Finally, an Internet Meme with my Name all over it

April 30, 2008

Some folks have been digging through LibraryThing books, looking at books that most often get tagged “unread,” indicating, duh, that they haven’t been read. Sadly, my system of tagging uses “TBR” (to be read) instead of “unread”, so my tags aren’t included in this collection. The top 106 most unread books are the meme. Why 106? Don’t ask me.

It is much in the spirit of other Internet memes in that it lets you talk about yourself a lot.

Here’s the premise: you take the list and then indicate:

  1. Books you’ve read
  2. Books you started but didn’t finish
  3. Books that are on your to-read list
  4. Books that you downright hated!

I’m going to do it this way:

  1. Books I’ve read
  2. Books I started but failed at
  3. Books that are on my to-read list. If I own it already, it won’t be italicized. If I intend to read it Real Soon Now, it’s bold.
  4. Books that I have no particular intention of reading, at this time
  5. Books that I didn’t like!

Here we Go!

  1. Jonathan Strange & M. Norrell
  2. Anna Karenina
  3. Crime and Punishment
  4. Catch-22
  5. One hundred years of solitude
  6. Wuthering Heights
  7. The Silmarillion
  8. Life of Pi: a novel
  9. The Name of the Rose
  10. Don Quixote
  11. Moby Dick
  12. Ulysses
  13. Madame Bovary
  14. The Odyssey
  15. Pride and Prejudice
  16. Jane Eyre
  17. A Tale of Two Cities
  18. The Brothers Karamazov
  19. Guns, Germs, and Steel: the fates of human societies
  20. War and Peace
  21. Vanity Fair
  22. The Time Traveller’s Wife
  23. The Iliad
  24. Emma
  25. The Blind Assassin
  26. The Kite Runner
  27. Mrs. Dalloway
  28. Great Expectations
  29. American Gods
  30. A heartbreaking work of staggering genius (This is my least favorite book ever)
  31. Atlas shrugged
  32. Reading Lolita in Tehran
  33. Memoirs of a Geisha
  34. Middlesex
  35. Quicksilver
  36. Wicked : the life and times of the wicked witch of the West
  37. The Canterbury tales
  38. The Historian
  39. A portrait of the artist as a young man
  40. Love in the time of cholera
  41. Brave new world
  42. The Fountainhead
  43. Foucault’s Pendulum
  44. Middlemarch
  45. Frankenstein
  46. The Count of Monte Cristo
  47. Dracula
  48. A clockwork orange
  49. Anansi Boys
  50. The Once and Future King
  51. The Grapes of Wrath
  52. The Poisonwood Bible
  53. 1984
  54. Angels & Demons
  55. The Inferno
  56. The Satanic Verses
  57. Sense and sensibility
  58. The Picture of Dorian Gray
  59. Mansfield Park
  60. One flew over the cuckoo’s nest
  61. To the Lighthouse
  62. Tess of the D’Urbervilles
  63. Oliver Twist
  64. Gulliver’s Travels
  65. Les misérables
  66. The Corrections
  67. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
  68. The curious incident of the dog in the night-time
  69. Dune
  70. The Prince
  71. The Sound and the Fury
  72. Angela’s Ashes (I am reading this RIGHT NOW!)
  73. The God of Small Things
  74. A people’s history of the United States : 1492-present
  75. Cryptonomicon
  76. Neverwhere
  77. A confederacy of dunces
  78. A Short History of Nearly Everything
  79. Dubliners
  80. The unbearable lightness of being
  81. Beloved
  82. Slaughterhouse-five
  83. The Scarlet Letter
  84. Eats, Shoots & Leaves
  85. The mists of Avalon
  86. Oryx and Crake : a novel
  87. Collapse : how societies choose to fail or succeed
  88. Cloud Atlas
  89. The Confusion
  90. Lolita
  91. Persuasion
  92. Northanger Abbey
  93. The Catcher in the Rye
  94. On the Road
  95. The Hunchback of Notre Dame
  96. Freakonomics
  97. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
  98. The Aeneid
  99. Watership Down
  100. Gravity’s Rainbow
  101. The Hobbit
  102. In Cold Blood
  103. White teeth (This is the only book on the list I’m not familiar with)
  104. Treasure Island
  105. David Copperfield
  106. The Three Musketeers

Thanks for putting up with me! I’ve read nearly half of them. Whew!

5 Comments

  1. Sister says:

    I actually really like Dubliners. For a while, it was on my list of favorite books. And Dracula is strangely fascinating b/c it’s written in a kind of multi-media format (if you can get through the first part set in Transylvania, which I found dull). Just trying to pique your interest!

  2. Brett says:

    I love that Catch-22 is #4. I’ve been trying to finish that book for like three years. I just don’t think it’s that good.

    Also – send this list over to “stuff white people like”. Hell.

  3. Sharon says:

    I kinda agree with Brett on this. I mean I love many of the books on the list, I’ve read many of them some even that I am slightly ashamed to admit (Fountainhead, Atlas Shrugged), but it seems to be missing classics like Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. OK and Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad and Les Miserables by Hugo and heck, All Quiet on the Western Front. But still, besides a few like OK maybe The KiteRunner and Brothers Karamozov, they’re all pretty darn western world oriented…

  4. Sharon says:

    And I guess I can’t let it be, but why 106?
    Cause there is Left Hand of Darkness by Leguin, Siddhartha by Hesse, Hemingway’s Old Man and the Sea, Of Mice and Men, and freaking Huck Finn by Twain!

    OK, I’ll stop now…

  5. Sharon says:

    ….and I seem to have let my late night blogs blur together, as this is obviously not the post about the *best* novels in human history.

    106 most unread. Got it. :)
    -sigh-

    Have you guys ever heard of bookcrossing.com? ‘Catch and release books’?
    I was really into it for a few years, until I busy with other things..
    Super fun to find Tess of the Du’ubervilles in the Belmont Zupans doorway, know that someone loved it enough to set it free, and enjoy the read, tedious as it was at times…

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