tier-ranking more classic books (so you know which ones to read) -- part 2 📚

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2022
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @jack_edwards
    @jack_edwards  Год назад +256

    link to part 1 here with more traditional classics: ruclips.net/video/92QbQOK8VTI/видео.html

    • @audriachoudhury2280
      @audriachoudhury2280 Год назад

      Are these typed out somewhere/available to print or something? Would love it to help build my reading list!

    • @debodatta7398
      @debodatta7398 Год назад +1

      Please read Legends of Ilemuria: The Demon's Return

    • @seacretly
      @seacretly Год назад +1

      can't believe you haven't read all quiet on the western front!!! my favourite classic.

    • @Taliesintoomas
      @Taliesintoomas Год назад +2

      I have to admit that it seems just so weird to me what is considered "classics" in the anglosphere - that it is just so extremely heavily English-language based. Like, it seems that 90% of the titles are originally in English and that seems completely mad to me. To me, in any list of classics worth its salt, no language should have more than 50% representation - okay, I understand that you are taught in some language so you are allowed for it to have a greater share, but 90% seems just so wildly off the mark. Like, the literatures of different languages were in dialogue with each other, how on earth are you supposed to understand that if you, in essence, are just listening to merely one party in that conversation? How can one have a list of traditional classics, and have it lacking, say, Goethe or Cervantes or Molière? This is not an attack on the author of the video, I understand that this is how these things are defined in the anglosphere but it is just so damn weird.

    • @Candy_McK
      @Candy_McK 11 месяцев назад +2

      Really? You're starting with a joke about war and peace - and then there is no Tolstoi at all?
      No Alexandre Dumas, no Theodor Storm but 6 times Jane Austen...
      Harry Potter is a pop cultural phenomenon, but not a classic. And you didn't mention Astrid Lindgreens books - or Peter Pan (btw. all of them are better than Alice in Wonderland)
      Sorry, but someone who rates The Hunger Games higher than Dune or Lord of the Rings loses all credibility in my eyes.

  • @fishactivation5087
    @fishactivation5087 Год назад +5393

    "A classic is a book nobody wants to read but everybody wants to have read."
    -Mark Twain

    • @k49821
      @k49821 Год назад +107

      Why is that so true though 😂

    • @calina4544
      @calina4544 Год назад +228

      😂me buying classics bc of the gorgeous covers while also wishing i could get through them without getting into a slump

    • @camilagrgicevic2890
      @camilagrgicevic2890 Год назад +41

      He probably just chose bad classics

    • @seculoperdido9555
      @seculoperdido9555 Год назад +33

      The quote is wrong, bc nobody wants to read but everyone likes talking about it to pretend they're smart

    • @mary_book
      @mary_book Год назад

      Why is that trueeee??

  • @annie4005
    @annie4005 Год назад +4922

    Love that you included modern classics too, would be interested in a video breaking down exactly what makes a 'classic' and their importance

    • @sophia_alcock
      @sophia_alcock Год назад +36

      omg literally i did an hpq on this topic and it was so so interesting

    • @Honeybadgerrs
      @Honeybadgerrs Год назад +11

      I would also would love this break down!

    • @federicosavorani6320
      @federicosavorani6320 Год назад +27

      @@helvetesmakt1 I wish there was a way to copy comments, because yours is a great summary of the ""defence"" (I hate this term but I can't come up with anything better) of the literary canon. It's just a matter of statistics. Obviously if until the 19th century only white guys could write and publish their novels and treatises that's where we will find the majority of our cultural background. Thankfully nowadays that has changed, but you can't retroactively add works to the canon, even if it means broadening the representation, unless they genuinely are rediscovered as meaningful works of literature and referenced by a majority of people

    • @JungianHeights
      @JungianHeights Год назад

      @@tuqaridha4821 Exactly!

    • @mrlnxf8455
      @mrlnxf8455 Год назад

      Yes!!!

  • @shilo2100
    @shilo2100 Год назад +4096

    Gregor Samsa waking up as a bug and his first worry being how he's going to get to work is the most German thing I've heard, relatable

    • @b4rry420
      @b4rry420 Год назад +138

      That‘s so true 😭 The Metamorphosis was definitely my favourite German classic I‘ve read in my entirety of my school career (I‘m German), it‘s so weird? But very memorable

    • @shilo2100
      @shilo2100 Год назад +57

      @@b4rry420 That's so cool! I don't think I appreciated any of the books we were forced to read in school but I've been trying to read more German classics, picked up Steppenwolf by Hesse recently and loved it. Highly recommend

    • @lisimar2
      @lisimar2 Год назад +29

      @@shilo2100Hermann Hesse is great! I looooved Siddhartha

    • @ag4444
      @ag4444 Год назад +14

      So wrong. Germans call in sick for the tiniest issue. I am German and as soon as I or any of my colleagues have the slightest headache or cough we’ll stay home for 2 days and chill.

    • @lisimar2
      @lisimar2 Год назад +6

      @@ag4444 in my current workplace it's the opposite. But at my old workplace it was that way as well. I had to step in so many times and cover my colleagues hours :/ Once I fell off my bike the day before and i had to come in and sit there all day with both hands in the air haha. I'm German btw and I'm tryna say it probably just depends on your workplace 'cause where I work at now people would come in with a crushed finger 🙃

  • @MDaggatt
    @MDaggatt Год назад +2558

    You should review Agatha Christie! She's the most published author ever, only beat by the Bible and Shakespeare. She's written half a dozen classics. I'd love to see you do something similar to your Cain's Jawbone video and try to solve one of her mysteries.

    • @allypagley
      @allypagley Год назад +62

      Oh I love this idea! She's one of my fave authors ever I feel like I am constantly recommending her books!

