This is a great video. I enjoy reading "classics" and "difficult" books sometimes, but I completely agree that no one should be reading a book simply because they think they "have to" in order to be "well read" or a "serious reader". Reading is a hobby. There are so many books, of all kinds - and everyone can and should find what they enjoy. I fully believe the reason why more adults don't read is because they were forced to read books they didn't like in grade school and that can really sour a person on it.
I've read (and enjoyed) three of the books you've listed, and I have never been attracted to any of the other 7, so I think I'm fine 😂. I fully agree that there's no such thing as 'books you have to read' (unless you're claiming to be an expert in a particular area).
I enjoyed this video, thank you! As someone who just finished reading Joyce's Ulysses for the fourth time about three weeks ago (I've returned to it every few years for a deeper appreciation of it), and as someone who can honestly say that Ulysses is among my favorite books... even with all of that I'd agree with you that the book is not something anyone should feel they have to read. (Unless they want to!)
Thank you. I'm glad to hear from someone who loves Ulysses. I found reading it a rich if at times frustrating and confusing experience. Another commenter mentioned something about the character of Leopold Bloom that reminded me that in addition to all the modernist stuff there is a vividly created character, however boring or unpleasant he may be, at the heart of the novel
@@BookishTexan Fellow Ulysses enjoyer here. I have only read ito nce and I thought it was amazing. That I didn't understand all if it didn't bother me.
@@DressyCrooner Your comment here is exactly how I felt about the book after my first read; in fact, it took me three attempts just to make it through my first one long ago. Now, after numerous times re-reading Ulysses over the decades, I love it more each time, picking up more things each time, and gaining an even deeper understanding. This book very much rewards returning to it.
Obviously I agree with your essential premise that nobody has to read anything and reading certain things doesn't make you a superior reader. I have never been tempted to read Infinite Jest or Gravity's Rainbow. Reading the first third of the Proust sequence was enough to give me the flavour and I may go back to the rest. But all the others on your list I have read. Blood Meridian wasn't hard, just violent. And I think Foucault's Pendulum didn't justify the effort involved. But all the others paid me back in spades for any hard work involved. So I do think there is nothing wrong with encouraging people to push themselves sometimes to read things that are one step beyond their usual fare to see how they find it.
If you stopped reading Proust after the first third I don't think you've missed an awful lot. The second third is very hard work for not much reward. In fact, just thinking about it now makes my temples pound with boredom and frustration. It picks up again a bit after that but I wish someone would bring out a heavily edited version of the whole thing with all the mind-numbing parts taken out. I finally got around to reading Blood Meridian last year and I completely agree with you.
No nothing wrong with encouraging people to read these books, I just think there is a certain pressure/elitism that shows up surrounding these books and other hard books that isn't valid or healthy. This of course is not true with you. I do think many find McCarthy's vocabulary, ornate descriptions, and, in Blood Meridian, unwillingness to direct the reader to the true nature of the conflict to be challenging. That and no quotation marks etc.
@@jshaers96 I do wonder if I will ever find the motivation for more Proust when there are so many other books to read. You are tipping the balance against.
@@scallydandlingaboutthebook2711I'm sorry. If it helps I think the writing is beautiful and when what Proust was doing worked for me it was pretty amazing.
Worthy titles for the list! As with healthy eating and exercise, I do think there's much to be gained from reading (or just attempting to read) hard books, even if we don't want to do it. However, I do recommend finding a coach, bringing a buddy, and taking baby steps. I couldn't make it through the first chapter of TSoundatFury; then I checked out the Cliffs Notes and it suddenly clicked (still didn't finish it). I'm stalled at the 60% mark with Beloved and looking forward to finding out what others got from it. But I'm also reading a bunch of other books that I am enjoying and mining lots from. Fortunately, there's lots of good books out there; no need to get hung up on a handful (even if I want to).
Very wise words. I almost made a bigger workout/read hard books analogy in this video (cant remember if I mentioned it or not right now). I agree that reading hard books can be beneficial just as lifting heavy weights can be beneficial, but it is also beneficial, equally beneficial at least, to do more reps with lighter weights. I think the same is likely true with reading less demanding books.
The Sound and the Fury is on my all time favorites list. I need to reread it one of these days. I’d still like to try Paradise and Cloud Atlas from this list.
Great video, Brian. What I’ve read: Ulysses, The Sound and the Fury, Proust (the whole thing 😮), 2666, Cloud Atlas. DNF: Infinite Jest, Blood Meridian, Foucault’s Pendulum. I’ve tried other Pynchon and DNF’d him every time. I was assigned Blood Meridian in a class. I got to about 60% and just could not face another page. I wanted to read those that I’ve read and decided the others weren’t books for me. There are many classics and “important” books that I have no intention of ever reading and I am totally okay with that. Don Quixote and Moby Dick come immediately to mind. I’ve tried them both and it’s just never going to happen.
All of Proust, that always impresses me not because of the length of the work, but because I know how much concentration that takes. I found many of Proust's passages to be beautiful and I am glad I read what I did, but I have never felt the compulsion to read more. The ones on the list you DNF'd I of course fully support, particularly Infinite Jest. Of all the books I put on this list it is, I think, the least worthwhile. Its like a 1000 page Vonnegut novel with notes. I read 100 pages of Don Q last year after putting it on a list of books I would never read and that was plenty. That 100 pages made me think it was a long book with one joke and I didn't always find that joke funny.
@@BookishTexan My dad told me he utterly loathed DON QUIXOTE, but he's not really a literature guy, just a regular reader. So maybe he was missing some important context? One day I will tackle this book for myself. That day is not today. He also hated CATCH-22, which (though weird) I still liked. I thought my dad (having served in Vietnam) would connect with the "uselessness of Army bureaucracy" aspect of CATCH-22, but I think that part went right over his head. Perhaps satire/irony (or the like) is not for everyone? Maybe they're too literal. And in the case of DON QUIXOTE, I'm not really sure myself what Cervantes was satirizing. I'd have to do some research before diving in. I think when you're not "of the time" something was written, you might not get it. Like not understanding Orwell or Jonathan Swift or even Aldous Huxley. You need the context. You need to know what the author's ideas are in conversation with.
Ive read one of these (Cloud Atlas) and have three more on my list - Infinite Jest, 2666, and In Search of Lost Time. I definitely heard about all of them first as "hard books everyone needs to read" but these have filtered through to being books that actually really interest me, so theyre some of the ones that stayed on my list. At this point Ive pretty much given up on the idea of ever reading Charles Dickens for example (unless I have to for college), and honestly its a nice feeling. Very good video!
Thanks for inspiring me to read Sound & Fury. I think I'm ready to tackle Faulkner again. If I had only one book to read for a second time (and I wasn't allowed to re-read Tristram Shandy) it would be Absalom, Absalom.
Absalom, Absalom is a masterpiece and much more challenging than TSTF, but it is also less well known so I didn’t choose it for this list. Thanks for your comment.
Thanks for this video. I have read a few books on the list: 'Ulysses', 'In Search of Lost Time', 'The Sound and the Fury', 'Blood Meridian'. I had plenty of motivation to read 'Sound and the Fury', mainly a course in Wm. Faulkner I took in college. The lectures and criticism made it more lucid to me and made me curious to read it about three more times over the past 40 years or so, to the point where I think I got most of what Faulkner was saying. 'Ulysses' I have read once, with the aid of some literary criticism that elaborated on the parallels with Homer's 'Odyssey'. Some of it I enjoyed, much of it I just coasted along in the rhythm of the prose and didn't worry about what I didn't get. I've thought of re-reading it but probably never will. I read the seven volumes of 'In Search of Lost Time' over a five-month period and loved a lot of it. This is a work that I keep telling myself that I want to re-read sometime. Proust's philosophical observations are fascinating. He really takes a microscopic look at perception. 'Blood Meridian' was not that difficult to read stylistically and perhaps I blocked out much of the violence because it didn't shock me that much. I will re-read it sometime. McCarthy's 'Suttree' is far more of a challenging read. It's longer and has denser prose and seems more thematically complex. I also want to re-read this one sometime. I read Toni Morrison's 'Beloved' about 30 years ago and hope to re-read it sometime. It's powerful but a bit on the obscure side. I've read her first three novels, 'The Bluest Eye', 'Sula', and 'Song of Solomon', all of which are a little easier to read than 'Beloved'. What you say about 'Paradise' surprises me because I don't consider her to be a particularly difficult writer to read. I'll keep that in mind whenever I get to that book in the chronology. The other books on your list I've already decided are not worth the effort.
"Some of it I enjoyed, much of it I just coasted along in the rhythm of the prose and didn't worry about what I didn't get." This is exactly how I read and how I reacted to Ulysses both times I read it. I think the difficulty with Blood Meridian, aside from the violence, comes from many readers desire for a normal plot and the confusion about who/what the judge is. I enjoyed Proust's writing, but I just didnt have the will to keep going. Beloved is more complex structurally and thematically than Morrison's first few books. Paradise is much dense in symbolism. Thanks for the great comment.
Great points! I have deffinitly read a few books that i wasnt excited for because they were "essential reading" and in most cases i did not enjoy them, i believe had i waited for myself go be ready to read them and ezcited to read them my opinion may of been quite different!
Great point about waiting until you are really ready. I read Ulysses way sooner than I should have and got more out of it and enjoyed it more the second time.
Great video, great encouragement! I had to read The Sound and the Fury for class when I was a “baby” English Lit Major. Oh boy was that an experience. I do remember getting something out of it due to class discussion, but I really was not ready for that level of lit. I truly would like to read it again with a lot more experience. Somewhat out of curiosity and somewhat out of a desire to actually read it. Infinite Jest? That sat on my shelf, unread, for years and so it went to another home. Who knows - maybe I’ll get a bee in my bonnet and read it someday 🤷🏼♀️
The Sound and The Fury was my third Faulkner and I wasn’t ready. But I do love that book. I’m not sure that Infinite Jest is worth the effort, but I hope you give it a try.
I'm glad you included Proust here. I read Ulysses (love it) and Faulkner (love it), and read ALL of In Search of, but did not love it. I'll also admit I DNF'd Beloved, (gasp) and will never go back, so that's on my list. I have a long list of books I've read that everyone seems to love, but which I don't love (I already know you and I share a disdain for Wuthering Heights). If you haven't already done this, I'd love to see you do a video about books you feel you're SUPPOSED to like, but didn't.
We do agree about Wuthering Heights and I will overlook your DNF of Beloved.😂 I did a video about ten books that disappointed me. I will go back and look at it and see if I have other books that I was supposed to like but didn't. That would be a fun video to make.
I read Foucault's Pendulum in the 1990s. Before I got my Kindle in 2012, if I started a book, I always finished it. I hated Foucault's Pendulum, but I struggled through it until the end. As soon as it was finished, I practically ran to a charity shop to donate it, just so it wouldn't be in the house!
I liked FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM, but it was a bit of a headscratcher, as I recall. Is it absurdist? Post-modern? Complete conspiracy? I believe I read the book more than once, and I can't answer those questions, so I guess it's not successful in what it sets out to achieve? I don't know. Not sure if I'd ever go back to it. There are too many other things to read.
