Beginner's Guide to Reading The Classics

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  • Опубликовано: 29 янв 2025

Комментарии • 139

  • @GreatBooksProf
    @GreatBooksProf  2 месяца назад +8

    You can find a reading list -- based on one of my first-year courses -- for free on my Patreon page. 👉 www.patreon.com/c/GreatBooksProf

    • @sallyarmstrong7825
      @sallyarmstrong7825 14 дней назад

      I cannot accesss this list. Could you please share it with us here?

  • @degreesbrix
    @degreesbrix Год назад +48

    As a kid, I was fascinated by the Great Books of the Western World collection which sat atop my dad's bookshelf. One of the coolest features was a 10-year reading plan suggested by the editors which started with both Plato's Apology & Crito, ending years and years later with T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land. 15 year old me never got far into the collection, but I would daydream about what sort of person might be on the other end of the decade long journey.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  Год назад +10

      What a great anecdote! Thanks for sharing that. These books really can be transformative.

  • @1579list
    @1579list 9 месяцев назад +27

    Reading about Lennie in Of Mice and Men sickened me, but Pride and Prejudice saved me. I appreciate your approach and suggestions.

    • @tahlia__nerds_out
      @tahlia__nerds_out Месяц назад +2

      “Of Mice and Men” is a *hard* read emotionally… but I think that Steinbeck might not be for everybody. I didn’t care for “The Pearl” either… which I arguably enjoyed even less than “Of Mice and Men”. He seemed to embrace some really unpleasant topics and situations in his work.
      And Jane Austen is so witty and fun! While she too provided social commentary, her commentary is to a different scale than Steinbeck’s, and reader enjoyment was just as important to her as her commentary. She was a writer who enjoyed reading and inhabiting to worlds she read about… and it showed in her writing.
      “Of Mice and Men” and “The Pearl” view the world through a darker lens and serve as cautionary tales to the reader. Steinbeck doubtless would have preferred *not* to live in the world as he portrayed it, but it likely was how he viewed to human condition and the world as it was.
      And, yeah, I’ve also always personally enjoyed reading (and rereading) Austen more than Steinbeck.

  • @phoenixx00
    @phoenixx00 Год назад +170

    A recommendation list would be super helpful!

    • @129jazza
      @129jazza Год назад +1

      Did he ever do this??

    • @heidi6281
      @heidi6281 Год назад +31

      I am 53 but I remember liking these classics when I was young:
      Frankenstein
      The Count of Monte Cristo
      The Picture of Dorian Gray
      The Jungle
      To Kill a Mocking Bird
      Huckleberry Finn
      Slaughter House Five
      Little Women
      Grapes of Wrath
      The French Lieutenant's Woman
      Animal Farm
      All Quiet on the Western Front
      What I can recommend now is The First Law Trilogy,
      The Warlord Chronicles and The Empire Trilogy!!

    • @stephenmorton8017
      @stephenmorton8017 10 месяцев назад +8

      i'd recommend 'Bleak House' and 'Don Quixote.'oh, and Robinson Crusoe.

    • @conman77
      @conman77 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@heidi6281Thanks!

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  4 месяца назад +23

      @@phoenixx00 Hey, I just posted one of these. It’s free on my Patreon page. Basically it’s a list of all the books I’ve assigned my first-year students this year!

  • @Dino_Medici
    @Dino_Medici Год назад +41

    I appreciate that you look at literature as a form of philosophy

  • @dionysianapollomarx
    @dionysianapollomarx Год назад +15

    A recommendation list is awesome. Would love that video.

  • @Q-Ball.
    @Q-Ball. Год назад +6

    Thanks for the course syllabus tip. I’ve almost come to that conclusion by myself but you laying it out brings me the rest of the way.

  • @FranklyItsMe
    @FranklyItsMe 11 месяцев назад +4

    The fact that you really spoke to the importance of EDITIONS is so important!!! So appreciated!! Even just like reading the Signet edition of Les Mis is excruciating compared to the Penguin edition and the translations are different as well. I hope you will explain how different editions also mean different translations which is also important.

