I read every book Pedro Pascal has recommended and found a new favourite book of all time !!!!!!

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  • Опубликовано: 7 апр 2023
  • [ad] Click here ritual.com/JEDWARDS20 to get 20% off your first month with Ritual. Thanks Ritual for partnering on this video.
    i read every book internet daddy Pedro has recommended and OMG THEY WERE SO AMAZING
    links:
    📚 second channel: • i did a literature pub...
    social media:
    📕 instagram: / jackbenedwards
    📙 tiktok: / jackbenedwards
    📒 twitter: / jackbenedwards
    📗 spotify: open.spotify.com/user/jackben...
    📘 goodreads: / 20013214.jack_edwards
    fun projects:
    📖 I wrote a book! amzn.to/31meIaN
    💻 jackedwards@sixteenth.co (just .co!)
    FAQs:
    😭 what happened to your intro? it got copyrighted ://///
    🤠 how old are you? 24!
    📆 when is your birthday? 18th october 1998 (libra)
    🎓 where did you go to university? i studied english at durham!
    🔎 where do you live? new york
    💼 what is your job? research assistant in the publishing industry
    🎥 what do you film with? lumix gh5 + canon g7x
    👾 what do you use to edit? final cut pro
    📫 how do I contact you? jackedwards@sixteenth.co or social media!
    sub count:
    📊 1,219,417
    thanks very much for watching, don't forget to subscribe, and give the video a thumbs up if you enjoyed!!
    ----
    * These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease

Комментарии • 636

  • @jack_edwards
    @jack_edwards  Год назад +112

    Click here ritual.com/JEDWARDS20 to get 20% off your first month with Ritual. Thanks Ritual for partnering with me on this video! :)

    • @noratariq
      @noratariq Год назад +1

      loved this video so much! your monologues are hilarious and i couldnt stop watching till the end. 😂

    • @lenasophie5455
      @lenasophie5455 Год назад

      A little FYI: Please talk to your doctor about getting a blood test done before you start taking vitamins. If your blood test results are good, there’s no need to take substitutes, if you have too much of something in your blood it can actually be counterproductive. Just be aware of that 😊

    • @princedavid7016
      @princedavid7016 Год назад

      Jake Reed zj James Chronicles in Wattpad and talk about it in your channel and I promise I will subscribe to your channel if you do this and also this story is very interesting

    • @princedavid7016
      @princedavid7016 Год назад +1

      That is the link

    • @uchihaobito5810
      @uchihaobito5810 Год назад +1

      Jack, Please make a video on shah rukh khan recommendation

  • @kasia8306
    @kasia8306 Год назад +5992

    So now we know that Pedro is a no plot just vibes kind of guy. Which I respect

    • @Toughmittens
      @Toughmittens Год назад +202

      Seems like he likes introspective, meditative stuff. I’ll be reading all of these books for sure

    • @gonzalozamora5715
      @gonzalozamora5715 Год назад +181

      Imma go out on a limb but I feel that shows that he has those latin american roots. Pretty much every book from the 20th century in latin america has those vibes. I really hope Jack gets to read more Cortazar, Bombal, Carpentier or Donoso.

    • @JJ-rx8ym
      @JJ-rx8ym Год назад +38

      It’s both a valid take and my nightmare as a reader. Plot is my jam

    • @sonyawix5871
      @sonyawix5871 10 месяцев назад

      I am too

  • @chilenaerrante
    @chilenaerrante Год назад +3200

    A hundred years of solitude is a Latinamerican CLASSIC! The genre is "magical realism" and it's about crazy things being perceived as natural for the characters yet the most normal things being weird. Honestly at least in Chile is a book that is almost always mandatory at school. I love the author. Gabriel García Marquez is amazing but he definitely made me suffer with all the characters having the same name hahaha

    • @alloralou4722
      @alloralou4722 Год назад +45

      With him being from Chile I see why he loves Marquez. Stunning book.

    • @astro-pp5xq
      @astro-pp5xq Год назад +13

      It's a masterpiece but same.

    • @miecaf
      @miecaf Год назад +13

      Istg I loved the book but I was so confused with the names too 😭

    • @gm.8805
      @gm.8805 Год назад +23

      not just latinamerican, it’s pretty well known worldwide as well.