Loved Blood Meridian, but I agree I would not recommend it to anyone unless they are really interested in the subject matter. The prose while beautiful, can be dense. And it's quite brutal. Looking forward to attempting The Sound and the Fury one day though, as someone who enjoyed As I Lay Dying.
I am a fan of Toni Morrison and honestly I don't understand all of her books while I'm reading them; but I find her writing SO beautiful - its like a decadent dessert that is best consumed slowly and in small portions. I haven't read Paradise yet, but I will one of these days..... even if its hard. lol.
Morrison is fantastic. There was an article of John Updike questioning her legacy (in his opinion her latests novels haven't the same quality) and it's curious that 15 years later Morrison's legacy seems in a way better shape than Updike's
Great list and wise advice! In the long run though I think that books I have had to spend more time on have become some of my most memorable. There are also ways of easing the effort - my read of Ulysses was made possible by the audio book narrated by Jim Norton, Foucault’s pendulum was helped by Jason and Faulkner in August has seen me through some of his books. Paradise is my next Morrison and I want to read it as I want to read all of her novels so fingers crossed!
There is nothing wrong with reading any of these books. With a few exceptions I enjoyed all of them. Obviously you know that Faulkner and Morrison are among my favorite authors. I don't think I could audio Ulysses though. Seems like it would be really hard for me to follow. Paradise is a very good book. A very ambitious book for someone who had already accomplished so much with her writing.
@@BookishTexan absolutely - I did the audio of Ulysses as an ‘audio text combo’ as Shawn the book maniac would say - I read along to the audio, and then read the same section myself (took a long time though!)
Maybe I'm weird, but these are precisely the kinds of book I look forward most to reading. I love getting involved with something I know is going to demand my full attention and rewards however much time and study and analysis and rereads I care to give it. Of these I've read Ulysses, The Sound and the Fury and Blood Meridian and all are among my favorites, especially The Sound and the Fury. Faulkner radically changed my perception of what literature could do and I find his entire output from '29 to '36 astonishing. I've even since started reading various studies on Faulkner to try to get even more out of the experience. Some I'd add to the list would be the late novels of Henry James (The Wings of the Dove, The Ambassadors, and The Golden Bowl) and Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe.
I absolutely loved Foucault's Pendulum. Eco is one of my favorite writers. Several of the books on your list are on my TBR list: Blood Meridian, Cloud Atlas, Infinite Jest, 2666. I have an English degree, so I had to read Ulysses and The Sound and the Fury for my degree. I've read The Sound and the Fury twice, because English departments in Southern universities treat Faulkner as a god, so you have to read his novels.
I see what you're saying man, and certainly there are many "classics" and overhyped novels that don't merit that classification, but one could just as easily make a video for why one should tackle all of these books. Not that one should read a difficult book for the sake of difficulty, but many difficult books are impressive, immersive, and worthwhile. There's quite an array of styles and subject matter in these 10 books, and they're probably worth reading at least once. Ulysses is one of my all time favorite books, so I guess that speaks to my willingness to be an ambitious reader. And I appreciate ambition in a writer. It all depends on whether the hypothetical reader in question wants to interact with the history and development of literature. If they don't, well, then sure, they don't have to read any of the classics or any groundbreaking book. Not that every book on this list is as beautifully and richly groundbreaking as Ulysses, but still. In a way it's a paradox because you can only make this judgment of these books after having read them, and I think everyone should read a book for themselves before dismissing it. I'm not trying to bark at you or anything. In fact, I'm sure that in a different video or in a different mood you would agree with that perspective too. I always appreciate your content.
Thank for the comment and for watching. I agree that almost all of the books on the list are worth reading. What I am saying is that no one has to read them to qualify as a serious reader or to consider themselves a reader. Ulysses is great. I've read it twice and might read it again. I agree with everything you said about it. People should read it if they want to, but not because they think they should or because they want to say they have read it.
I read Foucault' Pendulum in the original Italian and enjoyed it greatly. In Search of Lost Time is very well written but I couldn't finish the last part. I hated Marcel's pathological obsession with Albertine. Infinite Jest is a thorn in my side. I read 140 pages, but I find it very hard going. I don't care about the characters, so when read it I feel frustrated but I feel like I should read it, since I bought it and so many people think it's a great book. Maybe that is what you mean when you say "You don't have to read it unless you want to." I still feel like I should, though. It's almost like a challenge. I can force myself to finish it, but will it be worth it?
Thanks for your comment. I think my experience with Foucault’s Pendulum is similar to yours with Infinite Jest. I hope if you do read it you find it worthwhile.
Henry James and I don’t mix. I read two of his novels and Dailey Miller and his style really irritates me. I have him on a list of authors I won’t read now.
While no one has to read any book, I have to disagree to an extent. You don’t have to read them to be a “serious reader” or to be able to say you read them, but if you have any interest in being alive at all, I think you do at least need to try to read these - particularly Infinite Jest, Ulysses, and Gravity’s Rainbow. I understand, these books aren’t for everyone, but looking back at my personal experiences with those three specifically, my life would not be nearly as complete as it is without those books. They changed my life, and my relation to the world around me, in a profound manner. Infinite Jest especially made me realize that I’m not nearly as alone as I thought I was, and I think it can do that for anyone who reads it. It’s essential to understanding the human condition.
I think it’s great that those books had such an impact on your life. The three books that changed my life would not include those three. I don’t think there is a list of books that will work in that way for everyone. I think almost all the books in this video are worth reading, but I don’t think there are any should/must read books. Thank you for the great comment.
Desses eu já li: Meridiano de Sangue, e 2666. Adorei ambos. Já comecei a ler, porém não terminei Infinite Jest e Gravitys Rainbow, não estava me divertindo. Tenho muita vontade de ler Cloud Atlas e The Sound and the fury. Também tenho vontade de tentar terminar Gravitys Rainbow (eu amo Inherent Vice) e Infinite Jest.
I think all the books on my list are worth reading if you want to. I hope you will finish them if you are enjoying them. Cloud Atlas is probably the most fun book on the list. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Morrison is my favorite author. It took me four readings of Paradise to approach a degree of comprehension that I'm satisfied with lol. I had to sit down with a pencil and Morrison's narration at 1.0x speed. The way she narrates her work can untangle the occasionally confusing syntax, and the slow pace of her reading helped give proper time to let the images of the book settle in my mind. The feelings of an entire town are often encapsulated in a single sentence, and they're easy to glance over and miss, and not to mention concepts and plot points that are hinted at throughout and revealed later on if you aren't paying attention. The key for me was to focus on the emotion -- we don't really know what the Oven is for the entire first third of the book, nor the words written on it, but we know that it pissed a lot of people off. Holding onto that feeling every time the Oven was mentioned made the payoff so satisfying. It was such a rewarding experience!!!
Now I want to listen to the audio of Paradise. I did not know that Morrison narrated it. Your description definitely makes me think it would be worthwhile. Thank you!
Great conversation. Lots of variables, of course. I do feel compelled as a reader to tackle the toughies, but I completely agree not everyone should bother, especially if you're miserable doing so. I will go through the experience of these long journeys, and if I feel I must revisit the journey, I will. It took me three readings of Paradise, but this one was personal to me and I was going to travel the path until I felt like I'd absorbed the experience. Others...once was enough.
Three times through Paradise is impressive. I thought it was a good book, but I wasn't willing to go back to it. Nothing wrong with reading tough books if that's what you want to do.
One audio, one library, one purchased copy and finally it took hold. I loved Beloved by the way, it floored me. Paradise was just personal, starting with the first line which gets my vote for best first line ever. But I totally understand why others wouldn't even attempt that book. I will never read another Pynchon after GR, I don't care if he's awarded sainthood. @@BookishTexan
I started Gravity's Rainbow back when it first came out in the 70's. Got through about 1/3 until school got in the way and I set it aside. When Border's books went out of business, they were selling off their inventory for a song, and I picked up a copy of Against the Day. It resided on my bookshelf next to Gravity's rainbow until last year, when I picked it up and read it all the way through. Then I picked up Gravity's Rainbow and read it all through. Then I found a copy of Inherent Vice which I finished. I think the key to reading Pynchon is to press on and not try to reflect or resolve continuities as you go through them. I think Thomas Wolfe is a little more readable. Blood Meridian is good.
I like your approach to Pynchon. It sounds like my approach to Joyce and other difficult books/authors. The only other Pynchon I have read was Mason & Dixon which I did like.
Since being on Booktube I had tackled some books that I felt I needed to have read and it was a mistake, I was miserable. But it's making me more astute as to realising what I'll enjoy reading or not. I want to give Proust a chance, it's in many parts, so may just try one part and see how it goes!
Thanks for the great comment. I made myself miserable with a few of these as well. I hope I won’t do that again.🤓 Proust writes beautifully and evocatively. I hope you will give his work a try if you want to.
I felt Infinite Jest was easier for me to read than The Sound and the Fury. Faulkner’s work through a wrench in my gears and was very hard to understand and get through. I love this video and you got yourself a new subscriber!
I have Ulysses on my shelf but haven't tackled it yet. I have listened to Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man on Audible and evI found it challenging to so I'm in no rush for the other one. Maybe someday I'll tackle Blood Meridian. I read The Road and was blown away. It still haunts me years later. I did read All the Pretty Horses which I was a little cooler on. Recently picked up the next series The Crossing. In do have Proust's Swann's Way but have yet to tackle that yet.
I hope you enjoy them all when you get a chance to read them. I have very mixed feeling about The Crossing and the third in the series Cities of the Plain. If you read The Road I don't think there is anything in Blood Meridian that will slow you down
I often say there is really only one question one needs to ask oneself when deciding whether to continue reading a book beyond its first few pages: do you care what happens to the characters? Or, for a plot or concept driven narrative, do you want to know what happens next? If the answer to any of those questions is "no", then stop reading - or stop watching in the case of a film or tv series, as the question really is exactly the same. This question also covers books that are hard because of their language or narrative structure as it may disconnect you from the characters or break your immersion with the story, in which case you will quickly not care what happens next or what the fate of the characters might be. Then there are of course books that you might simply not be in the mood for when you approach them the first time, but which you may try again at some other point. You will usually be able to tell if that might be the case. Some books require more patience, and some might also be more emotionally demanding, and in both cases, there will be times in your life when you won't feel up to it. These are often worth revisiting, which will be easier if you manage to at least identify what about them made you have to stop reading the first time and then realise when the time is right to try again. I think it's important to read what you want to read so that you spend your time on something you enjoy, or that stimulates you intellectually or emotionally in some way, as art is supposed to do. And one should also never be ashamed of what one enjoys reading, nor embarrassed about not having read something that "everyone" has read, but which of course many people are just pretending to have read in order to seem more clever. There is snobbery everywhere, and the only way to get rid of it is to proudly enjoy what you like and never to judge anyone else for their taste.
Thank you for the excellent comment. I agree with all of it, particularly the idea of note being ashamed or embarrassed by what you like to read. Book snobbery is vile and I should know because I used to be one. I will argue that sometimes, if what you want from a book is a challenge or something different even difficult, it a can be very rewarding to push through a book. Additionally, there are other reasons to continue reading other than the plot or the characters, but those are matters of individual taste and not something that indicates a more "serious" or superior reader.
