
Top 5 Tuesday was created by Shanah at Bionic Book Worm, and it is now being hosted by Meeghan at Meeghan Reads. For details of all of the latest prompts for October to December, see Meeghan’s post here.
Do you have a pile of books on your TBR that you were “going to read soon” but now it’s been like 5 years and you don’t know how to start that book any more? Maybe it’s 600 pages long. Or maybe you’ve seen some not-so-great reviews that pushed it down a bit. What books on your TBR intimidate you?
These are books I want to read but each time that I look at them I think ‘not now’ because they are so long AND as these are all either hardbacks or paperbacks they’re heavy, unwieldy and in small print!





Nicholas Nickleby by Charles Dickens (860 pages) – Nicholas Nickleby, is left penniless after his father’s death and forced to make his own way in the world. There’s an extraordinary gallery of rogues and eccentrics: Wackford Squeers, the tyrannical headmaster of Dotheboys Hall; the tragic orphan Smike, rescued by Nicholas; and the gloriously theatrical Mr and Mrs Crummle and their daughter, the ‘infant phenomenon’. Nicholas Nickleby is characterized by Dickens’s outrage at social injustice, but it also reveals his comic genius at its most unerring.
Past Imperfect by Julian Fellowship (528 pages) described on the back cover as a story that takes us back to the Debutante Season of 1968 – ‘Poignant, funny, fascinating and moving’ . Wishing to track down a past girlfriend who claims he had fathered her child, the rich and dying Damian Baxter contacts an old friend from his days at Cambridge. The search takes the narrator back to 1960s London, where everything is changing–just not always quite as expected.
The Women’s Room by Marilyn French (544 pages), described as ‘one of the most influential novels of the modern feminist movement.’ It was first published in 1977 to a barrage of criticism. This is the story of Mira Ward, a wife of the Fifties who becomes a woman of the Seventies. From the shallow excitements of suburban cocktail parties and casual affairs through the varied nightmares of rape, madness and loneliness to the dawning awareness of the exhilaration of liberation, the experiences of Mira and her friends crystallize those of a generation of modern women.
The Wine of Angels by Phil Rickman (623 pages) – the first Merrily Watkins novel, in which the Rev Merrily Watkins tries to be accepted as the vicar (or priest-in-charge as she insists she ought to be called) in the country parish of Ledwardine in Herefordshire, steeped as it is in cider and secrets and echoes of the poet Thomas Traherne who was once based in the area.
This Thing of Darkness by Harry Thompson (750 pages) – In 1831 Charles Darwin set off in HMS Beagle under the command of Captain Robert Fitzroy on a voyage that would change the world. This is the story of a deep friendship between two men, and the twin obsessions that tear them apart, leading one to triumph, and the other to disaster.
I can definitely relate to the intimidating chunkster. I only read a couple massive books a year, and when I’m in the mood for them it’s usually great, but the mood doesn’t come often.
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I used to love getting ‘stuck into’ a long book. But these days I love shorter books too.
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That’s a really clever way to get through the TBR pile, Margaret, especially those longer or otherwise more intimidating books. You have a nice variety here, too; I hope you like them.
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The beauty of Kindle books is that they’re much easier to handle and you can enlarge the font!
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I read Nicholas Nickleby earlier this year and it took me a few months to get through it, but that’s because I kept reading other books in between (it’s very episodic so you can easily put it down and come back to it). I enjoyed it overall.
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Thanks Helen – I’m looking forward to reading Nicholas Nickleby!
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I love this idea but please don’t be intimidated by Past Imperfect. I laughed my way through it so that my husband had to ask what I was reading, he then laughed his way through reading it!
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That’s good to know Jane!
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I love Nicholas Nickleby–it’s one of my favorite Dickens novels, and I’ve read it a few times. It is long, but very entertaining. I don’t know if you are a fan of audio books, but I really like to listen to Dickens novels–the last time I “read” NN was a listen, in fact.
I read The Women’s Room a long time ago–in the early 80’s. I think it would feel dated now, and I have never felt compelled to reread it, but at the time I felt it was a powerful book that had an impact on me and how I faced the work world.
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Thanks, Janegs. I don’t often listen to audio books, but that sounds like a good idea.
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I haven’t heard of any of tehse, but from the blurb alone they sound not like my cup of tea.
My post: https://laurieisreading.com/2024/11/12/top-5-tuesday-books-on-my-tbr-that-intimidate-me/
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Well, we all have different tastes – so we can’t all enjoy the same books. I’ll look at your post and see if there are any I’d like. :)
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