I reread some Jane Austen every year. I find it really fascinating that with every reread I see the stories from a different perspective. Love works that stand up to repeated study, especially these because there is so much humor.
This is how I feel about the Realm of the Elderlings by Robin Hobb. The way I perceived certain characters when I was in my 20s was vastly different to how I viewed them in my 30s... and then they were different again when I reread in my 40s. I also love that, and based on your 'review' I might have to finally read some Jane Austen for the first time ever. 💜
Yes! Please do a vlog on the ‘weird’ books you picked up last year in the bookshop. 👩🏻👍🏼 This video was a great idea! I’ll need to do the same with my shelves! Thanks!
@@PlantBasedBride I did! And I really do! It was very helpful to see you go through the process. It was fun trying to guess the rating before you gave each book.😆 And I’m watching P&P on Starz right now!
Haha I use blankets all year long 😂 I love being cozy even if I’m warm, but I also love in Canada so our warm weather is not as warm as most other places 😅❤️
i did james joyce when i was in uni and had a visceral reaction to you pulling out that book...further validated by the face you made trying to read that first line!😆 this is a great way to decide what book to read next, i'm absolutely gonna do this to pick my next read
@@PlantBasedBride as a major joyce head the "moocow" sentence is a very accurate preview to what you are in for with both those books and no your brain is definitely having the intended response lmao
It’s pretty awesome, I can’t lie! I’m so glad I found these bookcases on Facebook marketplace for $50 a piece 🥰 and my library is in the basement so it’s quite cool in there even in summer!
You have just GOT to watch the A&E miniseries adaptation of Pride and Prejudice starring Jennifer Ehle and Colin Firth if you've never seen it. The casting on it is really great, it's a very faithful adaptation of the book, and I feel like it has the best understanding of the subtleties of Austen's writing. All the unlikable characters in the book are played by actors who really get why their characters are the worst. I swear, Mr. Collins even managed to get me mad at his hairstyle.
Seeing you have On a Sunbeam by Tillie Walden was a delight for me! I’m a big Tillie Walden fan and I think she writes very emotionally driven stories. On a Sunbeam and Are You Listening are two of the greatest graphic novels I have ever read. ❤
I would love to see you read all the weird books! My favourite genre has to be weird-lit. If you want another weird-lit recommendation (that I know I've already given once before) it would be The Monsters We Deserve by Marcus Sedgewick. It was my first weird book and it still is so fantastic!
I started reading Jane Austen in like middle school and was in college by the time I'd worked my way through, so I was much more able to grasp them at the time (and I'm pretty sure the 2005 movie altered my brain chemistry). But I've since reread them all a few times as an adult and the writing hits so much harder now 😂 It's actually been a few years since rereading, but I recently fell down the RUclips hole of Austen analysis, and specifically got obsessed with Dr. Octavia Cox who has fantastic deep dives into the seemingly tiniest bits of writing/language/characters/history that make me love the books all over again.
You smelling the old book was by far the most relatable thing I've seen in a long time. I recently received a book published in 1910 from my grandma, and the combination scent of musty book/her home has me shamelessly inhaling it.
really hope you'll get to reading the remainder of Ursula K Le Guin's work!! her work really is amazing - and the more of earthsea you read the better it gets
P&P is one of my favorites books ever! This video was really fun and I had to add "Making love with the land" to my TBR, can't wait to read it at some point 😅
Yay, P&P! I reread it every year 😊 (dead serious - unless you’re going to study Modern 20th century English/Irish literature you can skip Joyce 😉). Would love to see that “five weird books” vlog
Amazing! Are there any other books you reread regularly like that, or is P&P just extra special? LOL I’ve heard such mixed things about Joyce that I definitely feel the need to try him out for myself 😂 and good to know re: weird books vlog!
@@PlantBasedBride not quite that regularly...I do re-read Persuasion quite often, as well as some of the other Austens. Jane Eyre gets in there, too. ;)
I agree with @balletbookworm . You can skip Joyce. I was “forced” to read him for my English philology university studies, and I despised every single second I spend reading his books. It is quite an experience. 😮
I’m watching this whilst I work from home. 🥰 I found your channel about 3 weeks ago and I’m afraid I’ve become obsessed but I love how calming your videos are honestly ❤
Loved this! and yes, please to the weird book vlog. My favorites was Stone Blind ("I see you" when the book is about a person who's sight turn you to stone 😬) and Pillars of the earth. The first is now on my TBB (to be bought) and the second is probably do for a re-read.
Opening lines are important to me, really giving vibes of what’s to come. Love this way of picking what to read from the ever-growing TBR so many of us relate to! And, I am a sucker for the purple prose!
I'm so glad you read P & P. I love it, but my favorite Jane Austen is Persuasion. This was a fun vlog. I am toying with if I should do this as well...my TBR is ridiculous...
I’ve never read Persuasion! I’m definitely feeling an urge to read all of Austen’s work right about now 😅 Oo you should! It made me so excited about my tbr again ❤️
If you're ever so inclined to give a tv adaptation of a book a chance, the 2004 BBC North and South with Richard Armitage is such a comforting watch!! Like Anne of Green Gables, I rewatch-it every year.