@@BookishTexan I mentioned this last year but I think you would like Black Swan Green about a boy growing up in a suburb of England, ..no gimmicks, funny and heartbreaking.
This is a great list with quite a few of my DNFs on it and a few never-starteds, too. There are so many wonderful books in this world, I'm never going to waste another minute trying to plough through something that's not speaking to me.
For whatever reason, I generally eschew American authors, with one proviso--skip Hemingway, skip Faulkner, & go directly to John Dos Passos, who wrote an incredible number of works, both fiction & non-. Ive read a couple of his decades ago, & just started the trilogy U.S.A. I remembered in the first few pages why I like his writing so much. I still haven't gotten through all the century-old (or nearly) books, perhaps I'll get around to the contemporary era in 20 or 30 years. Also, used books are generally a lot cheaper than new ones (& better made) & if you haven't read them, they are still new to you. Books I would recommend: Thos. Mann-Magic Mountain; Hermann Broch-Death of Virgil; Hasek-The Good Soldier Sveik; Aphra Behn-Love Letters between a Nobleman & his Sister; Breton-What is Surrealism; Hesse-The Glass bead Game; Bulgakov-The Master & Margarita. (Yes, it's true, I love European Modernism.) I do agree that there are a lot of strings in Foucault's Pendulum (possibly a fictional account of quantum entanglement) so I would recommend Baudolino or The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana (the latter especially if you're interested in early-mid 20th C. Italian commercial illustrations). I will take Henry James over James Joyce any day of the week, my personal favorite The Ambassadors. If you're a writer & having trouble with dialogue, Read Henry James.
Thank you for all the recommendations. I have videos about the USA Trilogy, Dos Passos and Hemingway (Dos didn’t seem to agree with your dismissal) and a short biographical sketch of Dos Passos. In grad school Dos Passos’ Three Soldiers was a very important text in a research project I completed. Several of the books you mentioned I have read or have intended to read, but Mann’s Magic Mountain isn’t one of them I’m afraid. Also, I’ve read enough Henry James to know he isn’t for me. Thank you for watching and commenting.
I hate - HATE - Henry James and take particular pleasure in sending passages from his novels to a friend, an English professor at a prestigious university, and demanding to know what these passages mean. I’ve never received a reply. James, to me, commits the cardinal sin of calling attention to himself with his complicated and impenetrable prose. Updike, too, I’m sad to say.
I have read and loved all of these books except for Eco and Proust. Blood Meridian is in my top 3 books; I only wish I could read it again for the first time!
Praise be! I’d love to chat with you sometime about books and reading if you’d be interested. I host a stream biweekly on Fridays and think you’d be an incredible guest.
I got one third of the way through Infinite Jest before I put it down. I just couldn't. I think Marcel Proust might go the same way, I'm a quarter through Swann's Way but I still can't work out if anything has happened or will happen. The only way to get through Ulysses is to read it out loud.
The interesting about reading Ulysses aloud. Do you subvocalize (hear your voice in your head when you read)? Regarding Proust: Yes something happens (ish) and things are revealed, but none of them are monumental.
I found S.J. Perelman tough going until I started reading him in Groucho Marx's voice -- then he made sense. Which would have really pissed off Perelman, because he hated being compared to Groucho.
i mean - nobody has to read anything. i personally think videos like this feed into the anti-literary/anti-classics crowd that is so prevalent on the internet today. I genuinely believe no one has to read anything or do anything they don't want. But i think it goes too far when people want to deny the quality of clearly great works of literature. I loved 2666 by Bolaño and I think it's one of the best novels of the 21st century. Blood Meridian in my opinion is the preeminent western novel of the 20th century and is McCarthy's crowning achievement. Sound and the Fury is a tremendously rewarding read but i didn't fully appreciate it until I read it together with my girlfriend about 20 years after i first tried it. I also won't stand by while Proust slander is being thrown about - I love Proust and I've learned a ton about the human condition by reading him. Do you need to read ISoLT? no - nobody needs to read anything. difficult, challenging books are not worth reading just because they are difficult. its the quality of the writing and cultural relevance that makes them worth reading. Now I'll tell you an unnecessarily difficult book that you don't need to read - Omensetter's luck by William H Gass. the first 40 pages of the book is practically incomprehensible. is there still literary value? probably but I couldnt get to it.
I’ve never read Gass or Gaddis and I don’t have much interest. I agree with your assessment of the others. I think Blood Meridian is a true classic. I enjoyed Proust some of the time and his writing and the sense of nostalgia and his ability to communicate that sense to readers who live a century after his books were published is remarkable.
Your description of some of these books makes me want to try them. I only got through Ulysses because of audiobook and several documentaries about Ulysses. I studied Dubliners for A level English literature in 1980. I find Joyce fascinating.
I had that thought particularly as I was discussing The Sound and the Fury. I want people who really want to read these books to read them. I think Joyce the person was really interesting. I don't think I can concentrate hard enough on an audiobook to have gotten through Ulysses that way.
I've read other Joyce but not Ulysses. However, I came across a website where a guy was slowly writing Ulysses as a graphic novel. He had the first portion up at that time, I imagine there is now more. I tried to watch the movie of Cloud Atlas. It was too mixed up for me and about the time the guy threw the author of the top of the building I gave up. Foucault's Pendulum was a challenge but I managed to stick with it but now, about thirty years later, I should do a re=read. And I've got Gravity's Rainbow on my computer waiting to load onto my e-reader. There's no hurry. Thank you for your absolution. 😀
You are welcome🤓 The Ulysses graphic novel sounds kind of amazing. I’ll have to try to find it. FP is just not a book for me, but I know many people like you who enjoyed it. In the spirit of this video let me say: You don’t have to read Gravity’s Rainbow, but if you do I hope it’s because you want to.
I am going to read Ulysses, by god…. I have 2 copies and multiple reference books sitting on my bed leering at me, challenging me. I got about 50 pages into Foucault’s Pendulum; I wanted to like it; I just couldn’t get past all the endless descriptions….
Definitely appreciate this as I am currently struggling my way through Sound and the Fury. I don't really want to DNF it as I do enjoy the writing and the story but it is just so dang depressing. I also DNF'd Rabbit Run for the same reason. I want to read more challenging and complex books, but sometimes it does feel like many of the most respected books are just miserable times.
The Sound and the Fury is incredibly depressing. I wish I could say there is some hope in it. If there is it is in the Dillsey section. That section is pretty unusual in Faulkner's work. I dislike the work of Thomas Hardy for the exact reason you mention here.
I'm sure I'll have read all of this list within the next few years, since the ones I have not read yet are mostly on the Boxall's 1001 Books lists. I actually liked Cloud Atlas, and didn't find it hard. I did read Ulysses, and hated it, though listening to the BBC radio play of it helped make it make some sense. I've read Eco, but not Foucault's Pendulum (yet), and I read the Crying of Lot 49, which I hated, so I have put off reading another, longer Pynchon book for a while. I've read the first 2 sections and the 5th and 6th sections of Proust, and they weren't hard, just tedious. My sister LOVES Proust, so I am sure I'll have to finish it eventually. I have noticed that a theme in common with a lot of 'hard' books on book lists is violence against women, which always makes me wonder about the culture and the people who make the cannon that determines who is well read. In any case, once I finish my projects reading the Boxall 1001 Books lists and Guardian 1000 novels list, I am probably considering myself done with quite a few or the 'great' writers whose misogynist writing keeps getting added to new book lists, not because they are hard, but because there are other more wholesome voices in modern literature that don't perpetuate such an unhealthy culture.
I am impressed by your commitment to reading from these lists, but I wonder if these are the books that you really want to read or do you feel compelled/obligate to read them or to try to read them. What I would say is that if you don’t like reading classics by misogynists don’t read them or any other book that you don’t want to read.
I might eventually start skipping books on lists I am reading, but I read fast enough that a bad book is only a small investment of time and energy. Steve Donoghue did a great job of describing some of the reasons people read hard books, and reading a list like Boxall's is one of those projects where reading a few lousy books is part of the overall project. When I talk about disliking a book I disliked off that list, like Ulysses or The Atrocity Exhibition, I can articulate why I disliked them, as an informed evaluation rather than a DNF. & for every lousy book or author on a list like that there are several authors I'd never have tried that I really enjoy.Reading projects like this are not for everyone, and I'm sure a lot of readers get into them for all the wrong reasons, but for me it is a reading project that has worked for over a decade.
Hmm, well. I have read one of these books -- Gravity's Rainbow -- and thoroughly enjoyed it. In fact, I may re-read it one day, since I've learned a lot from life since I read it in the '80s. I have a copy of Ulysses, and intend to read it, as I'm sure many people say. There is no Proust in my collection, but I'm beginning to get interested and may try him if I find a good deal and translation. As for the rest of these books, no interest so I'll take your advice. There are so many books that I *want* to read that I feel no guilt about ignoring those that others say I should read. And these are all big novels -- I much prefer collections of short stories, and non-fiction. Heck, there's copies of The Decameron, and 1001 Nights, and the essays of E.B. White calling to me. That should fill in a pretty good chunk of my time on Earth. PS: I like your room.
Those last books will indeed fill a lot of time. You have hit upon the key to happy reading: read what you want to read and not what others say you should or must read. Thanks for the room call membranes as well.
I really get what you're saying, but my friends would say I definitely fit the category of difficult book 'collector'. I was very pleased with myself when I finished Ulysses! I would confess to a certain level of literary snobbery, but I always thought if these books had such a great reputation, I should read them and once started I have to finish - however long it takes 😊. Talking of difficult books - have you read Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry? One of my favourites.
I have not read Lowry. I’ve heard mixed things about it from people with similar taste to mine. About reading hard books to say you have: I don’t think that’s what you did. It sounds to me like you were curious and like to challenge yourself. And because you like more literary works books like Ulysses were ones you wanted to read. Those are of course great reasons to read them that are similar to my own. If I were approaching them now as a reader who had t read them there are a few I would skip. Thanks for the great comment.
That is true. I cant' put a book down for a long time and pick it back up. For me it has to happen all in one go no matter how long that takes. I look forward to hearing your full thoughts about both of those books.
i think one of the reasons to read ulysses is, because you get much information about dublin in this time... it is maybe a good introduction to irish politics also... but maybe not so much people are really interested in these things... i agree, the marvel universe is maybe more fascinating...
That is very true. More than 100 years after it was written I think that detail adds to the confusion because there are so many references that today's readers have no idea about.
I’ve read Infinate Jest 4 times , and still love it. I think it’s because I’m very intelligent but very scattered, so oddly I enjoy it. It’s my bedtime listening.
Thank you for this, it was excellent. I get the concept of feeling I must read certain titles (eg War & Peace) to have a black belt in reading, but I think even more is a feeling of curiosity. Both "why is this book considered so important?" and "is it really that good?" And maybe "is it enjoyable?" So I think maybe you're also giving me permission that after 50 pages or so I can dnf if it doesn't seem important (to me) or doesn't seem that good. Thanks!
