Gary Childress
Student for and of life
WARNING: POSSIBLY SPOILERS!!
This is a thread to discuss all things pertaining to great works of world literature, philosophy and science.
So I bought two books last week, both used hardcover and over 600 pages each for a good bit less than $10.00 a piece (compare at 30.00+ each new). Both are in excellent shape. One book is titled: Masterpieces of World Philosophy and the other Masterpieces of World Literature. Both are edited by Frank N. Magill. Between the two books they contain short summaries of probably over 250 great works of literature and philosophy.
Over the years I've read a good bit of stuff of and about great works of philosophy and literature and I have forgotten much of what I read. So I'm thinking these two books might be good refreshers and help me recapture a little of what I once knew plus help me learn new things I did not know before.
I've started off with Masterpieces of World Literature and have read the first two summaries. They are in alpha by title. The first one was Absolom, Absolom! by William Faulkner and the second The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain.
I've seen Absolom, Absolom! god knows how many times in used book stores but never bothered to buy nor read it so that was a new one for me. Huck Finn I've read a couple times in high school and college. Who hasn't? But it was a nice refresher. Coincidentally to recent news, both initial books covered center a great deal around the issue of the American South and Slavery.
According to the summary Absolom, Absolom! carries the theme that slavery was the undoing of the South, a plague that destroyed every soul it touched including the plantation owners. For Huck Finn the book makes big of a recurring theme of the river being a kind of place of safety and serenity compared to society. Every time Huck and Jim land on the banks and encounter society, they encounter all sort of hypocrisy and mayhem until they retreat again to the safety and sanctuary of the river.
So I hope to do more reading but I'm not going to push myself to read on a regular basis, only when I feel like it. Otherwise I tend to get discouraged when I don't meet projections.
Thoughts, comments? Anyone else here familiar with Absolom, Absolom! or Twain's Huck Finn? Also feel free to discuss other "masterpieces" of world literature, philosophy or science.
This is a thread to discuss all things pertaining to great works of world literature, philosophy and science.
So I bought two books last week, both used hardcover and over 600 pages each for a good bit less than $10.00 a piece (compare at 30.00+ each new). Both are in excellent shape. One book is titled: Masterpieces of World Philosophy and the other Masterpieces of World Literature. Both are edited by Frank N. Magill. Between the two books they contain short summaries of probably over 250 great works of literature and philosophy.
Over the years I've read a good bit of stuff of and about great works of philosophy and literature and I have forgotten much of what I read. So I'm thinking these two books might be good refreshers and help me recapture a little of what I once knew plus help me learn new things I did not know before.
I've started off with Masterpieces of World Literature and have read the first two summaries. They are in alpha by title. The first one was Absolom, Absolom! by William Faulkner and the second The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain.
I've seen Absolom, Absolom! god knows how many times in used book stores but never bothered to buy nor read it so that was a new one for me. Huck Finn I've read a couple times in high school and college. Who hasn't? But it was a nice refresher. Coincidentally to recent news, both initial books covered center a great deal around the issue of the American South and Slavery.
According to the summary Absolom, Absolom! carries the theme that slavery was the undoing of the South, a plague that destroyed every soul it touched including the plantation owners. For Huck Finn the book makes big of a recurring theme of the river being a kind of place of safety and serenity compared to society. Every time Huck and Jim land on the banks and encounter society, they encounter all sort of hypocrisy and mayhem until they retreat again to the safety and sanctuary of the river.
So I hope to do more reading but I'm not going to push myself to read on a regular basis, only when I feel like it. Otherwise I tend to get discouraged when I don't meet projections.
Thoughts, comments? Anyone else here familiar with Absolom, Absolom! or Twain's Huck Finn? Also feel free to discuss other "masterpieces" of world literature, philosophy or science.