I really loved this video! It's interesting to see what first lines are interesting to you (and to me). Gives me some ideas for my writing projects as well. I have 635 books on my goodreads TBR which is INSANE and I keep adding things and reading the new shiny things. The rest of this year + next year I'm reading only from my TBR shelf. I mean there is enough and there must be something I'm in the mood for right? 😆
Haven't even watched the video yet but I am excited. I have my sun tea and some mending to do while I listen. Goodreads is also open to add to my virtual TBR....hopefully
The Left Hand of Darkness was already on my tbr but that first line totally bumped it up for me damn. Also would love if you made this a series and worked through the other books you gave 5 stars!
This is such a fun video - I'm going to do this with my TBR too (and maybe make it into a podcast episode...) - thanks for the idea! And so glad you liked P&P - Austen is always my go-to when I'm in a reading slump because I know I'll always have a good time and I won't want to skim because the prose is so good.
I loved the bit where you relate to Elizabeth, I felt so many of the same things. I re-watch the Keira Knightley P&P adaptation at least once or twice a year.
Does your glittery nail polish match the color of the walls? Love it! You've inspired me to finally read Pride & Prejudice and do this with my own TBR cart. Good luck everyone with getting through your own TBR lists!
The Classics don't usually do it for me so I was rooting for A Magic Steeped in Poison based on its first line. I've added it to my TBR though! I also would love to see the weird books vlog.
“Alone with you in the ether” was one of my total surprises for the year. I was so disappointed with the Atlas trilogy, but this romance between a bipolar and autistic young adults was just breathtaking.
I enjoy watching your recommendations. I don't regularly read sci-fi, fantasy, or horror, but your recommendations help me expand my book selections. If you get back to that James Baldwin collection, read the short story Sonny's Blues. I read it first in my early 20s and it helped me develop a more empathetic view of those dealing with addiction.
A video I would be super interested in is a deep dive of your p&p annotations, actually. I watched your annotation overview videos, but it would be really interesting to see in action on a work I'm so familiar with.
How fun! I'm now inspired to do this with my physical TBR. P&P is one of my favorite books of all time! I've read it a few times, which I don't typically do because theres so many new-to-me books i haven't read yet. Little Women is another favorite that I reread. As far as P&P adapations go, Colin Firth is my Mr. Darcy (you gotta watch that one, too). In terms of the stereotypical nature of the characters in the book, I always felt that was a reflection of Lizzie's opinions of them and by the end of the book you tend to see characters differently as she becomes aware of her own pride and prejudice. JA is so tongue in cheek, like that first line is soooo sarcastic, that the sterotypes are certainly intentional and self-aware, right? An that makes rhem not only acceptable to me, but actively fun to read. And finally, intellectually I'm a huge Joyce fan but reading him is definitely a labor. I recommend getting the annotated companion to Ulysses, it's pretty necessary. Also reading it as a book club or with a course, more slowly over time, to translate and process and digest. I always tell people it's more like an encoded poem than a novel, and the fulfilment I got from reading it was in the process of digging through it with a small literature studies cohort in university. It was a formative experience that impacted my intellectual interests for the next decade. I'll be curious to see what you think if you read it!
I LOVE this interpretation of the stereotypical portrayal of the characters! Thank you so much for taking the time to type this out because it makes so much sense (and I wish I’d thought of it!) 🙏❤️
What a great idea! I would love to do this with my German/English TBR and live as a Stream! I also loved your reactions! Especially when it was just one name that was shouted at the beginning of a book. :D My favorite from your stack was probably magic steeped in poison. Thanks for sharing! (And ofc: yes to the weird books!)
You have inspired me to go through my books and separate them between books I have read and haven’t read and the. Trying first lines for books for my next book XD Sorry for run on sentence
This video was so fun to watch! Also I noticed that The Pillars of The Earth is on your TBR. I'd be interested in your review; I actually love that book but "with notes" and I am curious what your thoughts would be!
You mentioned reading Jane Eyre - highly recommend! I read it this past winter and, given that it is technically a gothic, may I suggest reading in the fall to enjoy its essence in its entirety?
I started reading P&P about 3 times but never finished it. I remember liking it but classics are always hard to get into. It's still on my TBR and will finish it one day.
Look, I would love it if you read and discussed some nonfiction on this channel from time to time! I've yet to come across a book tuber that does that. You read em, so we don't have to! If anyone could inspire us to learn more about topics that we know little to nothing about, it's you! I love your content. Thank you for sharing your love of books with us. ❤
Oh, but I love the idea, I should try to do it with my own TBR even though it’s not as big I still have quite a few books waiting 😅 I have read The woman in Black by Hill , I liked it😊
Based on what you loved about Pride and Prejudice, you should read North and South. It's similar in a lot of ways. As to adaptations, the BBC one of Pride and Prejudice, with Colin Firth, is the best. I'd also recommend the BBC adaptation of North and South. I own DVDs for both of these series, and I have lost count how many times I've watched them 🙂. I enjoyed listening to the first lines. And you made me go back to the excellent book I had just finished and read it's first line - this time noticing how much it intrigued me. I think I'm going to pay extra attention to the first line, and first paragraph, of all my reads going forward. So thanks for that. Of the lines you read out, I think the one that grabbed my attention the most was the chicken pox one. I feel like I need to know more. I'm planning to hunt that one down to add to my own extensive TBR - but maybe I'll try the library first.
