i had all kinds of shit ready to discuss for chapter one-
historical significance of places, lexical themes, etc. :P
i REALLY fucking miss english class
Shit...all I have are passages that I liked and wonderment at how chapter 2 ended.
Not much of a history buff so the 'changes' that are there don't stick out too much. I mean, I know there wasn't an actual railroad, give me some credit. But the makeup of the towns and such...nope.
@elevenism , take notes, okay? Do you have a word processing program? Type your notes in there, and then copy and paste them into here on discussion day?
@allegate , have you ever read Swift's "Gulliver's Travels?" This is allegedly set up to be an homage to that book as far as each "state" being a different voyage.
I'll just leave that here for now, keep that in mind. :-)
Since people are itching to get to a discussion, here, I move that we begin discussing the first three chapters the day after Christmas, on Monday, December 26th.
Again, if you want, take notes, copy and paste into here at that point.
Last edited by allegro; 12-22-2016 at 01:40 PM.
Also be mindful of this book as compared to other pieces of American slave narrative, e.g. "Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave," and "Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl" by Harriet Ann Jacobs.
By the way, I HIGHLY recommend both of the above books.
Jacobs book on Kindle HERE.
Douglass book on Kindle HERE.
Also, this speech by Sojourner Truth:
Last edited by allegro; 12-22-2016 at 01:52 PM.
I have, and that makes a lot of sense given how chapter two ends and chapter four starts.
I'm pretty sure I've read the Frederick Douglass book many moons ago back in middle school, but I'll read it again and the other as well. Help me from reading too far ahead, I guess!
Also, in "The Underground Railroad," there is a lot of symbolism of "things to come" juxtaposed with the things from the past, which is why this book is not 100% historical.
also, my preliminary discussion may be limited as there are going to be 4 extra people in the house and everybody congregates in here where the computer is, and they have tablets that eat up the wifi so my laptop may or may not work
Now I know how my college Profs felt. Delays delays delays.
This will be the ONLY time we delay the schedule. Actually, I'm thinking of moving it backward again. We can get the discussion going and others can join in as they can fit into their schedule. I'm highlighting parts of the chapters for discussion.
And I can bake Christmas cookies at the same time.
Last edited by allegro; 12-23-2016 at 02:46 AM.
HIGHLIGHTING is what I really love.
Speaking of highlighting, I'll just leave this here (a reference from Chapter One):
http://www.epm.org/resources/2010/Ja...sed-curse-ham/
Last edited by allegro; 12-22-2016 at 08:45 PM.
they will be here in a few hours and i'm not sure when they will leave, but i will find a way to work around it.
also @allegro , if nothing else, my mom got a Fire tablet when L and i got the paperwhites and it runs really well even with low wifi. i will borrow that if i have to.
Last edited by elevenism; 12-22-2016 at 09:45 PM.
I just found out that if I read the book on my iPad, I can see page numbers.
Okay, how far has everybody read, so far?
I just started "Ethel" (I'm on page 192).
I got sick over the long weekend and instead of reading, I slept.
But hopefully I am caught up by the next discussion day!
Took the weekend off because of travel and stuff but I'm starting North Carolina today.
At the end of Georgia, when she gets out and says she's looking at skyscrapers I was totally (even though the book was dropping historical hints as to what time it's set) hoping for a slavery in the future, the South didn't lose the Civil War kind of story.
HEY BY THE WAY, ALL, I read this REALLY interesting article saying there was no Underground Railroad in the south, at all, etc.:
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/20...round-railroad
Last edited by allegro; 12-27-2016 at 11:34 AM.
Well, you guys just wake me up when y'all are caught up, okay?
I'm just going to keep reading ahead.
Damnit @allegro ,
i would have long since finished the book if i had known that reading ahead was permissible.
i've read the new anne rice book and The Girl With Curious Hair by DFW waiting to be told when to read more :P
I think I said earlier that we can go ahead and read; hell, nobody's following the "rules," anyway, it's all been delayed by a week, do whatever you want, seriously. I am.
I suspect it's all going to be delayed indefinitely.
Or, you and I will be discussing it. We were supposed to start discussing it yesterday but that never happened.
I'm kinda over this book club thing already, truth be told.
Last edited by allegro; 12-30-2016 at 11:32 AM.
i was waiting to be told when to discuss it. i was trying to do it right.
i think maybe we shouldn't have started it around xmas. it still might work :/
it says there are 8 "hours" left or whatever which means 3 or 4 for me so i can be done with it post fucking haste if you want to do it that way.
DON'T GIVE UP ON IT
I think it's a good idea. I wasn't anticipating getting sick and wanting to die this weekend. But I'm reading on my lunch right now, and think I'm starting to feel a bit better today, so I plan on reading for a couple of hours tonight before I drug myself up to get some sleep!
@Sarah K , I hope you feel better. I think once you start reading this book, you'll find it's pretty hard to put down.
I'm the quiet one in class that waits and listens to everyone and then puts in two cents worth based on the conversation. I'm not very good at initiating. :/
also, @allegro , i know you are very introverted, but you are quite outspoken and confident on this forum.
Tis why i looked forward to you leading the discussion.
Well, I've finished the book. (couldn't put it down until I finished it, hence the late post. Egad.)
How you doing, @elevenism ?