the book right now into portugueses for my internship in a publishing house. You have a very interesting view of the story and themes of the book. Good job!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 19 сағат бұрын
@@nunotorres6314 oh how fun! Thank you :) hope the translation goes well!
@nunotorres6314
@nunotorres6314 19 сағат бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings thank you!
@jimsbooksreadingandstuff
@jimsbooksreadingandstuff 7 күн бұрын
Shaketember sounds fun. I have only read Macbeth of the six plays, but I did see a performance of Cymbeline during my Uni years (40 years ago!). I'm not sure what I'll choose from those on offer, Twelfth Night and The Tempest are the most appealing to me.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 6 күн бұрын
Glad to hear you’re interested! Hope you enjoy them whichever you choose :)
@royreadsanything
@royreadsanything 8 күн бұрын
Very excited about Shaketember... Cymbeline is a definite to watch (x3) and read
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 6 күн бұрын
Hello! Nice hearing from you! Times three? 😆 which version will you be watching? It’s a bit hard to find.
@royreadsanything
@royreadsanything 6 күн бұрын
@adayofsmallthings Hi Nicole - I've got BBC version 1983, from when they did all of Shakespeare; RSC 2017 and a 2014 movie with Ethan Hawke, sometimes repackaged with the title 'Anarchy'.
@larrymarshall9454
@larrymarshall9454 8 күн бұрын
Love your book choices, Nicolle, as well as your discussions of them. The Oresteia is fantastic.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 6 күн бұрын
Thank you - so kind! Look forward to reading Oresteia!
@larrymarshall9454
@larrymarshall9454 9 күн бұрын
Looking forward to Shaketember discussions. I'll be reading Cymbeline and maybe I'll reread King Lear. Good excuse to do that. Thanks for hosting this Nicolle
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 6 күн бұрын
Pleasure! Hope you enjoy both!
@lindysmagpiereads
@lindysmagpiereads 11 күн бұрын
Shakespeare is fun for me too (not homework). I look forward to participating. Of the plays you and your co-hosts have chosen, there’s only one I have not yet seen performed-Cymbeline-although I did participate in a readalong of the play a few years ago. I’m excited that I will see Cymbeline performed in Stratford Ontario in September. The week that I am at the festival, I will also see Romeo and Juliet and Twelfth Night. The Twelfth Night production will have a gender-swapped Malvolio, which was also a choice made by the director in a Twelfth Night show that I attended in Vancouver earlier this month. I saw a horror clown rendition of Titus Andronicus a few years ago. Polythene sheets were laid over the laps of people in the front row to protect them from the gore. And a memorable performance of The Tempest at the Citadel Theatre in Edmonton was created with one third of the cast being Deaf and using sign language. I wanted to see it a second time but all of the shows were sold out. Thanks for co-hosting this event!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 9 күн бұрын
That’s very exciting - that you’re going to watch Cymbeline performed next month! Yes I watched a Twelfth Night with a woman playing Malvolio too. She was an excellent actor. Oh dear the Titus Andronicus you watched - that sounds intense! It’s so great you were able to watch so many shows! Hope you enjoy Shaketember!
@lindysmagpiereads
@lindysmagpiereads 9 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings Thanks Nicole.
@katfujioka212
@katfujioka212 11 күн бұрын
I love this bookshop! When I lived near Edinburgh I used to visit regularly, the staff are so friendly :)
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 9 күн бұрын
Yes it’s lovely!
@bethieandbooks
@bethieandbooks 11 күн бұрын
Yay Shaketamber! And very excited to hear that you’re heading to the Sam Wanamaker playhouse soon-it’s the most magical venue!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 9 күн бұрын
Hopefully soon!
@barn_ninny
@barn_ninny 11 күн бұрын
This is really helpful. Thanks!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 9 күн бұрын
Pleasure :) glad it was helpful!
@CherylButad
@CherylButad 12 күн бұрын
Thank you. 🎉 Can you also talk about "To All The Virtuous Ladies in General"😊
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 9 күн бұрын
Pleasure! Thanks for the suggestion! Will keep in mind and have a look :)
@tumblyhomecarolinep7121
@tumblyhomecarolinep7121 15 күн бұрын
What a brilliant review… so touching. I feel a lot of sympathy for Hedda, she is horrid, but also she feels so lost. I know she has it in her to be better but she just feels caught up in a world that gives her no way to find her soul. I think the play is incredible and one I think about often.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Yes I completely agree. She feels lost and has no way to find her soul - precisely! Glad to hear you enjoyed it too.