Thanks for this! I have found that we have quite a similar taste in books, and this video really cemented it. I've been looking for a new audiobook, and now I have several. I must also recommend The Dancers Dancing by Éilís Ní Dhuibhne. I am rereading it right now and I think you'd love it. I haven't seen anyone talk about it and it deserves to be read and loved.
I had to smile as you were taking in that book smell. I reminded me of a part of one of my favorite books. And I know, I already recommended it to you. 😅 But I have to give you a short insight. Quote from "The city of dreaming books" by Walter Moers: You can smell the place from a long way off. It reeks of old books. It’s as if you’ve opened the door of a gigantic second-hand bookshop - as if you’ve stirred up a cloud of unadulterated book dust and blown the detritus from millions of mouldering volumes straight into your face. There are folk who dislike that smell and turn on their heel as soon as it assails their nostrils. It isn’t an agreeable odour, granted. Hopelessly antiquated, it is eloquent of decay and dissolution, mildew and mortality. But it also has other associations: a hint of acidity reminiscent of lemon trees in flower; the stimulating scent of old leather; the acrid, intelligent tang of printer’s ink; and, overlying all else, a reassuring aroma of wood. I’m not talking about living wood or resinous forests and fresh pine needles; I mean felled, stripped, pulped, bleached, rolled and guillotined wood - in short, paper. Ah yes, my intellectually inquisitive friends, you too can smell it now, the odour of forgotten knowledge and age-old traditions of craftsmanship.
I love the weird books idea, I think that could definitely be a series...like ask us what we think are weird books LOL..... Also I was really hyped that you had bout Pillars of the earth, you love Labrinyth o f the spirits, and you are reading Jane Eyre !! Yes Queen!! Also now my tbr is a thousand books long lol. Books I was interested in that you were not: JG Ballard has a book that;s called The Garden of Time which sounded interesting. woman in black sounded good. Ann petry the street. (sp?). on a sunbeam, lies we sing to the sea,
I would love to see a video picking apart the epic proposal scene line by line for P&P! Even the movie scene is sooo epic! I'm also interest to know what tabs you landed on for this book 🩷
Love In A Fallen City is incredible, you should read it soon! Eileen Chang is a great writer and she also had a crazy life. I wrote part of a paper on her, she's so cool. (This is typed before seeing what she chose to read.)
Excellent video as always, Elizabeth. I will strongly recommend to watch not the Keira Knightley version of pride and prejudice but the really old one with Colin Firth, which is a 6 episodes series. He is the perfect embodiment of Mr. Darcy, as well as amazingly handsome.❤❤❤❤ by the way, please read Jane Eyre and The left hand of darkness. You won’t regret it.
Regarding the topic of perfume of musky old books - there is a Spanish company that created a vegan scented candle called Biblioteca (library) and it's absolutely spot on :D
joyce is so fun … if you like experimentation and dense prose then don’t listen to people who tell you to skip his stuff !!! and i hope you get around to the left hand of darkness .. it’s THE definitive sci fi imo
The most intriguing ones are "Sundial" and "Song of silver flame like night" 🤣 Now, I need to know! Uh~ and the one of "If an egyptian cannot speak english" left me with some questions, too 😅
omg if you DO decide to do an in-depth review for p&p that would be AMAZING! you could pair it with a movie review? (i mean it's not like 2005 p&p is one of my comfort movies or anything). ooh or you could do a reading vlog of jane austen books? i'm just requesting things i want now 😅
I'm so curious about the French books! I work with adult second language learners so I'm always curious about books that manage to draw in anglophones to French!
Most of them are French classics but I have maybe 6 or 7 contemporary French novels! I was in French immersion all through school and my sister married a francophone (québécois) so French has always been a big part of my life ❤️
Top are things I want to find more easily like my absolute favourite quotes and such 🥰 in a book I haven’t finished they indicate the 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 points 😊
I particularly like the tv series of Pride and Prejudice. It's longer, but the costuming and the language is much more reflective of the book, I think. The 2005 is still great, though.
I did this once with my own TBR and there was a book amongst them, with an opening line that was so cringe, that I have been giving it the stink-eye ever since.😆 I don't know that I can sit through 600 pages if the rest of the writing is as bad as the opening line!🙊 So, this idea can be dangerous as well. 😅
You should watch the 1995 TV series. It follows the book more since it's a series and not one movie and it's good too. I prefer the movie but I'm always rewatching the series too.
Oh wow. I'm actually quite shocked you've never read the Pillars of the Earth. It's Historical Fiction and it's considered one of the best Historical Fiction! It has one of my most-hated characters EVER (which I think is a sign of great writing). This game was fun AF!