    • @Anime-mi9xo
      @Anime-mi9xo Год назад +87

      Can we make it a collection of crime novels? Coz I really want reviews on the Sherlock Holmes stories, and I think this would work as a tier video on the best detective stories with Agatha Christie and Dr Jekyll

    • @emilydeboer9476
      @emilydeboer9476 Год назад +45

      you might watch her already, but * emmie * has a few videos where she tries to solve agatha christie mysteries and they're really fun to watch

    • @emmagrace6457
      @emmagrace6457 Год назад +13

      Yes! I’d love to hear his opinion on “Then there were none”

    • @Jade-zm2tg
      @Jade-zm2tg Год назад +5

      Omg same and then there were none is a masterpiece

  • @lulun1669
    @lulun1669 Год назад +1655

    1:46 - The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien
    2:10 - A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens
    2:42 - Vile Bodies by Evelyn Waugh
    3:25 - Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    3:46 - Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
    4:27 - Persuasion by Jane Austen
    5:23 - Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen
    5:38 - Lady Susan by Jane Austen
    6:02 - Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen
    6:37 - North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell
    7:04 - East of Eden by John Steinbeck
    8:38 - The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
    9:00 - Season of Migration to the North by Tayeb Salih
    9:45 - The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
    10:08 - The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
    10:59 - Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse
    11:16 - The Art of War by Sun Tzu
    12:06 - Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin
    12:14 - The Color Purple by Alice Walker
    12:37 - Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
    12:56 - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
    13:21 - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
    14:09 - Wieland by Charles Brockden Brown
    14:44 - The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
    15:17 - The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
    15:32 - Sons and Lovers by DH Lawrence
    15:40 - The Stranger by Albert Camus
    16:07 - Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
    16:16 - The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli
    16:46 - Silas Marner by George Elliot
    17:07 - The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
    17:19 - The Secret History by Donna Tart
    18:12 - Harry Potter by JK Rowling
    18:38 - The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
    19:10 - The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis
    19:35 - The Testaments by Margaret Atwood
    20:27 - The Talented Mr. Ripley by Patricia Highsmith
    20:45 - Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
    21:10 - The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead
    21:47 - Roxana by Daniel Defoe
    22:19 - A Study in Scarlet by Arthur Conan Doyle
    22:26 - The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark
    22:59 - Nadja by Andre Breton
    23:15 - Brighton Rock by Graham Greene
    23:36 - The Razor's Edge by William Somerset Maugham
    24:00 - Goodbye to Berlin by Christopher Isherwood
    24:24 - Howards End by EM Forster

  • @lucvanheerden128
    @lucvanheerden128 Год назад +1398

    I’d love to see Jack make a video on current books that he thinks will become classics in the future (if he hasn’t already)

    • @amayac4655
      @amayac4655 Год назад +6

      I am pretty sure he already has 😊

    • @lucvanheerden128
      @lucvanheerden128 Год назад +1

      @@amayac4655 oh cool! do you know the link of the video?

    • @qnnnnn3557
      @qnnnnn3557 Год назад +1

      @@amayac4655 link?😅

    • @ciara1045
      @ciara1045 Год назад +2

      ((((girl, woman, other)))))

    • @RecaJ333
      @RecaJ333 Год назад +1

      @@qnnnnn3557 the link, also know as the URL of the video so they can watch it.

  • @LaEnana001
    @LaEnana001 Год назад +277

    I would love a video where you re-read books, that you read "at the wrong time" like "The Master and Margarita". It would be so interesting to see if / in what way it changes your opinion about the books!

    • @putonghua73
      @putonghua73 5 месяцев назад

      I adore the 'Master and Margarita' after a friend's sister recommended it to me around 20 years ago. The only book that compares is Yukio Mishima's 'Spring Snow', which is hand's down my favourite book.
      I too, have many books (of shame) that I tried reading and couldn't get in the right headspace for whatever reason. 'To the Lighthouse' and 'Tender is the Night' are two glaring examples.
      I feel less shame regarding 'Ulysses'. I have but a single life and I'm damn well not going to waste more time forcing myself to read it!

  • @thislifeisconfusing
    @thislifeisconfusing Год назад +330

    The Master and Margarita is complicated to read since there are a lot of historical references/inside 'jokes' that are difficult to understand if you are not familiar with that era and its people. It's best to read one with a LOT of footnotes. The version shown here is pretty decent.

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint Год назад +2

      I’ve been meaning to read that.

    • @carole5648
      @carole5648 Год назад +19

      I would recommend the Burkin/O'Conner translation. The pevear/voronsky translation felt like a different, book that over explained jokes, or missed them entirely.

    • @MissCaraMint
      @MissCaraMint Год назад +1

      @@carole5648 Thanks for the advice.

    • @VampireHeart518
      @VampireHeart518 Год назад +22

      I just have to say that, in my ignorance (intentional, as I keep away from info on books - even classics - so that I could go in with a clear slate / mind :)) ) I wasn't even completely sure when Bulgakov was writing that precisely.
      So I took it as it is and it's one of my favourite books ever, I found it SO much fun and SO free... like, the way it was written felt very free and liberating. It made sense to learn later that he wrote it in secret basically.
      I loved the unhinged imagination, the dark humour... the satire/irony of the absurd situations and characters that transpire even without knowing many details of the background
      - not contradicting you, I wholeheartedly agree with what you said, especially as an explanation to why someone might find it difficult
      Just thought I'd provide an extra view, so that people would give it a go anyway; maybe it finds you in the right moment :)

    • @robbc3851
      @robbc3851 Год назад +15

      I just read the 50th Anniversary edition (the one pictured) and it is THE edition to get. The footnotes genuinely saved me from hours of google searching although I did still spend a lot of time in my reading researching due to it being so soviet-society focused. I found it to be an all-time favorite! A literary acid trip.