  • @suzannericker8127
    @suzannericker8127 Год назад +9

    I find this very validating. I love so many works of classic literture but there are some that are very popular and beloved that I can't stand. It's important to remember all classics are not Wuthering Heights and I can just read classics that I want to read, not ones I feel like I "should".
    Also getting back into deeper literature after months of sleepless nights it's a great idea to start with small wins.
    A recommended reading list would be great!

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  Год назад

      Great to hear from you, Suzanne! Sometimes even our best intentions to read can be thwarted when life's obligations get in the way. I'm going to try to work on that reading list.

    • @sockthief9138
      @sockthief9138 5 месяцев назад

      I’m actually enjoying Wuthering Heights right now as I’m trying to get back into reading.

  • @ambreenali.
    @ambreenali. 9 месяцев назад +15

    Love the confession towards the end. Literature is for everyone and there's no shame in feeling differently from the masses after reading a classic. We all have our own perspective... our personal thoughts, beliefs and experiences can be seen in the way we perceive a great classic. I'm in my last semester of grad school and the arguments/debates never stop in my class. There's always room for debate when it comes to literature. Love the way you handled this topic.

    • @Jay-Kay-Buwembo
      @Jay-Kay-Buwembo 7 месяцев назад

      Literature like all arts is subjective, one man's diamond is anothers trash. It's always so interesting the way stories can split people on their impressions.

  • @thejoeyd9207
    @thejoeyd9207 11 месяцев назад +2

    Very helpful and appreciated, especially the part about the language being difficult. What I tend to do is read the material, think about what I think is going on. Then I’ll go read a summary of sorts that explains it better, and see how close I was to what was being said.

  • @melindaaimeeroth5580
    @melindaaimeeroth5580 9 месяцев назад +35

    My father who taught English literature and speech until he was 91 told me that when a person approaches the ancient literature, he or she should read about eight explanations and one valid explanation, he said, was "The Cliff Notes," and another he said was a graphic novel of the piece of literature. I did this during the pandemic and read eight explanations from his shelf of "Ulysses," by James Joyce. I got through it. I also would read aloud at night ten pages and then read three books of explanations ten pages each.

    • @BrainFreezeWave
      @BrainFreezeWave 24 дня назад +3

      Can you elaborate a bit on this, please? What do you mean by 'eight explanations and one valid explanation'? You mean books about books?

    • @melindaaimeeroth5580
      @melindaaimeeroth5580 24 дня назад +2

      @@BrainFreezeWave I have read 1)"The Cliff Notes," 2) "Ulysses on the Liffey," by Ellman, 3)"Introducing Joyce, " by David Norris, (Graphic Organizer
      4)"The New Bloomsday Book," by Harry Blamires, 5)"A Reader's Guide to James Joyce," by Tindall, 6)"Ulysses Annotated," by Gifford, 7)"Notes for Joyce," by Don Gifford
      Dear Brain Freeze, During the plague while I had moved in with my mother in a small town of Allentown, Pa., she is now 96, I went to my deceased father's bookshelf. He had always told me that one has to read explanations for an ancient or complicated text, so at night, I read 10 pages per four explanation books, and then I read out loud ten pages of "Ulysses." I also read small increments of the "Cliff Notes," before I approached "Ulyssess." I place a paper clip on the page of each book where I have left off.
      I will not be reading "Finnegan's Wake." This was enough.

    • @BrainFreezeWave
      @BrainFreezeWave 24 дня назад +1

      ​@melindaaimeeroth5580 thank you for explaining!

  • @bienvenidoperez3427
    @bienvenidoperez3427 Год назад +13

    Never actually read classic books as a kid. It's not like it wasn't presented to me. It's just that I wasn't interested as a child. Now as a 33-year-old man have been turning to the classics. What a journey! Almost done with the count of Monte Cristo. I could do bicep curls with that book!

    • @connorclarke5463
      @connorclarke5463 День назад

      That's my favorite book! I enjoyed Dumas's other classic, the three musketeers, also

  • @resul8777
    @resul8777 Год назад +8

    Love this channel!