I think that wanting to read the books out of curiosity is great. Obligation no. War and Peace is not a book I have read or intend to read. It’s just too long.🤓 Thanks for watching and commenting.
I've started PARADISE and, so far, have found it vivid and gripping. Same with BLOOD MERIDIAN. Yes, the subject matter is disturbing, but as with anything by McCarthy, you should expect that to be the case coming out of the gate. Odd that Bookish left out Joyce's FINNEGAN"S WAKE. It should've headed the list, as should have Gaddis's. THE RECOGNITIONS.
'Finnegans Wake' was the first title that came to mind for me too when confronting this topic. Most people find that text virtually unreadable, and it is unreadable in the ordinary sense (decoding would be a more accurate term describing one's engagement with the book).
Good news! Most people have already been opting out of these books. And you're of course correct but there is a reason people challenge themselves with these hard books.
I've only read three of these and I doubt I'll read the others because I am not interested. I don't think we "have" to read hard books, but they can be rewarding if we push through. I didn't enjoy Ulysses, but I am happy to have read it and I understand the cultural references better. I felt after reading it that I would have understood it much more if I knew the history of Dublin. I felt somewhat the same after reading Swann's Way. I don't need to read the rest, but I have an understanding of references to it that I didn't prior. I need to reread The Sound and the Fury, but I don't know if I will. I haven't read it since college, but I have read a few other Faulkner books in the past decade and that may be enough for me.
I agree completely with everything you said here particularly with your view of Proust and Ulysses. I do think hard reads can be very rewarding, but I think it’s important to do it because you want to, not out of a sense of obligation.
I am on my third time through Ulysses and I get a little more out of it each time. I am on volume five of Proust, which I began in undergrad back in the early 80s!! It's not for nothing that it is the world's longest novel!!!
I DNF’d Cloud Atlas at 60% so happy to agree on that one 😂 Me and Alice are struggling through Ulysses at the moment, and will finish it out of pure stubbornness 😂 You’ve actually sold me on quite a few of these 😆
I'm British so my reading in American literature is poor, however, I'm trying to read some American history for Historathon. I like Umberto Ecco, and have read many of his books. Gravity's Rainbow is not only weird, but inaccurate in some of the London details. It might be a great book, but much of it was plain silly. I have read 3 books, so far by Cormac Mccarthy. The violence repells me. I am in possession of several Wm Faulkner volumes. I may get round to them, but shan't force myself. I want to read Emerson , the Trandendalists and other American classics, so don't think I am anti -American literature. I just haven't had much luck with some of these. This was a fine video, thanks.
I hope you’ll try a Faulkner if you feel like it. I want to read Emerson as well, but somehow I always forget. I’m interested to know what American History you are reading.
@@BookishTexan I'm building a selection of books War of Independence and the Civil War. I want to get the American perspective. I'm following Peg of the History Shelf and she is good on military History, but I need to find decent social histories of the period, so if you have any suggestions, I'd be open to them. I'm doing Historathon, so I have plenty of time to get them. I shall try Faulkner, which book would you start with?
@@battybibliophile-Clare Peg is the exact right booktuber to get suggestions from on those topics. She’s great! Some Civil War suggestions: This Republic of Suffering by Drew Gilpin Faust, Embattled Courage by Linderman, and Down by the Riverside by Joyner (this one is about culture on an enslaved community), Ghosts of the Confederacy (about Reconstruction and post Civil War) Faulkner wise if you are interested in his Stream of Consciousness books I’d Start with As I Lay Dying. If you want to get your feet wet with a more straight forward book The Hamlet or maybe The Unvanquished.
@@BookishTexan I have the series including the Hamlet. Yes, Peg is one of my favourite booktubers, she's so enthusiastic. I have noted your suggestions and am off to look for them. I do appreciate your suggestions, thanks.
🤣🤣🤣 Well, I'm glad you absolve me, because although I do not shy away from a challenge (heck, I finished all of Tale of Genji last year), almost all of those are on my list of... nope. I did read Cloud Atlas and then go on to read (and enjoy) the rest of David Mitchell's oeuvre thus far, that's the one exception. I'm reading Bolaño's Savage Detectives right now, partly so I can check that box and *not* have to read 2666! I've enjoyed everything I've read by Toni Morrison and haven't tried Paradise yet, but Kim at Middle of the Book March just DNF'd it for the second time, and that along with your 'warning' is going to put it at least last on the books of hers I try!
Paradise is a very good book, but it is very dense in biblical allusions and allegory. I have read three Mitchell books and like The Thousand Autumns of JDZ the best. I think I have Genji in a video that contains a list of classics I have no intention of reading.🤓
I read only an excerpt from Joyce's "Finnegan's Wake." Since it didn't make the list here, do I have to read all of it now? Damn it! I was looking for an excuse to save me the chore. I read "Blood Meridian" twice and never felt I wasted my time, but then again I invoke the qualifier, "Unless You Want To."
I only included books I have read or tried to read. I haven’t tried to read Finnegan’s Wake. I herby absolve you of having to read it. Blood Meridian is a classic.
@@BookishTexan > Thank you. But the question now becomes do YOU HAVE to read FW? Unless you can find someone who says you don't have to, (unless you want to) you may have to include it on your books to read bucket list, and you may HAVE TO to read it my friend, otherwise you could lose your Bookish status. Since you gave me a pass, again I thank you. I couldn't get pass the excerpt, but I don't know how YOU can get a pass. 🤥
@@BookishTexan does this mean, that you can't identify a funny take at all, or more that you can't lough even though you think this take is funny? Have you read any russian or german literature? I'm german, and my reading journey is taking place through the afro-german lense :)
I picked up Infinite Jest and immediately got intimidated by the footnotes. Don’t think I made it five pages. (And your sleepy pup in the background is adorable!)
When it comes to Faulkner, I found Absalom, Absalom to be far more difficult than The Sound and the Fury, at least in terms of density. I would also add to your list The Sot-Weed Factor, Moby Dick, and The Brothers Karamozov, which are the only books I've ever DNF'ed.
My father is a fan of that book! He keeps trying to turn my mother on to it, but she constantly demurs. And thanks for the reminder that great, canonical literature is not confined to fiction.
@@barrymoore4470Wow , really? Is your mom a philosophy student? The 1st Critique is a great book but not so much because of its literary aspects-it’s a clunky, difficult read, even in the German; but the ideas will blow you away!
@@Summalogicae My mother's actually not a keen reader of philosophical literature per se, but my father thinks exposure to Kant would be edifying, and promotes his classic work for that reason. Kant is definitely a cornerstone of modern Western philosophy, but notoriously difficult.
Of course no one has to read any book, and I am delighted that you included books that you yourself love here. That being said: The first section of “Cloud Atlas” can be a slog, but after that it really gets going and there are many, many delights to be had, especially the hilarious nursing home sections. I too love Faulkner, and my favorite is “Absalom, Absalom,” which I frequently recommend unsuccessfully to others 🤣. As for “Ulysses,” I get it, especially when you hit that third Telemachus chapter, but I’m of Irish descent and hate to see it here. I don’t think you need to explore all the references or think about them at all, unless you’re of an arcane mind. Essentially it is a tragic-comic story of a married couple who love each other but whose sex life has been aborted by the death of a son, and of a son who has lost a mother and (at least figuratively) a father, how their paths intersect during one day, and how that day is a microscopic acceptance of the whole universe. There’s poetry, heartbreak, and hilarity in it. You don’t have to read it, but your world might become larger if you do.
You wrote: "You don’t have to read it, but your world might become larger if you do." Beautifully put...this is the impetus to investigate literature (and art in general) in a nutshell.
I like most of the books on my list, love several and have read them more than once. What I am against is the idea that these books must be read and the parallel idea that reading certain books qualifies one as a “serious reader.”
I think there are some books with a reputation for being difficult that are important to read in order to be part of the conversation that books have between “themselves” and with other readers. .. to get the references and therefore the deeper meaning That being said, I agree that *most* of the books on your list are not necessary to be a “well read” person. In my opinion, Ulysses and Proust and some Faulkner and some of Morrison are pivotal and important reads. DFW: no, not necessary. Gravity’s Rainbow: not necessary. Pendulum, not necessary. Etc. Etc. I enjoy being part of the conversation with other readers and the conversation with the book I am reading, so I forge on with a lot of big books that have the reputation for difficult for that reason and for the feeling of having accomplished something outside my zone of comfort. Thank you for your blessing and absolution. I need all of both of those I can get.
I certainly agree that having those books as a background to engage in conversations is a good reason to read them. But I’m not sure every reader wants that. Agree about IJ and GR.
@@BookishTexan Partly I was speaking metaphorically about difficult books being in conversation with each other, referencing symbolically a great work that came before it and the reader not understanding the reference if the original (difficult) book was not read. (WOW that sounds like a big bowl of word salad.. too tired to fix it)
@@TKTalksBooks Haha! I love word salad. Probably why I like Faulkner and Joyce. I know what you mean and yes if a reader wants to be able to see that progression and those connections reading these books would be important.
They are undeniably great parts in Ulysses, that make it hard to dismiss outright. But there are also large chunks, like the Nighttown sequence, that are utterly awful and unreadable. I think it's one of those books (like Don Quixote) that improves the longer ago you read it, so that you remember the good parts and forget the bits that made you want to chew your own arm off.
I suspect for me that what you said about Ulysses aging better in your mind than the actual experience at the time is true for me. I couldn't get past page 100 of Don Q.
The books/authors of these I've read I've generally enjoyed, I often like reading the "harder" stuff, a lot of these are appealing to me... ... but man, the effort involved in Ulysses, I dunno if I'm likely to get to that one. (and that's okay!)
Almost all of the books on the list are ones I like and some I truly love. I’m not sold on the idea of reading something just because it is hard, but I have done it.
I felt I must read _Ulysses_ in order to know what people were talking about - I’m glad I did, mainly for that purpose. I read _The Sound and the Fury_ because I had to - for a class. If this video had existed I would have shown it to my teacher & said it gave dispensation. Proust I read 2/3rds of _Swann’s Way_ and also feel no compelling reason to pick it up again - not that I’m opposed. Let’s see, glanced at _Infinite Jest_ and went meh; tried _Savage Detectives_ and couldn’t get into it, so have not hankered after Bolaño’s posthumous opus. Of the others, I’m glad to be absolved.
Same for me on Ulysses and Proust. Infinite Jest is easily the least worthwhile book on this list. You are hereby and in perpetuity granted dispensation.
Haha, I was like I wonder if Infinite Jest is going to be on the list and it was first. Honestly, I never felt pressure to read it, but I thought it was super cool.
I’m glad you liked it. I bought it in hardback when it was published and read it pretty quickly (for me). I thought it was very ambitious and at times excellent.
Ulysses and The Sound and the Fury were required reading for two different college literature courses I took. I would not have read either for personal enjoyment.
I’ve read Infinite Jest, Ulysses, Gravity’s Rainbow, all of Proust, and The Sound and the Fury. I think they are all worth reading and re-reading (read Pynchon Joyce and Faulkner all more than once, but I doubt I will ever get around to rereading all of Proust). But I agree that you don’t have to read them, or anything for that matter. On the other hand, I think your whole video would take on a different tone if you started with Faulkner, which you love, instead of Wallace, which you obviously dislike.