    • @alexherran5008
      @alexherran5008 Год назад +26

      @@alloralou4722 he is from colombia but yes it is a really good book

  • @Rachel-sv9pq
    @Rachel-sv9pq Год назад +1831

    Before I read One Hundred Years of Solitude somebody told me that it's not a story about people it's a story about a town so don't get hung up on the names and that helped a lot. I love that book.

    • @bibliophilecb
      @bibliophilecb Год назад +107

      Ooh that’s interesting! I haven’t read 100 years yet (it’s been on my tbr forever) but I read Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Marquez and remember thinking the same thing. It reads like a murder mystery but really the whole town is at fault, not any one person.

    • @jack_edwards
      @jack_edwards  Год назад +165

      Definitely great advice!!

    • @patmiec
      @patmiec Год назад +18

      Indeed, One Hundred Years of Solitude is about the lifetime of the town of Macondo following the family that founded it and was there when it ended. Gabriel Garcia Marquez first introduced this fictional town of Macondo in short stories that were published in the newsletter. Some of his first novels also developed stories and characters in the same town. Macondo was inspired by his hometown Aracataca. If you read other stories in Macondo, it is like you know they belong to the same universe and recognise some of the characters.

    • @shreya...007
      @shreya...007 10 месяцев назад +2

      This book has been on my tbr for so long. Actually me and my mom have a bit of a contest of who will finish this book first and neither of us have started it yet 😅

  • @praz5823
    @praz5823 Год назад +1523

    "The certified internet daddy" I agree with you Jack!😂

  • @leilajaafari8436
    @leilajaafari8436 Год назад +662

    “He’s call James BaldWIN because he never looses!” Best review of an author.

  • @katemcdougall1221
    @katemcdougall1221 Год назад +681

    i’ve been having both pedro pascal brainrot and jack edwards brainrot this came at the perfect time

  • @accioscript
    @accioscript Год назад +286

    What is insane about 100 Years of Solitude is that reading it as a Latino American, even more, as a Colombian, you know what's being narrated makes complete sense. Because most of us have heard stories our whole lives that sound insane, but that are "real". And I don't need to explain it further because Gabriel García Marques manages to transmit it in his novel so well, that people from outside Latin America get it while reading it, as Jack shows. I think that's one of its biggest features.

    • @sweetestaphrodite
      @sweetestaphrodite Год назад +1

      superstition

    • @cristinabottger1509
      @cristinabottger1509 Год назад +41

      I remember a video that said that "As a Latin-American, magical realism is just realism" (and as a Peruvian I can confirm it does tend to seem that way) not necessarily because of superstitions, it has a lot to do with syncretism and the catholic faith being intertwined with older native traditions and beliefs, as well as families being very large and close together so anecdotes just get carried on for generations, possibly becoming more exaggerated with each telling. Then at the same time many villages are very close by to rainforests and wild animals, so for example my great grandmother knew a soldier that was swallowed by a boa, which is the kind of thing you could see happening in a magical realism story. (Though I’ve read magical realism, I haven’t gotten to reading 100 years of solitude yet, but I really want to)

    • @sweetestaphrodite
      @sweetestaphrodite Год назад +6

      @@cristinabottger1509 Coming from a country who passes on such realities in the same way, it is superstition. ‘A superstition is any belief or practice considered by non-practitioners to be irrational or supernatural, attributed to fate or magic, perceived supernatural influence, or fear of that which is unknown.’ The reason for its integration into a culture doesn’t mean it’s not superstition.

    • @accioscript
      @accioscript Год назад +7

      @@cristinabottger1509 That’s very well put. It’s exactly that experience. It is sometimes hard to make people from other places understand it they way we have lived through it, but notice how Jack mentioned magical realism and not superstition, which is a wider comprehension of Latin American culture, rather than reducing it to just one phenomenon.

  • @TheLightofAniu
    @TheLightofAniu Год назад +565

    Oh my god! Baldwin, Márquez, *and* du Maurier!!! I am screaming, they’re three of my favourite writers of all time. Now we know Pedro has amazing taste

    • @jack_edwards
      @jack_edwards  Год назад +128

      Salinger right now: 👁👄👁

    • @TheLightofAniu
      @TheLightofAniu Год назад +13

      @@jack_edwards I actually have never read Salinger’s work! I should! Though I hear so many conflicting things, I do not know on which side of marmite I will fall. But I will defo give him a try very soon x

  • @genesisulin2792
    @genesisulin2792 Год назад +444

    I would love to see him do one of these videos on Anya Taylor-Joy. I think that would be really fun tbh she has an amazing taste in literature and some interesting reads that made me respect her even more as a person than an actress after seeing her work.

