Showing posts with label British. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British. Show all posts

February 19, 2024

#08-838: Great Expectations

Miss Havisham, Pip, and Joe (Wikipedia)

Note: I first read Great Expectations in 8th grade, and again in adulthood; it was stunning both times.


Get Ready: What (if anything) is the "secret of success" in this world?


February 09, 2024

#08-835: Jeeves and Wooster

Bertie and Jeeves (Wikimedia)

Note: Like Holmes and Watson, Jeeves is a capable problem solver, and his follower Bertie writes the "adventures" down. But here, the follower is technically the boss!


Get Ready: How do you feel about servants? Are they "second-class" citizens, or are they equal to their bosses?


February 02, 2024

#08-833: The Silverado Squatters

At home in the bunkhouse (Gutenberg)

Note: Quick: What did Robert Louis Stevenson write? Would you be surprised to learn he wrote about his personal travels?


Get Ready: Have you ever visited an interesting place and then written about it--even a postcard? What sorts of things did you (or would) write about?


January 29, 2024

#08-831: The Adventure of the Speckled Band

Holmes strikes at the speckled band (Wikipedia)

Note: British doctor Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote 56 stories about the adventures of Sherlock Homes, and four novels. "The Adventure of the Speckled Band" was his personal favorite.


Get Ready: Have you--or anyone you know--ever kept an exotic pet? If so, what was it? If not, is there one you would like to have?


January 26, 2024

#08-380: The Soul of a Regiment

Adventure, Feb., 1912 (Gutenberg Australia)

Note: There was a time--before television, even before movies--when people got their entertainment from weekly and monthly magazines--stories we still read today. Here's one.


Get Ready: How important are symbols--flags, patriotic songs, and so on--to you?


January 25, 2024

#08-379: Finnegans Wake

A View of Howth (Wikimedia)

Note: Ahh, James Joyce. Some of his work seems more like a puzzle or guessing game than like literature. At the top of that list is this book, Finnegans Wake.


Get Ready: Do you think reading literature should be a struggle, or as easy as watching television?


January 19, 2024

#08-378: The Bottle Imp

Keawe is out of spirits (Wikimedia)

Note: This story throws some twists into the old "genie in a lamp" motif. Fascinating!


Get Ready: The age-old question: if you could have anything, what would you wish for? And at what cost?


January 12, 2024

#08-376: Captains Courageous

Harvey Cheyne Jr. is pulled into a fishing dory (Wikimedia)

Note: Rudyard Kipling is famous for stories in exotic settings--India, for example. But this one happens mainly off the coast of Canada and New England!


Get Ready: Within reason, do you think children should be given anything they ask for, and allowed to do anything they want to? Why or why not?


January 05, 2024

#08-374: Satan as Hero

At his fall, "Satan first knew pain..." (Wikimedia)

Note: Can Satan in any way ever be considered a hero? The answer of some literary scholars is YES!


Get Ready: What characteristics make a hero a hero, and a villain a villain?


January 02, 2024

#08-372: The Mabinogion

Lady Charlotte Guest (Wikimedia)

Note: One person--and a 19th-century woman at that!--is responsible or bringing us some of the earliest prose stories about King Arthur written down in what is now Great Britain.


Get Ready: How many languages do you speak? Do you wish to learn any more? Why or why not?


December 29, 2023

#08-371: The Twelve Days of Christmas

(Wikimedia)

Note: Some people think that the giver in this song gave only one partridge in a pair tree. But it was twelve!


Get Ready: Do you know a formula for adding tetrahedral numbers? Look at this.


December 26, 2023

#08-369: The Woman in White

Walter Hartright is accosted by the Woman in
White on a lonely road--at night (Wikimedia)

Note: Wilkie Collins was a popular novelist, but this and The Moonstone are his two best-known works.


Get Ready: Have you ever had someone tap you on the shoulder (or otherwise get your attention) when you thought no one was there? What happened?


December 22, 2023

#08-368: Rebecca

Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine as Maxim and
Mrs. de Winter in the Hitchcock adaptation (Wikipedia)

Note: The suspenseful novel Rebecca has a Hitchcockian twist at the end. No wonder Hitchcock made such a successful film of it!


Get Ready: What would you do if you learned you had a painful, fatal illness?


December 21, 2023

#08-367: Jacob Marley - The Forgotten Ghost

Scrooge and Marley: together again (Wikipedia)

Note: Like any good book (or film), Dickens's A Christmas Carol never gets old, and we can find something new in it each time we read it. Let's zero in on the often-forgotten character of Jacob Marley: the fourth ghost.


Get Ready: What would it take to convince most people to change their bad habits?


December 07, 2023

#08-364: The Rape of the Lock

Arabella Fermor in a 19th-century print (Wikipedia)

Note: One way to trivialize a potentially serious event is the logical technique called reductio ad absurdum--taking an idea all the way to a ridiculous conclusion. See how the poet Alexander Pope applied this to a social squabble.


Get Ready: How big a deal would it be if someone snipped off a bit of your hair without your permission?


December 01, 2023

#08-363: The Thirty-Nine Steps

Hannay crashes a meeting (Gutenberg)

Note: A thrilling movie, and an even more thrilling book, featuring one of the prototypes for James Bond.


Get Ready: Can the actions of one common man really affect the fate of nations? Can you think of examples?


November 30, 2023

#08-362: The Turn of the Screw

The governess sees a man--Peter Quint?--on a high tower (Wikipedia)

Note: The "unreliable narrator" is a fairly recent storytelling technique, coming into its own in the 19th century. This is an excellent example.


Get Ready: Have you ever sworn something strange was happening--but no one else would agree, or admit they saw anything unusual?


November 17, 2023

#08-359: The Death of Merlin

Nimue and Merlin (detail) (Wikimedia)

Note: Even the wisest of wizards can be a fool for love. Case in point: the humbling of Merlin.


Get Ready: Why do you think folk stories are told with so many variations?


November 03, 2023

#08-355: Ode on a Grecian Urn

Tracing of an engraving of the Sosibios vase by Keats (Wikipedia)

Note: Some people are just--different. John Keats saw the world with fresh eyes, and left it at age 25, after creating such masterpieces as this poem.


Get Ready: Which is "truer": one's own experience of a thing or event (say, a mountain) or the lasting art produced of that thing or event (say, a painting of a mountain)? A woman, or the painting of her (say, the Mona Lisa)?


October 27, 2023

#08-353: The Red-Headed League

"Vincent Spaulding" tells Jabez Wilson of a vacancy in the Red-headed League (Wikimedia)

Note: Here's another clever story--with a surprise solution--featuring the estimable Sherlock Holmes!


Get Ready: If you wanted to get someone out of his or her house, how would you do it?