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Had anyone come to a classic late in life ?

80 replies

almondflake · 26/02/2025 15:05

Has anyone come to a classic late in life and been blown away by it ?
I've reached the age of 60 and have never read or seen To Kill a Mockingbird i didn't even know the story . I've been blown away by the story and the writing , i absolutely loved Atticus and Scout , i found Atticus to be such a kind and wise man , a staunch believer in right and wrong ready to pass all he knows onto Scout and Jim .
If you've never read it I heartily recommend reading or listening to it .
I've already downloaded Go Set a Watchman onto kindle to see how Scout grows up .
Please send any recommendations for classics I may love too .

OP posts:
beguilingeyes · 28/02/2025 10:18

almondflake · 26/02/2025 15:05

Has anyone come to a classic late in life and been blown away by it ?
I've reached the age of 60 and have never read or seen To Kill a Mockingbird i didn't even know the story . I've been blown away by the story and the writing , i absolutely loved Atticus and Scout , i found Atticus to be such a kind and wise man , a staunch believer in right and wrong ready to pass all he knows onto Scout and Jim .
If you've never read it I heartily recommend reading or listening to it .
I've already downloaded Go Set a Watchman onto kindle to see how Scout grows up .
Please send any recommendations for classics I may love too .

I really recommend the film. It's beautiful and Gregory Peck is the perfect Atticus.

dairydebris · 28/02/2025 10:22

Dappy777 · 26/02/2025 15:37

I am always discovering new classics, and hope to be doing so in my 80s and 90s. There are 3,000 years of literature to explore OP! Take a look at Harold Bloom’s list.

I was in my 40s before I read Pride and Prejudice and Sons and Lovers, and before I read a word of George Eliot, Daniel Defoe, John Ruskin, Walter Pater, or Oscar Wilde.

Since I turned 50, I have discovered Ford Maddox Ford and Geoffrey Hill, and have also read Madame Bovary, The Mayor of Casterbridge and Vanity Fair for the first time.

But my ignorance is limitless. I have never read one word of Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky or Kafka or Hilary Mantel or H G Wells or the Brontes or Chekhov. I have never read Tess of the D’Urbevilles or Bleak House or The Grapes of Wrath or Emma or The Great Gatsby or anything by Tom Stoppard or Pinter or Beckett or William Golding or Dante or countless others.

If you haven't read House Of Mirth I think you'd love it.

Most subtleties would have completely passed me by if I'd have read earlier.

I've now read it twice in the last year. Beautiful book.

Barbadossunset · 28/02/2025 10:27

I had a big Evelyn Waugh phase, with Handful of Dust probably my favourite because of the absolutely nuts ending that no one would have seen coming.

The ending is so brilliant - especially how the people who came to find him were thwarted. What a clever writer Waugh was.
I am also a huge admirer of his contemporary Elizabeth Bowen. She must have been a formidably intelligent woman.

ItGhoul · 28/02/2025 10:38

I read a lot of classics when I was younger (English degree) but only recently, in my late 40s, read Bleak House and was surprised to find that I absolutely loved it.

Panticus · 28/02/2025 10:39

What a great thread. I'm pleased to have seen Rebecca mentioned a couple of times!

In Cold Blood, Great Expectations and Gone With the Wind were all a million times more engrossing than I expected - proper page turners.

Thanks to those who recommend The Real Charlotte - looks very interesting.

ItGhoul · 28/02/2025 10:44

TheProvincialLady · 28/02/2025 10:15

@Scout2016 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is one of my all time favourite books but I seldom hear anyone even mention it. Definitely plenty of bad behaviour there.

Yes, I second this. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is brilliant and for some reason I didn't read it until I was in my 40s. The themes feel so contemporary for a Victorian novel.

Hellohah · 28/02/2025 10:45

Scout2016 · 28/02/2025 09:48

Toni Morrison's Beloved, if that counts as a classic by now? It should.

I had a big Evelyn Waugh phase, with Handful of Dust probably my favourite because of the absolutely nuts ending that no one would have seen coming.

I am a sucker for people behaving really badly and Tenant of Wildfell Hall would get my vote if I were to reread any.

Nella Larsen's Passing is a short novel that really stayed with me and is thematically very relevant today I think.

Edited to add - my username is down to being a TKAMB fan, although I don’t wear dungarees as often these days.

Edited

Ooh, I'm about 50 pages into The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.

I've done WH and JE and have to say it's remarkably more readable and engaging than both so far.

Deathraystare · 28/02/2025 10:59

FionaJT · 26/02/2025 18:52

Middlemarch - I was a precocious reader as a teen, but never got on with Dickens, tried The Mill on the Floss and hated it, and avoided everything English between Austen and Hardy for the next 30 years :) Then I read Middlemarch in lockdown and I am so glad I left it for a time of life when I was ready to appreciate it, it's fantastic!

Funny, that was a book club book. Possibly my choice and I gave up with it. Even had it on audio and could nt be bothered with it!

Would like to read/listen to other classic though and I have a load on my phone!! Not much room for 'real' books sadly!

HamSpray · 28/02/2025 11:11

Gwenhwyfar · 28/02/2025 10:01

"two of the saddest scenes in the entire history of fiction."

Which are they?
I do think it has a great character in Miss Havisham.