  • @nguyethuynh11
    @nguyethuynh11 Год назад +522

    'One hundred years of solitude' is literally the first work of fiction that made me go like "A human being created this???" (The second and only other occasion is when I watched the show 'Dark'. Now that I say this, I realize that both have a complicated family tree so I guess I have a type lol 😂)

  • @henryorhank
    @henryorhank Год назад +228

    One Hundred Years of Solitude has one of the best endings ever, it ties the whole book together in a way I didn't think was possible for the type of book he had written

    • @ramirez4630
      @ramirez4630 Год назад +6

      I read it last year and I didn’t found it hard. I loved it ofc, but I mean, the book is so cool because of all the intertwined plots, names, curious cases, etc.
      So I think the ending was perfect but at least for me didn’t help tying the whole book

    • @stefaniewimmer7077
      @stefaniewimmer7077 Год назад +4

      That book has the best final paragraph ever, honestly how good a writer was he

  • @linamarin11
    @linamarin11 Год назад +57

    One hundred years of solitude does have plot. It is easier to understand when you know a bit of Colombian history and can relate the events in the novel to the events that inspired it. As a colombian, this books is pretty much mandatory reading in school and we study it through our actual history. When you see it as the story of a country, instead of a single character, you can see that there is plot woven in between all the seemingly random events. Anyways, I'm glad you liked it!

  • @asliozy7
    @asliozy7 Год назад +559

    I’m glad you liked One Hundred Years of Solitude. I read it 2 years ago and it’s one of my favourite books ever since. For those who want to read the book, my only advice try to read it everyday and finish it as soon as you can. You’ll understand the reason whilst you’re reading it.

    • @esranur829
      @esranur829 Год назад +8

      holy s never knew an another turkish person who has read the book really happy to see this comment

    • @rachaelerin1
      @rachaelerin1 Год назад +15

      I’m going to take this advice. I’ve tried to read it multiple times and even though I’ve enjoyed it, whenever I put it down for a bit I find it impossible to pick back up.

    • @samanthaisabelzambranacabr8676
      @samanthaisabelzambranacabr8676 Год назад +7

      omg yes that's definitely a great tip, i read it like in 10 days and was able to remember all of the names with ease

    • @jenng.e.7652
      @jenng.e.7652 Год назад +1

      Best advice ever for this book!

    • @SammieMousie
      @SammieMousie Год назад +2

      I gave this book 90 or 100 pages but it just didn't resonate with me. I didn't like it at all. And that's not to say it's bad it just wasn't my cup of tea.

  • @bikashnath01
    @bikashnath01 Год назад +648

    Daddy Pedro recommended books mentioned in the video --
    01:30 - Another Country by James Baldwin
    05:11 - Don't Look Now by Daphne Du Maurier
    07:04 - Franny And Zooey by J. D. Salinger
    11:07 - One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez

    • @meghnaandrews3865
      @meghnaandrews3865 Год назад +8

      Ah Thank you!

    • @aakanshakar4960
      @aakanshakar4960 Год назад +27

      His other recommended (mentioned briefly towards the end of the video) are Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky and East of Eden by John Steinbeck.

    • @gem0.079
      @gem0.079 Год назад +3

      Love how even guys are calling him daddy atp

    • @maaizelaa
      @maaizelaa Год назад

      I would like to know why he recommend "Franny and Zooey" because I just read it and I don't get the fascination🥺👉🏻👈🏻

    • @Leo-ge7qy
      @Leo-ge7qy 11 месяцев назад +1

      Add the magic mountain by thomas mann (gq interview)

  • @alissalins
    @alissalins Год назад +68

    Reading One Hundred Years of Solitude in Spanish is just… magical. Totally magical.

  • @alloralou4722
    @alloralou4722 Год назад +180

    Insomniac here in the US and I love love this! I had no idea Pascal loves these classics. Just when I didn’t think I could like him any more I discover he has excellent taste in books.

  • @erinsbooks
    @erinsbooks Год назад +115

    Interresting fact about Frranny and Zooey: Salinger wanted Franny and Zooey to be published into two different books, but the publisher wouldn't do it that way, much to his horror.