I’ve heard great things about it over the years but only recently bought a copy! I really need to find the time to read it. I’m so glad you enjoyed the video!
After you watch a normal movie version of P&P you need to watch P&P&Zombies. It's one of those things that's so wrong it's right. It is a definite mood lifter. It had no business being as good a movie as it was!
I would love the five weird books vlog! As an English Literature major, I waited expectedly on your response to Joyce. Your facial expressions and thoughts mirrored my own on reading him. It was hilarious, but I feel your pain, confusion, and frustration. He is male WASP entitlement at its worst IMO. He is part of the cannon for a reason, but no one needs to subject themselves to Joyce as an example of this type of writing unless a student in this field (and if you are my sympathies). Read Fight Club or Slaughterhouse Five instead.
I was unreasonably irked by the 2 stars for Jane Eyre vs one star for some others :-P but great video as always and I love this concept for a video, it was so interesting to see what intrigued you versus what not, great things to take not of from a writer standpoint. :-)
Its not an issue, i more found it funny that it irked me so much cause it doesnt really matter😂. Thanks again for the great video it provide a lot of comfort today. @PlantBasedBride
Thanks Ritual for sponsoring a portion of this video! For 25% off your first order of Ritual go to ritual.com/plantbb25
I 100% want the reading vlog of the weird books! I love weird books so much.
Same! They can be hit or miss for me but they’re always interesting ☺️
I reread some Jane Austen every year. I find it really fascinating that with every reread I see the stories from a different perspective. Love works that stand up to repeated study, especially these because there is so much humor.
I couldn’t agree more! I love rereading a book and getting something new from it each time ❤️ do you have a favourite Austen?
This is how I feel about the Realm of the Elderlings by Robin Hobb. The way I perceived certain characters when I was in my 20s was vastly different to how I viewed them in my 30s... and then they were different again when I reread in my 40s. I also love that, and based on your 'review' I might have to finally read some Jane Austen for the first time ever. 💜
Yes! Please do a vlog on the ‘weird’ books you picked up last year in the bookshop. 👩🏻👍🏼
This video was a great idea! I’ll need to do the same with my shelves! Thanks!
I hope it helps you get excited about your tbr as it did for me! And good to know you like the idea of the weird books reading vlog 🥰
@@PlantBasedBride I did! And I really do! It was very helpful to see you go through the process. It was fun trying to guess the rating before you gave each book.😆 And I’m watching P&P on Starz right now!
I would also love to see the weird books vlog!!
@@jus2tinaI love that you tried to guess my ratings 😂
"Grab a drink, a blanket, a fluffy animal."
Me, in 39° weather: 😃
Girl I wish.
Haha I use blankets all year long 😂 I love being cozy even if I’m warm, but I also love in Canada so our warm weather is not as warm as most other places 😅❤️
I would love a part 2 of this series: reading five star first line books! That would be so fun
I would love to do that!
i did james joyce when i was in uni and had a visceral reaction to you pulling out that book...further validated by the face you made trying to read that first line!😆 this is a great way to decide what book to read next, i'm absolutely gonna do this to pick my next read
lol I was really in the trenches on that one 😂 I truly thought I broke my brain for a second 🫠
@@PlantBasedBride as a major joyce head the "moocow" sentence is a very accurate preview to what you are in for with both those books and no your brain is definitely having the intended response lmao
Ahhh...yes.... goals: a bookshelf just for tbr!!
Also, how are you able to wear a sweater? I am currently waiting for 2 Hobits with a ring to show up asking to chuck it
It’s pretty awesome, I can’t lie! I’m so glad I found these bookcases on Facebook marketplace for $50 a piece 🥰 and my library is in the basement so it’s quite cool in there even in summer!
@@aldakendall4921 I live in Arizona. I feel this in my soul.
I would love to see that weird book reading vlog! I think that would be a fun premise.
The Left Hand of Darkness first line was so intriguing to me, I want to start it immediately! Dangit, hahah.
Haha I love that! Report back and tell me if I should read it next 😂❤️
You have just GOT to watch the A&E miniseries adaptation of Pride and Prejudice starring Jennifer Ehle and Colin Firth if you've never seen it. The casting on it is really great, it's a very faithful adaptation of the book, and I feel like it has the best understanding of the subtleties of Austen's writing. All the unlikable characters in the book are played by actors who really get why their characters are the worst. I swear, Mr. Collins even managed to get me mad at his hairstyle.
Haha amazing! It looks like I have it on streaming so maybe I’ll start it tonight 😅
Colin Firth as Mr. Darcy is everything!
@@brandiwilesevans557 truly. everything. EVERYTHING. (No offense to the wonderful Matthew Macfadyen)
@@PlantBasedBride it's important that you do. Colin Firth as Darcy is a gift from the gods.
Seeing you have On a Sunbeam by Tillie Walden was a delight for me!