@VegasHermit
@VegasHermit 15 күн бұрын
I must read and then watch immediately!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Haha, hope you like it - let me know!
@anilsbawa
@anilsbawa 15 күн бұрын
Hi Nicole. A very relevant and deep analysis of Hedda Gabler. A job well done, Applause, Applause! We read this play at Ben’s Hardcore Literature Book Club last year. What can I say Nicole. You are getting better and better at your analysis. Indeed, you are gifted. Best wishes🌹🌹🌹
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Thank you for the encouragement - So kind of you :) I didn’t realise you’d read world classics too - but yes of course. Glad to hear it’s in Ben’s curriculum!
@apoetreadstowrite
@apoetreadstowrite 15 күн бұрын
Thanks for this, very enjoyable, I love Elizabethan poetry - all those perfectly wrought urns so rich in literary/classical allusion & discursive/imagist language. Really appreciated your spotlight on one of my favourites.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Really glad to hear you love Elizabethan poetry! They’re definitely rich in language. I have so much more to learn. Thank you - glad you liked the video :)
@apoetreadstowrite
@apoetreadstowrite 15 күн бұрын
Really looking forward to this spotlight on wonderment. Thanks for hosting.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Thank you and pleasure!
@christinakaras6452
@christinakaras6452 15 күн бұрын
A very thoughtful analysis, as usual! I hadn't considered that Aunt Julia serves as a contrast to Hedda in embodying the theme of beauty in the context of death ... but you're right, she is a more direct foil than Thea in that sense. As to Tesman, in the production I saw, the actor made an interesting choice to play Tesman as more clued-in than he seems in the text. At certain moments he clearly saw her true nature and how things stood between her and Judge Brack, yet willfully turned a blind eye (as you said), either because he was too intimidated by her or just wanted to cling to his fantasy of her. I actually *do* find Hedda likable. She's neither kind nor totally stable, but I sympathize with her feeling of being trapped. She is so afraid of scandal and desperate for respectability, and somehow those forces are just strong enough inside (and outside) of her to suppress her desire for beauty and power and meaning -- until the moment when she sees no way to achieve either of those ends. Plus, she's just ... fun. What did you think of the part when she burns Lovborg's and Thea's "idea baby"? That part gave me chills. In a lecture I attended, one professor pointed out that, to a writer, burning a manuscript is not a trivial plot device. We should view it as carrying enormous significance for her characterization, which I thought was a great point.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Oooh interesting if Tesman knows and willfully turns a blind eye. Yes burning the manuscript - I wasn’t sure so didn’t mention it. I think she feels empowered to have the manuscript in her control. She burns it to make sure there’s no getting back together for Lovborg and Thea; and Lovborg will always love her best. So it’s ironic when Tesman is committed to making another book (making a new baby) with Thea, as the result of Hedda burning the first ‘baby’. She can foresee when Tesman and Thea work together every evening in Aunt Juliana’s house, they’d fall in love (like Lovborg did with Thea) and Tesman would stop loving her best. And it’s all because she burnt the first book! She not only lost Lovborg, she’d lose Tesman too. Maybe killing the ‘idea baby’ foreshadows her killing herself and the baby inside her too? Just my very scattered thought! Thanks for sharing your thoughts! It’s wonderful to be able to discuss this.
@christinakaras6452
@christinakaras6452 12 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings Yes! I think you are absolutely onto what this action represents: the futility of Hedda's attempts to direct her fate and that of the people around her. And I hadn't connected the death of the manuscript to her own death - that was a revelation! Thanks again for discussing with me, Nicole.
@donaldkelly3983
@donaldkelly3983 15 күн бұрын
Hedda is Iago's Scandinavian cousin!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Oooooh interesting - why? Because she’s deceitful?
@donaldkelly3983
@donaldkelly3983 13 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings Not only deceitful, but that she, like Iago, revels in evil. Hedda urges the man to kill himself beautifully. Hedda is not Nora from The Dolls House, she is no one I'd want mad at me.