    • @jack_edwards
      @jack_edwards  Год назад +85

      Much to my horror too

    • @lilhedonistcannibal123
      @lilhedonistcannibal123 Год назад +5

      ​@@jack_edwards 😭 you're making me want to read this even tho I pledged to never read salinger

    • @Ellie-K.the-nerd
      @Ellie-K.the-nerd Год назад +6

      @@lilhedonistcannibal123 why not he is my favorite author😢give him a try

    • @Me-vn3gz
      @Me-vn3gz Год назад +6

      @@lilhedonistcannibal123 why not? i think he gets a bad rep from people not really understanding what he’s trying to say, or not looking beyond the surface

  • @V1ckyL
    @V1ckyL Год назад +42

    He really has good taste in books and seems to be reading a lot. He talked about even more books than just these. I read "Birds of America" by Lorrie Moore because of his recommendation and absolutely loved it

    • @Moon_Moon91
      @Moon_Moon91 Год назад +3

      Could you tell me where you saw him giving those book recs coz I always hear people say he has great taste yet I can’t find any interviews where he talks about books.. I’d love to know more about his readings!

  • @shaniparag8059
    @shaniparag8059 Год назад +88

    I wish I was famous purely so Jack would judge my taste in books….

  • @naastyaaaaaaaaa
    @naastyaaaaaaaaa Год назад +136

    For some reason, it's rare to find a classic with a good cover, so when I stumbled upon your copy of One Hundred Years Of Solitude a while ago I couldn't believe my eyes - I had to buy it. That cover is gorgeous!🌿
    PS: ..and so is Pedro hehe ;)

    • @sol12314
      @sol12314 Год назад +2

      penguin recently released "Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition Series" and their cover are beautiful

    • @8LyJu8
      @8LyJu8 Год назад +1

      There is an anniversary edition of One Hundred Years of Solitude in spanish that is beautiful, with illustrations in a pretty clear latin american style

  • @DaniCalderon_G
    @DaniCalderon_G Год назад +21

    Omg I’m so glad you finally read One hundred years of solitude! I knew you would love it, I think readying it in spanish is a bit more gratifying but it seems like you really get and appreciate it! This book makes me feel proud to be colombian to be honest 🥰

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Год назад +34

    Legends know that this video was in the works since the ‘How Many Classics Have you Read?’ Video and the ‘Celebrity Reading Room’/‘Celebrity Book Club’ video.

  • @orphu88
    @orphu88 Год назад +7

    When I first read "Franny and Zooey," I had a similar reaction to yours. But I returned to it later, and because I then knew what I was getting into, I appreciated it so much more. If you read "Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters and Seymour: An Introduction," -- as well as two of the stories in "Nine Stories" -- you'll get to know the rest of the Glass family, and it will all come together more clearly. Every few years I reread all of these books. Salinger's writing is amazing and like no other.

  • @sarcasmxkate
    @sarcasmxkate Год назад +9

    James Baldwin's entire catalogue is ace. I love everything he's written. One of those authors that just creates such a picture. And often an uncomfortable one, but so important and he's just someone I'm wildly grateful existed.
    You right. BaldWIN. Obviously.

  • @ateacherexplains
    @ateacherexplains Год назад +44

    Franny and Zoey is criminally underrated. It is my fav by him and and far outstrips Catcher by miles.

  • @purple0hairstreak
    @purple0hairstreak Год назад +15

    What takes the reading experience of Another Country to a whole different level is if you listen to all the tracks he mentions as you read 😍