They are all worth reading if a person wants to. I was just thinking about your last point, where to put the emphasis/ strongest point the other day. My whole life o have almost always saved what I thought of as the strongest point till the end based on the idea of leaving the reader/viewer with the most powerful argument. But when I was a teacher grading essays a lot of my students would start with their strongest point and put their weaker points at the end. It drove me crazy until I realized there isn’t really a rule it was just a style thing. But in this case I think you have a good point. Starting with my favorite would have communicated the tone of the video more clearly.
@@BookishTexan As I said before, I agree with the main point, at least until I start thinking a bit more deeply about it. What makes me want to read a book? This turns out to be a much more difficult question to answer in the abstract than I would have thought. I’m in the middle of reading, for example, Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. One of the reasons I started it is because it’s one of the classic history books I thought I should read, based upon its reputation. It would not be too far off the mark to say that I, at least in part, wanted to read this book because it’s one of those books you “have to” read. Was that illegitimate? I think not - but it largely depends on how you phrase it. Where I see a real tension is in my finishing books that I’m not enjoying. On those, I don’t want to finish them because I’m not liking them. On the other hand, I do want to finish them because I hate not finishing books. What do I actually “want” in these cases? I think the answer is mostly determined by the result, which almost always means that I want to finish them, even though I don’t like them.
If I'm going to read a hard book, generally I'd rather read a nonfiction book. I guess it shouldn't be that way. I should be willing to read hard fiction too I suppose. So far in my adult reading I've treated fiction as being for fun.
Just as I don't think you should feel obligated to read these books I don't feel that you, who enjoys nonfiction more, should feel obligated to read more fiction
I really interesting list. I have read 8 out of 10. Cloud Atlas and Paradise withstanding. I only read the first two of In Search of Lost Time . I’m rereading Ulysses in June with Allen and others. There are tentative plans for a Year of Proust in 2025. I’m more or less glad about reading the 7 I completely finished. I agree that no one should feel compelled to read these.
I think most of the books on my list are good books (Infinite Jest being the exception) and I am glad I read them. The year of Proust might motivate me to pick up where I left off. I hope the Ulysses group read goes well.
Ulysses is only "hard" if you want to understand everything about it. My favorite non-fiction hard books, VERY much worth reading: The Restless Clock by Jessica Riskin (about the fascinating history of the mechanistic world view and how that's not the only way to think) and The Master and His Emissary by Iain McGilchrist, about the dominance of the "left brain" in our culture and how it has destroyed the world. It has a LOT of detail about the functioning of the brain. The two books go together in my head and have changed my approach to the world.
I approached Ulysses on the way you described and I liked it and even at times enjoyed it. Non-fiction, particularly the sciences, are usually my most challenging reads.
Hi Brian. I definitely agree with the premise of your video. I abandoned Infinite Jest and have no desire to go back to it, and I don't feel bad about that. I read a lot of Pynchon in graduate school, and he leaves me cold. Faulkner and Joyce, however, will always be incredibly important to me. I read Ulysses for the first time in graduate school with a brilliant Joyce scholar. Believe it or not, I was taking a Joyce/Yeats seminar at the same time that I was taking a 19th Century European Novel course, and I found myself reading Anna Karenina and Ulysses at the same time because of the way the syllabi worked out. It was the MOST intense reading experience of my then young life. I remember that I actually dreamt about Ulysses, I was so totally immersed in it. I don't know that that kind of reading experience would happen to me at this point in my life. Sorry for rambling. Thanks for another thoughtful video that gets us all to think. 😊
I enjoyed Ulysses as well. I think it is remarkable, but I think too many people feel either bullied into reading it or feel like they arent "serious readers" if they don't. Of all the books on the list Infinite Jest was, for me, the worst. It really felt like a waste of a lot of time. I've only read two Pynchon novels, Gravity's Rainbow and Mason and Dixon. I liked Mason and Dixon much, much better.
@@BookishTexanI know what you mean about how people feel about Ulysses. If I had not been reading it with the professor I had, I don’t know that it would have been such a powerful experience for me. I remember reading Pynchon’s novel, V, in a graduate course, and I just didn’t see what was so important about it. At all. I got nowhere with Infinite Jest. Gave up and had no interest in going back to it. Thanks for this video, Brian. Very thought-provoking.
made quick guesses based on my own dnf list: guessed: ulysse and infinite jest, .didn;t think of gravity's rainbow, but would have guessed it if i had. still want to finish it. thought war and peace would be on there. enjoyed and finished foucault's rainbow, it's in my conspiracy wheel house, proust and faulkner are on my want to read list. cloud atlas couldn't finish book or movie even with halle berry.
If Halle Berry cant get you through a movie that movie is definitely not for you.😁 I talked about not reading War and Peace in a video from about a year ago, so didn't include it hear. I have you will read Proust and Faulkner, but only if you really want to and not because you feel like you have to.
Of those books I have only read Cloud Atlas and The Sound and Fury. Many of the books are the usual suspects when people talk about hard books... Ulysses, Infinite Jest, Gravity's Rainbow... I was surprised you didn't have Finnegan's Wake on the list. I have Cryptonomicon on my March TBR, which is a mammoth and I've heard it is difficult (I DNFed it last March but didn't get very far into it).
I have never even attempted Finnegan's Wake so I didn't feel comfortable talking about it. Though my total lack of interest in it is, I think, a good example of me choosing not to read a hard books.
First I'd like to say that I agree with you; people shouldn't read a book so they can say they've read it. It should always be to enjoy the book. I've read Ulysses from cover to cover and occasionally randomly read pages, which might be good for most people. I read Proust's great novel; it took me a year, but I think it was worth it and intend to reread it. I'd like to repeat that no one should read a book because they feel they have to or to say they've read it. Read to enjoy; if you're not enjoying it put it aside. Maybe try again later in life. Just enjoy.😀
Cloud Atlas is the only book I have read from this list. I remember going to see the movie by myself and being the only person in the theatre who understood what was happening at any time in the movie 😅
Haha. My wife gave me Ulysses a couple of years ago, but it defeated me after a few pages. I loved Dubliners and studied some Irish lit at QUB, but Ulysses will require more effort. Infinite Jest does not interest me at all. I think Proust is fun to read randomly from time to time. I'm surprised you didn’t like Blood Meridian, but I think it was less impactful than Absalom, Absalom! (McCarthy overrated?) My best philosophy professor's favourite book was Gravity's Rainbow, so I feel compelled to struggle through it. But will I go to Hell if I don't read it? Will i go to Hell if I don't like it? 😂
For me the key to Ullyses was to let go of the feeling that I had to understand it all and just try to follow the basic action, pick up on the characterization, appreciate what Joyce was trying to do, and catch as many jokes as I could. I support your decision about Infinite Jest and like your approach to Proust. I like Blood Meridian very much. It is a true masterpiece. Good luck with Gravity's Rainbow. It has its moments. Reading it might feel like hell, but I'm pretty sure you wont wind up there if you dont read it.
James Joyce's swansong 'Finnegans Wake' comes to mind immediately for this category; I've never encountered anyone who has actually read that book word for word to the end (or circular beginning, rather). It's debatable if the novel is even a work in English, so idiosyncratic is the author's permutations of language, densely allusive throughout. Many intrepid explorers of literature find this book to be literally unreadable, so just as climbing Everest doesn't have to be on everyone's bucket list, neither does tackling perhaps the most intractable work in the modernist canon.
I like your Everest analogy. I’ve never attempted Finnegan’s Wake so I didn’t put it on my list. I do know someone who has read it and studied it - Allen from the channel Big Hard Books and Classics.
@@BookishTexan Thanks for alerting me to that channel; I'll check it out. Incidentally, I have watched (online) the very odd film adaptation of 'Finnegans Wake', from 1966, entitled aptly if inelegantly 'Passages from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake', and directed by the late Mary Ellen Bute (a fellow native Texan, who was best known for her work in abstract animation). She had amazing chutzpah to even attempt to grapple with a screen version of this work, and the results are interesting though definitely bewildering--a true cinematic curio.
I'm rather surprised that Cloud Atlas is included here, I've never heard it described as a difficult book - it's not particularly long, particularly esoteric or particularly complex, certainly not when compared to Ulysses, Infinite Jest or Foucault's Pendulum (this last one is truly a slog but the ending justified the whole for me). I've only read Swann's Way but I'm saving the Whole of Lost Time for when I retire :) It's rare for me not to finish a book that I've started (I'm obstinate like that) but The Sound and the Fury is one of the rare ones that defeated me.
I have been working hard on not forcing myself to finish books I’m not enjoying. I included Cloud Atlas because I have seem several people describe it as confusing. I agree with you about Ulysses .
I read 'Turn of the screw' by Henry James because it was short and he is recognized as 'a great writer' . Lets just say I'd hate to have to read a long Henry James novel,. Thanks for your video.
Thank you. I read The Turn of the Screw. Its my favorite Henry James. Which for me is a little bit like saying its my favorite poke in the eye. I read The Wings of the Dove and it was a chore. James is definitely not the writer for me.
I am hereby absolved. Thank you, pastor Bookish!
Go in peace with my Bookish blessings.
This is a great video. I enjoy reading "classics" and "difficult" books sometimes, but I completely agree that no one should be reading a book simply because they think they "have to" in order to be "well read" or a "serious reader". Reading is a hobby. There are so many books, of all kinds - and everyone can and should find what they enjoy. I fully believe the reason why more adults don't read is because they were forced to read books they didn't like in grade school and that can really sour a person on it.
Very well said. And I agree with you about forcing kids to read classics in school being source of negative feelings about reading.
Well, to be well read one does need to read books-it’s in the definition of the term.
@@Summalogicae Yes. But not a specific list of books determined by other people
I've read (and enjoyed) three of the books you've listed, and I have never been attracted to any of the other 7, so I think I'm fine 😂. I fully agree that there's no such thing as 'books you have to read' (unless you're claiming to be an expert in a particular area).
I enjoyed this video, thank you! As someone who just finished reading Joyce's Ulysses for the fourth time about three weeks ago (I've returned to it every few years for a deeper appreciation of it), and as someone who can honestly say that Ulysses is among my favorite books... even with all of that I'd agree with you that the book is not something anyone should feel they have to read. (Unless they want to!)
Thank you. I'm glad to hear from someone who loves Ulysses. I found reading it a rich if at times frustrating and confusing experience. Another commenter mentioned something about the character of Leopold Bloom that reminded me that in addition to all the modernist stuff there is a vividly created character, however boring or unpleasant he may be, at the heart of the novel
@@BookishTexan Fellow Ulysses enjoyer here. I have only read ito nce and I thought it was amazing. That I didn't understand all if it didn't bother me.
@@DressyCrooner Your comment here is exactly how I felt about the book after my first read; in fact, it took me three attempts just to make it through my first one long ago. Now, after numerous times re-reading Ulysses over the decades, I love it more each time, picking up more things each time, and gaining an even deeper understanding. This book very much rewards returning to it.
