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23 Books You Didn't Read In High School But Actually Should
BuzzFeed ^ | July 5, 2013 | Spencer Althouse

Posted on 05/30/2014 12:34:14 PM PDT by EveningStar

You probably SparkNoted these books before, but now's your chance to read them.

(Excerpt) Read more at buzzfeed.com ...


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Education
KEYWORDS: books; literature
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To: napscoordinator; KGeorge
I can only guess at the public schools. Mine go to Catholic School thankfully.

I went to Catholic school in the 70s. My daughter is in public school and her reading lists are not so different that what mine were back then, including many on this list.

81 posted on 05/30/2014 1:37:24 PM PDT by Gabz (Democrats for Voldemort.)
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To: gigster

My parents gave it to me to read when I was 14, and it began the development of that process for me-as well as my understanding of why my parents were politically the way they were...

I’ve read it several times since then, and now I’m working on going galt to the max ...


82 posted on 05/30/2014 1:37:54 PM PDT by Texan5 ("You've got to saddle up your boys, you've got to draw a hard line"...)
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To: EveningStar

I wouldn’t want to waste so much time reading a bunch of novels; I prefer reading about real people.


83 posted on 05/30/2014 1:42:57 PM PDT by eclecticEel ("The petty man forsakes what lies within his power and longs for what lies with Heaven." - Xunzi)
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To: econjack
Beowulf....the only thing I remember is also in the song Hotel California.

“They stab it with their steely knives but they just can't kill the beast.”

I do remember things from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar (”The evil that men do lives after them - The good are oft interred with their bones”) and Macbeth. From Macbeth, the witches tell him early on “No man of woman born shall harm Macbeth” but at the end as he lay mortally wounded Macduff informs him “I was from my mother's womb untimely ripp’d” meaning he was brought into the world by Cesarean, not “born.”

84 posted on 05/30/2014 1:43:00 PM PDT by fredhead (Join the Navy and see the world.....77% of which is covered in water.)
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To: Blood of Tyrants
Can't vouch for Kesey or Vonnegut or Lee or Stowe. Most of the rest seem worth reading (The Bell Jar, though? And is As I Lay Dying really the best Faulkner for high schoolers?). And most high school or college grads probably have read a fair chunk of them by the time they graduate.

A lot of the lines they give the books are pretty insipid, though. When books become assimilated into the culture they may not really make people "question" much of anything. Catch-22 is hardly likely to make anybody feel good about US politics. Are you really going to be jealous of George and Lenny's friendship in Of Mice and Men? Is reading Kafka really going to make you change how you treat people?

85 posted on 05/30/2014 1:44:49 PM PDT by x
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To: eclecticEel

I read history and biography. Only novels I read are Louis L’Amour westerns. I love westerns.


86 posted on 05/30/2014 1:45:22 PM PDT by fredhead (Join the Navy and see the world.....77% of which is covered in water.)
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To: strider44
I would add some classic Sci Fi.

Clarke's Childhoods End is a great book.

87 posted on 05/30/2014 1:45:23 PM PDT by FatherofFive (Islam is evil and must be eradicated)
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To: FatherofFive

100% with you! Me too..... :(


88 posted on 05/30/2014 1:54:31 PM PDT by clee1 (We use 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 2 to pull a trigger. I'm lazy and I'm tired of smiling.)
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To: SeaHawkFan

Also on the list should be:

The Three Musketeers and The Man in the Iron Mask by Dumas
The House of the seven gables—Hawthorn.
Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Tom Sawyer—Mark Twain
30 Seconds over Tokyo
The Longest Day.


89 posted on 05/30/2014 2:14:03 PM PDT by Forward the Light Brigade (Into the Jaws of H*ll)
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To: eclecticEel

I too. Real events.

However, some of those required books were OK, some not, many overrated.

But I have read some fiction myself, including Gone with the Wind and lighter “child” classics such as Little Women and Black Beauty. Great reads!


90 posted on 05/30/2014 2:18:18 PM PDT by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue./Technological progress cannot be legislated.)
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To: EveningStar

Good reading list.


91 posted on 05/30/2014 2:23:18 PM PDT by TBP (Obama lies, Granny dies.)
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To: Blood of Tyrants
"Slaughterhouse-Five" - the only Vonnegut I haven't read
(odd, being that it's his most famous)
92 posted on 05/30/2014 2:28:07 PM PDT by Psalm 73 ("Gentlemen, you can't fight in here - this is the War Room".)
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To: Resettozero
"Steinbeck book stupid!?"