  • @MM-lv7yf
    @MM-lv7yf Год назад +73

    Look who’s spoiling us with videos! ❤️

  • @PricelessAudiobooks
    @PricelessAudiobooks Год назад +16

    00:00
    Jack Edwards reads books famous people have recommended and then psychoanalyzes them on X.
    00:15
    Pedro Pascal, the certified internet Daddy, recommended his favorite books to us, and we immediately went out and bought the rest of the books on his list that we hadn't yet read. So we have 100 Years of Solitude, Franny and Zooey, Another Country by James Baldwin, and Don't Look Now.
    01:20
    This week I will work my way through Pedro Pascal's book recommendations and let you know whether they're more Mandalorian or Mandiborian. The first book I will tackle is Another Country Two hours later by James Baldwin.
    02:29
    Another Country is in Another League is about a group of liberal friends in New York City who go through a range of experiences in this big scary world and this ominous City. The book is ultimately about love and the Myriad forms that Love Takes.
    03:36
    I'm fascinated with this novel and don't know if I'll ever recover. One minute 37 seconds later, Ritual raises the bar for me.
    04:04
    Rituals are a brand of multivitamins essential for men and made from 100 recycled materials. They are transparent about what ingredients they use and why and you can get 20 off your first month of Ritual if you use the code J Edwards20.
    05:25
    A couple who have recently lost their daughter go to Venice on holiday to relax and get a little bit of an escape, but end up getting a little bit creeped out and warned to leave immediately by two women.
    05:59
    This story was terrible for my anxiety levels because I was tense the entire time I read it.
    06:19
    Sure, it's like the perfect short story; you would study it in class. The pace slows slightly in the middle, but right at the end, it's pulled super tight again.
    06:45
    I'm glad to have read this book, and I'm going to be reading Freddie and Zui, which is a novel divided into two parts but combined into one. It's very sharp, witty, and audacious, and Franny has so many great one-lighters.
    07:49
    The overall story is about Franny going on a date with this intellectual guy, Lane. I thought Franny was a well-crafted character, and I can't wait to see what the next section contains.
    08:29
    The Zooey section of this book was a little laborious to read because it took one step too far from the Franny section. The Zooey section is basically Franny's older brother, and he is intensely introspective and Hyper self-aware, leaving them disillusioned with the wild.
    09:30
    The second part of this book drags, but it has moments where it's genuinely hilarious, and ultimately Freddie and Zui is just a series of arguments between different people. They confront themselves and society with significant positive and negative human traits.
    10:25
    I found the book's second half a bit of a slog to read line by line, but I'm still grateful to have read another Jd. Salinger's book and so many memorable moments in this book.
    11:04
    Gabrielle Garcia Marquez's 100 Years of Solitude exemplifies no plot, just Vibes. It took me a lot of brain power to finish this book, but I am so happy to have read it.
    11:55
    This woman is 200 years old and hasn't died yet, and her family tree has 17 people with the same name.
    12:12
    Gabrielle did precisely that in her book, and it is a ride with loop-de-loops, and you have to put your arms up and enjoy. It pioneered magical realism as an idea in literature, and there are points where a girl would like to float off into the sky.
    13:04
    The narrative flows freely between the characters in this book and discusses fate, time, magic, honesty, Order and Chaos, generations, and family Dynamics.
    13:24
    Pedro Pascal's reading challenge was incredible; I found a new favorite book in another country and hope you enjoyed this video. Let me know who you want to see in my next celebrity book club.

  • @c.reimer1624
    @c.reimer1624 Год назад +22

    Another country is just phenomenal. I’m so glad you liked it and I hope it gets more attention now. Bless your souls with this amazing book guys!

  • @KeroseneSkies
    @KeroseneSkies Год назад +9

    I also love The Catcher in the Rye omg!! It's one of my favourite books of all time and I remember other students not realizing or noticing things I did about a lot of passages. It felt like they were reading the book very surface level and not thinking about it at all. To me it brought up a lot of really pertinent things, especially revolving around Holden's mental health.

    • @Moon_Moon91
      @Moon_Moon91 Год назад +2

      100% same!

    • @mikyahperry8121
      @mikyahperry8121 Год назад +2

      I liked it to an extent. Idk why but it felt like it kept repeating itself a lot but there were a lot of parts that I liked in the book. I wanna try to reread it to see what I find next since it’s been a while since I read it.

    • @anakhanair_
      @anakhanair_ Год назад +1

      It was a DNF for me. It just kept going and going without
      Getting anywhere and i usually like books without any plot but all about the vibe ,however I just couldn't care less about the narrator. Glad you enjoyed

  • @unathitshoni1902
    @unathitshoni1902 Год назад +11

    the way Jack is beaming reading Franny's part. I'm holding my breath for his reaction to Zooey😂

  • @jaredvlogs8891
    @jaredvlogs8891 Год назад +8

    dude i literally just bought franny and zooey... i must've connected with pedro through space and time

  • @angeandwords
    @angeandwords Год назад +17

    Franny and Zooey needs more appreciation, one of the favourites! So witty, just love the conversations of Zooey and his mother

  • @wiets90
    @wiets90 Год назад +7

    "The truth is in fiction"
    - Pedro Pascal (GQ's '10 Things Pedro Pascal Can't Live Without')

  • @PoetryJesusY2K
    @PoetryJesusY2K Год назад +5

    Don’t Look Now is also an incredible movie from the 70’s with some of the wildest editing I’ve ever seen that’s worth checking out!

