May 15, 2004

Book Thing

Well, as everyone else seems to be following the meme, here's my bid for becoming one with the bloggy consciousness. This list (which originally comes from CollegeBoard.com's 101 Great Books Recommended for H.S. Students & Readers of All Ages has been making the rounds of blogs (including my friend KT's, who got it from her friend, who got it from... well, you get the idea). It's not the best of lists, but it's not the worst of lists, either (thank you, author #21). The idea is to boldface or otherwise highlight everything one has read, so let's give this a shot...

The Book Thing List:

Beowulf (thrice in the original Anglo Saxon, and three translations)
Achebe, Chinua — Things Fall Apart
Agee, James — A Death in the Family
Austen, Jane — Pride and Prejudice
Baldwin, James — Go Tell It on the Mountain
Beckett, Samuel — Waiting for Godot (...and still waiting...)
Bellow, Saul — The Adventures of Augie March
Brontλ, Charlotte — Jane Eyre
Brontλ, Emily — Wuthering Heights (not that I remember much of it)
Camus, Albert — The Stranger (HATED this. HATED HATED HATED.)
Cather, Willa — Death Comes for the Archbishop
Chaucer, Geoffrey — The Canterbury Tales (In the original and in "translation")
Chekhov, Anton — The Cherry Orchard
Chopin, Kate — The Awakening
Conrad, Joseph — Heart of Darkness
Cooper, James Fenimore — The Last of the Mohicans
Crane, Stephen — The Red Badge of Courage
Dante — Inferno (The entire Commedia, actually)
de Cervantes, Miguel — Don Quixote (LONG. Good, but LONG.)
Defoe, Daniel — Robinson Crusoe
Dickens, Charles — A Tale of Two Cities (Paid by the word, and it SHOWS)
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor — Crime and Punishment (Started, but never finished it.)
Douglass, Frederick — Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
Dreiser, Theodore — An American Tragedy (No, but I might, now... Sister Carrie was excellent)
Dumas, Alexandre — The Three Musketeers (And 20 Years After, and Man in the Iron Mask, and...)
Eliot, George — The Mill on the Floss
Ellison, Ralph — Invisible Man (Not to be confused with H.G. Wells' Invisible Man, which I did, but finished reading this one anyway ^_~)
Emerson, Ralph Waldo — Selected Essays (He should be required citizenship reading)
Faulkner, William — As I Lay Dying
Faulkner, William — The Sound and the Fury
Fielding, Henry — Tom Jones (read one volume of it, for a class)
Fitzgerald, F. Scott — The Great Gatsby
Flaubert, Gustave — Madame Bovary
Ford, Ford Madox — The Good Soldier
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von — Faust (Nope, read Marlowe's version)
Golding, William — Lord of the Flies (My advice, skip the book and watch Survivor instead. It's more realistic.)
Hardy, Thomas — Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Hawthorne, Nathaniel — The Scarlet Letter
Heller, Joseph — Catch 22 (No, but it's on my List)
Hemingway, Ernest — A Farewell to Arms
Homer — The Iliad
Homer — The Odyssey
Hugo, Victor — The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Hurston, Zora Neale — Their Eyes Were Watching God
Huxley, Aldous — Brave New World
Ibsen, Henrik — A Doll's House
James, Henry — The Portrait of a Lady
James, Henry — The Turn of the Screw
Joyce, James — A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (No, but I read over 40 pages of Finnegan's Wake-- does that count?)
Kafka, Franz — The Metamorphosis
Kingston, Maxine Hong — The Woman Warrior
Lee, Harper — To Kill a Mockingbird
Lewis, Sinclair — Babbitt
London, Jack — The Call of the Wild
Mann, Thomas — The Magic Mountain
Marquez, Gabriel Garcνa — One Hundred Years of Solitude (No, but this is on my reading stack at the moment)
Melville, Herman — Bartleby the Scrivener
Melville, Herman — Moby Dick
Miller, Arthur — The Crucible
Morrison, Toni — Beloved
O'Connor, Flannery — A Good Man is Hard to Find
O'Neill, Eugene — Long Day's Journey into Night
Orwell, George — Animal Farm (George, you're too clever for yourself)
Pasternak, Boris — Doctor Zhivago (No, but I liked the movie music :D)
Plath, Sylvia — The Bell Jar
Poe, Edgar Allan — Selected Tales
Proust, Marcel — Swann's Way
Pynchon, Thomas — The Crying of Lot 49
Remarque, Erich Maria — All Quiet on the Western Front
Rostand, Edmond — Cyrano de Bergerac (And I still start crying 30 pages from the end)
Roth, Henry — Call It Sleep (Who needs sleep?)
Salinger, J.D. — The Catcher in the Rye
Shakespeare, William — Hamlet
Shakespeare, William — Macbeth
Shakespeare, William — A Midsummer Night's Dream
Shakespeare, William — Romeo and Juliet
Shaw, George Bernard — Pygmalion
Shelley, Mary — Frankenstein
Silko, Leslie Marmon — Ceremony
Solzhenitsyn, Alexander — One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich
Sophocles — Antigone
Sophocles — Oedipus Rex (And why aren't all three of his Theban plays here, hm?)
Steinbeck, John — The Grapes of Wrath (great writer, but so bloody DEPRESSING!)
Stevenson, Robert Louis — Treasure Island
Stowe, Harriet Beecher — Uncle Tom's Cabin
Swift, Jonathan — Gulliver's Travels (It was a "selections from" version-- only some of the stories)
Thackeray, William — Vanity Fair
Thoreau, Henry David — Walden (A 350 page SHOPPING LIST! No book has so made me want to Thoreau up.)
Tolstoy, Leo — War and Peace
Turgenev, Ivan — Fathers and Sons
Twain, Mark — The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Voltaire — Candide
Vonnegut, Kurt Jr. — Slaughterhouse-Five (on my List)
Walker, Alice — The Color Purple
Wharton, Edith — The House of Mirth
Welty, Eudora — Collected Stories
Whitman, Walt — Leaves of Grass
Wilde, Oscar — The Picture of Dorian Gray
Williams, Tennessee — The Glass Menagerie
Woolf, Virginia — To the Lighthouse
Wright, Richard — Native Son