  • @lays4831
    @lays4831 Год назад +527

    you NEED to read "a thousand splendid suns" especially if you found "the kite runner" emotional. That is the most heart wrenching and beautiful book I've ever read😢 still waiting for a book to make me feel everything the way that did😅

    • @angelicaaltaf
      @angelicaaltaf Год назад +17

      Read that book on a holiday years ago, completely unaware that I would be sobbing by the poolside for days! So affecting ❤

    • @luzsalas7583
      @luzsalas7583 Год назад +11

      I got this from a friend on my 19th birthday (I'm now 29) and I still remember how much it made me feel, a lot of scenes and quotes. This book has my heart. And I don't know many people who have read it.

    • @WooHooCelery
      @WooHooCelery Год назад +10

      I am fairly devoid of all emotion, so if a book can make me feel something then it’s a pretty damn good book. A Thousand Splendid Suns made me sad therefore it’s an instant five star!

    • @shilo2100
      @shilo2100 Год назад +10

      That book destroyed me, I actually found it very painful to read. But so worthwile

    • @ciara1045
      @ciara1045 Год назад +11

      and the mountains echoed is khaled hosseinis other book and it is as good and heartbreaking as the other 2 (if not more), it focusses on lots of different characters and is more like short stories which i think puts some people off but i would highly highly recommend

  • @james2529
    @james2529 Год назад +59

    Metamorphosis is my favourite classic by a significant margin. I studied it with my students and the deeper you dig into it the more it rewards and astounds you. I absolutely love it.

    • @klauslispector
      @klauslispector Год назад +4

      Hell yes

    • @TomEllisLovesU
      @TomEllisLovesU Год назад +3

      I really need to re-read it... One of the first books I bought, very memorable

    • @lilmissrockchick4962
      @lilmissrockchick4962 10 месяцев назад +1

      I would also love to know what Jack thinks of 'The Trial' by Kafka too ❤

  • @flippedwafflesokurr728
    @flippedwafflesokurr728 Год назад +280

    Is it too early to ask for a part 3? 😂 I’d love to know your opinion on more classics!

    • @captureeverychapter
      @captureeverychapter Год назад

      🤣 I was about to ask that too.

    • @18shuh
      @18shuh Год назад

      I'm pretty sure he talked about them in part 1 🤔

    • @flippedwafflesokurr728
      @flippedwafflesokurr728 Год назад

      I literally watched Part 1… my brain doesn’t work properly 😆 y’all r right

  • @wendygabriella612
    @wendygabriella612 Год назад +369

    "It (Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone) made so many of us readers for life."
    Well said, Jack!👏

    • @esfahanius
      @esfahanius Год назад +16

      Yeah…
      BUT ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS!!!
      Harry Potter has better ranking than the Hobbit?!
      Please…

    • @wendygabriella612
      @wendygabriella612 Год назад +8

      @@esfahanius I was commenting on and quoting what Jack says in the video about a particular book. I wasn't saying anything about ranking. Jack is the one ranking and he's entitled to his taste, preference and opinion anyway. But if you for some odd reason have a problem with that, take it up with him don't go disagreeing on my irrelevant comment using caps. Please...

    • @ispeakforthetrees7517
      @ispeakforthetrees7517 Год назад +14

      Fr harry potter was the book that got me into reading

    • @avalonrhys
      @avalonrhys Год назад +22

      I'm just gonna be honest and mention the blatant transphobia of J.K. Rowling. Harry Potter was also a favourite of mine growing up but realizing Rowling's views on everything really puts it into perspective - personally, it's not my vibe anymore. clothbound classic at its best for me

    • @SidPil
      @SidPil Год назад +22

      ​@@avalonrhyswhy does the author's views affect the book?

  • @rubymcdime7382
    @rubymcdime7382 Год назад +73

    I think Huckleberry Finn is a masterpiece, but I also think it’s very specifically situated in American (US) culture and history. I agree the dialect is hard to read and aged super poorly, but even so I’d be curious to know if you’d view it differently rereading it after living in the US

    • @darkwitnesslxx
      @darkwitnesslxx 7 месяцев назад +9

      Huckleberry is greatest first person novel ever written. Every word in the prose Is from Huckleberry. Unlike modern first person, which is really just 3rd person with the pronouns changed

  • @charliehardwick7625
    @charliehardwick7625 Год назад +134

    Omg the orange-juice-after-toothpaste description hit me HARD. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @toribellmar7623
    @toribellmar7623 Год назад +489

    ‘I’m moby dick without mody part’, - actually killed me 😭
    i would also recommend reading master and margarita in two sessions because I don’t know a single person, who liked it from the get go and didn’t get bored out of the mind by everything that didn’t include Woland!

    • @maduross
      @maduross Год назад +13

      It’s me, I liked it from the get go.
      Jack it looks like you read the P+V translation? I would recommend going with the Ginsburg or Burgin O’Connor translations your next go around. P+V translations is kind of stiff and the manic humor doesn’t come across well.

    • @brothercheems2818
      @brothercheems2818 Год назад

      @@maduross i read the oconnor one and tbh i feel like i'll never fully understand & appreciate the humor and nuance bc im not a russian / native russian-speaker

    • @yatinhu1153
      @yatinhu1153 Год назад +2

      Honestly I'm at chapter 15 and so long I loved every single part of it

    • @maduross
      @maduross Год назад +2

      @@brothercheems2818 Something of the original context is always lost but I’d say a good translation (along with an informative introduction most editions of classic lit will include) can give most if not all of the original feeling and intent of the work.
      for this book in particular I’d say the context of life in the Soviet Union is key to getting the satire but I think even without background knowledge of that stuff the novel does a good job portraying the way the bureaucracy and secret police etc affects people’s daily lives in the text itself from the ridiculous situations that happen (and thus that make fun of their real life counterparts).