@sjmsutherland
@sjmsutherland 15 күн бұрын
I really enjoyed your July wrap up, I did have a little chuckle when you mentioned who wrote A Dissertation Upon Roast Pig!! I would definitely like to read Cider with Rosie, I've been wanting too for a while!! Thank you for a lovely video and a lovely wrap up!! Have a great weekend!!xx
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Thank you! Are you a fan of Charles Lamb at all? Cider with Rosie is lovely - hope you enjoy it too :)
@sjmsutherland
@sjmsutherland 13 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings I hadn't heard of him until your video, the book does sound interesting though!! Cider With Rosie is definitely going to be added to books I want to read!!
@brigittebeche4117
@brigittebeche4117 16 күн бұрын
Thank you once again Nivole, the only thing I have read from Ibsen is the Doll’s house, which I found extremely good, movingly disturbing, with the theme of woman’s freedom and happiness in this world so brillantly dealt with. I am going to read Hedda Gabler❤
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
I’m definitely interested in reading more Ibsen. Will keep the Doll’s House in mind - thanks for sharing! Hope you like Hedda Gabler - let me know! Thank you :)
@user-jv2vh4zz5q
@user-jv2vh4zz5q 16 күн бұрын
This looks great. A bit spoiled for choice. Leah is in my opinion the greatest play. Have seen in 4 times (including at Stratford). Tempted by Cymbeline -a play I don’t know Saw the tempest in July Twelfth night is a favoirite I’m tempted by
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 13 күн бұрын
Sounds like you watched quite a lot of Shakespeare! Hope you get to read (or re-read) some in September!
@katiejlumsden
@katiejlumsden 18 күн бұрын
Ibsen is fantastic!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 17 күн бұрын
Yes I enjoyed Hedda Gabler! Any recommendations what next?
@anbuchelvan
@anbuchelvan 21 күн бұрын
Hi.. how was the stephanie mccarter's translation? Were you able to complete it? Because I'm just interested in buying that book very soon...
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@anbuchelvan hello! The translation is fine. But I haven’t completed it. I think it’s more to do with the book rather than the translation. I find the stories within stories hard to keep track of. Hope you get on with it better than I do!
@anbuchelvan
@anbuchelvan 20 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings ok....thanks for the reply, good day!! 😅😊
@sjmsutherland
@sjmsutherland 22 күн бұрын
This will be my first ever Shaketember...I'm thinking MacBeth, as I already own it and Twelfth Night 😊 looking forward to this!!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@sjmsutherland so glad you’re joining us! I hope you enjoy them!
@tumblyhomecarolinep7121
@tumblyhomecarolinep7121 22 күн бұрын
Ooohhhhhhh how exciting all this is. I am super interested in the Jonathon Bate books you mention and might have to read those too. I really want to read Faust too… so much to read!! I am reading the Faerie Queene right now. I read one canto each evening and listen to the audible read by David Timson. He is excellent reading it and I follow along in my book. Like you I don’t like the cover at it could have been much more inventive. Some of the book is a bit tedious but then some is really very very excellent. I am currently much enjoying book three and have half an hour of laughing every evening.. it can be very funny. I liked the first half of the Aeneid and found it tailed off at the half way point and LOVED the Oresteia and Hedda Gabler..these are all fairly recent reads so I think we are similar reading trajectories… I am also on a Keats journey and loving that. He was much influenced by Edmund Spenser and Shakespeare Ps hamlet is at the RSC in the new year
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 19 күн бұрын
Agree - so much to read! Oh how interesting we ARE reading a lot of the same titles! So glad to hear you find Faerie Queen funny too - I wasn't sure if it was supposed to be! I just finished Hedda Gabler and loved it too. I just made a video about it. Would love to hear your thoughts. I don't know anything about Keats - will bear it in mind!
@elizabethjonczyk6818
@elizabethjonczyk6818 22 күн бұрын
I am hoping to start The Faerie Queene soon as well and wanted to mention a book I have found: The Faerie Queene: A Reader's Guide by Elizabeth Heale. I have a used copy on order. It looks like it will be very helpful in reading the book.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@elizabethjonczyk6818 oh great we can swap opinions on the Faeries Queene! Thanks for sharing the Readers Guide. Will keep it in mind! Hope you enjoy the read!