I’m a big Tillie Walden fan and I think she writes very emotionally driven stories. On a Sunbeam and Are You Listening are two of the greatest graphic novels I have ever read. ❤
Oh that’s so awesome to hear! I don’t even remember where I heard about this graphic novel but I’m definitely intrigued by those first few panels ❤️
I would love to see you read all the weird books! My favourite genre has to be weird-lit. If you want another weird-lit recommendation (that I know I've already given once before) it would be The Monsters We Deserve by Marcus Sedgewick. It was my first weird book and it still is so fantastic!
Oo thank you for the recommendation! I’m always happy for more weird lit recs ❤
I started reading Jane Austen in like middle school and was in college by the time I'd worked my way through, so I was much more able to grasp them at the time (and I'm pretty sure the 2005 movie altered my brain chemistry). But I've since reread them all a few times as an adult and the writing hits so much harder now 😂 It's actually been a few years since rereading, but I recently fell down the RUclips hole of Austen analysis, and specifically got obsessed with Dr. Octavia Cox who has fantastic deep dives into the seemingly tiniest bits of writing/language/characters/history that make me love the books all over again.
I love when books have detailed and serious content warnings!
Me too ❤️
You smelling the old book was by far the most relatable thing I've seen in a long time. I recently received a book published in 1910 from my grandma, and the combination scent of musty book/her home has me shamelessly inhaling it.
really hope you'll get to reading the remainder of Ursula K Le Guin's work!! her work really is amazing - and the more of earthsea you read the better it gets
P&P is one of my favorites books ever! This video was really fun and I had to add "Making love with the land" to my TBR, can't wait to read it at some point 😅
I’m so excited to read it, too! That first line was incredible ❤️
I would LOVE the weird books vlog!
Thanks for sharing this! I found it helpful in terms of writing a gripping first line
Yay, P&P! I reread it every year 😊 (dead serious - unless you’re going to study Modern 20th century English/Irish literature you can skip Joyce 😉). Would love to see that “five weird books” vlog
Amazing! Are there any other books you reread regularly like that, or is P&P just extra special? LOL I’ve heard such mixed things about Joyce that I definitely feel the need to try him out for myself 😂 and good to know re: weird books vlog!
@@PlantBasedBride not quite that regularly...I do re-read Persuasion quite often, as well as some of the other Austens. Jane Eyre gets in there, too. ;)
Northanger Abbey by JA is also amazing!! A bit different from her usual, she dabbles in suspense and atmosphere and it's stunninggggg
I agree with @balletbookworm . You can skip Joyce. I was “forced” to read him for my English philology university studies, and I despised every single second I spend reading his books. It is quite an experience. 😮
Eep! Love Joyce 🫣 Dubliners is a good taster to see how you feel about him before jumping into Ulysses imo
I’m watching this whilst I work from home. 🥰 I found your channel about 3 weeks ago and I’m afraid I’ve become obsessed but I love how calming your videos are honestly ❤
Loved this! and yes, please to the weird book vlog.
My favorites was Stone Blind ("I see you" when the book is about a person who's sight turn you to stone 😬) and Pillars of the earth. The first is now on my TBB (to be bought) and the second is probably do for a re-read.
This video came at the perfect time as I’m currently reading Pride and Prejudice for the first time! 🥰
I personally don't read many books but your video inspires me to read more books. Which book do you like that you have read?
Your videos always make me feel cozy. ☺️
I'm so glad 🥰
Opening lines are important to me, really giving vibes of what’s to come. Love this way of picking what to read from the ever-growing TBR so many of us relate to! And, I am a sucker for the purple prose!
It works so well for me, too! A first line really sets the tone, I find ❤️
I'm so glad you read P & P. I love it, but my favorite Jane Austen is Persuasion. This was a fun vlog. I am toying with if I should do this as well...my TBR is ridiculous...
I’ve never read Persuasion! I’m definitely feeling an urge to read all of Austen’s work right about now 😅 Oo you should! It made me so excited about my tbr again ❤️
@@PlantBasedBride I also recommend Persuasion for your next Austen book. I bet it’s looking ‘shiny and new’ for you! 🤭
If you're ever so inclined to give a tv adaptation of a book a chance, the 2004 BBC North and South with Richard Armitage is such a comforting watch!! Like Anne of Green Gables, I rewatch-it every year.
Oh good to know! I’m still planning on reading the book at some point, even though the first line didn’t draw me in 😅
I really loved this video! It's interesting to see what first lines are interesting to you (and to me). Gives me some ideas for my writing projects as well.
I have 635 books on my goodreads TBR which is INSANE and I keep adding things and reading the new shiny things. The rest of this year + next year I'm reading only from my TBR shelf. I mean there is enough and there must be something I'm in the mood for right? 😆
this is such a genius idea i will do that right now *continues to read every first line of all her tbr books*
Haven't even watched the video yet but I am excited. I have my sun tea and some mending to do while I listen. Goodreads is also open to add to my virtual TBR....hopefully
Sounds lovely! I hope you find some books to add to your TBR ☺️
That first line of Andrew lang totally caught my attention! But of course it did. I'm such a fairy tale lover lol
There’s something so comforting about the fairytale structure of storytelling ❤
The Left Hand of Darkness was already on my tbr but that first line totally bumped it up for me damn. Also would love if you made this a series and worked through the other books you gave 5 stars!
