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Thursday, July 10, 2008

Thursday, July 10, 2008 12:30 am by M. in ,    No comments
Chris Routledge, online editor of The Reader Magazine has alerted us to the following initiative:

Before I start let’s just get something out of the way: The Richard and Judy Book Club is on the whole and on balance a good thing. It encourages reading, helps people choose what to read and gets people talking about books. And while it has been accused–correctly I think–of helping to skew the book trade in favour of coffee table bestsellers and hokey populist emotionalism, I don’t think it’s doing anything more than going with the market flow.

In any case ‘Richard and Judy’ readers, like ‘Oprah’ readers in the United States, are not scared of difficult material. The Richard and Judy Book Club winner for 2008 is Khaled Hosseini’s A Thousand Splendid Suns, a novel about women in Afghanistan which the New York Times described as flawed, but praised for its ‘sheer momentum and will’. Patrick Gale’s Notes from an Exhibition, another of this year’s books, which tackles manic depression, has been widely praised by serious reviewers in serious newspapers. Obviously the Richard and Judy Bookclub is about readers and lots of them, but popular doesn’t have to mean second rate.

And that brings me to my main beef with the Richard and Judy Bookclub, that there are no ‘classic’ novels on the booklist. Why is there no Elizabeth Gaskell, or the Brontë sisters? What’s wrong with Dickens and what’s so hard about Hardy? Do the producers of the Richard and Judy Book Club think their readers wouldn’t like these writers? If so The Reader magazine would like to bet they are wrong. These great novels are full of stories about difficult human subjects: bad marriages, unrequited love, childhood, families in crisis, joy and mourning. Everything in fact that shows up in the modern novels that do get chosen for the list.

We would like to see a ‘classic’ novel in the Richard and Judy top ten and as of right now we are launching a campaign to make it happen. We’re starting with a poll to decide which novel we should champion over the coming months. In consultation with Phil Davis, the magazine’s editor and having taken suggestions from people in the office we have a shortlist. Please vote for the book you would most like to see championed on the famous couch.

Here you can vote for The Mayor of Casterbridge, by Thomas Hardy, David Copperfield, by Charles Dickens, Sons and Lovers, by D.H. Lawrence, Adam Bede, by George Eliot and our very own The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë. VOTE FOR ANNE.

And more polls. Poll The People is a website enterely devoted to polls. Several Brontë related books appears:
8. Wuthering Heights
9. Jane Eyre

81. Rebecca (Daphne Du Maurier)
151 THE EYRE AFFAIR: A THURSDAY NEXT NOVEL (Jasper Fforde)
466. THE ILLUSTRATED JANE EYRE (Charlotte Brontë & Dame Darcy)

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