  • @gonzalozamora5715
    @gonzalozamora5715 Год назад +110

    Finally more latin american books! I'm shocked that you hadn't read 100 years before. There such a lot of books from here that are the best out there, yet get missed for not being from europe or the US.

  • @felix__93
    @felix__93 Год назад +36

    I love James Baldwin. And like you, I just have another reason to love Pedro Pascal.

  • @rachaeldiviney712
    @rachaeldiviney712 Год назад +11

    You should do Chris Pine! He's a BIG reader and he's having a really good year

  • @azulrosa6906
    @azulrosa6906 Год назад +6

    The edition of One hundred years of Solitude that's distributed here in Argentina does NOT come with a family tree on the first page. Maybe the editors think that the translated edition needs that for the European/ north american readers who don't know Spanish but man!!!! we Hispanics need it too!! I don't know wich Aureliano are we talking about please help

  • @fridaresquin8199
    @fridaresquin8199 Год назад +12

    You should make more videos about Latin American authors! Borges, Roberto Bolaño, Mariana Enriquez, Martin kohan and I can go on and on hahaha

  • @hailey5784
    @hailey5784 Год назад +1

    There is also a film of Don't Look Now from the 70s starring Donald Sutherland and Julie Christie which is somewhat of an influential work in cinema. Fun fact is that it received an X rating in the UK for the sex scene in it that was quite scandalous for the time. They cut a few frames from it which allowed it to receive an R rating in the US.

  • @chupacabra77
    @chupacabra77 Год назад +2

    The film adaptation of Don't Look Now is one of the most beautiful horror films of all time. Also, famously, has maybe the best sex scene ever filmed.

  • @bladepanthera
    @bladepanthera Год назад +6

    I'm in love with Pedro atm. The man is charm and sexiness embodied.

  • @last_flower.
    @last_flower. Год назад +12

    the fact that i've read all of these books when i was at school makes me realise what an incredible nerd i used to be

  • @liliamuseum196
    @liliamuseum196 Год назад +24

    FINALLY YOU READ ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF SOLITUDE! its my favorite book !!🍀💕👌

  • @pradnya-uj4iq
    @pradnya-uj4iq Год назад +19

    I am in love with these series

  • @romaissakoulal3128
    @romaissakoulal3128 Год назад +20

    He's as charming as his books taste

  • @lmf221
    @lmf221 Год назад +1

    PAPA PEDRO? Please feel free to do as many parts of this as humanly possible because I just want to understand how this man's mind works because I adore him.

  • @amandaconstanza
    @amandaconstanza Год назад +5

    one hundred years of solitude is one of my favorite books, I had to read it in high school and write a thesis, so I had a deadline and I had 5 days to read it, and I just loved it😍

  • @MM-eb7hm
    @MM-eb7hm Год назад +6

    I don't even read the same types of books as you and I still watch your videos religiously. What a jolly fellow you are 👍

  • @brigri8
    @brigri8 Год назад +17

    Franny and Zooey is one of my favourite books of all time. It's a shame you didn't pick on on the theatre/acting subject matter. You observed that the book reads as a series of arguments (hello, can prose be more play-like?). The fat lady image, the fact the F&Z's parents were vaudeville actors & that Zooey is an actor - just to mention a few. I wonder if Pedro Pascal was drawn to this book because of how much attention Sallinger puts on acting/theatre.

  • @RosaDaniello
    @RosaDaniello Год назад +14

    the master and margarita immediate green flag. Loved this video Jack! thank you for doing this series it's just a fun way to review books and get your opinions on them

  • @michellemmmm
    @michellemmmm Год назад +15

    Another Country is one of my all-time favorites as well ❤ you just made me want to reread it asap

  • @Vic-mc6tb
    @Vic-mc6tb 27 дней назад

    The last 2 pages of 100 Years of Solitude blew me away. It really sticks the landing and pulls the whole book together.

  • @ryanpeterson8446
    @ryanpeterson8446 Год назад +3

    I've been impatiently waiting for this video!! I was thrilled to read from an article where Pedro was interviewed in March, that the second book he mentions as a favorite was Watership Down, which is one of my fav books of all time!! I was super psyched to see what you thought of it, then you didn't add it to your list lol, maybe next time!

  • @luisenrich5436
    @luisenrich5436 Год назад +1

    the movie of Don't Look Now is AMAZING, my favorite adaptation of a book ever. So good.

