Classics and the Western Canon discussion
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Planning for our fourth 2016 read



I would very much like to read Spenser, and this group would be ideal for that. However, this session starts right as I will be transitioning back to the States with a new baby and a new job, and given my likely distraction levels, I'd better refrain from voting.


Ah, yes, but it's so beautiful in parts, isn't it? But it is long. Three hundred years ago no English reader would have considered themselves educated if they hadn't read it. But it's fallen onto evil days today, and few people other than scholars have read it. (I've only read bits myself.)


Very true. I can't recall whether you were with our group when we did the Canterbury tales, but we, too, of course, did them all, though some got more interesting discussion than others!

I have always wanted to read more Chaucer and I see you have one of his works on the list.


There are so many choices this time around, it will be hard to choose a book.

The Random Number Generator is expert at picking lists that make it hard to choose!

Must have been somewhere else -- we haven't done it here.
The Brothers Karamazov discussion was over on Readers Review.

My physical bookshelf is straining under weight and begging me to vote for Dostoevsky. I would probably be just as happy with Conrad or Chaucer. Also, I kind of miss fiction.

I definitely agree, Nemo. Dostoevsky is one of these writers who really speak to my soul. According to Calvino, it is a real "classic" as I can never leave the book after I've finished reading. It stays in my thoughts for weeks and I must go back and reread entire chapters... And then every time someone mentions the book, even years later, it makes me go back and it starts all over again, in a new light, with new thoughts...


If it's confession time, I've started BK a few times myself, but never gotten very far into it. I know I should read it, but ...


You'd better be careful: if BK wins, I may draft you to moderate the discussion!



But BK is one I have been meaning to read. I loved Crime and Punishment, and would describe it as my favourite book. He is an amazing writer.

Delighted to have you back, and a warm welcome to the new baby.
We'll hope to see him or posting here here in a few years! (It comes sooner than you think; my second grade grandson has already read all of Harry Potter, among many other things. Reading in our family seems to be in the genes!)

And you don't think this trait has any aspect of "nurture"? [g]

3 now - a 6yo, a 4yo and a brand new little boy. Exhausted beyond belief at the moment, I feel like I haven't read a decent - write in the margins type - book in a year.
Though I am currently working my way through the Abebooks list of favourite dystopian novels,

And you don't think this trait has any aspect of "nurture"? [g]"
Yay for nurture. It has been the greatest pleasure raising readers. My husband (who is discovering reading) has read so many books to our girls over the past 12 months (The Narnia series, all the Roald Dahl books, The Hobbit, etc).
One day the school librarian stopped me to tell me about library time. My eldest daughter (5yo at the time) had asked for help finding a new chapter book for Dad to read to her. It prompted the librarian to read a chapter book (instead of a picture book) to the students in the storytime. My daughter helped pick the book (I believe she chose 'The Twits' by Dahl) and the librarian explained to the students how chapter books were different, and how we used our imagination.
I was kind of proud to realise how immersed my kids were into reading, it is easy to forget that most kids don't get this type of upbringing.

3 now - a 6yo, a 4yo and a brand new little boy. Exhausted beyond belief at the moment, I feel like I haven't read a decent - write i..."
Hi Cass,
I will add my congratulations, and let you know that I'm with you in spirit. I have a three-year-old and a 14-month-old. Hang in there!
I got through some hefty books on my TBR list while my baby was an infant by listening to audiobooks on my phone during nighttime feedings. It also made me slightly more enthused about getting up for the feedings to begin with. :) Put it on speaker, and you have handsfree entertainment. Baby gets the benefit of additional verbal input from hearing the books, delivered in a soothing voice, so it's all good. Just a suggestion, if you're not doing it already.
Abebooks has a list of favorite dystopian novels? I must check that out.

They didn't sit still until around the 4.5yo mark. Prior to that it was piles of picture books. Last year my youngest (3yo) would not sit still while my husband read. Lots of the time I would lay cuddling her to sleep, while he read to the eldest (all in the same room). If I didn't, then the 3yo would interrupt.
So yes, looking at it I can see that because we value reading, we didn't see any of that as too much.
For the last three nights I have sat my (now) 10wk old on the bed beside me and read Enid Blyton to the girls... I am so excited because... this is the first chapter book that my (now) 4yo has really listened to, and my boy stops crying long enough for me to read a chapter or two, and finally, because I loved Enid Blyton, and when I tried to read this book last year it was met with boredom.... Now I just need to make them fall in love with "Snugglepot and Cuddlepie" (gorgeous and well loved Australian children's book).

The Abebooks literary bucket list:
http://www.abebooks.com/books/feature...
I am working through the Post-Apocalyptic list (sorry, I said Dystopian, close enough). It is kind of a random list, but it beats the category list on Amazon.

Not hefty, but we just finished listening to the entire "Game of Thrones" audiobooks - must have been almost 200 hours. I am listening to "Persuasion" at the moment.
Well, I shouldn't say the GoT isn't hefty, it has a lot going for it, and I really think it is LotR calibre (in that it is not hardcore literary fiction, but that it does belong on must read booklists for a variety of reasons, in particular the way woman in the series are just so awesome).

I loved the Martin books, mostly because they felt so much like the history I spend most of my time reading. He understands the Golden Rule very well - he who has the gold makes the rules. One doesn't have to spend all of one's time on weighty matters. Wouldn't want to turn out like Jack Nicholson in the Shining.



Oops -- I forgot to go check the poll. Will do it soon. Sorry!

Only two selections were serious contenders.
Dostoevsky -- raw 9, weighted 18
deTocqueville -- raw 5, weighted 13
When the voting is close we normally hold a run-off. Is this result close enough to merit a run-off? The voting in favor of Dostoevsky was 64% raw and 58% weighted. That seems more decisive than is usual in our first polls, so I'm inclined to think not to force a run-off but just to declare Dostoevsky the winner and move on. But I'll listen to bribes if deT adherents want to offer them. (Warm chocolate chip cookies go a long way toward softening my heart. )



Yes, but no, not particularly. Perspective is sometimes valuable.

Distance gives perspective. Sometimes we need someone who lives outside the fishbowl to explain to us how our water got so polluted.


Definitely. It goes both ways. In either case one needs to step back a bit -- in space or time or both -- to see the big picture. Reading De Tocqueville let us do this, and at this point in history we could certainly use some perspective.

Yes, but no, not particularly. Perspective is sometimes valuable."
There are many "perspectives" existing inside the nation already, aren't there? Why do you think adding one more would help?

What it did come up with is this list, as always in alphabetical order by author. Some interesting offerings, including one I'd never heard of.
The Shakespeare entry requires a bit of explanation. The RNG came up with Much Ado About Nothing, which can't by itself constitute a major read, but rather than dismiss it, I decided to put it into the list with the plan that if it should be chosen, we would then vote on three or four more Shakespeare comedies to go with it, spending probably two weeks on each to make a full complement of readings.
Other than that, here's the list for your perusal and discussion.
Adams, The Education of Henry Adams
Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde
Conrad, Lord Jim
de Tocqueville, Democracy in America
Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov
Flaubert, Sentimental Education
Hobbes, Leviathan
Locke, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
Shakespeare, Much Ado about Nothing plus
Spenser, The Faerie Queene
Trollope, Orley Farm