@christinakaras6452
@christinakaras6452 22 күн бұрын
I'm reading Hedda Gabler now after seeing an adaptation at the Stratford Festival in Canada. Hedda is a fascinating character. I'd love to hear your thoughts! I've also been trying to catch up on Greek drama, so you are motivating me to go back to Sophocles and Aeschylus. You can definitely trace the influence on Shakespeare and early modern drama.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@christinakaras6452 She is! Very glad to hear you’re reading it too and are interested in discussing it. I wasn’t sure if anyone would be interested. I’m excited to find out more about Greek drama and their influence on Shakespeare and others!
@donaldkelly3983
@donaldkelly3983 22 күн бұрын
Early Ibsen is fun, try Brand which is a meditation on true faith and what it can lead to. Ibsen became a realist and then became Ibsen. And he started by writing plays about Vikings, popular at the time in Norway. I'd love to see one!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@donaldkelly3983 oooh interesting. Will try that one soonish. Thanks for recommending! Vikings! I need to find out more about him!
@barbarahelgaker390
@barbarahelgaker390 22 күн бұрын
So many interesting works you mention - I need to get started on Shakespeare but following up Arthurian legend sounds exciting for later in the autumn
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 22 күн бұрын
Thank you! Hope you enjoy them when you get there :)
@joelharris4399
@joelharris4399 22 күн бұрын
Why a French author wrote about the Arthurian legends? England has had a notable French cultural influence vis-a-vis the Normans since 1066 (French Vikings) For a long time, the lingua franca at the court was French. Hope this helps🧐
@Kornbhangra-hc2tf
@Kornbhangra-hc2tf 22 күн бұрын
For propaganda purposes.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@joelharris4399 🤔 very intriguing. Thanks for explaining for me! 🙂
@joelharris4399
@joelharris4399 20 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings Merci madame!
@genteelblackhole
@genteelblackhole 22 күн бұрын
I look forward to hearing your thoughts on Shakespeare’s contemporaries. I’ve been meaning to try Marlowe for ages, but never got around to it.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@genteelblackhole thank you :) will do my best!
@elizabethbrink3761
@elizabethbrink3761 22 күн бұрын
I'm planning to start The Faerie Queene this autumn too and go into 2025. I'm looking forward to King Lear and Cymbeline in September!
@elizabethjonczyk6818
@elizabethjonczyk6818 22 күн бұрын
Elizabeth! I hope to start the Faerie Queene this fall too!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 20 күн бұрын
@@elizabethbrink3761 yay, let me know what you think! Hope you enjoy the plays :)
@elizabethbrink3761
@elizabethbrink3761 18 күн бұрын
@@elizabethjonczyk6818 Libby! That's so exciting to hear! We'll have to chat about it as we read!
@LanaCelebic
@LanaCelebic 22 күн бұрын
The Oresteia is wonderful, it deals with many interesting themes, such as justice, revenge, law etc. Paradise Lost is one of my favourite poems and I also loved the first part of Faust, but the second part I absolutely didn't understand at all, even after a reread. I'd recommend The Doll House by Henrik Ibsen. Hope you enjoy all the books you chose! 😊
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 22 күн бұрын
I’m slightly intimidated by the Oresteia, as well as Faust, to be honest! Thanks for recommending The Doll House - I’m just wondering where to go next. I’ve finished Hedda Gabler. Thank you!
@brigittebeche4117
@brigittebeche4117 23 күн бұрын
Sorry Nicole, you will forgive my spelling mistake: I meant PORE over😮not POUR.....milk or tea... or any of my erratic spelling!😅
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 22 күн бұрын
Haha not at all not at all :)
@brigittebeche4117
@brigittebeche4117 23 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video! And once again, I do love all the books from Jonathan bate, so...I am going to pour over the book you mentioned! 😊
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 22 күн бұрын
Pleasure! He’s great isn’t he. Hope you enjoy the book!