  • @circrna
    @circrna 2 месяца назад +4

    I like the comment on editions. I know Penguin and Oxford but did not hear about others.

  • @MP-ye6tv
    @MP-ye6tv Год назад +1

    You are so generous in sharing your knowledge, experience and insights, it’s deeply appreciated ❤️

  • @andrewchristian7004
    @andrewchristian7004 17 дней назад +1

    My first classic after high school was The Picture Of Dorian Gray. I remember being so gripped by Oscar Wilds after drudging through some of the existentialist works in school. The momentum after coming off a book you loved is great advice!

  • @tomdixon7358
    @tomdixon7358 Год назад +4

    Thank you for making this video.

  • @TGoodfaith
    @TGoodfaith Год назад +1

    I am auditing a class at Our Lady Seat of Wisdom College in Barry's Bay, Ontario. I decided to take a class called, Restoration and 18th Century Satire. Very enjoyable and though I won't do the research paper or tests, I did do the satire poetry assignment and that was fun!
    We are just starting to read Cecilia by Frances Burney. My professor has had us read books and authors that influenced Jane Austen. Next September I am taking the Jane Austen class!

  • @DavideMazzetti
    @DavideMazzetti 9 месяцев назад +1

    I agree with you about the Oxford World Classics - the introductions and notes are really good and the bindings, at least for their Shakespeare series, have sewn bindings, so they're really durable.

  • @RiaMankee-Sookram-lp9fx
    @RiaMankee-Sookram-lp9fx Год назад +2

    Yes! Interested in philosophy- but it can be overwhelming. Would love a checklist and recommended reading list please

  • @NovaSphera-c7g
    @NovaSphera-c7g 16 дней назад +1

    Thanks for the step-by-step guidance, super helpful.

  • @tahlia__nerds_out
    @tahlia__nerds_out Месяц назад +1

    I love the classics I’ve read, but I would love a recommendation list. It could be a cool way to discover classics I might have otherwise missed!

  • @Erikk_0
    @Erikk_0 Год назад +1

    Nice, right on time, I was considering asking.

  • @linushallgren4156
    @linushallgren4156 8 дней назад +1

    The Great Gatsby is a great place to start. It is short and on the surface simple, language is a bit tricky at times, I guess, but don't place too much weight on that initially. What makes it good is the literally endless amounds of discussion you can read online or listen to. It really helps getting into these books to know how they are analyzed and perceived. It's what makes them classics, that they survive endless scrutiny and spark infinite interesting discussions.

  • @Theomite
    @Theomite 28 дней назад +1

    I'm a film geek. Younger people would ask me what movies to watch and I'd advise. I found by accident that I could adapt my principles to get caught up on my literature acculturation. The short version of what I did is I built a list of names & bibliographies and then I broke them into groups: Antiquity, Dark Age, Middle Age, Renaissance, etc. Then I arranged the selected books chronologically by release. Then I would find the most accurate translation with the most annotations. THIS WAY...I can read the History of Literature organically and see how the medium changed over time...which is what I taught budding film nerds to do.
    Penguin, Oxford, Norton AND Wikipedia were all very helpful in the long version of what I did. Picked up a lot of notes and tidbits that helped me shape my strategy. It took some doing but the used bookstore & college libraries are your friends and then after I built a plan and schedule I could get started.

  • @NoxVita
    @NoxVita 16 дней назад

    I’m so glad I found this, it was exactly what I was looking for.

  • @anthonyholroyd5359
    @anthonyholroyd5359 6 месяцев назад +3

    As a keen mountain climber and reader? There's a concept in the former called 'type 2 fun'. The fun that doesn't feel fun at the time.
    It took me about 6 years and four attempts to get through Ullyses, for example. I ended up having to read it with a guide to each chapter open whilst I read that chapter. That novel made me feel so small and so ignorant at times. But I got through it, and more so I found myself loving those moments where everything started clicking into place. I love the novel now, but only because I spent months putting in the work.
    That said, there are other classics that I found deeply engaging and readable from the get go. Most Kafka, Crime & Punishment and As I lay Dying spring immediately to mind.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  6 месяцев назад

      @@anthonyholroyd5359 Thanks for sharing. Apt comparison!

