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My Literary Canon...

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by basso, May 17, 2024.

  1. basso

    basso Member
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    • Catcher in the Rye
    • Siddhartha
    • A Perfect Peace
    • Catch-22
    • Breakfast of Champions
    • A Confederacy of Dunces.
     
  2. Buck Turgidson

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    This is good

    You left out a few, though
     
  3. Ubiquitin

    Ubiquitin Member
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    I regularly reference

    Animal Farm
    Lord of the Flies
     
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  4. basso

    basso Member
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    please share.
     
  5. Buck Turgidson

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    Lonesome Dove
    Blood Meridian
    Etc...
     
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  6. Buck Turgidson

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    The Son
    Orphan Master's Son
     
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  7. Dankstronaut

    Dankstronaut Way, way out here.

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    Treasure Island
    House of Leaves
    Dune/Dune Messiah
    Lord of the Flies
    Fahrenheit 451
     
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  8. Xerobull

    Xerobull ...and I'm all out of bubblegum
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    That’s a tough one as I’ve read so many books in my life. The above books didn’t impact me like they do a lot of people.
    • Game of Thrones books 1-3
    • Ready Player One
    • Daemon
    • Three Body Problem trilogy
    I’ll have to think about it.
     
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  9. peleincubus

    peleincubus Member

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    I’ve read all of those except have not even heard of Sidhartha I don’t think.
     
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  10. FranchiseBlade

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    Wow. Very close to mine.

    I'd add,
    • Chicot the Jester
    • Marguerite de Valois
    • The Beautiful and Damned
    • Don Quixote
    • Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
     
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  11. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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    Crime and Punishment
    1984
    A Christmas Carol
    A Gentleman in Moscow
    Dracula
    The Witching Hour
     
  12. StupidMoniker

    StupidMoniker I lost a bet

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    Not including anything already mentioned, The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings would definitely be included in mine. The Bible as well. Animal Farm, The Great Gatsby, The Raven, The Count of Monte Cristo, Jurassic Park, maybe The Wheel of Time and the Timothy Zahn authored Star Wars trilogy (Heir to the Empire, Dark Force Rising, and The Last Command).
     
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  13. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Member
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    Walden
    Bleak House
    Great Expectations

    The Stranger
    Babbitt
    On Liberty
    Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance

    also, the essay "Sequences" by Patrick McManus. If you don't know it, here it is:

     
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  14. basso

    basso Member
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    yes, I should have included 1984, and Brave New World.
     
  15. Ubiquitin

    Ubiquitin Member
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    I am surprised no one has answered Atlas Shrugged. I have never finished it because once it starts going on about train track alloys I get so disinterested I put it back on the shelf and forget.
     
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  16. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Member
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    related

    441658475_861414742687940_3147624404015344726_n.jpg
     
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  17. StupidMoniker

    StupidMoniker I lost a bet

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    It's okay, but could have used a much more aggressive editor. At one point there is a monologue by John Galt that goes on for 60 pages. It also has way too much focus on Dagny Taggart and her romantic relationships. The Fountainhead is a better read.
     
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  18. rimrocker

    rimrocker Member

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    “There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old’s life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs."

    These kind of threads often puzzle me because of the disconnect between people's reading choices and actual politics. I'd like to think mine are well aligned and reflective of both my intellectual and lived life. Then again, I'm an idiot.

    Here are 10 of mine broken into categories:

    Novels
    Absalom, Absalom
    The Brothers Karamazov
    Angle of Repose

    History
    Simple Justice
    The Education of Henry Adams
    I Will Bear Witness (both volumes)

    Work
    Young Men and Fire
    Drift into Failure (Sidney Dekker)

    Environment
    Desert Solitaire
    Cadillac Desert
     
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  19. basso

    basso Member
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    odd that you brought up politics in this thread, or that you'd be surprised people read books written by authors who might feel differently than they do about one or another issue.
     
  20. Francis3422

    Francis3422 Member

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    Both books (The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged) have long monologues by the hero. For sure the Galt monologue is much, much longer than the courtroom speech by Roark in The Fountainhead.

    Rand was using those novels to define Objectivism. She was a philosopher as well as writer, so that is why it was written as it was.

    A strict interpretation or application of Objectivism to politics or economics doesn’t function as it did in her fictional world. That being said, she had some concerns about the future of society that frankly have come to pass. I think if you read Atlas Shrugged and then look at changes in society over the last 50 years there are a lot of parallels.

    I read both around the age of 15 at the recommendation of my history teacher. And at least for me, a lot of the principles that I live by and how I run, my businesses were developed on her inspiration.

    Ayn was a flawed person (as we all are) and both books are pretty long and excessively wordy at times but inside of all of that they are both brilliant stories.
     
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