“A man ought to read just as inclination leads him.”
So, this is it: tomorrow is the last day of Summer B, 2008. I don’t really know how to feel about it, since my senses have been numbed so thoroughly by all the reading and writing I’ve been doing over the last six weeks, and especially the last three.
Tonight I finished the last of my papers, a review of A Land Remembered, the 1984 historical novel by Patrick Smith which describes Florida through three generations of a family. In a nutshell: the MacIveys arrive in northern Florida just before the Civil War; they struggle to survive in a difficult and unforgiving land; their son does better–as a cattle rancher–when he grows up; his son does better still as a land developer. But by then it’s 1968, and hardly any of the Florida that his grandfather would have known still exists. Along the way all of the various issues of Florida history are woven into the narrative. The purpose of the paper was to explain how, if at all, a historical novel helped expand my understanding of Florida, or how my understanding of Florida history helped me better appreciate the novel.
I did my best to explain all that, but I now have other novels on my mind, since I am already looking ahead to the Fall semester. I’ll be taking Professor McCrea’s Eighteenth Century Novel course, and we’ll have to read:
- Aphra Behn, Oroonoko, The Rover, and Other Works
- Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe
- Samuel Richardson, Clarissa
- Henry Fielding, Joseph Andrews
- Henry Mackenzie, The Man of Feeling
- Horace Walpole, The Castle of Otranto
- Frances Burney, Evelina
- Elizabeth Inchbald, A Simple Story
As I may have written here before, just this semester I read Fanny Burney’s Evelina, so I have a leg up there. Meanwhile, this afternoon I stopped by my favorite independent bookstore–Goering’s on 1st Avenue–and picked up a few of the above titles to get a head start during my two week break before Fall classes begin. As luck would have it, they had A Simple Story, Oroonoko and Robinson Crusoe on sale for half off, so I saved a bundle there. But I couldn’t resist purchasing George Eliot’s Mill on the Floss and Silas Marner; and Henry James’ Turn of the Screw. Irony of ironies: being an English major has reawakened my appreciation for narrative fiction! I have therefore resolved that I will build myself a great library of classic poetry and prose, concentrating primarily on the great pre-twentieth century writers. The good news is that this material can be had cheap.
Already on my “to buy” list are a number Samuel Johnson’s writings. The more I read of Johnson the more I am convinced he was the smartest man who ever lived. He said about Alexander Pope: “New things are made familiar, and familiar things made new”. I’d say the same about Johnson. After all, he wrote “He is no wise man that will quit a certainty for an uncertainty”. As true today as when it was written. So, as I type, en route is Boswell’s Life of Johnson, which I expect to contain endless wonders. James Boswell spent decades following Johnson, documenting his life to prepare for the biography. I don’t know what it would be like to have someone around you day and night, but I don’t think it would be especially enjoyable, and I guess it went both ways for Johnson. Boswell quotes him as saying, “Sir, you have two topics, yourself and me. I am sick of both”. How can you not love this man? I will next purchase as an extensive an edition of his Dictionary as I can find, plus Rasselas and his Lives of the Poets.
I know that in this day and age, when Google is digitizing great literature and placing it online for free, it hardly makes sense to some people to pay good money for books. But I like lying in bed with a book in my hands. It’s much more comfortable than having a laptop on my crotch, which is how I am now seated. And a book is easily portable, and it doesn’t strain my eyes, and I can put a little marker between the pages and pick up right where I left off, and it doesn’t use any electricity. And Project Gutenberg, for all it’s brilliance, doesn’t have the helpful introductions and extensive footnotes that these Penguin Classics and Oxford editions include.
Yes, I am very excited about my new library project.
UPDATE: I found Joseph Andrews at Goering’s this afternoon, so, just three to go and I’ll have my whole reading list.
Dana doesn't do what Dana doesn't want to do.
August 8th, 2008 at 1:38 am
My son (another English major) found much of his required reading in the form of Heritage Press editions on eBay.
These hardcover books are anywhere from 30-60 years old, were printed on high-quality paper, have first-rate bindings & slip-cases, and are frequently less expensive at auction, and on eBay stores than full-sized paperback editions.
Apparently, many were originally purchased merely for the value of their display on a bookshelf, as most of his collection (now in the hundreds) seems to be previously unread - New Old Stock, almost.
It appears that you appreciate a book as an artifact, as well as an intellectual experience - you might want to take a look at what’s available from HP.
There’s nothing like a substantial collection of well-made, long-lived books that have actually been read!
August 8th, 2008 at 5:10 pm
Thanks for letting me know. I’ve had a great deal of luck at my local bi-annual “Friends of the Library” sale, where hundreds of thousands of books are priced to move…and they do. Until now I’ve gone mostly for the travel and art and architecture books, but I’m going to do a lot more shopping for fiction in the future.