Sunday, July 6, 2008
Brave New World?
Friday, June 13, 2008
More on Emma
If Praiseworthy: what makes someone an authority on what will make others happy?
If Blameworthy: why shouldn't we do our best to help others?
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Summer Book #2
Wednesday, June 4, 2008
Tuesday, June 3, 2008
Step 2
I vote for a two day grace period in case anyone started reading and forgot.
Also, I am not sure what we are actually going to do now that we've read the book. Hartley was less than enlightening on the matter. But on the bright side, he's no longer the only person on campus wearing shorts.
As seen in the poll, the next book is Brave New World.
It's short, and fun.
Please comment and offer guidance for what should happen!!!
Monday, May 19, 2008
Interesting...
At one point, the author writes: "The desire that something be true, rather than the desire for truth itself, may well be the root of all evil. It is certainly the origin of all ideology, and ideology was the source of much of the evil in the past century."
Interesting, no?
PS - I didn't actually *read* this book, so I have no idea if it's any good, and don't really know anything about it, I just think it's interesting how the Great Books come up everywhere, all the time, and are used for such a variety of purposes by so many different sorts of people
PPS - Do people inform you of any and all great-books-related things that they find? People certainly have started pointing them all out to me... it's quite funny.
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Bilateral Decision: Book #1

Dear Comrades,
Good news, the first book of the summer is Emma, by Jane Austen!
The date to have Emma completed by is: June 4, which is three weeks from today.
I had a planning meeting about book group and we decided that picking one book at a time will be better than laying out an entire program right now. This way, we can see what people want to read, who is reading, etc, as we go.
Of course, the people who decide to take part in book #1 will get more of a say in the next books. Hartley and I thought Emma was a safe bet for making people happy.
Please comment with complaints about the book, the date, etc, and/or to say you're planning to take part!
And, of course, Congrats on surviving finals everyone!!!! We no longer need refer to ourselves as "First years."
Love,
Hannah
Monday, May 12, 2008
Picking Books
Sunday, May 11, 2008
So...
Thursday, May 8, 2008
Suggestions, Humbly Submitted for Your Consideration
1. I suspect this thing will only work if it is run by all of you and not by me. So, you should certainly feel free to disagree with everything below.
2. A modest program will likely work better than an ambitious one.
3. The final book list does not have to be a complete summer’s worth of reading—I am certain that many of you will have other books you want to read over the summer, and a schedule that is not all-consuming will probably work better.
4. This may seem obvious, but the longer the book, the less likely everyone will read it; similarly, the worse the prose style of the book, the less likely everyone will read it. That is only a serious problem if the reading list becomes an “all or nothing” sort of thing.
Looking over the list of books suggested so far, there are a large number of quite lengthy books. The long ones are:
100 Years of Solitude
Anna Karenina
Life of Johnson
Institutes of the Christian Religion
The Canterbury Tales
Don Quixote
East of
Federalist Papers
Philosophy of History
Leviathan
Critique of Pure Reason
Moby Dick
Stranger in a Strange Land
The Tin Drum
War and Peace
For the shorter works, here are a few comments:
1. The Communist Manifesto, The Metamorphosis, Much Ado About Nothing, and Of Mice and Men are very short, quick reads.
2. For Mill, the best bets are: On Liberty, Utilitarianism, or The Subjection of Women
3. For Freud, the best starting place is either 1) one of the parts of the Introductory Lectures on Psycho-Analysis (the three sections are Parapraxes (aka Freudian Slips), Dreams, and General Theory of the Neuroses—the whole book is long (almost 600 pages), but the sections can be read alone) or 2) (if you want a complete, short book) Civilization and its Discontents.
4. For Swift, Gulliver’s Travels is the obvious choice.
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Full List
1984
100 Years of Solitude
A Passage to India (E.M. Forster)
Anna Karenina
Borges
Boswell's Life of Johnson
Brave New World
Calvin: Institutes of the Christian Religion
The Canterbury Tales
The Communist Manifesto
Don Quixote
East of Eden
Emma
Federalist Papers
Freud
Hegal: Philosophy of History
Hobbes: Leviathan
JS Mill:
Kant's Critique of Pure Reason
Lolita
Marx: Communist Manifesto
Metamorphosis (Franz Kafka)
Moby Dick
Much Ado About Nothing (William Shakespeare)
Nietzsche's Ecce Homo
Of Mice and Men
Paradise Lost
Pride and Prejudice
Stranger in a Strange Land
The Sun Also Rises
Swift
This Side of Paradise (F.Scott Fitzgerald)
The Tin Drum
War and Peace
Summer book suggestions
Here are some more options:
Lolita
Emma
Brave New World
Paradise Lost
The Sun Also Rises
The Canterbury Tales
East of Eden
Don Quixote
The Communist Manifesto
Something by Freud... (by the way, today is his birthday)
These are just ideas. I don't really know how long some of these are, so they may be too long. I think Hartley was right about keeping them shorter for the meantime.
Anyway... let's start this soon! I'm really excited about it! Can the first book be something really entertaining and readable? And by that, I mean something by Jane Austen, lol, if that's all right with everybody.
Summer Books
I have decided that we should read the following:
1) 100 Years of Solitude
2) A few choice works by Borges
3) War and Peace
4) Stranger in a Strange Land
5) The Tin Drum (seriously, hehe)
6) Brave New World
7) Of Mice and Men
Well, it's a start. What do you think?
Great Books Boot Camp
Book Suggestions
2) Brave New World (Aldous Huxley)
3) Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
4) Of Mice & Men (John Steinbeck)
5) Slaughterhouse Five (Kurt Vonnegut)
6) War and Peace (Leo Tolstoy)
7) 100 Years of Solitude (Gabriel García Márquez)
Oh - and a negative on The Metamorphosis - didn't like it.
Check out this list, it's one of those silly "best 150 novels" lists. It's by no means perfect, but it is certainly a decent list of possibilities.
For those of you that haven't read it, read East of Eden. It is AMAZING, I'd be happy to read it again if ya'll want. Same with The Fountainhead. And Anna K. And A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. And 1984... but especially East of Eden.
PS - I figured P&P went without saying...
Book Suggestions
I guess I'll go first.
1) This Side of Paradise (F.Scott Fitzgerald)
2) Metamorphosis (Franz Kafka)
3) A Passage to India (E.M. Forster)
4) Much Ado About Nothing (William Shakespeare)