  • @boredbobby943
    @boredbobby943 Год назад +12

    Thankyou for making content catered specifically to my interests (my interests are books and pedro pascal) ❤

  • @aysegulbildiren2978
    @aysegulbildiren2978 Год назад +4

    got the notification just when i was searching for books to buy .. this is getting scary but no complaints ! just worshipping jack and pedro's recommendations (honestly this combo simply CANNOT disappoint)

  • @azu_rikka
    @azu_rikka Год назад +8

    I see, you mostly connected with the crazy stuff in One hundred years of solitude, but it actually mentions quite a lot of events in South American history as well a history in general (like, history repeating itself).
    I definitely want to read more James Baldwin, only read one so far and loved the beautiful writing!

  • @l.j.b.3264
    @l.j.b.3264 Год назад +44

    I love this series. Jack is absolutely hilarious 😂

  • @brinda5774
    @brinda5774 Год назад +10

    The amount of joy i get from watching your videos is insane.

  • @user-co8cq9nr5f
    @user-co8cq9nr5f Год назад +3

    "and hes also possibly the most charming man to ever exist" aint that the truth fr

  • @laiscavalcanti947
    @laiscavalcanti947 Год назад +20

    Glad to see that you enjoyed reading One Hundred Years of Solitude! Would love to see you reading more Latin
    American authors. 🥺

  • @iibifuro
    @iibifuro Год назад +3

    this is the first time I've heard someone use the word "laborious" outside of an English classroom but then again this channel is lowkey a literature classroom so it makes sense!

  • @juancarlosjerividal7382
    @juancarlosjerividal7382 Год назад +6

    I was so excited for this video! I just got a Baldwin book for my birthday, now I'm more excited to read it.
    Gabo is one of my favorite authors. I found 100 years of solitudes very intimidating so procrastinated reading it for forever, but when I did...I loved it. I honestly didn't find it that hard to keep track of the family tree (my copy didn't have one 😢) but then I realized it was because my family is almost as big as the Buendia's 😂

  • @gabi4248
    @gabi4248 Год назад +2

    Pedro Pascal has the most pure dad energy I’ve ever witnessed, and I am desperate for this man to be my dad.

  • @cmondya4919
    @cmondya4919 Год назад +2

    Loved it so much !

  • @juligomesanes3184
    @juligomesanes3184 11 месяцев назад +2

    An interesting fact about 100 years of solitude is that actually all the characters are inspired by different countries from Latinoamerica, and once you read the book knowing that (specially if you are from Latinoamerica) it gives you a whole different perspective

  • @hawkwardzombie
    @hawkwardzombie Год назад +1

    As someone who lives in South Dakota, I’m alllll for adding him to Mount Rushmore 👌

  • @emmabluu
    @emmabluu Год назад +2

    yesss pedro is one of my fav actors and people i love this video!

  • @aysegulbildiren2978
    @aysegulbildiren2978 Год назад +3

    11:08 istg every. single. remark. about "one hundred years of solitude" is hilarious I'm HOWLING HERE

  • @Karinaurr_
    @Karinaurr_ Год назад +9

    love love love pedro! but i love love love this video idea even more!!!!

  • @ivett314
    @ivett314 Год назад +1

    Really loved this one! I just finished 100 years of solitude I'm April as part of my book club and I can't wait to reread it again there is so much beauty and detail in that book! Also I'm a new subscriber and I adore you!!!!

  • @elainemiller451
    @elainemiller451 Год назад +1

    Love in the Time of Cholera is amazing too! Highly recommend it too

  • @saji397
    @saji397 Год назад +3

    One hundred years of solitude is also a very in-depth depiction of Colombian identity and history; the never ending curse of violence and disgrace, in contrast with the magical, and beautiful landscapes, people & stories that the country has make it a very special and personal book (at least for Colombians who read it)
    But is also very universal in the way that people from all over the world (like yourself or Pedro) also appreciate its beauty without knowing the context in witch the author took inspiration from. It is also a Nobel literature Prize winner;)

  • @spring6066
    @spring6066 Год назад +4

    Your review of one hundred years of solitude is such a mood you make me want to read that book again😂

  • @tallactordude
    @tallactordude Год назад +5

    This was interesting, because for one thing, I actually like the “Zooey” section of the book more than I do the “Franny” part (though some of that may be because her disagreeable date has my name). And “One Hundred Years of Solitude” is an amazing novel and a well-deserved classic. It sounds like I need to find myself a copy of “Another Country.”