I know, huh?
A most excellent story-teller.
Bloody socialist/Marxist - but a great read.

93 posted on 05/30/2014 2:32:20 PM PDT by Psalm 73 ("Gentlemen, you can't fight in here - this is the War Room".)
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To: napscoordinator

VERY thankfully, I imagine. DH went to Catholic school. Something about it must have taught him to really be a whiz at studying. It amazes me. I have to *work* at learning things. It’s like he just reads & it’s in there.

Public school must really vary a lot by school. He has been substitute teaching (& just passed his EC6 to teach/ also passed ESL- which you have to have to get a job on an alternative certificate)...anyway, he is in the district where he went to high school & I attended all 12 years. I’ve been impressed. So far, he hasn’t seen the usual indoctrination stuff & they do have a moment of silence & are required to stand up for it. Even the schools that pay more per hour (because of the make up of the students, I guess) have not been bad. Mho is that parenting plays a huge role in how kids do. He’s had 1 real problem child. It was a little second grade girl in an affluent school & she was White. Even the “alternative school” has impressed him.
(I’m in Texas, so no Common Core & depending on where they are, it’s still a pretty traditional place)
He would love to teach at his parish school. (I am Church of Christ, so that’s why I say “his”. I enjoy it, too, though)


94 posted on 05/30/2014 2:40:20 PM PDT by KGeorge (Till we're together again, Gypsy girl. May 28, 1998- June 3, 2013)
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To: EveningStar

The Great Gatsby, To Kill A Mockingbird, 1984, Slaughter House Five, Frankenstein, Animal Farm and Metamorphosis are great books and should be read by all intelligent and informed adults.

The rest range from ok to overrated. Read them if they interest you but there are better books out there.

I always thought Catcher in the Rye was very overrated. I wonder if it is just a coincidence that several troubled young men who went on to kill people read the book and were influenced by it.

Mark David Chapman, John Hinckley, Sirhan Sirhan and others were said to have read it several times and been heavily influenced by it.


95 posted on 05/30/2014 2:41:18 PM PDT by detective
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To: Blood of Tyrants
I read all of them with a few exceptions most of them Sucked starting with #1. A pass for Steinbeck, and Orwell.
96 posted on 05/30/2014 2:41:36 PM PDT by Little Bill (EVICT Queen Jean)
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To: Psalm 73
Bloody socialist/Marxist - but a great read.

No. No. NO! That's like saying all Democrats of that era were socialist/Marxists. Simply not the way it was. Are all current Republicans conservatives? No. Were there once Democrats who needed unionization and/or work help but were not socialist/Marxist. Yes. A lot. And they voted for Reagan.
97 posted on 05/30/2014 2:41:51 PM PDT by Resettozero
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To: mountainlion
Joseph Heller, the author of "Catch-22", got his inspiration from an even older book. "The Good Soldier Švejk" ('Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka za světové války', literally 'The Fateful Adventures of the Good Soldier Švejk During the World War') was written by Jaroslav Hašek, a Czech author, satirist, anarchist and practical joker extraordinaire. You can find it in English translations - the best one done by Zdeněk Sadloň and Emmit Joyce, in three volumes. Joseph Heller said that if he'd never read "Švejk", he never would have written "Catch-22". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Good_Soldier_%C5%A0vejk
98 posted on 05/30/2014 2:42:00 PM PDT by AnAmericanAbroad (It's all bread and circuses for the future prey of the Morlocks.)
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To: EveningStar

Instead of these tired examples of pop books, here is a more challenging list:

1) The Long Ships, by Frans G. Bengtsson (1943). An adventure of the Viking Era, set in the late 10th Century. It has been translated into 23 languages.

2) Selections from Les Misérables (1862). Called the greatest novel ever written, it takes readers to emotional lows and highs far beyond what most people could experience.

3) I, Claudius, by Robert Graves (1934).

4) Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury (1953).

5) One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1962).

6) The Complete Short Stories of Mark Twain.

7) The Happy Return (Beat to Quarters in the US), the first of the Horatio Hornblower novels by C.S. Forester (1937).

8) The Federalist Papers.

9) The Red Badge of Courage, by Stephen Crane (1895).

10) The Green Berets, by Robin Moore (1965).


99 posted on 05/30/2014 2:50:21 PM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
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To: Forward the Light Brigade

On one Navy deployment I read all of the Tarzan novels.


100 posted on 05/30/2014 2:59:15 PM PDT by fredhead (Join the Navy and see the world.....77% of which is covered in water.)
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