I've made a commitment to myself to be more literate in that there are a lot of classics I have never read. I read a fair bit, but some of what would be considered "core" material I've never touched.
To get ideas, please put in 5 books (or authors) you have read that you think are essential to being a literate human, and 5 books that you have NOT read that you think you should:
5 that I have read
To Kill a Mockingbird
Lord of the Rings (Trilogy) or Chronicles of Narnia
Gate to Womens Country or Handmaids Tale
1984 or Lord of the Flies
Robert Heinlen, Issac Asimov or Orson Scott Card
5 I think I should read (going by authors so that I have a bit of wiggle room on what I can find available):
Ernest Hemingway
Charles Dickens
Hamlet (I've read some Shakesphere but not this one)
Clockwork Orange
The Picture of Dorian Gray (Oscar Wilde)
Something by one of the Bronte sisters
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Permalink Reply by DonnaKat on January 4, 2011 at 7:54am I went through a phase of trying to read as many of the classics as possible, back when I wanted to be in college but couldn't afford it. I'm not sure that any of these are essential to being a literate person, but they're the first that popped into my head.
5 that I have read
- Jane Eyre
- Great Expectations
- Moby Dick
- War and Peace
- Pere Goriot
5 I tried to read but didn't finish (yet. There's still hope, right?)
- Grapes of Wrath
- Anna Karenina
- Updike
- Hemingway
- Edith Wharton
Permalink Reply by SweetJudyB on January 4, 2011 at 10:05am I think the only real think I got out of my bachelors degree was reading Brave New World (Huxley) and Metamorphosis (Kafka). I picked up some young adult classics a while ago- Peter Pan, Wizard of Oz, Secret Garden. Also liked The Time Machine, Dracula, Age of Innocence, Catcher in the Rye, Beowulf (some of these I should re-read)
Should read- Atlas Shrugged- anything Jane Eyre- The Oddesey- Huck Finn- Of Mice and Men
Good thing hubby got me a kindle :)
Permalink Reply by Mommy Monster on January 4, 2011 at 10:11am 5 that I have read
Robert Heinlen - Stranger in a Strange Land
Carl Sagan - Contact (completely changed many of my previously held notions on, well, everything)
Hemingway - For Whom the Bell Tolls
Faulkner - The Sound and the Fury
Margaret Mitchell - Gone With the Wind
There are so many I should read...hard to pick just five.
The Grapes of Wrath
T.S. Eliot - pretty much anything
Beowulf
Huck Finn or Tom Sawyer
Willa Cather
Permalink Reply by mcglory13 on January 4, 2011 at 11:23am I feel like the main benefit to reading canonical texts is that you get the allusions other people make to them, the cultural capital, I guess. To that end, I am going to list works I see lots of references made to in culture in general of late:
Have read:
1. Shakespeare
2. Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, etc
3. Emma or other Jane Austen novels
4. The Scarlet Letter
5. The Tell Tale Heart and other Poe stuff
Have not read:
1. Moby Dick
2. Crime and Punishment
3. Ulysses
4. In Search of Lost Time
5. The Sun Also Rises
And of course, I'm noticing that the majority of things that pop to mind as canonical are almost all by dudes.
Permalink Reply by Floor Pie on January 4, 2011 at 12:29pm This was hard to cull down. Here we go:
Have read
Greek mythology /British canonical poetry (foundations)
William Shakespeare (obviously)
Virginia Woolf /F. Scott Fitzgerald / Ernest Hemingway (modern classics)
Hawthorne / Twain / O'Connor / Kerouac (American zeitgeist)
Updike / Vonnegut (postmodern)
Should read
Russian novels
Jane Austen (I know, I know...)
Ulysses by James Joyce
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace
Moby Dick by Herman Melville
Permalink Reply by LeastLikely2Breed on January 6, 2011 at 7:06pm Things I've read:
Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre & all the Bronte sisters stuff -- even the not so good ones
Gravity's Rainbow (it's post modern torture -- just like Joyce's Ulysses -- I only enjoyed the accomplishment of having finished it, not the reading of it)
Of Human Bondage
The House of Mirth & everything Edith Wharton
The Great Gatsby & everything by F. Scott Fitgerald
and a whole bunch more...
Things I feel I should read but just can't bring myself to do:
any Thomas Hardy other than Tess' d'Urbervilles -- too damn depressing and rural (poor women live a life of sorrow and death - yippee)
War and Peace
Crime and Punishment
As I Lay Dying -- or for that matter anything by Faulkner
anything by Eudora Welty
---
BTW the best classics title ever: "Death on the Installment Plan"
Permalink Reply by DLBK on January 7, 2011 at 7:56am After looking at a list of classics, I realized I've read a bunch, but not as many as I should have.
Some that I've liked a lot:
Color Purple
Flowers for Algernon
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Tale of Two Cities
The Iliad and The Odyssey
Wuthering Heights
I'd like to read:
The Last Temptation of Christ
The Satanic Verses
Given how long both books are and how little time I have to read (and how tired I am), I don't see myself reading those any time soon.
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