The reading for day 15 is B3 Part 2 Chapter 5 through and including Chapter 17, pp. 752-804.
>Ebooks and audiobook
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The reading for day 15 is B3 Part 2 Chapter 5 through and including Chapter 17, pp. 752-804.
>Ebooks and audiobook
mega.nz
Previous threads
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Reading Schedule
>Count Nikolai Rostov
>such chivalry
>much gentleman
Don't call it a comeback
I really liked the descriptions of Kutuzov. There's something temptingly fatalistic and yet optimistic about his point of view.
>Two days previously he had received news that his father, son, and sister had left for Moscow; and though there was nothing for him to do at Bald Hills, Prince Andrei with a characteristic desire to foment his own grief decided that he must ride there.
Damn.
RIP you old cunt.
Having previously read Tolstoy's The Death of Ivan Ilyich, the scenes with the old prince were very reminiscent of it. They each offer their own views of death, similar but giving us both different characters, circumstances, and points of view. Ivan Ilyich deals almost exclusively with the dying, while the scene in War and Peace is told mainly from the bereaved. While Ivan Ilyich ends with the death, Marya's life may be beginning with it.
>two best girls are in love with worst guy
Why is this allowed?
>Nikolai
>worst guy
>not best husbando
He's not terrible but c'mon, he can't compete with Andrei and Pierre.
Finished today's reading. We've now read as much as Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix + Chamber of Secrets.
Words read for day 15: 23,305
Time taken: 62 minutes
Total words read so far: 347,359
Total words in book: 563,286
Total time taken so far: 14 hours 47 minutes
Approximate total reading time: 25 hours
>a woman actually wanting Pierre
>el freemason autismo man
>daddy issues nihilism manlet
>better than based war-hero Rostov
hmm
Man, I had the time of my life reading this out of order and going part IV, II, III, V, VI, I, and then VII. I cried so much when I finally got to part one and saw them all as children for the first time, and IV was such a comfy introduction to the characters and the whole book, just a nice long part about going to a ball.
and then boom, part II and frontline combat and retreats for two parts after
someone tell me I'm not crazy
Holy shit that sounds based
I'm gonna start doing this t b h
This should be the new meme. Reordering the structure of already existing novels to give them different effects. But let's not try and turn it into a movement or anything faggy like that
I've had fun reading other books out of order, too, mostly with science fiction series however. I remember I started with the last book of Gene Wolfe's The Book of the Long Sun and only ever otherwise read the second book in his The Book of the Short Sun and the narrative that resulted was really cool. It's not coming around as much for me in BOTNS but for a while it was a blast. War and Peace was really the only novel I've attempted it with, although I got tempted with Remembrance of Things Past. I'm kind of glad I didn't with that though, Cities of the Plain just sounded the most interest but Swann's Way was incredible (I still haven't worked my way up to COTP yet though, Guermantes Way killed me and I need a break).
Do y'all tend to reread War & Peace habitually? I've found that to be really rewarding with certain anime in the past, and I've been really tempted with W&P to maybe give it the straightforward read it never got in the first place. I wanna reread TBK first though
not gonna lie you sold this really well im tempted to do this if i ever read WP again...
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>trying to get the old prince Bolkonsky to leave Bald Hills
from
...
>le shot off his horse and run away man
Catch-up day today. We've gone five days straight now. If you are caught up, use it to read Day 16's reading.
So what do you think are the best and worst family so far?
I think the Kuragin family is obviously the worst. The best would be the Rostovs for me.
Yeah I'd agree on both counts. Rostovs are comfy as fuck and make me wish I hadn't been an only child.
>ywn retire with your sister and Sonya to your favourite corner of the sitting room to "philosophize" about your feels and dreams and that time you all dreamt you saw a Negro in the study when you were children
ourguy Bezukhov > Rostov > Bolkonsky > Drubetskoy > Kuragin
The Kuragins are both rich assholes. Bolkonsky is marred by the patriarch, but as he's now out of the way things are looking up. Drubetskoys are poor, the mother managed to do well by her son and he's doing well himself. Good work Boris, keep it up. Bezukhov father left everything to ourguy, so they are the greatest.
>tfw will never grow up in the Rostov household
>tfw will never get to sneak kisses from Sonya
>Bezukhov > Rostov > Bolkonsky > Drubetskoy > Kuragin
Nailed it.
Bolkonsky > Bezukhov > drubetskoy > rostov > kuragin
Stop sleeping on my boy Boris. Boris pretending to be a S A D B O Y while courting Julie is top tier bants
>Rostov that low
It's like you hate everything good in this world.
>gamble away family fortune
>wont marry a girl you loved for like 8 years
>cheat on waifu while at war
>pretend to be a war hero
Nikolai is shit
At least his redemption is top tier
I'm of a similar mind. Boris is so unapologetic about his social climbing that I can't help but like him.
The Rostovs are comfy but I can't say I particularly like any of them as individuals.
I'm a plebeian who haven't read many classics yet. Should I read War and Peace?
>Sometimes he remembered how he had heard that soldiers in war when entrenched under the enemy's fire, if they have nothing to do, try hard to find some occupation the more easily to bear the danger. To Pierre all men seemed like those soldiers, seeking refuge from life: some in ambition, some in cards, some in framing laws, some in women, some in toys, some in horses, some in politics, some in sport, some in wine, and some in governmental affairs. "Nothing is trivial, and nothing is important, it's all the same - only to save oneself from it as best one can," thought Pierre. "Only not to see it, that dreadful it!"
Sure why not. It gets good after like 300 pages so bear with it.
>they started charging people who speak french
Heh. Can't make this shit up.
A little curiosity about kutuzov:
>He had five daughters; his only son died of smallpox as an infant. As he had no
male heir, his estates passed to the Tolstoy family, as his eldest daughter,
Praskovia, had married Matvei Fyodorovich Tolstoy.
en.wikipedia.org
Funny, no?
Good insight. Tolstoy made a great description of Marya's horror after seeing the dead body of her father. So good.
Also, Guewilla Warfare!
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