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Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Mon Nov 27, 2006 11:52 pm
by nihil_Archive
Andrew L. wrote:If you were a college English instructor and could teach one 19th-cent novel and one 20th- or 21st-cent novel, what two novels would you inflict on your semi-literate kiddies?
Your recommendations are appreciated. A short explanation of each choice would be helpful. Also, pretend the original language of each novel must be English: No À la recherche du temps perdu! No Преступление и наказание! No 京華煙雲! English-language novels only. Obscure, popular, or non-canonical choices welcome.
Thanks!
No, thank
you for hurting my brain. I can't decide.
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 12:15 am
by NerblyBear_Archive
burun wrote:
And the kids in my class will cockpunch your kids.
Best post ever. And I don't even know what a cockpunch is.
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 12:24 am
by Christopher J McGarvey_Archive
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 12:32 am
by burun_Archive
Christopher J. McGarvey wrote:The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
I was thinking about that, but I can't decide if I like this book or Twain's short stories better.
Of course, if Andrew asked for short stories, I would have said O. Henry.
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 1:39 am
by wes9_Archive
Charles Dickens, Great Expectations, and George Orwell, Down and Out in Paris and London. Alternately, Hawthorne's The Marble Faun, and Saul Bellow's The Adventures of Augie March. Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel would also be a good choice.
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:12 am
by sparky_Archive
Brett Eugene Ralph wrote:How about Moby-Dick and Invisible Man?
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:41 am
by connor_Archive
Christopher J. McGarvey wrote:The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Hotdamn! My all-time favorite novel (or top 5 at least). I even like the much-debated ending.
Check out the new printing with the George Saunders forward.
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 3:49 am
by Adam CR
Riddley Walker and Oliver Twist.
I think they'd make great parallel reads. Apart from being brilliant novels about children, they cover a huge amount of religious, political, social and linguistic ground.
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 4:04 am
by Earwicker_Archive
I'd go Moby Dick and Catch 22
(or Jude the Obscure and Finnegans Wake if you want to annoy the fuck out of them)
Book advice: if you were a college instructor...
Posted: Tue Nov 28, 2006 4:10 am
by sunlore_Archive
I would choose Thomas Hardy's Jude The Obscure and Paul Auster's The New York Trilogy.
Firstly, both novels reflect the grand traditions of the time: the novel of ideas as with Jude, the more (though, thank Christ, not overly) post-modern approach to text in TNYT. In fact, with these two novels you can go premodern-modern-postmodern, no problemo, which is what kids love. Give 'em something to oversimplify about and impress the parents with.
Secondly, these books both have considerable scope in terms of subject matter. Which means that at the end of the day you won't have to read the same goddamn paper, making the same goddamn point (there's going to be a paper, right?) twenty old times.
Thirdly, these books are in fact readable, which is always substantial where it regards your class actually reading them.
Lastly, they are both very great.
My picks.