Obviously I agree with your essential premise that nobody has to read anything and reading certain things doesn't make you a superior reader. I have never been tempted to read Infinite Jest or Gravity's Rainbow. Reading the first third of the Proust sequence was enough to give me the flavour and I may go back to the rest. But all the others on your list I have read. Blood Meridian wasn't hard, just violent. And I think Foucault's Pendulum didn't justify the effort involved. But all the others paid me back in spades for any hard work involved. So I do think there is nothing wrong with encouraging people to push themselves sometimes to read things that are one step beyond their usual fare to see how they find it.
If you stopped reading Proust after the first third I don't think you've missed an awful lot. The second third is very hard work for not much reward. In fact, just thinking about it now makes my temples pound with boredom and frustration. It picks up again a bit after that but I wish someone would bring out a heavily edited version of the whole thing with all the mind-numbing parts taken out. I finally got around to reading Blood Meridian last year and I completely agree with you.
No nothing wrong with encouraging people to read these books, I just think there is a certain pressure/elitism that shows up surrounding these books and other hard books that isn't valid or healthy. This of course is not true with you.
I do think many find McCarthy's vocabulary, ornate descriptions, and, in Blood Meridian, unwillingness to direct the reader to the true nature of the conflict to be challenging. That and no quotation marks etc.
@@jshaers96 I do wonder if I will ever find the motivation for more Proust when there are so many other books to read. You are tipping the balance against.
@@BookishTexan I hadn't even remembered the absence of quotation marks.
@@scallydandlingaboutthebook2711I'm sorry. If it helps I think the writing is beautiful and when what Proust was doing worked for me it was pretty amazing.
Blood Meridian is my favorite novel. I love all of Cormac McCarthy’s books, but Blood Meridian is a masterpiece.
It is a great book. But, not for everyone and not something people should feel compelled to read.
Agree. I think that is the great American novel.
Worthy titles for the list! As with healthy eating and exercise, I do think there's much to be gained from reading (or just attempting to read) hard books, even if we don't want to do it. However, I do recommend finding a coach, bringing a buddy, and taking baby steps. I couldn't make it through the first chapter of TSoundatFury; then I checked out the Cliffs Notes and it suddenly clicked (still didn't finish it). I'm stalled at the 60% mark with Beloved and looking forward to finding out what others got from it. But I'm also reading a bunch of other books that I am enjoying and mining lots from. Fortunately, there's lots of good books out there; no need to get hung up on a handful (even if I want to).
Very wise words. I almost made a bigger workout/read hard books analogy in this video (cant remember if I mentioned it or not right now). I agree that reading hard books can be beneficial just as lifting heavy weights can be beneficial, but it is also beneficial, equally beneficial at least, to do more reps with lighter weights. I think the same is likely true with reading less demanding books.
The Sound and the Fury is on my all time favorites list. I need to reread it one of these days. I’d still like to try Paradise and Cloud Atlas from this list.
I love that book and the more often I read it the more I love it. Paradise is a good book, maybe a very good book. Cloud Atlas can be fun.
Great video, Brian. What I’ve read: Ulysses, The Sound and the Fury, Proust (the whole thing 😮), 2666, Cloud Atlas. DNF: Infinite Jest, Blood Meridian, Foucault’s Pendulum. I’ve tried other Pynchon and DNF’d him every time. I was assigned Blood Meridian in a class. I got to about 60% and just could not face another page. I wanted to read those that I’ve read and decided the others weren’t books for me. There are many classics and “important” books that I have no intention of ever reading and I am totally okay with that. Don Quixote and Moby Dick come immediately to mind. I’ve tried them both and it’s just never going to happen.
All of Proust, that always impresses me not because of the length of the work, but because I know how much concentration that takes. I found many of Proust's passages to be beautiful and I am glad I read what I did, but I have never felt the compulsion to read more. The ones on the list you DNF'd I of course fully support, particularly Infinite Jest. Of all the books I put on this list it is, I think, the least worthwhile. Its like a 1000 page Vonnegut novel with notes. I read 100 pages of Don Q last year after putting it on a list of books I would never read and that was plenty. That 100 pages made me think it was a long book with one joke and I didn't always find that joke funny.
There is an abridged version of Moby Dick which I read recently which I liked. And it spared some of the whaling details.
@@BookishTexan My dad told me he utterly loathed DON QUIXOTE, but he's not really a literature guy, just a regular reader. So maybe he was missing some important context? One day I will tackle this book for myself. That day is not today. He also hated CATCH-22, which (though weird) I still liked. I thought my dad (having served in Vietnam) would connect with the "uselessness of Army bureaucracy" aspect of CATCH-22, but I think that part went right over his head. Perhaps satire/irony (or the like) is not for everyone? Maybe they're too literal. And in the case of DON QUIXOTE, I'm not really sure myself what Cervantes was satirizing. I'd have to do some research before diving in. I think when you're not "of the time" something was written, you might not get it. Like not understanding Orwell or Jonathan Swift or even Aldous Huxley. You need the context. You need to know what the author's ideas are in conversation with.
Ive read one of these (Cloud Atlas) and have three more on my list - Infinite Jest, 2666, and In Search of Lost Time. I definitely heard about all of them first as "hard books everyone needs to read" but these have filtered through to being books that actually really interest me, so theyre some of the ones that stayed on my list. At this point Ive pretty much given up on the idea of ever reading Charles Dickens for example (unless I have to for college), and honestly its a nice feeling. Very good video!
Thank you. You should definitely read any of these you want to. I do look be A Christmas Carol though.🤓
Thanks for inspiring me to read Sound & Fury. I think I'm ready to tackle Faulkner again. If I had only one book to read for a second time (and I wasn't allowed to re-read Tristram Shandy) it would be Absalom, Absalom.
Absalom, Absalom is a masterpiece and much more challenging than TSTF, but it is also less well known so I didn’t choose it for this list. Thanks for your comment.
Thanks for this video. I have read a few books on the list: 'Ulysses', 'In Search of Lost Time', 'The Sound and the Fury', 'Blood Meridian'. I had plenty of motivation to read 'Sound and the Fury', mainly a course in Wm. Faulkner I took in college. The lectures and criticism made it more lucid to me and made me curious to read it about three more times over the past 40 years or so, to the point where I think I got most of what Faulkner was saying. 'Ulysses' I have read once, with the aid of some literary criticism that elaborated on the parallels with Homer's 'Odyssey'. Some of it I enjoyed, much of it I just coasted along in the rhythm of the prose and didn't worry about what I didn't get. I've thought of re-reading it but probably never will. I read the seven volumes of 'In Search of Lost Time' over a five-month period and loved a lot of it. This is a work that I keep telling myself that I want to re-read sometime. Proust's philosophical observations are fascinating. He really takes a microscopic look at perception. 'Blood Meridian' was not that difficult to read stylistically and perhaps I blocked out much of the violence because it didn't shock me that much. I will re-read it sometime. McCarthy's 'Suttree' is far more of a challenging read. It's longer and has denser prose and seems more thematically complex. I also want to re-read this one sometime. I read Toni Morrison's 'Beloved' about 30 years ago and hope to re-read it sometime. It's powerful but a bit on the obscure side. I've read her first three novels, 'The Bluest Eye', 'Sula', and 'Song of Solomon', all of which are a little easier to read than 'Beloved'. What you say about 'Paradise' surprises me because I don't consider her to be a particularly difficult writer to read. I'll keep that in mind whenever I get to that book in the chronology. The other books on your list I've already decided are not worth the effort.
"Some of it I enjoyed, much of it I just coasted along in the rhythm of the prose and didn't worry about what I didn't get."
This is exactly how I read and how I reacted to Ulysses both times I read it. I think the difficulty with Blood Meridian, aside from the violence, comes from many readers desire for a normal plot and the confusion about who/what the judge is. I enjoyed Proust's writing, but I just didnt have the will to keep going. Beloved is more complex structurally and thematically than Morrison's first few books. Paradise is much dense in symbolism. Thanks for the great comment.
Great points! I have deffinitly read a few books that i wasnt excited for because they were "essential reading" and in most cases i did not enjoy them, i believe had i waited for myself go be ready to read them and ezcited to read them my opinion may of been quite different!
Great point about waiting until you are really ready. I read Ulysses way sooner than I should have and got more out of it and enjoyed it more the second time.
Great video, great encouragement! I had to read The Sound and the Fury for class when I was a “baby” English Lit Major. Oh boy was that an experience. I do remember getting something out of it due to class discussion, but I really was not ready for that level of lit. I truly would like to read it again with a lot more experience. Somewhat out of curiosity and somewhat out of a desire to actually read it. Infinite Jest? That sat on my shelf, unread, for years and so it went to another home. Who knows - maybe I’ll get a bee in my bonnet and read it someday 🤷🏼♀️
The Sound and The Fury was my third Faulkner and I wasn’t ready. But I do love that book. I’m not sure that Infinite Jest is worth the effort, but I hope you give it a try.
I'm glad you included Proust here. I read Ulysses (love it) and Faulkner (love it), and read ALL of In Search of, but did not love it. I'll also admit I DNF'd Beloved, (gasp) and will never go back, so that's on my list. I have a long list of books I've read that everyone seems to love, but which I don't love (I already know you and I share a disdain for Wuthering Heights). If you haven't already done this, I'd love to see you do a video about books you feel you're SUPPOSED to like, but didn't.
We do agree about Wuthering Heights and I will overlook your DNF of Beloved.😂 I did a video about ten books that disappointed me. I will go back and look at it and see if I have other books that I was supposed to like but didn't. That would be a fun video to make.
I couldn't get into Beloved either. And I also hate Wutgering Heights.
I read Foucault's Pendulum in the 1990s. Before I got my Kindle in 2012, if I started a book, I always finished it. I hated Foucault's Pendulum, but I struggled through it until the end. As soon as it was finished, I practically ran to a charity shop to donate it, just so it wouldn't be in the house!
I struggle with this. It has only been recently that I have been able to stop reading a boom I was not enjoying.FP was one of the first.
I liked FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM, but it was a bit of a headscratcher, as I recall. Is it absurdist? Post-modern? Complete conspiracy? I believe I read the book more than once, and I can't answer those questions, so I guess it's not successful in what it sets out to achieve? I don't know. Not sure if I'd ever go back to it. There are too many other things to read.
I read it when it came out. But first I read 6 short books on the Cabala and that made it a bit easier to understand. Never again.
One last thought... for newbie bibliophiles...
Don't start with "Finnigan's Wake."
Loved Blood Meridian, but I agree I would not recommend it to anyone unless they are really interested in the subject matter. The prose while beautiful, can be dense. And it's quite brutal.
Looking forward to attempting The Sound and the Fury one day though, as someone who enjoyed As I Lay Dying.
I loved Blood Meridian too and think it is very rewarding to those who are interested. I hope you enjoy TS&TF when you get to it.
I am a fan of Toni Morrison and honestly I don't understand all of her books while I'm reading them; but I find her writing SO beautiful - its like a decadent dessert that is best consumed slowly and in small portions. I haven't read Paradise yet, but I will one of these days..... even if its hard. lol.
I feel exactly the same about Morrison’s writing and her books. Paradise is worth the effort if you want to.