  • @darrengagliardi1540
    @darrengagliardi1540 10 месяцев назад +3

    I would love to see a list of recommendations.

  • @joelvick3243
    @joelvick3243 7 месяцев назад +2

    Very helpful and motivating. Thank you

  • @claudiawarstat8319
    @claudiawarstat8319 2 месяца назад +1

    Wow, this is what I will tell my students whenever they complain about school. Thank you!

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  2 месяца назад

      @@claudiawarstat8319 Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks!

  • @LoisThiessen
    @LoisThiessen Месяц назад

    I love reading - and I'm not restricted to the classics. I enjoy history, philosophy, science and, of course, literature. And, as you noted, I will never live long enough to read everything that interests me. I appreciate the encouragement you provide on this video.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  Месяц назад

      @@LoisThiessen Thanks, Lois! Glad you enjoyed it! Truly there are more great books than there are days left to read them.

  • @MathWithHeather
    @MathWithHeather 9 месяцев назад +1

    Sooo happy I’ve found your channel! Fabulous video!

  • @ParcoLAU-cm5jg
    @ParcoLAU-cm5jg Месяц назад +1

    thank you for your advice!

  • @MidnightHunter-u3q
    @MidnightHunter-u3q 16 дней назад

    Your content never fails to impress, great job as always.

  • @RyanLion77
    @RyanLion77 8 дней назад

    Yes for a recommendation list!

  • @catherinemelnyk
    @catherinemelnyk 7 месяцев назад +3

    What I'm looking to start, or perhaps the term is, revive an intellectual discussion group, much like Oxford profs like C.S. Lewis attended. Maybe it sounds like "an old boys club" in stuffy rooms with heavy drapes and overstuffed chairs, but that's EXACTY what I want to recreate! I long to discuss poets and prose authors amidst a Victorian environment. To me, ambiance is everything!

    • @SerWhiskeyfeet
      @SerWhiskeyfeet 6 месяцев назад +1

      Adam Walker Close Reading Poetry is a great channel here on yt. It’s virtual so no ambience but you can create your own while you listen. Benjamin McAvoy is great for novels

    • @SimplyBeautiful516
      @SimplyBeautiful516 3 месяца назад

      This idea sounds fascinating!

  • @joycejarrard6958
    @joycejarrard6958 Месяц назад +3

    I am 70 years old. I wish I had the list my English teacher gave us in high school. I was a good reader, but I was very immature. I worked harder for a B in literature than I worked for an A in my other classes. I managed to get a business degree without taking any literature. I was that afraid of it. I am still ashamed of my ignorance. I am slowly trying to read the classics. Some of it is so depressing. For example, I detested The Grapes of Wrath in high school. I am still hoping to find a good path here.

  • @harrietparnell6318
    @harrietparnell6318 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for making this channel! I’ve been looking for something exactly like this!!

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching! I’m glad you found it worthwhile.

  • @sanchitaway
    @sanchitaway 10 дней назад

    I too enjoy reading classics. They help a lot in improving the language.

  • @rebeccavaughn8897
    @rebeccavaughn8897 4 месяца назад

    I think lists of like books is helpful. I really enjoyed Shakespeare’s comedies, so knowing which ones were in that list helped.

  • @MikeFuller-d4d
    @MikeFuller-d4d Месяц назад

    I am currently reading tiny sections of the classical pianist
    Stephen Hough's book 'Rough Ideas'.
    I admire anyone who can read complete novels!

  • @viniciusbilheri
    @viniciusbilheri 9 месяцев назад +1

    I would love to have a class with you professor.

  • @finalascent
    @finalascent 27 дней назад

    1:38 - Possible corollary - it's OK to at least read critiques and summaries, so that at the a minimum, one gets familiar with the author(s), plot, characters, etc.