    • @diyworld4462
      @diyworld4462 Год назад +1

      @@yatinhu1153 I have completed it and it's actually great. Idk why people hate it so much. Some chapters can be slow and boring but after completing them it's really rewarding.

  • @serahnkahukura8433
    @serahnkahukura8433 Год назад +296

    I would love to see a tier ranking of just children's literature. The comments would be bloodshed

    • @luigi7834
      @luigi7834 11 месяцев назад +2

      omg need

    • @destituteanddecadent9106
      @destituteanddecadent9106 5 месяцев назад +3

      Already I want to cuss him out for putting HARRY POTTER of all books in the top tier!???

  • @dominiqueendeavors
    @dominiqueendeavors Год назад +102

    The Lion, the Witch & the Wardrobe was the first chapter book I ever read; My Dad gave it to me for my birthday. I was already a pretty avid reader, but that book changed my life and cemented my love for reading.

    • @princeapoopoo5787
      @princeapoopoo5787 Год назад +3

      Oh yes, a rather familiar story to me. Not quite the same, as I started with the Magician's Nephew, but the Narnia series (and the Hobbit!) were the first chapter books I read as recommended by my dad.

  • @elsbethhh
    @elsbethhh Год назад +44

    Video idea: what books you THINK will become classics/modern classics and why

  • @charu2774
    @charu2774 Год назад +107

    I had never intended on reading 'the god of small things' but one day I found it in a second hand store for a very cheap price and therefore purchased it. Started reading with no expectations and it turned out to be one of my all time favourites.

  • @Maya-et5jk
    @Maya-et5jk Год назад +91

    “Fleagency” is the best thing I heard. Your play on words and jokes are the literal best way to discuss these books.
    I do think the Art of War deserves a 2nd read (esp since it’s so short) bc it isn’t just about war and enemies. It can be applied to work and personal life. It also influences major marketing strategies and sports. It’s actually a pretty pacifist text and I feel like if you didn’t like the Prince, you would like this one more. I’ve read that war is not glorified in traditional Chinese philosophy like it is in Western. Sun Tzu constantly says that it is better not to engage in war and to do everything you can to prevent it. And the strategies are more about deception in order to carry out and end a battle in the quickest, most efficient way, rather than strategies for a blood shedding battle. Sun Tzu’s values are rooted in Taoism, so harmony and simplicity are important factors. I would definitely recommend reading it again!

  • @wavy3710
    @wavy3710 Год назад +142

    📚TIMESTAMPS 📚
    1:47 - The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)
    2:09 - A Christmas Carol (C. Dickens)
    2:41 - Vile Bodies (E. Waugh)
    3:25 - Americanah (C. Ngozi Adichie)
    3:45 - A Metamorphosis (F. Kafka)
    4:27 - Persuasion (J. Austen)
    5:23 - Sense & Sensibility (J. Austen)
    5:38 - Lady Susan (J. Austen)
    6:03 - Northanger Abbey (J. Austen)
    6:37 - North & South (B. Percival)
    7:04 - East of Eden (J. Steinbeck)
    8:40 - The God of Small Things (A. Roy)
    9:00 - Season of Migrations to the North (T. Salih)
    9:45 - The Kite Runner (K. Hosseini)
    10:09 - The Master and Margarita (M. Boulgakov)
    11:00 - Siddhartha (H. Hesse)
    11:16 - The Art of War (S. Tzu)
    12:06 - Giovanni's Room (J. Baldwin)
    12:14 - The Color Purple (A. Walker)
    12:57 - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (M. Twain)
    13:22 - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (M. Twain)
    14:10 - Wieland (C. Browkden Brown)
    14:45 - The Bluest Eye (T. Morrison)
    15:17 - The Good Soldier (F. Madox Fox)
    15:33 - Sons and Lovers (D. H. Lawrence)
    15:40 - L'Étranger (A. Camus)
    16:07 - Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (R. L. Stevenson)
    16:17 - The Prince (N. Machiavel)
    16:47 - Silas Marner (G. Eliot)
    17:08 - The Old Man and the Sea (E. Hemingway)
    17:21 - The Secret History (D. Tartt)
    18:12 - Harry Potter (J.K. Rowling)
    18:39 - The Hunger Games (S. Collins)
    19:10 - The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe (C.S. Lewis)
    19:35 - The Testaments (M. Atwood)
    20:29 - The Talented Mr. Ripley (P. Highsmith)
    20:46 - Slaughterhouse Five (K. Vonnegut)
    21:48 - Lady Roxana (D. Defoe)
    22:19 - A Study In Scarlet (A.C. Doyle)
    22:27 - The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (M. Spark)
    22:58 - Nadja (A. Breton)
    23:15 - Brighton Rock (G. Greene)
    23:37 - The Razor's Edge (W. S. Maugham)
    24:25 - Howards End (E.M. Forster)

  • @AlishaN-qj5iz
    @AlishaN-qj5iz Год назад +51

    Uni has caught me in a reading slump basically ever since I started my degree, so thanks for making these videos! I love how accessible you make it and make light of books considered classics - makes me feel okay with not reading classics just for the sake of them being classics.

  • @lunar_python8359
    @lunar_python8359 Год назад +53

    As someone who has studied classic chinese literature, I am always confused why the Art of War is well known in the west lol. If you would like to read a classic chinese novel, I would suggest Dream of the Red Chamber or Water Margins (also translated to Outlaws of the Marsh). These 2 novels are regarded as 2 of the 4 top classical chinese novels. (The other 2 classics are The War of Three Kingdoms and Journey to the West, which I feel are more well known) I will say that since these are novels, they are probably easier to read compared to something like Art of War.

