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Natalia Blagoeva's avatar

Wow! What an invitation! I love your description and reasoning! I personally have read the book as a teenager but I remember nothing other than it being a great book. When I was young, I was reading tons of classics, and I studied English and American literature including many of the authors you mention. Funny fact- back in communism, such literature was available because it was showing what they would call "the decaying capitalism" 😂. Then in the last years- I went into other type of reading and I don't go back to the classics. There is a part of me that longs for that, and for poetry, and I know that you are spot on with this invitation. Such literature cannot be compared with any other reading.... So, let's see... I am not fully ready to dive in but maybe you are shifting something... I will report how I do on that.

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Michelle Dixon, Ph.D.'s avatar

It’s so funny you know because although I grew up in America, my kids are growing up in Australia, and yet in high school they are reading some of the same classics I did. To kill a Mockingbird. Slaughterhouse five. Even the grapes of wrath! it was so weird when my Australian stepchildren were talking about Lenny and George … that’s when I realised that that’s what they were reading in their English class in year 10. Since this is the second time recently that this novel has appeared on my radar, I reckon it’s a sign to reread it, so thank you!

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