  • @elfflame
    @elfflame 2 месяца назад

    I have read a lot of classics over the years, mostly through high school and college classes, but I'm struggling to find out what I want to read next, so I have been trying to find ways to find more books I would actually enjoy. I'd love to see your list of Classics to check out.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  2 месяца назад

      Check out the pinned comment for a link. I just updated it.

    • @elfflame
      @elfflame 2 месяца назад

      @@GreatBooksProf Thank you! :)

  • @surlespasdondine
    @surlespasdondine 6 дней назад

    As someone reading in different languages, I recommend everyone looking into classic literature from other countries as well, not just English-language books. Proust, Rilke, Ibsen, Calvino to just name a few.

  • @AlexHernandez-u5i
    @AlexHernandez-u5i 16 дней назад

    Great Books Prof, I remember in High School, having to read The Great Gatsby, and I pretty much hated that book. I gave it a 1 star review. I remember reading Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare and not being real impressed with that either. I gave that a 2 star review. Really the only assigned book in High School that I read that I actually enjoyed was And Then There Were None.

  • @drewhunkins7192
    @drewhunkins7192 16 дней назад

    The "Classics" I recommend, and I define "classics" pretty broadly: Catcher in the Rye, In Cold Blood, Old Man and the Sea, For Whom the Bell Tolls, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Portrait of a Lady, Age of Innocence, Lolita, All the King's Men, Picture of Dorian Gray, Confessions of Nat Turner, Gone with the Wind, Great Gatsby, On the Road, Tropic of Cancer, Long Day's Journey into Night, Pride and Prejudice, Tobacco Road, Crime and Punishment.
    I didn't much care for Moby Dick. I've yet to read War and Peace, but I plan to within the next couple of years. I've yet to read "Ulysses" and I'm unsure if I ever will.

    • @mimicrybypravesh
      @mimicrybypravesh 13 дней назад

      You should read "War and Peace". It's the best!!

    • @drewhunkins7192
      @drewhunkins7192 12 дней назад +1

      @@mimicrybypravesh I plan to start and finish it by the end of 2026.

  • @Rosie-n8m
    @Rosie-n8m 2 месяца назад

    I am so glad I found your video. Where can I find a real professional analysis of "The turning of the screw"? I started reading classics this year and read this book, but I would really like a deep dive in it.

  • @bethjames8212
    @bethjames8212 Год назад +1

    Hi Dr Moore, thanks so much for the video. Great tip about googling the course syllabi! Just wondering if you've done a video on Frankenstein that I might have missed? Or can I request one? :)

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  Год назад +4

      Hi Beth, Glad you liked it! I haven’t done one on Frankenstein yet, but I should. Thanks for the suggestion!

    • @bethjames8212
      @bethjames8212 Год назад +1

      @@GreatBooksProf That would be great, thank you!

  • @gradinaorganicatransilvania
    @gradinaorganicatransilvania 6 месяцев назад

    When I was 13 years old I have read Miserabilii by Victor Hugo for the first time.From that on, I felt in love with classics and read almost all of them during highschool and university. It’s all about that first book you read. :)

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  6 месяцев назад

      @@gradinaorganicatransilvania I agree! For me it was probably Lord of the Flies and The Chronicles of Narnia!

  • @joey12344715
    @joey12344715 16 дней назад

    Are there any podcasts that read the classics with explanations and notes after chapters and such?

  • @VeritatisQ
    @VeritatisQ 27 дней назад

    Hey Professor Moore, I just looked at your reading list. To be honest, I don't know more than half of the titles. Could you make a video just _very_ briefly extolling the benefits of each of the books on your list?

  • @jchiappardi891
    @jchiappardi891 Месяц назад

    Wonderful !!!!!! Thank you!!!

  • @kernel1kadafi
    @kernel1kadafi Год назад +3

    Any help for me!
    I need to hand in dissertation on neoliberalism and its social harms it causes

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  Год назад

      Have you read Achille Mbembe? I made a video about his book Necropolitics. Might be relevant: ruclips.net/video/pX_Ql-8HIhI/видео.html

    • @ryanand154
      @ryanand154 Год назад

      @@GreatBooksProf You dropped the ball on Adorno.