    • @mouslima1056
      @mouslima1056 Год назад +3

      The west is confusing on so many levels lol.
      Thank you so much for the recommendations. I am senegalese :)

  • @shilo2100
    @shilo2100 Год назад +57

    I definitely think you should give the Master and Margarita another try! I recently read it and would say it is a *lot* , but I find the narrative voice so spellbinding, hilarious at times plus I find the plot and characters actually interesting. Definitely more readable than a lot of the old dusty classics in my books

  • @MusicJamSchauspiel
    @MusicJamSchauspiel Год назад +79

    The fact that I knew about Jekyll&Hyde's plot twist before reading it took away all atmosphere of the book for me. This book would have been so eerie and beautifully grim if I hadn't known about the secret.
    I was actually really upset after reading the book because of what could have been. I don't know if you know the feeling. You probably do.

    • @magic8girl
      @magic8girl Год назад +8

      I knew about the plot twist because of Monster High (seriously), so reading it for the first time because I was interested, knowing the plot twist made me miserable

    • @Waste-Water-Management
      @Waste-Water-Management Год назад +8

      One of my biggest regrets is spoiling Jekyll &Hyde for my sister who didn't know the plot twist, only because I'd assumed that was universal knowledge. She doesn't seem to have any interest in reading it but the fact that I ruined it will haunt me forever.

    • @elisecode2212
      @elisecode2212 9 месяцев назад +1

      yes, looney tunes gave it away lol. i still found it fascinating though, 6/5, will be rereading.

  • @lrkeerlandsen5033
    @lrkeerlandsen5033 Год назад +29

    Hunger games is the book that got me out of a 3 year reading slump, and I can reread it any day! I’m so happy u acknowledged it as a classic, I did not expect it and was pleasantly suprised😄

  • @marianegiacoia3334
    @marianegiacoia3334 Год назад +56

    15:32 "Sons and lovers is... a book about mommy issues and... yea, it's fine" the best book review

  • @zynpkrdg
    @zynpkrdg Год назад +50

    i was 11 when i read metamorphosis and you can be sure that it left a HUGE impression on me, i am still disturbed by it to this day. i remember our literature teacher always told it was her favorite book and one time she wrote the first sentence of the book and made us continue the story, and then awarded me foor writing the best one, and then made it one of the books we had to read in that year, and lemme tell you it did NOT go the way 11 year old me wrote it to be lol.

  • @slenderhatesyou
    @slenderhatesyou Год назад +347

    why is it so hard for people to understand that others can have different opinions than yours and are still valid like cmon

    • @gutenbird
      @gutenbird Год назад +6

      Why can't you understand that some people don't want other people to have different opinions?

    • @eve_______
      @eve_______ Год назад +3

      So Is opinion of other opinion being wrong cannot be valid? In that case absolute inclusivity is validity? In that case you stand for nothing, represent nothing and amount to absolutely nothing. Which is riddled with hypocrisy.

    • @gutenbird
      @gutenbird Год назад +1

      @@eve_______ There's not hypocrisy in standing for nothing. You have to stand for something to be a hypocrite.

    • @saqweq
      @saqweq Год назад

      Mostly it’s just insecure incels whose entire self-worth is based on reading scifi novels due to not having a social life or societal meaning. Then when people don’t like their hard magik systems they piss their panties. Pretty funny imo.

  • @bookwyrm8181
    @bookwyrm8181 Год назад +23

    The Color Purple actually made me bawl my eyes out. 10000/10 I’m very happy my English teacher last year chose it for our class because I know that it’s not something I would’ve picked up on my own. But I’m so so glad I read it.

  • @amnessie
    @amnessie 8 месяцев назад +13

    The Little Prince, Count of Monte Cristo, and Don Quixote as suggestions if you ever decide to continue this series! Agatha Christie would be cool too, though it could possibly be a list on its own, combined with other famous detective/mystery books

    • @TheLifeOfTexan
      @TheLifeOfTexan 3 дня назад

      I sat through two of these just so I could watch him drag Mark Twain and ignore Dumas

  • @LiliGrosserova
    @LiliGrosserova Год назад +58

    Really glad modern classics were included!

  • @khalilahd.
    @khalilahd. Год назад +32

    Jack, our chaotic King, constantly doing the lords work. You love to see it ❤

    • @burp2048
      @burp2048 Год назад +2

      girl idk if we just happen to watch the same people but i see you comment everywhere

    • @irisgemina1185
      @irisgemina1185 Год назад +1

      girly, ur literally everywhere

    • @idontcare9574
      @idontcare9574 Год назад +1

      i see u everywherree. in almost every vids i watchh xD maybe wr highly share d same interest lolss

  • @emmacd6515
    @emmacd6515 Год назад +23

    As a former French student, I swear I’ve read whole journal articles about how to translate the first line of The Stranger /L’Etranger 😂😅

    • @lorannamoody7011
      @lorannamoody7011 9 месяцев назад

      I love the early translation the best. “Mother died today or maybe it was yesterday.” Later translations tried to improve upon it, but they didn’t have the impact. 😊

  • @ellieh0397
    @ellieh0397 Год назад +12

    I looove classics so much, so happy you talk about them as well 😍❤️

  • @folkwh0re
    @folkwh0re Год назад +9

    Ive been waiting for this ever since the last video was posted. Classics are my love ❤ Great job, Jack!