  • @aakanshakar4960
    @aakanshakar4960 Год назад

    I was going through the list of Pedro's recommendations the other day, AND YOU MADE A VIDEO ON THIS?!
    One of my favourite book-tubers x my current obsession! THE WAY I SCREAMED!!!

  • @patax144
    @patax144 Год назад +1

    I was made to read 100 years of solitude in school, because as a Colombian they make us read our one literature Nobel Prize book, but back then I wasn't that tick, so I just got confused stopped reading and basically cheated on our reading control using an app someone made on the book, might read it when I have the time and mindpower to give to that book.

  • @kaiskollections
    @kaiskollections Год назад +1

    i have been WAITING for this

  • @scarlett2692
    @scarlett2692 Год назад +1

    highly anticipated this . perfect

  • @oliviakoury1219
    @oliviakoury1219 Год назад +3

    I just finished 100 Years of Solitude literally 2 nights ago! I started it last year, struggled big time, and then restarted it. I read it to my son for his bedtime (skipping a lot of it of course), but it helped with the whole "did I just read that right??"

  • @moonfruito5960
    @moonfruito5960 Год назад

    i really really appreciate how you can give such solid reviews without spoiling books

  • @personaldisaster444
    @personaldisaster444 Год назад +1

    I can say, i was here before sponsors and omg, you are growing so fast ❤❤❤❤ so happy for you. Ty to always read books and save us from the worst 😅!! Also, James Baldwin was a really great writer, his writing style is on a different level!

  • @haileyybarra7618
    @haileyybarra7618 Год назад

    I WAS WAITING FOR THIS ONE!!

  • @alep5561
    @alep5561 Год назад

    jack i've been following for a while and im soooo happy you read 100 years of solitude and i know it's very hard to get through, he is the most well known colombian writer, he won the nobel prize for that book which deals in its own magical realism way the colombian internal conflict. tsym for reading it, love from colombiaaa

  • @jacquieb1529
    @jacquieb1529 Год назад +3

    I have all these books on my shelf, except the short story collection 😮
    I recently read Giovanni’s Room and loved it. I am so looking forward to Another Country.

  • @johanna_2061
    @johanna_2061 Год назад

    I am so happy you read 100 years of solitude!! I’m currently reading the original version and since Spanish isn’t my first language I kinda struggle with the language and you don’t really have a plot to hold onto so after 3 month I’m still only at 25% so it really makes me feel better to know that it also took you a while to read it. Also you made me excited about reading whole books in one breath again wich is kinda the wrong moment bc it’s like the middle of the night but who cares about healthy sleep when you could read instead
    Love your videos!!!

  • @O_M554
    @O_M554 Год назад +1

    I’ve gotten so many great book recommendations from watching your channel, thanks! I wonder if you could do the top five (or ten?) books that helped you grow as a person and why?

  • @CegomezChannel
    @CegomezChannel Год назад

    loved this one!!

  • @AlexKillzMC
    @AlexKillzMC Год назад

    Ahhh love Pedro and jack! Great video!

  • @prufrockj.a8532
    @prufrockj.a8532 Год назад +5

    Just wanted to say Solitude is one of my favourite books of all time and that I really liked your little tour around Namjoon’s favourite bookshop!

  • @angieduque4748
    @angieduque4748 Год назад +1

    One Hundred Years of Solitude is one of my favorite books ever. Every time I read it, I find something new. I'll always love Gabriel García Marquez. We are immensely proud of him in Colombia.

  • @Mary-uq4ww
    @Mary-uq4ww Год назад +75

    “No plot just vibes” is basically a definition of Marquez’s works lol
    My edition didn’t have a family tree included and I legit had to draw it myself to keep track of all the people with the same name
    It was a fun experience 😂

  • @elyshajoymorrison5280
    @elyshajoymorrison5280 Год назад

    omg another post!! loved it jack :D

  • @laurenschenck5355
    @laurenschenck5355 Год назад +1

    Love this series!! ❤❤❤❤

  • @zaramushtaq5866
    @zaramushtaq5866 Год назад +3

    Love this series .Thank you jack for spoiling us with your videos :)))). :P

  • @itskatie7114
    @itskatie7114 Год назад

    i’ve been waiting for this video

  • @LMX_Edits
    @LMX_Edits Год назад +5

    Every three lines someone lights a cigarette
    Is probably one of the more normal lines in books