This is such a fun video - I'm going to do this with my TBR too (and maybe make it into a podcast episode...) - thanks for the idea! And so glad you liked P&P - Austen is always my go-to when I'm in a reading slump because I know I'll always have a good time and I won't want to skim because the prose is so good.
I loved the bit where you relate to Elizabeth, I felt so many of the same things. I re-watch the Keira Knightley P&P adaptation at least once or twice a year.
Your genuine enthusiasm exudes 5 stars for P&P, Lizzie! 😂
Haha well you might be right about that 😂❤️
Does your glittery nail polish match the color of the walls? Love it! You've inspired me to finally read Pride & Prejudice and do this with my own TBR cart. Good luck everyone with getting through your own TBR lists!
It’s very close 😂 I’m nothing if not consistent with my colour palette lol Oo have fun with both of those endeavours! ❤❤
The Classics don't usually do it for me so I was rooting for A Magic Steeped in Poison based on its first line. I've added it to my TBR though! I also would love to see the weird books vlog.
I was so impressed by that first line! Definitely bumped it up to the top of my TBR 🙏
“Alone with you in the ether” was one of my total surprises for the year. I was so disappointed with the Atlas trilogy, but this romance between a bipolar and autistic young adults was just breathtaking.
This is so good to know! I’ve owned it for ages and heard lots of good things. I honestly don’t know why I haven’t read it yet 😂
I enjoy watching your recommendations. I don't regularly read sci-fi, fantasy, or horror, but your recommendations help me expand my book selections. If you get back to that James Baldwin collection, read the short story Sonny's Blues. I read it first in my early 20s and it helped me develop a more empathetic view of those dealing with addiction.
Austen has been one of my favorites for many years, I'm glad you enjoyed P&P 😊
This was a really cool video, I've never seen such a big physical TBR 😅
A video I would be super interested in is a deep dive of your p&p annotations, actually. I watched your annotation overview videos, but it would be really interesting to see in action on a work I'm so familiar with.
How fun! I'm now inspired to do this with my physical TBR. P&P is one of my favorite books of all time! I've read it a few times, which I don't typically do because theres so many new-to-me books i haven't read yet. Little Women is another favorite that I reread. As far as P&P adapations go, Colin Firth is my Mr. Darcy (you gotta watch that one, too). In terms of the stereotypical nature of the characters in the book, I always felt that was a reflection of Lizzie's opinions of them and by the end of the book you tend to see characters differently as she becomes aware of her own pride and prejudice. JA is so tongue in cheek, like that first line is soooo sarcastic, that the sterotypes are certainly intentional and self-aware, right? An that makes rhem not only acceptable to me, but actively fun to read. And finally, intellectually I'm a huge Joyce fan but reading him is definitely a labor. I recommend getting the annotated companion to Ulysses, it's pretty necessary. Also reading it as a book club or with a course, more slowly over time, to translate and process and digest. I always tell people it's more like an encoded poem than a novel, and the fulfilment I got from reading it was in the process of digging through it with a small literature studies cohort in university. It was a formative experience that impacted my intellectual interests for the next decade. I'll be curious to see what you think if you read it!
I LOVE this interpretation of the stereotypical portrayal of the characters! Thank you so much for taking the time to type this out because it makes so much sense (and I wish I’d thought of it!) 🙏❤️
What a great idea! I would love to do this with my German/English TBR and live as a Stream! I also loved your reactions! Especially when it was just one name that was shouted at the beginning of a book. :D My favorite from your stack was probably magic steeped in poison. Thanks for sharing! (And ofc: yes to the weird books!)
It was so fun! I definitely need to read magic steeped in poison asap ❤️
This was so fun! Would truly LOVE to see a working-through-my-TBR reading vlog after seeing all that’s on your shelf 😊
I’d love to make some follow ups! Maybe I’ll start with the weird lit and then move on and read some more ☺️
@@PlantBasedBride FAB!!!
You have inspired me to go through my books and separate them between books I have read and haven’t read and the. Trying first lines for books for my next book XD
Sorry for run on sentence
The 1940 P&P movie with Greer Garson is great too (the costumes and the attitude)
This video was so fun to watch! Also I noticed that The Pillars of The Earth is on your TBR. I'd be interested in your review; I actually love that book but "with notes" and I am curious what your thoughts would be!
You mentioned reading Jane Eyre - highly recommend! I read it this past winter and, given that it is technically a gothic, may I suggest reading in the fall to enjoy its essence in its entirety?
Love your content btw! ❤
The 1 star line reactions were my faves 😂😂
I started reading P&P about 3 times but never finished it. I remember liking it but classics are always hard to get into. It's still on my TBR and will finish it one day.
Yes please, always here for a weird book reading vlog!
