It started snowing last night around midnight and it is now past noon the next day. We are all bundled up safe and snug in our house and my thoughts turn to favorite things to do when I don't want to leave my home. And of course the number one entertainment for a winter afternoon is reading. I love to read and like my sister Shelley, and probably all of you, I will read anything, anywhere. So it is good to be surrounded by many good books. I know that we have read lots of books and we hope to add to that number in a serious way. So Rachel and I were sitting in the kitchen after lunch and decided we would devise some literary quizzes that I hope will amuse you in between the books you're reading and yes, I recognize that we have other demands on our time, such as jobs, children, and feeding our families, but take little time and check out these quizzes. The first one is from the internet and is rather silly, but easy.
The premise of this first quiz is that the first line of a famous book has been translated into a foreign language and then translated again and then finally translated back into English. See if you can figure out what book they are referencing.
"Is one universally recognized truth, that one that a single man in possession of good fortune must be within wishes of one moglie."
Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Count of Monte Cristo, or Silas Marner
Here is another quiz for you. Can you identify these famous books and plays by their subtitles?
In the early 19th century Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote a play, "Prometheus Unbound: A Lyrical Drama in Four Acts", and his wife Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, wrote a novel subtitled "The Modern Prometheus", published in 1818. What was the main title of Mary's novel?
Dracula, VanHelsing, Frankenstein, or Victor
The central character in this Victorian novel is the heroine, narrator, and title character. When it was first published, the novel was subtitled "An Autobiography" and Currer Bell was credited as being the editor, rather than the author. Which novel is it?
Agnes Grey, Shirley, Emma, or Jane Eyre
Which controversial anti-slavery novel was subtitled "Life Among the Lowly"?
Huckleberry Finn, Roots, Black Like Me, or Uncle Tom's Cabin
Which Oscar Wilde play is subtitled "A Play About a Good Woman"?
An Ideal Husband, Lady Windemere's Fan, The Importance of Being Earnest, or A Woman of No Importance
This novel was subtitled "Provincial Life"when it was first published in 1857. Its author and publisher were prosecuted for "violation of of public morals". Which novel was it?
Fanny Hill, Lolita, Madame Bovary, or Tom Jones
Which of the following novels has the subtitle A Study of Provincial Life", and was written by a woman using a masculine pen name?
Middlemarch, Indiana, Agnes, or Grey Villette
Whose biography is entitled "A King's Story" , The Memoirs of the Duke of Windsor? George IV, EdwardVII, Edward VIII, or George V
"There and Back Again" involves a journey which begins and ends at "The Hill"
The Hobbit, The Realm of the Gods, Out of the Silent Planet, or The Forbidden Tower
Which of the following novels, set in France during thr 1830's, has TWO subtitles?
Les Miserables, The Plague, The Red and the Black, or Madame Bovary
Which of Shakespeare's comedies has the subtitle "What You Will"?
Much Ado About Nothing, Comedy of Errors, Twelfth Night, or As You Like It
(Rachel's Questions- they are probably a bit harder than moms' mostly because I doubt that any of you have read the same books I have. If anyone gets them all right, they get a digital cookie!)
1) What is the name of "The Woman" from Sherlock Holmes; The Scandal in Bohemia?
2)What is the inner name of Paul Mau'Dib?
3)What are the names of the two main Countries from "The Princess Bride"?
4)What is the name of the ship that houses the Infinite Improbability Drive?
5)What is the Prequel to the Lord of the Rings (NOT The Hobbit!) ?
Tell us what your top five favorite books of the last few years have been. Let's pass along the good reads.
Some of my of my favorite books have been Outliers, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, The Lindsey Davis Ancient Roman Mysteries Series, (the main character is Marcus Didius Falco), Anne Perry mysteries and Ellis Peter Brother Cadfael mysteries.
This is Rachel's list, not in any particular order; The Princess of Mars; Freedoms Landing, Abarat; The Ear, the Eye and the Arm; the Weird of the White Wolf.
The weatherman tells us we are getting more snow tonight and tomorrow so I will be snuggled down in my blankets reading and I hope that you can find some time to read an old favorite or something new. Tell us all about your favorite reads. Oh I am also reading the Book of Mormon before the Relief Society birthday in March. Didn't want you to think I was slipping.
Thursday, January 7, 2010
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3 comments:
1. Pride and Prejudice
2. A Tale of Two Cities
3. Valley of the Dolls
4. Jane Eyre
5. Moll Flanders
6. Sense and Sensibility
7. Great Expectations
8. Alice in Wonderland
9. Vanity Fair
10.Harry Potter
11.Frankenstein
12.Jane Eyre
13.Uncle Tom's Cabin
14.Lady Windemere's Fan
15.Madam Bovary
16.Middlemarch
17.Edward VIII
18.The Hobbit
19.Les Miserables
20.Twelfth Night
1.Irene Adler
2.Jim says he know this but can't think of it. It is from Dune.
3.Florin and Guilder
4.Heart of Gold
5.The Silmarillion
Noah and I tried to answer all the questions, but he left me and went to bed and I can't remember the answer, but my favorite books are as follows:
The Hunger Games
Catching Fire
Fablehaven
The Percy Jackson Series
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
As you can see I've spent a lot of time in the children and young adult sections of the library.
It is a fact universally known that if Jennifer sees a blog first with a quiz, she will answer all the questions correctly and then I feel like a village idiot because I don't know them or have the time to look them up. I knew but a few but I knew them.
1. P&P
2. Tale of Two Cities
and the one about the Dashwood Family is obviously S&S.
The other quiz is
Frankenstein, then possibly Agnes Grey, 3. is Uncle Toms Cabin.
I know that George Elliot wrote Middlemarch and consequently a woman and so I am hoping that is the answer to that one.
Sadly I know none of Rachels answers. My literary tastes are sadly lacking. However, I was at the library yesterday and I have picked up my first Anne Perry novel. I have started We Shall Not Sleep. I have started it and it has intrigued me already. This past year my favorite read was probably The Guernsey Literary Society... Stacy gave it to me for my birthday. I loved it. I am so sad that there will never be another book from that author. All the more to treasure it I suppose. Happy Reading!
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