Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly linkup of book bloggers hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl! This week is a autumny freebie. Since autumn always makes me think about school, I figured this week I’d feature titles I’d love to seriously study. I took a whole class on Dante’s Divine Comedy in college, and it was not only an amazing course, but it made me wonder how you could ever really understand the work without getting all that context, because there is SO MUCH Italian history crammed in there. And sometimes I feel that way with books, like I need to really dive into it to understand everything. So here are ten books I’d love to study!
War and Peace: I’d love to know more about Russian life, both among regular people and the aristocracy to which the Rostov family belongs. And then the Napoleonic wars on top of that!
Vanity Fair: Another perspective on the Napoleonic wars! Plus more information about social status/life/etc during the Victorian era would be great.
Midnight’s Children: I enjoyed reading this, but felt like if I knew more than what I’d picked up from other novels about the Partition, I would get about 1000% more out of it.
Snow: Turkey has had an interesting history, being neither really Middle Eastern or European, but a little bit of both. I just don’t know much about that history, which would have given a lot more richness to the way this wrestles with cultural tensions in Turkey.
Sense and Sensibility (and all of Austen, really): I still have one Austen novel outstanding (Northanger Abbey), but I would love to deconstruct both the class system of Britain and how it has changed/evolved and just really dig into what makes her work so brilliant.
The Age of Innocence: While we certainly know all about the Roaring Twenties, the Gilded Age in America (and particularly New York) isn’t as high profile. I’d love to learn more about that world, and compare it with our own, in exploring this wonderful novel.
Great Expectations: I’d really enjoy going into depth on form and structure here, as this was of course originally published as a serial. It’s been the most successful, for me, of the Dickens I’ve read, and how he managed to make each installment interesting while keeping the overall story on track would be fascinating to explore.
The Lord of the Rings: There is a LOT going on in this trilogy, and I’d love to explore how J.R.R. Tolkien’s own life experiences/social world impacted the writing of these books, as well as really dive deep into questions I’ve always had, like what the holy heck is the whole Tom Bombadil thing about?
Harry Potter: I’m sure there actually are classes about this at college these days, but every time I go back and revisit these books I catch another layer in them, and would love the chance to really dig into this world.
Wolf Hall: I’ve read quite a bit of Tudor-era historical fiction, and most of it is wrapped up in the interpersonal drama of the relationships between the main players. But this one is uniquely rooted in both church and political power structures, which made it hard to get into at first and definitely required outside research to grasp.