  • @SirGandalfTheWise
    @SirGandalfTheWise Год назад

    Hey Prof! Love your vlog. You motivate me to read more classic literature. :)
    Wanted to know: What is the version of 'The Aeneid' on the thumbnail of this video? I'm looking for a good translation to read. Any recommendations welcome, too.

  • @esthermeabh3771
    @esthermeabh3771 4 месяца назад +1

    Where is the whole list of the classic books? I want to be able to read them all. Currently on 1984 by George Orwell.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  4 месяца назад

      You can find a free reading list -- the same one I give to my freshmen students -- on my Patreon page.

    • @esthermeabh3771
      @esthermeabh3771 3 месяца назад

      Thank you so much!

  • @AJ-iq9ng
    @AJ-iq9ng Месяц назад

    Funny that you mentioned Joyce. I just tried (an failed to enjoy) Ulysses.

  • @allenwoodall1162
    @allenwoodall1162 Месяц назад

    Yes make a recommended reading list on a 101 level please!

  • @catherinehowell4044
    @catherinehowell4044 4 месяца назад

    Great video!

  • @MP-ye6tv
    @MP-ye6tv Год назад

    I grew up surrounded by and enjoying many classics because that is what my parents read. However I would your advice on where to start with modern literature, would be grateful for your guidance, can you recommend a site or do you have a list to hand? Thank you 🙏

  • @michaelasun7593
    @michaelasun7593 Месяц назад +2

    A great channel.

  • @Maryjane022
    @Maryjane022 3 месяца назад

    This is amazing 😊

  • @gregorymckinney8600
    @gregorymckinney8600 11 месяцев назад +4

    Start with Don Quixote, considered by readers and scholars to be the greatest novel ever written.

    • @ericapedroza7067
      @ericapedroza7067 2 месяца назад +1

      I would NOT start with Don Quixote 😂

    • @JohnCollins-th8hm
      @JohnCollins-th8hm 2 месяца назад +1

      Not a bad theory, but it’s kind of all downhill from there. I got lucky. Ive read a ton my whole life, but never read Quixote until 3 years ago. Ive read it 3 times since, and it not only gets better AND better, BUT it is my favorite book, and Im actually happy I didnt read it until I was 56.

  • @josephr.gainey2079
    @josephr.gainey2079 26 дней назад +1

    8:57. This is so true!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @thebluesmurfdude
    @thebluesmurfdude Месяц назад +1

    I like the way you say (paraphrasing) “If you don’t understand everything, that’s fine. Welcome to the club. Neither do we.”
    It reminds me of a quote my chess teacher told me when I was trying out for the Army’s chess team, and I was getting frustrated at my loses.
    He said “The chess master has lost more games than the student has ever played.”
    Really helped me put into context the lifelong struggle of pursuing a more deeper understanding.

  • @lalibobo4230
    @lalibobo4230 4 месяца назад

    I just finished Dorian Grey but seriously chapter 11 was extensively hard and as a person whose English is a second language but real good I loved the book eventhough i whish I could have understood more from this chapter....

  • @michellesiderio1010
    @michellesiderio1010 3 месяца назад +1

    I was FORCED to read
    CHANSON DE Roland in college French. Really struggled. Yet,
    I loved THE ODYSSEY
    I LOVE Japanese lit….
    OUT about bento box
    Packagers that end up cutting up bodies for Yakuza was really great…..5 women….
    Sounds dumb but very intricate. No gore…. Believe it or not!!!!!!

  • @Jcarp7607
    @Jcarp7607 Год назад

    Yes, please!😊

  • @johncrwarner
    @johncrwarner День назад

    BTW re: Shakespeare
    My parents loved going to the theatre
    and I went to my first Shakespeare
    aged 8/9 and saw The Merchant of Venice
    in Stratford upon Avon with Judi Dench as Portia
    and I always enjoyed Shakespeare on stage
    in the classroom it was boring as hell
    and we had to read around the class
    Much Ado About Nothing - not so much as a titter
    until I laughed at a bad pun
    "as civil as an orange"
    I do believe Shakespeare has to be seen
    not just dissected like a frog in biology.