This was so fun! I really enjoyed rereading P&P as an adult but also *loathed* Wuthering Heights, It's #1 on my Most Hated Books list 🤣
Look, I would love it if you read and discussed some nonfiction on this channel from time to time! I've yet to come across a book tuber that does that. You read em, so we don't have to! If anyone could inspire us to learn more about topics that we know little to nothing about, it's you! I love your content. Thank you for sharing your love of books with us. ❤
i’m so early!! have you read interview with the vampire by anne rice? not to add one more thing to your TBR but i think you’d enjoy it :^)
Not yet! I loved the 1994 movie growing up, though 😂
@@PlantBasedBride it's iconic!
Oh, but I love the idea, I should try to do it with my own TBR even though it’s not as big I still have quite a few books waiting 😅 I have read The woman in Black by Hill , I liked it😊
It definitely helped me get excited about my tbr again! I’d recommend it ☺️
Based on what you loved about Pride and Prejudice, you should read North and South. It's similar in a lot of ways. As to adaptations, the BBC one of Pride and Prejudice, with Colin Firth, is the best. I'd also recommend the BBC adaptation of North and South. I own DVDs for both of these series, and I have lost count how many times I've watched them 🙂.
I enjoyed listening to the first lines. And you made me go back to the excellent book I had just finished and read it's first line - this time noticing how much it intrigued me. I think I'm going to pay extra attention to the first line, and first paragraph, of all my reads going forward. So thanks for that.
Of the lines you read out, I think the one that grabbed my attention the most was the chicken pox one. I feel like I need to know more. I'm planning to hunt that one down to add to my own extensive TBR - but maybe I'll try the library first.
Thanks for this! I have found that we have quite a similar taste in books, and this video really cemented it. I've been looking for a new audiobook, and now I have several. I must also recommend The Dancers Dancing by Éilís Ní Dhuibhne. I am rereading it right now and I think you'd love it. I haven't seen anyone talk about it and it deserves to be read and loved.
I had to smile as you were taking in that book smell. I reminded me of a part of one of my favorite books. And I know, I already recommended it to you. 😅 But I have to give you a short insight.
Quote from "The city of dreaming books" by Walter Moers:
You can smell the place from a long way off. It reeks of old books. It’s as if you’ve opened the door of a gigantic second-hand bookshop - as if you’ve stirred up a cloud of unadulterated book dust and blown the detritus from millions of mouldering volumes straight into your face. There are folk who dislike that smell and turn on their heel as soon as it assails their nostrils. It isn’t an agreeable odour, granted. Hopelessly antiquated, it is eloquent of decay and dissolution, mildew and mortality. But it also has other associations: a hint of acidity reminiscent of lemon trees in flower; the stimulating scent of old leather; the acrid, intelligent tang of printer’s ink; and, overlying all else, a reassuring aroma of wood.
I’m not talking about living wood or resinous forests and fresh pine needles; I mean felled, stripped, pulped, bleached, rolled and guillotined wood - in short, paper. Ah yes, my intellectually inquisitive friends, you too can smell it now, the odour of forgotten knowledge and age-old traditions of craftsmanship.
The Lost Apothecary is so good. Highly recommend you read that at some point!
Oo good to know!
I love the weird books idea, I think that could definitely be a series...like ask us what we think are weird books LOL..... Also I was really hyped that you had bout Pillars of the earth, you love Labrinyth o f the spirits, and you are reading Jane Eyre !! Yes Queen!! Also now my tbr is a thousand books long lol. Books I was interested in that you were not: JG Ballard has a book that;s called The Garden of Time which sounded interesting. woman in black sounded good. Ann petry the street. (sp?). on a sunbeam, lies we sing to the sea,
I would love to see a video picking apart the epic proposal scene line by line for P&P! Even the movie scene is sooo epic!
I'm also interest to know what tabs you landed on for this book 🩷
Love In A Fallen City is incredible, you should read it soon! Eileen Chang is a great writer and she also had a crazy life. I wrote part of a paper on her, she's so cool. (This is typed before seeing what she chose to read.)
Excellent video as always, Elizabeth. I will strongly recommend to watch not the Keira Knightley version of pride and prejudice but the really old one with Colin Firth, which is a 6 episodes series. He is the perfect embodiment of Mr. Darcy, as well as amazingly handsome.❤❤❤❤ by the way, please read Jane Eyre and The left hand of darkness. You won’t regret it.
Regarding the topic of perfume of musky old books - there is a Spanish company that created a vegan scented candle called Biblioteca (library) and it's absolutely spot on :D
Crime and Punishment is absolutely fantastic and one of my favorite books of all time, do with that information what you will. 🥰
joyce is so fun … if you like experimentation and dense prose then don’t listen to people who tell you to skip his stuff !!! and i hope you get around to the left hand of darkness .. it’s THE definitive sci fi imo
I also really enjoyed Pride and prejudice and zombies😂. It was a fun take on the classic and Matt Smith as Parson Collins was perfect.
Omg that’s wild 😂 I need to watch it now
@@PlantBasedBridenot to add more books to the TBR but there’s a book too.
Jane Eyre is my favorite book! I re-read it all the time
I've got a perfume that smells like an old bookstore, in fact-- sometimes I dab it on just to get that old book smell.
That sounds amazing ❤️
Very intrigued in the non-fiction first sentences!
I think you could really love Washington Black. One of the most beautifully written books I’ve read.