Morrison is fantastic.
There was an article of John Updike questioning her legacy (in his opinion her latests novels haven't the same quality) and it's curious that 15 years later Morrison's legacy seems in a way better shape than Updike's
Great list and wise advice! In the long run though I think that books I have had to spend more time on have become some of my most memorable. There are also ways of easing the effort - my read of Ulysses was made possible by the audio book narrated by Jim Norton, Foucault’s pendulum was helped by Jason and Faulkner in August has seen me through some of his books. Paradise is my next Morrison and I want to read it as I want to read all of her novels so fingers crossed!
There is nothing wrong with reading any of these books. With a few exceptions I enjoyed all of them. Obviously you know that Faulkner and Morrison are among my favorite authors. I don't think I could audio Ulysses though. Seems like it would be really hard for me to follow. Paradise is a very good book. A very ambitious book for someone who had already accomplished so much with her writing.
@@BookishTexan absolutely - I did the audio of Ulysses as an ‘audio text combo’ as Shawn the book maniac would say - I read along to the audio, and then read the same section myself (took a long time though!)
Maybe I'm weird, but these are precisely the kinds of book I look forward most to reading. I love getting involved with something I know is going to demand my full attention and rewards however much time and study and analysis and rereads I care to give it. Of these I've read Ulysses, The Sound and the Fury and Blood Meridian and all are among my favorites, especially The Sound and the Fury. Faulkner radically changed my perception of what literature could do and I find his entire output from '29 to '36 astonishing. I've even since started reading various studies on Faulkner to try to get even more out of the experience.
Some I'd add to the list would be the late novels of Henry James (The Wings of the Dove, The Ambassadors, and The Golden Bowl) and Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe.
You should join us for Faulkner in August a yearly reading event in which we read one of Faulkner’s novels. This year’s book is As I Lay Dying
The best book ever written, other than the Bible, is Ivanhoe by Sir Walter Scott
I started that once. I will have to go back and give it another shot.
I absolutely loved Foucault's Pendulum. Eco is one of my favorite writers. Several of the books on your list are on my TBR list: Blood Meridian, Cloud Atlas, Infinite Jest, 2666. I have an English degree, so I had to read Ulysses and The Sound and the Fury for my degree. I've read The Sound and the Fury twice, because English departments in Southern universities treat Faulkner as a god, so you have to read his novels.
I tried to read Foucaults Pendulum and it just wasn’t my thing. I do love Faulkner, but then I’m Southern so I guess I got the pattern.🤓
I see what you're saying man, and certainly there are many "classics" and overhyped novels that don't merit that classification, but one could just as easily make a video for why one should tackle all of these books. Not that one should read a difficult book for the sake of difficulty, but many difficult books are impressive, immersive, and worthwhile. There's quite an array of styles and subject matter in these 10 books, and they're probably worth reading at least once. Ulysses is one of my all time favorite books, so I guess that speaks to my willingness to be an ambitious reader. And I appreciate ambition in a writer. It all depends on whether the hypothetical reader in question wants to interact with the history and development of literature. If they don't, well, then sure, they don't have to read any of the classics or any groundbreaking book. Not that every book on this list is as beautifully and richly groundbreaking as Ulysses, but still. In a way it's a paradox because you can only make this judgment of these books after having read them, and I think everyone should read a book for themselves before dismissing it. I'm not trying to bark at you or anything. In fact, I'm sure that in a different video or in a different mood you would agree with that perspective too. I always appreciate your content.
Thank for the comment and for watching. I agree that almost all of the books on the list are worth reading. What I am saying is that no one has to read them to qualify as a serious reader or to consider themselves a reader. Ulysses is great. I've read it twice and might read it again. I agree with everything you said about it. People should read it if they want to, but not because they think they should or because they want to say they have read it.
I read Foucault' Pendulum in the original Italian and enjoyed it greatly. In Search of Lost Time is very well written but I couldn't finish the last part. I hated Marcel's pathological obsession with Albertine. Infinite Jest is a thorn in my side. I read 140 pages, but I find it very hard going. I don't care about the characters, so when read it I feel frustrated but I feel like I should read it, since I bought it and so many people think it's a great book. Maybe that is what you mean when you say "You don't have to read it unless you want to." I still feel like I should, though. It's almost like a challenge. I can force myself to finish it, but will it be worth it?
Thanks for your comment. I think my experience with Foucault’s Pendulum is similar to yours with Infinite Jest. I hope if you do read it you find it worthwhile.
I've read most of the books you mentioned, but struggle with Henry James. I always feel that I should "give him another go".
Henry James and I don’t mix. I read two of his novels and Dailey Miller and his style really irritates me. I have him on a list of authors I won’t read now.
Maybe try "Washington Square".
"Blood Meridian" is his best work. It should be read! Ditto "The Sound And The Fury!"
I love both those books. But I don’t think there are any books that should/ must be read.
While no one has to read any book, I have to disagree to an extent. You don’t have to read them to be a “serious reader” or to be able to say you read them, but if you have any interest in being alive at all, I think you do at least need to try to read these - particularly Infinite Jest, Ulysses, and Gravity’s Rainbow. I understand, these books aren’t for everyone, but looking back at my personal experiences with those three specifically, my life would not be nearly as complete as it is without those books. They changed my life, and my relation to the world around me, in a profound manner. Infinite Jest especially made me realize that I’m not nearly as alone as I thought I was, and I think it can do that for anyone who reads it. It’s essential to understanding the human condition.
I think it’s great that those books had such an impact on your life. The three books that changed my life would not include those three. I don’t think there is a list of books that will work in that way for everyone. I think almost all the books in this video are worth reading, but I don’t think there are any should/must read books. Thank you for the great comment.
Desses eu já li: Meridiano de Sangue, e 2666. Adorei ambos. Já comecei a ler, porém não terminei Infinite Jest e Gravitys Rainbow, não estava me divertindo. Tenho muita vontade de ler Cloud Atlas e The Sound and the fury. Também tenho vontade de tentar terminar Gravitys Rainbow (eu amo Inherent Vice) e Infinite Jest.
I think all the books on my list are worth reading if you want to. I hope you will finish them if you are enjoying them. Cloud Atlas is probably the most fun book on the list. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Morrison is my favorite author. It took me four readings of Paradise to approach a degree of comprehension that I'm satisfied with lol. I had to sit down with a pencil and Morrison's narration at 1.0x speed. The way she narrates her work can untangle the occasionally confusing syntax, and the slow pace of her reading helped give proper time to let the images of the book settle in my mind. The feelings of an entire town are often encapsulated in a single sentence, and they're easy to glance over and miss, and not to mention concepts and plot points that are hinted at throughout and revealed later on if you aren't paying attention. The key for me was to focus on the emotion -- we don't really know what the Oven is for the entire first third of the book, nor the words written on it, but we know that it pissed a lot of people off. Holding onto that feeling every time the Oven was mentioned made the payoff so satisfying. It was such a rewarding experience!!!
Now I want to listen to the audio of Paradise. I did not know that Morrison narrated it. Your description definitely makes me think it would be worthwhile. Thank you!
Great conversation. Lots of variables, of course. I do feel compelled as a reader to tackle the toughies, but I completely agree not everyone should bother, especially if you're miserable doing so. I will go through the experience of these long journeys, and if I feel I must revisit the journey, I will. It took me three readings of Paradise, but this one was personal to me and I was going to travel the path until I felt like I'd absorbed the experience. Others...once was enough.
Three times through Paradise is impressive. I thought it was a good book, but I wasn't willing to go back to it. Nothing wrong with reading tough books if that's what you want to do.
One audio, one library, one purchased copy and finally it took hold. I loved Beloved by the way, it floored me. Paradise was just personal, starting with the first line which gets my vote for best first line ever. But I totally understand why others wouldn't even attempt that book. I will never read another Pynchon after GR, I don't care if he's awarded sainthood. @@BookishTexan
I started Gravity's Rainbow back when it first came out in the 70's. Got through about 1/3 until school got in the way and I set it aside. When Border's books went out of business, they were selling off their inventory for a song, and I picked up a copy of Against the Day. It resided on my bookshelf next to Gravity's rainbow until last year, when I picked it up and read it all the way through. Then I picked up Gravity's Rainbow and read it all through. Then I found a copy of Inherent Vice which I finished. I think the key to reading Pynchon is to press on and not try to reflect or resolve continuities as you go through them. I think Thomas Wolfe is a little more readable.
Blood Meridian is good.
I like your approach to Pynchon. It sounds like my approach to Joyce and other difficult books/authors. The only other Pynchon I have read was Mason & Dixon which I did like.
Since being on Booktube I had tackled some books that I felt I needed to have read and it was a mistake, I was miserable. But it's making me more astute as to realising what I'll enjoy reading or not. I want to give Proust a chance, it's in many parts, so may just try one part and see how it goes!
Thanks for the great comment. I made myself miserable with a few of these as well. I hope I won’t do that again.🤓 Proust writes beautifully and evocatively. I hope you will give his work a try if you want to.
I felt Infinite Jest was easier for me to read than The Sound and the Fury. Faulkner’s work through a wrench in my gears and was very hard to understand and get through. I love this video and you got yourself a new subscriber!
@@Jonny_2099 Thank you. Faulkner is one of my favorite authors, but TS&TF is a challenging read.
I have Ulysses on my shelf but haven't tackled it yet. I have listened to Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man on Audible and evI found it challenging to so I'm in no rush for the other one. Maybe someday I'll tackle Blood Meridian. I read The Road and was blown away. It still haunts me years later. I did read All the Pretty Horses which I was a little cooler on. Recently picked up the next series The Crossing. In do have Proust's Swann's Way but have yet to tackle that yet.
I hope you enjoy them all when you get a chance to read them. I have very mixed feeling about The Crossing and the third in the series Cities of the Plain. If you read The Road I don't think there is anything in Blood Meridian that will slow you down
I often say there is really only one question one needs to ask oneself when deciding whether to continue reading a book beyond its first few pages: do you care what happens to the characters? Or, for a plot or concept driven narrative, do you want to know what happens next? If the answer to any of those questions is "no", then stop reading - or stop watching in the case of a film or tv series, as the question really is exactly the same.
This question also covers books that are hard because of their language or narrative structure as it may disconnect you from the characters or break your immersion with the story, in which case you will quickly not care what happens next or what the fate of the characters might be.
Then there are of course books that you might simply not be in the mood for when you approach them the first time, but which you may try again at some other point. You will usually be able to tell if that might be the case. Some books require more patience, and some might also be more emotionally demanding, and in both cases, there will be times in your life when you won't feel up to it. These are often worth revisiting, which will be easier if you manage to at least identify what about them made you have to stop reading the first time and then realise when the time is right to try again.
I think it's important to read what you want to read so that you spend your time on something you enjoy, or that stimulates you intellectually or emotionally in some way, as art is supposed to do. And one should also never be ashamed of what one enjoys reading, nor embarrassed about not having read something that "everyone" has read, but which of course many people are just pretending to have read in order to seem more clever.
There is snobbery everywhere, and the only way to get rid of it is to proudly enjoy what you like and never to judge anyone else for their taste.