  • @julija8399
    @julija8399 Год назад +20

    the master and margarita is brilliant, you should definitely give it another go! the beginning is a bit confusing, but it all ties perfectly at the end. the metaphors and references to other books are outstanding (have you read goethe's faustus? it's needed to better understand the book)

  • @jweather66
    @jweather66 Год назад +19

    0:48 Out of these I've only read Animal Farm, Frankenstein, Lord of the Flies, and How to Kill a Mockingbird (all in high school). I agreed with their rankings.

  • @sarahnoll9018
    @sarahnoll9018 Год назад +12

    How am I supposed to ever finish my classic book when Jack keeps posting bangers during my lunch break

  • @riruahm2960
    @riruahm2960 Год назад +6

    I love Americanah so much, it is one of my favourite books ever. It is this amazing love story that takes place in three different countries. The writing is phenomenal, beautiful and very easy to read.

  • @samc2261
    @samc2261 Год назад +26

    so happy to see someone give dr jekyll and mr hyde the praise it deserves its a rlly good book and everyone i know hates it i makes me sad

    • @Camicazi
      @Camicazi Год назад +4

      its literally the only one from this list that I have read

  • @CHiCguitar
    @CHiCguitar Год назад +4

    The Kite Runner is one of my favorite books of all time. I didn't read it by choice, but I loved it by choice. It has stuck with me a decade later.

  • @ellieskouros2174
    @ellieskouros2174 Год назад

    ahhhh sooo happy about all the jack content we're getting lately 😊

  • @antoniamateos9209
    @antoniamateos9209 Год назад +1

    The wait was worth it! I love all of Jack’s videos and enjoy listening to his opinions. ❤

  • @chokoti7736
    @chokoti7736 Год назад +8

    id rlly love to see jack read and review Catch-22, its such a cracked up classic-like literal CRACK-with so many tone shifts and a beautiful ending and GOD id fr love to hear his thoughts on it. i literally have not been able to stop thinking about it since i finished reading it

    • @zeltzamer4010
      @zeltzamer4010 10 месяцев назад +2

      Funniest book of all time.

    • @kayelltom
      @kayelltom 8 месяцев назад +2

      Second this 💯

  • @deezxc
    @deezxc Год назад +3

    I just discovered your channel last week. And I’m really enjoying your channel so far. You’ve got the gift of the gab, my friend. I’m no public speaker so I’m really impressed how fluidly you articulate your thoughts. And as an aspiring novelist, it’s insightful gleaning into your thoughts on various books using accessible language. We all know how acerbic reviews on goodreads can get ha.

  • @Soadsgotaload
    @Soadsgotaload Год назад

    Watching your videos has gotten me back on the reading train! My day job is video game development so I usually play games in my downtime but I forgot how much reading can spark new ideas for games too! Love your content always pumped for new videos!

  • @zoykazh8607
    @zoykazh8607 Год назад +17

    I will definitely return for this video for recommendations, thanks Jack!
    The one book i can comment one, as a russian person, is Master and Margarita. I loved it when i read it for school, it was so different from every other classic russian literature. But I definitely get why it has gone over your head, i think it has a lot integration into soviet culture and also the city with all the little details and humor and context. I imagine it just doesn’t hit as hard in translation and with little context, unlike, for example , war and peace and Anna Karenina, which are kind of simpler and more universal i guess?
    Anyway, hope you like it the second time) maybe there is some good commentary on it as well!

  • @ievakalniskane1992
    @ievakalniskane1992 Год назад +8

    As someone who comes from ex-soviet country, knows the culture and speaks very similar language to Russian, I even found "The Master and Margarita" hard to read and honestly I took my time with it and loved it in the end! :)

  • @anjah8249
    @anjah8249 Год назад +3

    I love the book tier-ranking videos!

  • @sacely3
    @sacely3 Год назад +1

    Absolutely love your videos! Your book reviews and recommendations feel more like a genuine and passionate conversation with a fellow book lover, which is not something I often see with booktubers (at least the ones I've seen so far). Genuine plus points for the puns too lol

  • @callidio95
    @callidio95 Год назад +13

    0:18 Yes, as a new adolescent reader, I am starting of with classics to know what is considered good (in a way)
    Thank you Jack😊

  • @melonramune
    @melonramune Год назад +29

    i just read the god of small things back in august, it was on my bucket list this year to read my first indian novel. i've never read anything with a chronology like that. when i was like halfway through, i thought it would be a four star because i thought it wasn't fully working for me and was a bit melodramatic. but after i finished the book and all the little events come together, i thought each scene was actually perfectly crafted. i understood why the endorsement on the cover said they reread the book right away. anyways i'm excited to read more indian lit

    • @perksofbeingcurvy4827
      @perksofbeingcurvy4827 Год назад +4

      hello! here are some suggestions from an Indian! Try The Lowland from Jhumpa Lahiri and The Shadow Lines by Amitav Ghosh.

    • @melonramune
      @melonramune Год назад +2

      @@perksofbeingcurvy4827 tysm! i already own two other amitav ghosh books so i might read those first but i'll add these to the list

  • @jhoinerrodriguez1903
    @jhoinerrodriguez1903 Год назад +6

    I was literally looking for something to watch while having lunch and BAM Jack's got me

  • @yashasviharikrishna2020
    @yashasviharikrishna2020 Год назад +23

    Hey Jack , I was wondering if you could make an introduction series to various genre of books.

  • @johnley.youtube
    @johnley.youtube Год назад +1

    Honestly love this! Maybe do a video on what you think will be future classics?

