Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by The Broke and The Bookish! Today’s given topic is books that took a long time to read, and to be honest, this is a list I struggled to put together because I generally read really fast. Even for books I don’t like, because I try to burn through them as quick as I can so I can move on to something better. That being said, there are definitely some books that I had to chip away at bit by bit, mostly because of length but sometimes because they were genuinely difficult.
War and Peace: This book took me about three weeks to read, because it is very very long. But there’s a reason it’s virtually always at the top of lists of best books: it’s really incredible. Natasha might be one of my favorite characters in literature. Very much worth the time investment.
Les Miserables: Another super-long epic. I’ve actually never seen the show, but I did see the (very hit and miss) movie before I read it, and honestly I think it helped to have some sort of idea of the general plotline because there are so many characters and so much story that without an idea of generally what was going on I’d have been discouraged. It’s also very good and worth the time.
Creative Mythology: This was the end of a four-book series that I’d found tiresome even after the first one but I’m both a completist and very stubborn. By the time I got around to this one, I was deeply and profoundly ready for the series to be over but they were really hard to slog through so it took weeeeeks.
A Suitable Boy: I read this the summer after my freshman year in college because my mom had a copy hanging around and it had always intrigued me. Another super super long one, this book actually taught me most of what I know about The Partition. I’d like to revisit this story one day when I have a LOT of spare time.
The Grapes of Wrath: This was the bane of my senior year of high school. I’m not much for Steinbeck and this is a lot of pages of Steinbeck. We had to keep these reading logs for each chapter, so I actually had to do a close read of every part of it and by the time I finished it I was so angry about reading it.
Vanity Fair: I’d made a stab at this in high school for fun and never was able to get into it, but a couple years ago I picked it up again and made it through. I usually have a hard time with books with unlikable protagonists, but once I decided that Becky’s scrapiness was actually kind of admirable I got around to enjoying it if not loving it.
A Storm of Swords: All of the A Song of Ice and Fire books are long, but the third volume was the only one that stymied me on my initial read-through. I got bored and actually had to start it over again after getting about 1/4 of the way through because I put it down for so long that I couldn’t remember what was going on. Once I made a second stab at it, it went really fast, but that first try was rough.
Don Quixote: I loathed this book so hard. It was all I could do to make myself spend just 20-30 minutes a day with it, so it went by slooooooowly.
The Divine Comedy: This is kind of cheating, because I read this three-part epic poem over the course of an entire semester in college. I loved it, don’t get me wrong, especially since taking the whole class gave me so much of the context behind it…well, most of it anyway. Paradiso was kind of weak, but the other two parts were great.
Wolf Hall: Once I got into it, I really liked it (and its sequel even more), but I had a hard time getting grounded in the way Hillary Mantel was telling her story. It’s one of those things that I’m glad I was able to push through until I got my head around, though, because it’s a great book.