While I normally try not to get involved with comments on web sites (you know what I mean), Iâd rather get involved with the comments of some web sites than others. I doubt that underneath any Youtube video, for example,  youâd find dozens and dozens of well-considered suggestions for the canon of books every intelligent person should read, as we did here at Open Culture when we put the question to you on Wednesday . In the comments to that post as well as on our Facebook Page, we received a host of responses scattered satisfyingly across the textual map: everything from Michel Foucault to Foucaultâs Pendulum, Gibbonâs History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire to Brysonâs Short History of Nearly Everything, 18th-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant to reptilian conspiracy-envisioning ex-footballer David Icke. The top-ranking volume? Fyodor Dostoyevskyâs Crime and Punishment (available, incidentally, in our free eBook collection : Kindle from Amazon â" Read Online), followed by Herman Melvilleâs Moby-Dick (available there too: iPad/iPhone - Kindle + Other Formats - Read Online). Let none say that Open Culture readers shy away from weighty literature. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8]
Other, shorter novels popularly suggested include Voltaireâs Candide (iPad/iPhone - Kindle + Other Formats - Read Online), Joseph Conradâs Heart of Darkness (iPad/iPhone â" Kindle + Other Formats - Read Online), and George Orwellâs 1984 (Kindle Format - Read Online). We also received a number of votes for books famously pored over for thousands upon thousands of hours by their enthusiasts, such as the Bible, Danteâs Divine Comedy (iPad/iPhone â" Kindle + Other Formats â" Read Online), and Ayn Randâs Atlas Shrugged. (Given the formidable internet presence of Randâs readers, I expected more of an inundation of her titles, but they must not have turned out in force this time.) Such classic and deceptively universal guides to strategy as Sun Tzuâs The Art of War (iPad/iPhone - Kindle + Other Formats â" Read Online) and Niccolò Machiavelliâs The Prince (iPad/iPhone - Kindle + Other Formats - Read Online) also placed well, as did books like Platoâs Republic (iPad/iPhone â" Kindle + Other Formats - Read Online), Henry David Thoreauâs Walden (iPad/iPhone â" Kindle + Other Formats - Read Online), and Hermann Hesseâs Siddartha (iPad/iPhone â" Kindle + Other Formats) â" the ones you probably got assigned once, but that you may not then have understood why you should actually read. [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] [30] [31] [32] [33] [34]
The recommendations fascinate, but so do their justifications. (My personal favorite: âItâs a book about shamanism, although itâs not what you would expect from a socially accepted description of shamanism.â) Jo Stafford calls Crime and Punishment and Moby-Dick, the two big winners, âperfect examples of how great fiction can pose the âbig questionsâ, particularly around what it means to act morally.â Moira pitches Robert M. Pirsigâs Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance [35] as a âmodern study of the schism between classicist and romanticist thinking.â Nick Williams says Candide âstill feeds the inner cynic,â and Jason considers Walden [36]  âa better lesson on capitalism than The Wealth of Nations.â Arthur McMillan recommends Julian Barnesâ A History of the World in 10½ Chapters [37]  by holding out the promise that it âencapsulates the sheer futility of everything[ness].â Another reader suggests William Godwinâs Political Enquiry [38]  âto be reminded what books inspired us to be: free.â Wise words indeed, Mr. Beer N. Hockey.
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Colin Marshall hosts and produces Notebook on Cities and Culture and writes essays on cities, language, Asia, and menâs style. Heâs at work on a book about Los Angeles, A Los Angeles Primer. Follow him on Twitter at @colinmarshall or on Facebook. [39] [40] [41] [42]
Links
- ^ our Facebook Page (www.facebook.com)
- ^ Foucaultâs Pendulum (amzn.to)
- ^ Short History of Nearly Everything (amzn.to)
- ^ Kindle from Amazon (amzn.to)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org) < li>^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ Kindle Format (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ Atlas Shrugged (amzn.to)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (classics.mit.edu)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (classics.mit.edu)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Read Online (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ iPad/iPhone (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Kindle + Other Formats (www.gutenberg.org)
- ^ Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance (amzn.to)
- ^ Walden (ebooks.adelaide.edu.au)
- ^ A History of the World in 10½ Chapters (amzn.to)
- ^ William Godwinâs Political Enquiry (oll.libertyfund.org)
- ^ Notebook on Cities and Culture (blog.colinmarshall.org)
- ^ A Los Angeles Primer (www.kcet.org)
- ^ @colinmarshall (twitter.com)
- ^ Facebook (www.facebook.com)
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