  • @hadliellehawkins1964
    @hadliellehawkins1964 Год назад +14

    i used to hate metamorphosis with a passion until i realized that kafka is german and one of the hardest authors to translate bc so much gets lost, so now i feel bad and need to read it in its native german sooner or later bc his short stories are fire

    • @charlieboddy1022
      @charlieboddy1022 Год назад

      He was actually from Prague (Czech Republic) so his native language was Czech

    • @hadliellehawkins1964
      @hadliellehawkins1964 Год назад +10

      @@charlieboddy1022 Prague was part of austria-hungary back then. his native language is German (or when you want to be more accurate mauscheldeutsch) and he wrote in German. glauben Sie mir bitte, tschechisch könnte er ja, aber seine schreibfähigkeiten waren doch mit'n Paar Fehlern gestreut, darum hatte er seine Erzählungen darauf night geschrieben.

    • @hsvfanjan17
      @hsvfanjan17 Год назад

      @@charlieboddy1022 He grew up in a German speaking (upper class) Jew family and went to German school in Prague. He mostly participated in German speaking communities, too, iirc

  • @yenyen4114
    @yenyen4114 Год назад +3

    The Metamorphosis is that one book that I randomly found in the library and was instantly hooked when I read the opening line for the first time. I still have some books to read so I did not borrow it that time when I found it. By next week, I went back to the library to borrow it but I couldn't find it in the shelves anymore. Until I graduated from that school, I haven't found the book ever since. It was just gone. I was 15 years old that time but until now I still couldn't forget it so I finally bought one when I turned 20. It became one of my favorite books. The story is just depressing and although it doesn't directly refer to depression, I can't help but relate similarly to whatever George Samsa was feeling. The metaphor of the story towards mental health is so strong in this one. And as someone currently having quarter life crisis, it hits closest to home.

  • @brooklyn__________
    @brooklyn__________ Год назад +1

    Omg I CLEARED my classics TBR thanks your last video like this!!! Tysm Jack!!

  • @ShikiPirs
    @ShikiPirs Год назад

    the 1st part is my favorite video of yours of all time, amazing!!!

  • @kellinwayne3535
    @kellinwayne3535 Год назад +10

    please please please read "The Hunchback of Notre Dame". I personally think that it's one of the most incredible classics ever written with just how many topics it explores and how controversial it is. Plus it's set in Paris and as we all know, you love that city about as much as I love this book

  • @Mary-uq4ww
    @Mary-uq4ww Год назад +5

    I’m Russian and hearing you say that you weren’t in the right headspace for The Master and Margarita resonated a lot with me. I could only read it fully on my third try and fell in love with it instantly. It is, indeed, very confusing + you have to be very well-versed in Biblical themes and know a bit about at least historical landscape of the time that is depicted as “present” which is Soviet Moscow in roughly the 1930s. This is a very curious book with marvelous characters and I hope you’ll give it one more chance. The beauty of it is that every time you re-read it, you find something new that you haven’t noticed before because you probably lacked experience or knowledge to understand. Bulgakov is such a wonderful and controversial author who was way ahead of his time, I love him!

  • @gerudoking3180
    @gerudoking3180 10 дней назад

    I love that you have so many books at the top. You’ve got a great passion

  • @lydiaedwards8813
    @lydiaedwards8813 Год назад +1

    Yes!!! I literally go back to part 1 all the time when I read more classics.

  • @CegomezChannel
    @CegomezChannel Год назад +4

    i screamed YESSS when you gave giovanni's room 6 out of 5 stars. so glad you enjoyed it!! i loooove that book

  • @lilacsrain6004
    @lilacsrain6004 Год назад +5

    I read north & south and northanger abbey back to back at the start of this year and they're STILL my favourites so far. ik they're still very well-known but I feel like they don't get the recognition they deserve when it comes to talking about classics, so I feel like I'm in my vindication era rn cheers jack

    • @flippanties
      @flippanties Год назад

      I feel like Northanger Abbey is probably the LEAST discussed of Jane Austen's completed published work, which is such a shame because its definitely in my top 3 of hers (alongside Emma and Pride and Prejudice)

  • @sarasundmadsen
    @sarasundmadsen Год назад

    The little "I'm fragile" at the end, hit me right in the feels.. sending so much love

  • @patricia_laet
    @patricia_laet Год назад +1

    How stunning to have this painting as a background👌🏼

  • @taz2906
    @taz2906 Год назад +3

    You’re bang on with Gaskell and I wish more people knew how good North and South is. Also that is the perfect description of John Thorpe.

  • @jessleunig1375
    @jessleunig1375 Год назад +10

    Would love an in depth analysis of the hunger games!! I've been waiting for someone to give us a really academic take on Suzanne Collins FOREVER including looking it up on jstor (middling results)

    • @putonghua73
      @putonghua73 5 месяцев назад

      *cough* Battle Royale *cough*
      I remember watching BR early noughties. Had no idea about Hunger Games for many, many years. When I did eventually watch it (Netflix, I think?), I remember thinking, 'Eh? Why does this remind me of BR'?
      Quick Google later and wow! Lots of controversy surrounding Collins and her position that she has never heard of BR, despite having all of the same influences.
      Note: the BR manga is so much more messed up than the film. Mitsuko is my favourite character, but the manga properly explains her backstory. Good lord .. dark doesn't even cover it.
      I felt like drinking bleach just to feel clean ...

  • @anannasaha852
    @anannasaha852 Год назад +2

    Was anticipating this video....so excited!!!!!

  • @eshavk
    @eshavk Год назад +1

    adding so many books to my tbr bc of you 😩

  • @4dgreentea
    @4dgreentea Год назад +5

    My favorite childhood classic is “the little prince” so I got excited when you mentioned children’s books😭

  • @treenutperson4978
    @treenutperson4978 Год назад +6

    It would be really interesting for you to do a foreign literary classics tierlist

  • @louise-zi7xx
    @louise-zi7xx Год назад +1

    JACK!! THIS IS AMAZING! TYSM

  • @smolbara
    @smolbara Год назад

    This man is so passionate and charismatic, I love the way he talks about books.