@katiejlumsden
@katiejlumsden 23 күн бұрын
Such a great video!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 22 күн бұрын
Thank you! It was fun :)
@Baileyhouse1
@Baileyhouse1 24 күн бұрын
Two years ago I participated in Shaketember by reading, listening to an audio and watching an online production of Much Ado About Nothing. I remember it being harder than the average read, but worth the effort when I finally ‘got it’! Hope to take part again this year … will have to decide which play to focus on 😎
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 24 күн бұрын
That was the first year I participated too! Much Ado became a favourite as a result. Yes totally agree. It’s worthwhile! Glad to hear you’re interested to take part this year :)
@liquidgroove
@liquidgroove 26 күн бұрын
I studied The Go Between for English Literature. Thoroughly enjoyed it then. Feel called to revisit it now. Thanks for the On Chesil Beach recommendation.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 26 күн бұрын
Glad to hear you enjoyed The Go Between even when you had to study it! Pleasure :)
@donaldkelly3983
@donaldkelly3983 29 күн бұрын
Enjoyed the book haul!! According to my college professor, C.S. Lewis is one of the Big Kahunas of medieval and Renaissance literature studies. The Discarded Image: An Introduction to Medieval and Renaissance Literature and Allegory of Love are his major tomes. My Cymbelne is the RSC edition, edited by Bate. Looks like it will be fun. Read your Chesterton! Over here in America, Penguin reprinted a cool looking edition of The Man Who Was Thursday, my favorite of his novels. Chesterton's study of Dickens is worth your time.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 26 күн бұрын
Yes I'm vaguely aware that C. S. Lewis is an expert in those areas - there are so many more books to read and learn! I hope you enjoy Cymbeline and Bate's essays! Glad to hear he's still well in print in America too. Thanks for the recommendations!
@elizabethbrink3761
@elizabethbrink3761 29 күн бұрын
What a great haul! I was going back and forth between the video, Goodreads, and my library's website. I've never read anything by Jonathan Bate. I saw on his Goodreads profile that he's married to Paula Byrne. I've read her biographies of Jane Austen and Barbara Pym and enjoyed them both. That's intriguing that you loved Napoleon of Notting Hill! I have a goal to read more Chesterton.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 29 күн бұрын
So glad you find it interesting! Yes he is! I only found out recently too. The couple wrote so many amazing books. Have you read Napoleon? I love his essays too.
@elizabethbrink3761
@elizabethbrink3761 29 күн бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings I haven't read Napoleon yet, but I also love his essays. He's so pithy!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 26 күн бұрын
@@elizabethbrink3761 Yes he is!
@brigittebeche4117
@brigittebeche4117 29 күн бұрын
Jonathan Bate’s mad about Shakespeare is just fantastic ! Read it! It a deeply personal and so deeply moving, sometimes funny journey into Shakespeare ’s world. My book cover is different from yours though. Thank you for😊 your videos, they are always so inspiring.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 29 күн бұрын
Yes it is! It’s a wonderful book. So glad you love it too. Thank you :)
@AlbertTheConjugator
@AlbertTheConjugator 29 күн бұрын
Hello, Nicole ✌️ 😀 I just discovered your channel through Kelly and Jason. Shaketember is gonna be a fun time! I myself am gonna read The Taming of the Shrew and Macbeth 🧙‍♀️🧙‍♀️🧙‍♀️👑🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 29 күн бұрын
Thanks for stopping by. Nice meeting you! Great choices. I haven’t read The Taming of the Shrew. Really glad you can join us!
@beeheart6529
@beeheart6529 Ай бұрын
All that info is so interesting to me. Thank you for sharing those books and your thoughts with us. I’ll be on the lookout for the CS Lewis one especially. I’m finding it hard to wait until September to start Shaketember but trying to be patient. 😊
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 29 күн бұрын
Glad you find it interesting and hope you find the book ok :) Aww that’s so lovely to hear!
@barbarahelgaker390
@barbarahelgaker390 Ай бұрын
Great! I have 1606 but have not read it yet. I know 4 of the plays but not Cymbeline or Titus ! So must join you on these.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 29 күн бұрын
Glad to hear you’re joining us! 1606 is great 👍
@marywong9976
@marywong9976 Ай бұрын
Am looking forward to hear your non fiction recs! I have been digging all the nonfiction books about Shakespeare like Jonathan Bate's books and 1599!
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings 29 күн бұрын
Cool thanks for letting me know. I wasn’t sure if I should do a recommendation this year. I love both of those!
@tillysshelf
@tillysshelf Ай бұрын
I might try some Shakespeare audiobook versions this year. Would be great to revisit Titus Andronicus as we did it as a school play. Cymbeline is one that I haven't properly encountered yet.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings Ай бұрын
Wow doing Titus Andronicus in school is intense! Hope you enjoy whichever you choose to read!
@tillysshelf
@tillysshelf Ай бұрын
@@adayofsmallthings It was! Think it helped that we didn't quite get the full horror but just loved the gory drama of it all.
@adayofsmallthings
@adayofsmallthings Ай бұрын
@@tillysshelf sounds great!