  • @cassiefriedman1446
    @cassiefriedman1446 2 месяца назад +1

    When it comes to classic literature, I love Alice in Wonderland and Jane Eyre

  • @edgartokman4898
    @edgartokman4898 2 месяца назад

    When you re-read a classic you do not see in the book more than you did before. You see more in you than there was before."
    -Clifton Fadiman

  • @andrewcrowder4958
    @andrewcrowder4958 Месяц назад

    Cool title! APGB.

  • @spartanmod3
    @spartanmod3 4 месяца назад

    The problem for me is: where do I start? There is so many great books, but so little time to read them for the average person.

    • @circrna
      @circrna 2 месяца назад

      Start with French or Russian literature.

    • @surlespasdondine
      @surlespasdondine 6 дней назад

      I started as a teenager by following my interest. My starting point was Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters.

  • @campguy
    @campguy Месяц назад

    Tom Sawyer & Huck Finn....YES, .....Moby Dick- NO, ......Robinson Crusoe-YES......Treasure Island- YES........the Heart is a Lonely Hunter, YES........Blood Meridian, YES

  • @purplesprigs
    @purplesprigs 8 дней назад

    Far too much "classic literature" is like eating the worm at the bottom the tequila bottle - everyone hates it, but you're cool if you do it. I recommend P.G Wodehouse, Arthur Conan Doyle, Agatha Christie, Jules Verne, Rafael Sabatini, and H.G. Wells as good starting points - authors who write in a style that can be understood.

    • @surlespasdondine
      @surlespasdondine 6 дней назад

      Classic literature can absolutely be understood, make you laugh and move you.

  • @mattinnj979
    @mattinnj979 21 день назад

    I’m an educated man, but a man. Books by Steinbeck or Camus or Joyce suck. There’s no way a man is going to work all day and want to read Camus
    Dracula was great. The Invisible Man. Count of Monte Cristo. HG Wells, Jules Verne….
    Build up your reading muscles and then tackle an odyssey or Iliad.
    I keep searching a list like “Reading for Bros” where books by Robert E Howard (Conan) are sprinkled in with Xenophon or Caesar’s books on the Gallic war and the Civil War. Toss in a Lord of the Rings
    Guys don’t want to read Wuthering Heights
    We don’t
    The LeCarre books is another good read and the. Toss in a more “intellectual” book
    Anything but TV or video games
    Walk before running

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  21 день назад +2

      I’m a guy and I want to read Wuthering Heights.

  • @SaurianStudios1207
    @SaurianStudios1207 22 дня назад

    "Reading dense philosophical works or classical literature can be combersome at first"
    As someone who loves abstract thinking in philosophy, literature, metaphysics, art, or science, I don't see it as challenging, except for trying to be consistent in reading for at least 30-60 mins a day.

  • @edwardakhparian3014
    @edwardakhparian3014 2 месяца назад

    Facile. I don’t think there is really a helpful answer to this question. What he says here is already something a novice intuitively knows to do.
    Academia in the humanities gets more stupid and vacuous every year.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  2 месяца назад

      @@edwardakhparian3014 Hey, thanks for watching. I hope you have a great day! 👋

    • @urzathehappy72
      @urzathehappy72 Месяц назад

      So make ur own video then on this topic if ur so smrt then

  • @jeffreywilliams3646
    @jeffreywilliams3646 Месяц назад

    Wuthering Heights! You just triggered my PTSD. Worst book I ever read. Utter rubbish.

    • @GreatBooksProf
      @GreatBooksProf  Месяц назад

      @@jeffreywilliams3646 It has its detractors! 🤣

  • @rockyfortune3537
    @rockyfortune3537 Месяц назад

    Poetry blows😅

  • @ksneidndkdoknnw
    @ksneidndkdoknnw Месяц назад

    came for the hottie, stayed for the books (and hottie)

  • @VeritatisQ
    @VeritatisQ 27 дней назад

    1:31 this is kind of bittersweet to hear 🥲