The most intriguing ones are "Sundial" and "Song of silver flame like night" 🤣 Now, I need to know!
Uh~ and the one of "If an egyptian cannot speak english" left me with some questions, too 😅
I love Pride &Prejudice!! I read it every December 🥰
I will definitely be rereading it at some point!
Loooove P&P ❤ have you seen the BBC adaption with Colin Firth? Sooo good, I’ve seen it so many times 😂
omg if you DO decide to do an in-depth review for p&p that would be AMAZING! you could pair it with a movie review? (i mean it's not like 2005 p&p is one of my comfort movies or anything). ooh or you could do a reading vlog of jane austen books? i'm just requesting things i want now 😅
I'm so curious about the French books! I work with adult second language learners so I'm always curious about books that manage to draw in anglophones to French!
Most of them are French classics but I have maybe 6 or 7 contemporary French novels! I was in French immersion all through school and my sister married a francophone (québécois) so French has always been a big part of my life ❤️
I love any project like this lol
Fun video! Question, what are those tabs at the top of your book instead of at the side?
Top are things I want to find more easily like my absolute favourite quotes and such 🥰 in a book I haven’t finished they indicate the 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 points 😊
@@PlantBasedBride interesting! Thanks for answering :)
I particularly like the tv series of Pride and Prejudice. It's longer, but the costuming and the language is much more reflective of the book, I think. The 2005 is still great, though.
Is that the BBC series? A lot of people are recommending it!
See this works well for me, I'm interested in books I already have ❤
I did this once with my own TBR and there was a book amongst them, with an opening line that was so cringe, that I have been giving it the stink-eye ever since.😆 I don't know that I can sit through 600 pages if the rest of the writing is as bad as the opening line!🙊 So, this idea can be dangerous as well. 😅
Not me waiting for your French tbr and you not reading the first lines of it hahahahaha love P&P though ! good choice ❤
Haha aw I’m sorry! Maybe I’ll do a reel on that, since there seems to be a bit of interest but it’s definitely a touch niche for this channel 🤔
I absolutely love pillars of the earth!!!
I’ve heard such good things about it! I’m a bit intimidated by the length 😅
Yes, please to the weird books vlog!
wodnerful video as always! side note: where did the sweater come from?? I have to have
It’s from one of my favourite sustainable brands, Kotn!
Favourite opening line: "To start with, look at all the books." (Jeffrey Eugenides, 'The Marriage Plot')
Oo I love it! I might need to add this to my never-ending tbr 😂
I am predicting right know that you will hate "pillars of the earth", but I'd love a ranty reading vlog about it!
I wanted to know about the French books 💔
Well now I need to re-read Pride & Pred 😂
Maybe I can do the French books in a reel or something? It’s just quite niche since the vast majority of my audience doesn’t speak French ❤️
@@PlantBasedBride no worries, I totally get it
If you watch the Kierra Knightly Pride and Prejudice, make sure you watch the American version. I think you'll love the additional ending🥹
You should watch the 1995 TV series. It follows the book more since it's a series and not one movie and it's good too. I prefer the movie but I'm always rewatching the series too.
Noooo you should watch the BBC mini-series adaptation of Pride & Prejudice with Colin Firth!!! It's the most faithful adaptation, in my opinion!
The BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice is the best one. Colin Firth as Mr Darcy is….😍😍
I’ve never seen it but I suppose I should watch it now! I wonder if my husband will be up for watching more Pride and prejudice 😂
Oh wow. I'm actually quite shocked you've never read the Pillars of the Earth. It's Historical Fiction and it's considered one of the best Historical Fiction! It has one of my most-hated characters EVER (which I think is a sign of great writing). This game was fun AF!
I’ve heard great things about it over the years but only recently bought a copy! I really need to find the time to read it. I’m so glad you enjoyed the video!
After you watch a normal movie version of P&P you need to watch P&P&Zombies. It's one of those things that's so wrong it's right. It is a definite mood lifter. It had no business being as good a movie as it was!
I would love the five weird books vlog! As an English Literature major, I waited expectedly on your response to Joyce. Your facial expressions and thoughts mirrored my own on reading him. It was hilarious, but I feel your pain, confusion, and frustration. He is male WASP entitlement at its worst IMO. He is part of the cannon for a reason, but no one needs to subject themselves to Joyce as an example of this type of writing unless a student in this field (and if you are my sympathies). Read Fight Club or Slaughterhouse Five instead.
If you enjoy a good long sentence, Thomas Mann is your man.
I currently have 4 bookcases full to bursting of books I haven't read. It's over 400 books. I have a problem.
I was unreasonably irked by the 2 stars for Jane Eyre vs one star for some others :-P but great video as always and I love this concept for a video, it was so interesting to see what intrigued you versus what not, great things to take not of from a writer standpoint. :-)
lol it was all very subjective anyway 😅 I didn’t establish the scale so it was all just a feeling haha
Its not an issue, i more found it funny that it irked me so much cause it doesnt really matter😂. Thanks again for the great video it provide a lot of comfort today. @PlantBasedBride