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Diplomat 06-07-2005 10:44 PM

Summer Reading
 
All right,

Anyone reading anything interesting this summer? Usually I grab a bunch of things around this time and try to have them all read by September 1st. I usually shoot for 8-10 books over the summer, but this year my list is pretty short:

1. Fathers and Sons by Turgenev
2. The Grifters by Thompson
3. East of Eden by Steinbeck
4. Against the Gods by Bernstein

That's it. Anyone reading anything interesting?

-Diplomat

tbach24 06-07-2005 10:46 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
(insert some classic American literature I havne't decided yet [suggestions?])
Harry Potter 6
Founding Fathers

Reef 06-07-2005 11:12 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
Frankenstein
A Child called It
anything by Isaac Asimov

Ulysses 06-07-2005 11:22 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
My last two:

Life of Pi by Yann Martel
Hollywood Animal by Joe Eszterhas

My next two:

Stranger Than Fiction by Chuck Palahniuk
Ugly Americans by Ben Mezrich

ClaytonN 06-07-2005 11:23 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
Motorcycle Diaries

RacersEdge 06-07-2005 11:25 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
Blink (Gladwell) is a good nonfic. Maybe applies to poker.

tbach24 06-07-2005 11:26 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
If I get done with those I'd like to read "Mysterious Incidents of a Dog" or w/e it's called and "Tipping Point"

jakethebake 06-07-2005 11:39 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
One day I'm going to get through The University of Texas List of Unrequired Reading. I start again every couple of years, and I'm about halfway through at this point. This thread's timing was very good. I'm currently deciding what to read from it this summer.

[ QUOTE ]
FRESHMAN
Unrequired Reading Substitutions
[Philosophy and other topics]
The Problems of Philosophy - B. Russell
The Worldly Philosophers - R. Heilbroner
The Religions of Man - H. Smith
The Republic - Plato
A History of Western Philosophy - B. Russell
The Social Contract - J.J. Rousseau

[Science]
The Double Helix - J. Watson
Awakenings - O. Sacks
The Lives of a Cell - L. Thomas
The Discoverers - D. Boorstin
The Panda's Thumb - S. Gould
King Solomon's Ring - K. Lorenz

[Literature]
The Odyssey - Homer (T.E. Lawrence translation)
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain
The Sun Also Rises - E. Hemingway
Antigone/Oedipus Rex - Sophocles
Pride and Prejudice - J. Austen
Heart of Darkness - J. Conrad

[History]
The Historian's Craft - M. Bloch
The American Political Tradition - R. Hofstadter
Young Man Luther - E. Erikson
Samuel Johnson - J. Wain
The Making of the Middle Ages - R. Southern
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin - B. Franklin

SOPHOMORE
[Philosophy and other topics]
The Nicomachean Ethics - Aristotle
Democracy in America - A. de Tocqueville
Genesis, Exodus, Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Isaiah, & Amos - Old Testament
Luke, John, Acts, Galatians, & Ephesians - New Testament The Prince - N. Machiavelli
Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed - P. Hallie
The Theory of Social and Economic Organization - M. Weber

[Science]
Microbe Hunters - P. De Kruif
Science and the Modern World - A.N. Whitehead
The First Three Minutes - S. Weinberg
The Creative Explosion - J. Pfeiffer
Knowledge and Wonder - V. Weisskopf
Einstein - J. Bernstein

[Literature]
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass - L. Carroll
Richard II - W. Shakespeare
Moby Dick - H. Melville
Paradise Lost - J. Milton
Tom Jones - H. Fielding
Brideshead Revisited - E. Waugh

[History]
The Defeat of the Spanish Armada - G. Mattingly
This Hallowed Ground - B. Catton
Melbourne - D. Cecil
The Education of Henry Adams - H. Adams
History of the Conquest of Mexico - W. Prescott
Origins of the New South - C. Vann Woodward

JUNIOR
[Philosophy and other topics]
Utilitarianism/On Liberty - J. S. Mill
Purposes of Art, Second Edition - A. Elsen
The Varieties of Religious Experience - W. James Pragmatism - W. James
Meaning in Western Architecture - C. Norberg-Schulz
Witness - W. Chambers

[Science]
A Mathematician's Apology - G. Hardy
The Rise of Scientific Philosophy - H. Reichenbach
The Cosmic Code - H. Pagels
On Human Nature - E. O. Wilson
The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution - C.P. Snow
Scientific Knowledge and its Social Problems - J. Ravetz

[Literature]
Candide - F. Voltaire
Hamlet - W. Shakespeare
The Norton Anthology of Poetry, Third Edition/Don Quixote - M. Cervantes
Hard Times - C. Dickens
To the Lighthouse - V. Woolf

[History]
The White Nile - A. Moorehead
The Crisis of the Old Order - A. Schlesinger
Hitler: A Study in Tyranny - A. Bullock
Huey Long - T.H. Williams
The Old Regime and the French Revolution - A. de Tocqueville
The Raven - M. James

SENIOR
[Philosophy and other topics]
Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals - I. Kant
The Federalist - Hamilton, Madison, & Jay
Ed. B.F. Wright
The Screwtape Letters - C.S. Lewis
The Road to Serfdom - F. Hayek
The Road to Wigan Pier - G. Orwell
A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy - K. Marx

[Science]
Science: Good, Bad, and Bogus - M. Gardner
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions - T. Kuhn
Mankind Evolving - T. Dobzhansky
The Growth of Biological Thought - E. Mayr
Chance and Necessity - J. Monod
The Nature of Light and Color in the Open Air - M. Minnaert

[Literature]
A Midsummer Night's Dream - W. Shakespeare
The Brothers Karamazov - F.M. Dostoyevsky
Bread and Wine - I. Silone
War and Peace - L.N. Tolstoy
Light in August - W. Faulkner
The Magic Mountain - T. Mann

[History]
Russia and the West Under Lenin and Stalin - G. Kennan
Tumultuous Years - R. Donovan
Stillwell and the American Experience in China - B. Tuchman Stalin as Revolutionary - R. Tucker
The Rebel - A. Camus
Autobiography of Malcolm X - M. Little

[/ QUOTE ]

shadow29 06-07-2005 11:45 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
Oh, Lost by Thomas Wolfe (also known as Look Homeward, Angel. http://tinyurl.com/b9psr) I couldn't find the Oh, Lost version (it's updated and expanded from author's notes, etc)

Anything by Faulkner, really.

Sanctuary (http://tinyurl.com/c2acw) is probably the most accessible (rmarrotti, feel free to comment).

The Sound and the Fury (http://tinyurl.com/a2lu5) is the best known, and got me hooked on Faulkner. If you can get through the first section (I recommend reading it thrice, twice at the beginning and once when you're done with the book) you can get through most anything in literature.

edit- Wolfe + TSATF should take the summer. Enjoy [img]/images/graemlins/grin.gif[/img]

StevieG 06-07-2005 11:46 PM

Re: Summer Reading
 
I just read "The Devil In The White City" by Erik Larson and found it a great read. Stylized account of true events around the Chicago World's fair, with extensive citations.

I also recently read "Quicksilver" by Neal Stephenson. Dense, but enjoyable if you can wade through all the politics and name droppig of the first portion.

If you have not read the Harry Potter stories, now is a fine time, with book 6 due out in July. They make for fast reading, even the later, larger volumes.

I'll second the "Blink" nomination, too.


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