Wow, an awful lot of the moderns in this list (mind you, I count "modern" as "anything after 1700"), awful lot of Dead White Males... and unless you count the Russians as "Asian" this list could stand some major globalization. Were it not for my Early American and Victorian Lit classes (required "balance" for my English major), I probably wouldn't have read a large number of these titles. (And, admittedly, would have missed out on some great literature as well as some things I would have been happy to miss.) On the other hand, I was a little surprised at how many of these I had read by the end of high school.

Posted by gris at May 15, 2004 07:29 PM
Comments

And because Liz was so kind as to point me at it, you get CollegeBoard.com's list of Poetry and Cultural and Historical Texts, annotated in the same way. (According to them, "The poetry and other texts below didn't fit neatly into the 101 Great Books list, but are worth reading again and again." Oh, PLEASE.)

The Arabian Nights (I keep meaning to get the whole thing and read it...)
Kennedy, John F. — Profiles in Courage
The Bible
King, Martin Luther Jr. — A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings and Speeches of Martin Luther King, Jr. (Read selected speeches from this)
Adams, Henry — The Education of Henry Adams
Malory, Sir Thomas — Le Morte D'Arthur
Aesop — Aesop's Fables
Machiavelli, Niccolo — The Prince
Andersen, Hans Christian — Andersen's Fairy Tales (And where's the Brothers Grimm, hm? Where are Lang's Fairy Books?)
Marx, Karl — The Communist Manifesto
Aristotle — Nicomachean Ethics
Paine, Thomas — Common Sense
DuBois, W.E.B. — The Souls of Black Folk
Plato — The Republic (Not bad, 'til you realize there's no place for women and it only works if you support slavery...)
Franklin, Benjamin — Autobiography (No, but I have read his Fart Proudly :))
Tocqueville, Alexis de — Democracy in America
Hamilton, Edith — Mythology
X, Malcolm — The Autobiography of Malcolm X
Hamilton, John, et al. — The Federalist Papers

Poetry
Blake, William — "London" and "The Tyger"
Keats, John — "Ode on a Grecian Urn," "La Belle Dame Sans Merci," and "The Eve of St. Agnes"
Brooks, Gwendolyn — "We Real Cool," "The Mother," and "The Bean Eaters"
Moore, Marianne — "Marriage," "Poetry," and "The Fish"
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor — "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," "Kubla Khan," and "Frost at Midnight"
O'Hara, Frank — "Why I Am Not a Painter," "The Day Lady Died", and "Poem" (Lana Turner Has Collapsed)
Dickinson, Emily — "There's a certain Slant of light" (258), "I felt a Funeral, in my Brain" (280), and "Because I could not stop for Death" (712)(There's a reason Goths like her)
Shakespeare, William — Sonnets
Donne, John — "A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning," "Death, be not proud" (Holy Sonnet 10), and "The Flea"
Stein, Gertrude — Tender Buttons, Stanzas in Meditation (That was enough. She reads like a really bad translation of Chinese electronics directions
Eliot, T.S. — "The Waste Land" and "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock"
Williams, William Carlos — "The Red Wheelbarrow," "This is Just to Say," and "Spring and All"
Hopkins, Gerard Manley — "God's Grandeur," "Windhover," and "Carrion Comfort"
Wordsworth, William — "Tintern Abbey," "Prelude," Lyrical Ballads (with S.T. Coleridge)
Hughes, Langston — "Theme for English B" and "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" (More people need to read this man... then more people might agree that difference is good)

Their collection of poetry is pretty sad... no Basho? No Frost? No Petrarch? No Greeks? (And by the by... if you want to beef up your poetry list really quickly, try The Academy of American Poets, and listen to poets reading their own work just for you. ^_^)

Posted by: Gris at May 15, 2004 11:23 PM

List is befuct!

Now reading: UBIK, Philip K. Dick. Good stuff.

Posted by: jenniebee at June 4, 2004 11:01 AM