  • @bl9081
    @bl9081 10 месяцев назад +5

    I'm so glad the Kite Runner is on here. It definitely made me sob

  • @kirakoli8813
    @kirakoli8813 Год назад +3

    Oh, I read the metamorphasis of Franz Kafka in high school and it was so haunting.
    Kafka in general has that vibe where you're super intrigued by the premise and then a little bit scared by it. We actually had the Process from Kafka as one of the books in the final exams and it's even more about people just living for the work and capitalism.

  • @user-gf8hl5sw5k
    @user-gf8hl5sw5k Год назад +1

    This is a great video. Loved the books you selected for this one

  • @selena311lol
    @selena311lol Год назад +1

    So many of these have been on my TBR and I just got some copies recently bc of this channel 😂

  • @becwrites
    @becwrites Год назад +5

    I watched “The Muppets A Christmas Carol” every year, throughout the year when I was a kid. For that reason I’ve been putting off reading the book because the muppets perfected it 😅

  • @taniaberezhna7397
    @taniaberezhna7397 Год назад +3

    this video is literally a sign for me to finally purchase and read Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut. I avoided this book just as much as I actually wanted to read it but I wasn't entirely sure whether I'd enjoy it. And it's already in my shopping cart on a bookstore's website, and I just hope I would get as much pleasure reading it as you did. so thanks for the video, right on time!!!

  • @readread3747
    @readread3747 Год назад +1

    I absolutely LOVE these vids

  • @TaylorSwiftGleek
    @TaylorSwiftGleek Год назад

    Jack opens me open to so many new books I’d never consider reading. Thank you ❤❤

  • @LW14928
    @LW14928 Год назад +4

    I am *just about to* read Season of Migration to the North for my comparative literature course (and I mean I am actually just about to sit down and read it). I was already excited to read it, but I'm so glad it made a spot at the top as I'm even more excited for it now!

  • @candycaneexe8200
    @candycaneexe8200 Год назад +133

    POV: You're waiting for someone to put the timestamps up.
    And to that person thank you so much you're our hero

    • @rrubyprosser
      @rrubyprosser Год назад +5

      me rn looking through the comments

    • @388C4CGREEN
      @388C4CGREEN Год назад +3

      @@rrubyprosser illdo it

    • @lulun1669
      @lulun1669 Год назад

      hahaha i just posted the timestamps for you guys

    • @388C4CGREEN
      @388C4CGREEN Год назад

      @@lulun1669 you hurt me

  • @amyjbyfield
    @amyjbyfield Год назад

    Hi Jack! I LOVE your videos…you’ve got me into reading again and I’m so grateful !! Pleaseeeeee can you do your top 10 of ALL TIME…your taste is 🤌 chef kiss ✨

  • @dreaminginpastels
    @dreaminginpastels Год назад

    just submitted my final exam for my two undergraduate degrees and watching this video is my mini-celebration! so soothing after reading books for postmodernism. love your content Jack, thanks for being you ☺️🎉🤍

  • @sealswimswim354
    @sealswimswim354 Год назад +6

    *Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is my favorite author!* I also love reading translated Russian classics like Ivan Turgenev’s “Fathers and Sons.” But I always obsess over Sherlock Holmes, the writing is dense yet smooth. My favorite stories are the “Blue Carbuncle” and “The Adventure of the Naval Treaty.”

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +7

    The last time, I heard ‘Austussy’. The bar is high for Punnery and Jack will exceed our expectations as always🔥

  • @EruditeGayming
    @EruditeGayming Год назад +1

    Jack, would really love to see you do a video on cookbooks, or rather, food literature? For one, I think it's fascinating to see reactions to genres people don't read often, and two, there is quite a bit of narrative-heavy cookbooks out there, filled with stories and experiences and culture, akin to more of a memoir than just a cookbook.

  • @luzsalas7583
    @luzsalas7583 Год назад

    I'm watching this in my train from Paris to Saint Malo and I now want to read The razor's Edge. I really like this kind of videos, please continue to do them ❤️

  • @sm768
    @sm768 Год назад +6

    Great video again! It would be great to have a video about the best begginer novels/novella. X

  • @larabalieirodesousa6726
    @larabalieirodesousa6726 Год назад +10

    I'm so here for some Dickens-Defoe slander lol. I had to SUFFER through some of their work for uni. I don't think I've ever taken so long to read a novel as I did with Robinson Crusoe. It's been 2/3 years and I'm still traumatised.

  • @roniquebreauxjordan1302
    @roniquebreauxjordan1302 Год назад

    Happy you're doing this!!

  • @lunablue3356
    @lunablue3356 Год назад +1

    Love your jumper collection 😍

  • @zacsuxatgaming4982
    @zacsuxatgaming4982 Год назад +13

    I don't see The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, so I'm hoping for a part 3. I love hearing you talk about these books and getting the insight of somebody who knows more about them than I do. This would be a super fun series to keep going!

    • @hecoppiii
      @hecoppiii Год назад

      Exactly! I was going to comment that The Outsiders is missing. Also price of salt by Patricia Highsmith (The Talented Mr. Ripley's author)

  • @joycewible8816
    @joycewible8816 Год назад +7

    This is my 3rd video of yours I've watched in 2 days and I've gotten so many great recommendations! It's a shame that I've only read 3-4 of the books across all three vids 😩

    • @theresadwyer1886
      @theresadwyer1886 Год назад +2

      That doesn't sound like a shame, but a great opportunity to read the books he recommends :)

  • @tragicsimmer
    @tragicsimmer Год назад +1

    I was a little nervous when I saw the metamorphosis but thankfully you did it justice, I just love this book a lot