When Joe comes to visit Pip after he’s moved to London to be a gentleman, and Pip is ashamed of the awkward country ways of the man he used to adore — it’s also a very funny scene, with Joe desperately trying to manage his hat and mortifying Pip in front of Herbert and their serving boy by talking about how his first act on arriving in London was to go and see a blacking warehouse he knows from ads in shops at home, but I think it’s very poignant when Joe fully recognises, and is generous about, Pip being ashamed of him, says ‘I’m wrong out of the forge’, blesses him and leaves.

And the other one is when Pip is at the dying Magwitch’s bedside, faithfully keeping up the pretence that Magwitch’s money has set him up as a ‘gentleman’ for life, rather than the truth, which is that, as a returned transport, his money is forfeit, so Pip is penniless.

HamSpray · 28/02/2025 11:15

dairydebris · 28/02/2025 10:22

If you haven't read House Of Mirth I think you'd love it.

Most subtleties would have completely passed me by if I'd have read earlier.

I've now read it twice in the last year. Beautiful book.

And for a cheerier Edith Wharton, The Custom of the Country is black comic tale of a nouveau riche midwesterner, the wonderfully-named Undine Spragg, making inroads into upper-class society.

Though my favourite remains The Age of Innocence.

Slimbear · 28/02/2025 11:24

I reread Lord of the Flies (last read about 55 years ago at school) I liked it then and I think I liked it more now. Quite short and to the point, good story. It was the 70th anniversary of it's publication last year.
I find that books published in the 50s seem to be more to the point, less waffle than nowadays.

BiscuitsBooks · 28/02/2025 13:53

I read some Thomas Hardy in my youth but never got round to reading Jude the Obscure until much later in life. When I read it - wow! It made me cry. I cannot explain why without giving away a key element but it's one of my favourite classics.
In total agreement with @Dappy777 in looking forward to discovering lots of classics in my later years.

teentantrums · 28/02/2025 14:27

A lot of books I read (and enjoyed) as a teenager, hit really differently when read in my fifties. War and Peace, Anna Karenina, Hardy, Wuthering Heights - the great thing about rereading is that you get different things out of books at different times. I reread The Conscience of Zeno a year ago. I had studied it at uni and found it boring. It actually made me laugh this time around!

Pootlemcsmootle · 28/02/2025 14:32

Weirdly although I've read a ridiculous amount, there's so many classics I've not got to yet! What does everyone think of Anna Karenina?

FionaJT · 28/02/2025 14:49

teentantrums · 28/02/2025 14:27

A lot of books I read (and enjoyed) as a teenager, hit really differently when read in my fifties. War and Peace, Anna Karenina, Hardy, Wuthering Heights - the great thing about rereading is that you get different things out of books at different times. I reread The Conscience of Zeno a year ago. I had studied it at uni and found it boring. It actually made me laugh this time around!

I didn't get Anna Karenina at all when I read it as a teenager (although I really liked War and Peace) but very much enjoyed reading it in my forties.

NoraLuka · 28/02/2025 15:18

@Pootlemcsmootle I found Anna Karenina easier to read than War and Peace, simply because there are fewer characters to keep track of and not too many of them with the same names. I did skip some quite long sections about 19th century Russian farming. It is quite a sad story though, I didn’t find anything uplifting about it.

Scout2016 · 28/02/2025 16:25

@Barbadossunset oooh, I haven't read any Elizabeth Bowen. Where would you recommend starting please? You had me at "formidibly intelligent woman"!

Real Charlotte is going on my list too, thanks those who suggested that.

Fairyvocals · 28/02/2025 16:34

Thanks to whoever recommended The Real Charlotte - that’s going on my list.

I was having a similar chat with a friend this week and she highly recommended Trollope’s early Irish novels, which I haven’t read but am now planning to.

Anna Karenina is fantastic, but like a pp I recommend skipping the Russian farming bits.

Fairyvocals · 28/02/2025 16:36

“Sister Carrie” by Theodore Dreiser is very interesting and well worth a read.

Barbadossunset · 28/02/2025 18:56

@Scout2016 i would start with The Death of the Heart. It’s such a good book, and contains, in my opinion, the saddest character in 20th century literature, Major Brutt.
The Last September set in Ireland during the War of Independence is also excellent as is The Heat of the Day set in WW II.
Her short stories are also very good - if you enjoy ghost stories try The Demon Lover and The Cat Jumps.

Hazel665 · 28/02/2025 18:59

I'm trying to start The French Lieutenant's Woman, for the setting.

apotdw · 28/02/2025 19:09

MNetters would gasp, but my living doesn't have book shelves. Kids rooms' have them, I have some old uni books in another room, but as I've mostly listened to audio books for the last decade I don't have bookshelves with books.

So, the point, we are getting some shelves and cupboard put in our living room this year, and I am going to buy lots of pretty bound classic books so I look intelligent and the room looks good Wink to be a good influence to the kids, but also, I fully intend to read them too! I've only ever read classics that the curriculum demanded, I have no idea where to start and I hope I enjoy them!

cliffdiver · 28/02/2025 19:17
  • The Iliad and the Odyssey (the latter is better, IMO)
  • Little Women
Scout2016 · 28/02/2025 20:26

@Barbadossunset thank you!

almondflake · 28/02/2025 21:57

@beguilingeyes I watched the film today , it was £3.99 on Amazon . I think if I'd seen the film I might not have have read it the book , I didn't get as much out of it until after the court case , the film seemed very rushed until then . I do understand though that there a lot to fit in a short time .
I also wonder why there has never been a remake ?

OP posts: