TOP TEN WORKS OF THE 20TH CENTURY N1: Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov

Discussion in 'Music, TV, Movies & other Media' started by litwin, Feb 10, 2012.

  1. marleyfin

    marleyfin Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    I do not agree with it being No. 1, although a well written book I do not understand how it topped Joyce and Faulkner on that list.

    Also The Great Gatsby as No.2??? that book needs to be moved down on the list or taken off.
     
  2. free man

    free man Well-Known Member

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    Some additions:

    The road, Cormac McCarthy
    A Simple Story, Shmuel Yosef Agnon
     
  3. IrishLefty

    IrishLefty New Member

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    A Clockwork Orange? Portnoy's Complaint? 1984?
     
  4. lizarddust

    lizarddust Well-Known Member

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    Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - shhhhhhhh..

    Yep,, great read.
     
  5. lizarddust

    lizarddust Well-Known Member

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    The Mary Stewart series beginning with "The Crystal Cave".

    "One Crowded Hour" by Tim Bowden

    "Derailed in Uncle Ho's Victory Garden" by Tim Page
     
  6. Jack Napier

    Jack Napier Banned

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    Brave New World.

    1984.
     
  7. trout mask replica

    trout mask replica New Member

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    The Unberable Lightness Of Being - Milan Kundera
    Blindness - Jose Saramago
    A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
    The Wasp Factory - Iain Banks
    Of Mice And Men - John Steinbeck
    Lord Of The Flies - William Golding
    The Naked Lunch - William Burroughs
    Catch 22 - Joseph Heller
    A Taste Of Honey - Shelagh Delaney
    Animal Farm - George Orwell
     
  8. pimptight

    pimptight Banned

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    LOL, 'works' has a different meaning today, FYI.
     
  9. pimptight

    pimptight Banned

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    Yeah, that is more my cup of tea.
     
  10. SpaceCricket79

    SpaceCricket79 New Member Past Donor

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    Only reason it's "controversial" is because it (gasp) has the N word. Aka, political correctness.

    Though plenty of rap music albums do and that's never 'controversial' - go figure. :lol:
     
  11. SpaceCricket79

    SpaceCricket79 New Member Past Donor

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    Don't enjoy reading fiction myself. Last book I read that was fiction was "Count of Monte Cristo" - pretty entertaining, long but good.
     
  12. EvilAztec

    EvilAztec Banned

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    Mikhail Bulgakov's "Master and Margarita" and "Heart of a Dog" and "Morphine"
    Stanislav Lem All books of this Writer-master.
     
  13. EvilAztec

    EvilAztec Banned

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    For Russia is now very well-suited "Heart of a Dog"
    For the world as a whole Stanislova Lem's novel, "Eden"well-suited very well.
     
  14. Viv

    Viv Banned by Request

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    What is strange is that anyone loves it and even stranger that anyone thinks it is acceptable to publicly support child molestation.
     
  15. litwin

    litwin Well-Known Member

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    did you read this book? nabokov was an artist not a politician
     
  16. SpaceCricket79

    SpaceCricket79 New Member Past Donor

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    The only reason that book is at #1 is because it's about screwing a 13 year old girl. :lol: I guarantee it.
     
  17. Viv

    Viv Banned by Request

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    Oh go and try to kid someone more gullible. I suppose porn is art to you.:roll:

    You carry on trying to justify paedophilia and I'll carry on calling it what it is. A criminal offence.













    .
     
  18. Viv

    Viv Banned by Request

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    Not really. It's more because of the number of "men" who need locking up.
     
  19. Viv

    Viv Banned by Request

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    Aztec, have you ever read anything in Russian resembling this? :
     
  20. Ethereal

    Ethereal Well-Known Member

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    How the (*)(*)(*)(*) is 1984 not on that list?
     
  21. JohnConstantine

    JohnConstantine Active Member

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    Has anyone mentioned Camus yet?

    Also I'll throw in "For whom the Bell Tolls" by Hemmingway, great novel.
     
  22. genericBob

    genericBob New Member

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    I would add
    EARTH ABIDES
    to the top of the list, I have NO idea how "lolita" got there.
    oh well .... there is no accounting for taste ......
    whatever ......
     
  23. Aleksander Ulyanov

    Aleksander Ulyanov Well-Known Member

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    It should be noted that Nabakov himself said that Lolita was a metaphor for the English language, which is very young compared to most languages from Europe and the rest of the world. She might also be compared to America in that respect.
     
  24. Sir Thaddeus

    Sir Thaddeus Well-Known Member Past Donor

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    Yes

    Maybe

    Yes

    Yes

    Yes

    /yes

    Meh

    Yes

    Absolutely

    Na

    Never Read em.

    I like your list. Closest to mine.
     

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