Thank you for the excellent comment. I agree with all of it, particularly the idea of note being ashamed or embarrassed by what you like to read. Book snobbery is vile and I should know because I used to be one. I will argue that sometimes, if what you want from a book is a challenge or something different even difficult, it a can be very rewarding to push through a book. Additionally, there are other reasons to continue reading other than the plot or the characters, but those are matters of individual taste and not something that indicates a more "serious" or superior reader.
Great dog! Oh, and excellent discussion! Thanks!
@@e1e2t3 Thank you.
Thank you Bookish, I feel absolved except for Cloud Atlas,as I love David Mitchell books.
I really liked Mitchell's Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet and I liked Cloud Atlas. Utopia Avenue was not, in my opinion, good.
@@BookishTexan I mentioned this last year but I think you would like Black Swan Green about a boy growing up in a suburb of England, ..no gimmicks, funny and heartbreaking.
@@sandra7319. I remember that and I remember thinking I should read it. Hopefully your recommendation will stick this time.
This is a great list with quite a few of my DNFs on it and a few never-starteds, too. There are so many wonderful books in this world, I'm never going to waste another minute trying to plough through something that's not speaking to me.
I agree completely with your approach to reading. Read what you want, not what someone else thinks you should.
I agree. Very nicely done.
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Thank you.
I slogged through Foucault's Pendulum. Best to think of it as the journey rather than the destination. If you're not enjoying it, yes - bail out❤
I’ve started it twice. Not sure I’m going to go back to it.
For whatever reason, I generally eschew American authors, with one proviso--skip Hemingway, skip Faulkner, & go directly to John Dos Passos, who wrote an incredible number of works, both fiction & non-. Ive read a couple of his decades ago, & just started the trilogy U.S.A. I remembered in the first few pages why I like his writing so much. I still haven't gotten through all the century-old (or nearly) books, perhaps I'll get around to the contemporary era in 20 or 30 years. Also, used books are generally a lot cheaper than new ones (& better made) & if you haven't read them, they are still new to you.
Books I would recommend: Thos. Mann-Magic Mountain; Hermann Broch-Death of Virgil; Hasek-The Good Soldier Sveik; Aphra Behn-Love Letters between a Nobleman & his Sister; Breton-What is Surrealism; Hesse-The Glass bead Game; Bulgakov-The Master & Margarita. (Yes, it's true, I love European Modernism.)
I do agree that there are a lot of strings in Foucault's Pendulum (possibly a fictional account of quantum entanglement) so I would recommend Baudolino or The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana (the latter especially if you're interested in early-mid 20th C. Italian commercial illustrations).
I will take Henry James over James Joyce any day of the week, my personal favorite The Ambassadors. If you're a writer & having trouble with dialogue, Read Henry James.
Thank you for all the recommendations. I have videos about the USA Trilogy, Dos Passos and Hemingway (Dos didn’t seem to agree with your dismissal) and a short biographical sketch of Dos Passos. In grad school Dos Passos’ Three Soldiers was a very important text in a research project I completed.
Several of the books you mentioned I have read or have intended to read, but Mann’s Magic Mountain isn’t one of them I’m afraid. Also, I’ve read enough Henry James to know he isn’t for me. Thank you for watching and commenting.
I hate - HATE - Henry James and take particular pleasure in sending passages from his novels to a friend, an English professor at a prestigious university, and demanding to know what these passages mean. I’ve never received a reply. James, to me, commits the cardinal sin of calling attention to himself with his complicated and impenetrable prose. Updike, too, I’m sad to say.
@@johnsterman77 James and I do not mix well.
I have read and loved all of these books except for Eco and Proust. Blood Meridian is in my top 3 books; I only wish I could read it again for the first time!
That’s great to hear. I have read and love a few of them.
if you have lived in the Allston/Brighton area of Boston for a while I would recommend experiencing Infinite Jest
Good to know. I read the book sometime ago, but the parts that center around the halfway house are the most memorable for me.
Praise be! I’d love to chat with you sometime about books and reading if you’d be interested. I host a stream biweekly on Fridays and think you’d be an incredible guest.
Thank you! My email is bbbookish@gmail.com. Feel free to email.
I got one third of the way through Infinite Jest before I put it down. I just couldn't. I think Marcel Proust might go the same way, I'm a quarter through Swann's Way but I still can't work out if anything has happened or will happen. The only way to get through Ulysses is to read it out loud.
The interesting about reading Ulysses aloud. Do you subvocalize (hear your voice in your head when you read)? Regarding Proust: Yes something happens (ish) and things are revealed, but none of them are monumental.
I found S.J. Perelman tough going until I started reading him in Groucho Marx's voice -- then he made sense. Which would have really pissed off Perelman, because he hated being compared to Groucho.
i mean - nobody has to read anything. i personally think videos like this feed into the anti-literary/anti-classics crowd that is so prevalent on the internet today. I genuinely believe no one has to read anything or do anything they don't want. But i think it goes too far when people want to deny the quality of clearly great works of literature. I loved 2666 by Bolaño and I think it's one of the best novels of the 21st century. Blood Meridian in my opinion is the preeminent western novel of the 20th century and is McCarthy's crowning achievement. Sound and the Fury is a tremendously rewarding read but i didn't fully appreciate it until I read it together with my girlfriend about 20 years after i first tried it. I also won't stand by while Proust slander is being thrown about - I love Proust and I've learned a ton about the human condition by reading him. Do you need to read ISoLT? no - nobody needs to read anything.
difficult, challenging books are not worth reading just because they are difficult. its the quality of the writing and cultural relevance that makes them worth reading.
Now I'll tell you an unnecessarily difficult book that you don't need to read - Omensetter's luck by William H Gass. the first 40 pages of the book is practically incomprehensible. is there still literary value? probably but I couldnt get to it.
I’ve never read Gass or Gaddis and I don’t have much interest. I agree with your assessment of the others. I think Blood Meridian is a true classic. I enjoyed Proust some of the time and his writing and the sense of nostalgia and his ability to communicate that sense to readers who live a century after his books were published is remarkable.
Good list! I've read 3 and DNF'd 3. Like you, I adored The Sound and the Fury.
Awesome! Always nice to hear from another Sound and the Fury fan.
Your description of some of these books makes me want to try them. I only got through Ulysses because of audiobook and several documentaries about Ulysses. I studied Dubliners for A level English literature in 1980. I find Joyce fascinating.
I had that thought particularly as I was discussing The Sound and the Fury. I want people who really want to read these books to read them.
I think Joyce the person was really interesting. I don't think I can concentrate hard enough on an audiobook to have gotten through Ulysses that way.
I read Foucault’s pendulum way back in 2007. Can’t remember much of it though 😊
I think I've only made it through about page 110 in FP
I've read other Joyce but not Ulysses. However, I came across a website where a guy was slowly writing Ulysses as a graphic novel. He had the first portion up at that time, I imagine there is now more. I tried to watch the movie of Cloud Atlas. It was too mixed up for me and about the time the guy threw the author of the top of the building I gave up. Foucault's Pendulum was a challenge but I managed to stick with it but now, about thirty years later, I should do a re=read. And I've got Gravity's Rainbow on my computer waiting to load onto my e-reader. There's no hurry. Thank you for your absolution. 😀
You are welcome🤓 The Ulysses graphic novel sounds kind of amazing. I’ll have to try to find it. FP is just not a book for me, but I know many people like you who enjoyed it. In the spirit of this video let me say: You don’t have to read Gravity’s Rainbow, but if you do I hope it’s because you want to.
I am going to read Ulysses, by god…. I have 2 copies and multiple reference books sitting on my bed leering at me, challenging me. I got about 50 pages into Foucault’s Pendulum; I wanted to like it; I just couldn’t get past all the endless descriptions….
Same with me and Foucault’s Pendulum. I hope you do read Ulysses, but only if you really want to.
Definitely appreciate this as I am currently struggling my way through Sound and the Fury. I don't really want to DNF it as I do enjoy the writing and the story but it is just so dang depressing. I also DNF'd Rabbit Run for the same reason. I want to read more challenging and complex books, but sometimes it does feel like many of the most respected books are just miserable times.
The Sound and the Fury is incredibly depressing. I wish I could say there is some hope in it. If there is it is in the Dillsey section. That section is pretty unusual in Faulkner's work. I dislike the work of Thomas Hardy for the exact reason you mention here.
Do you think the praise for some of these books is a case of "The Emperor's New Clothes"?
@@e1e2t3 No, not really. Infinite Jest maybe.
I'm sure I'll have read all of this list within the next few years, since the ones I have not read yet are mostly on the Boxall's 1001 Books lists. I actually liked Cloud Atlas, and didn't find it hard. I did read Ulysses, and hated it, though listening to the BBC radio play of it helped make it make some sense. I've read Eco, but not Foucault's Pendulum (yet), and I read the Crying of Lot 49, which I hated, so I have put off reading another, longer Pynchon book for a while. I've read the first 2 sections and the 5th and 6th sections of Proust, and they weren't hard, just tedious. My sister LOVES Proust, so I am sure I'll have to finish it eventually.
I have noticed that a theme in common with a lot of 'hard' books on book lists is violence against women, which always makes me wonder about the culture and the people who make the cannon that determines who is well read. In any case, once I finish my projects reading the Boxall 1001 Books lists and Guardian 1000 novels list, I am probably considering myself done with quite a few or the 'great' writers whose misogynist writing keeps getting added to new book lists, not because they are hard, but because there are other more wholesome voices in modern literature that don't perpetuate such an unhealthy culture.
I am impressed by your commitment to reading from these lists, but I wonder if these are the books that you really want to read or do you feel compelled/obligate to read them or to try to read them. What I would say is that if you don’t like reading classics by misogynists don’t read them or any other book that you don’t want to read.
I might eventually start skipping books on lists I am reading, but I read fast enough that a bad book is only a small investment of time and energy. Steve Donoghue did a great job of describing some of the reasons people read hard books, and reading a list like Boxall's is one of those projects where reading a few lousy books is part of the overall project.
When I talk about disliking a book I disliked off that list, like Ulysses or The Atrocity Exhibition, I can articulate why I disliked them, as an informed evaluation rather than a DNF. & for every lousy book or author on a list like that there are several authors I'd never have tried that I really enjoy.Reading projects like this are not for everyone, and I'm sure a lot of readers get into them for all the wrong reasons, but for me it is a reading project that has worked for over a decade.
Hmm, well. I have read one of these books -- Gravity's Rainbow -- and thoroughly enjoyed it. In fact, I may re-read it one day, since I've learned a lot from life since I read it in the '80s. I have a copy of Ulysses, and intend to read it, as I'm sure many people say. There is no Proust in my collection, but I'm beginning to get interested and may try him if I find a good deal and translation. As for the rest of these books, no interest so I'll take your advice. There are so many books that I *want* to read that I feel no guilt about ignoring those that others say I should read. And these are all big novels -- I much prefer collections of short stories, and non-fiction. Heck, there's copies of The Decameron, and 1001 Nights, and the essays of E.B. White calling to me. That should fill in a pretty good chunk of my time on Earth.
PS: I like your room.
Those last books will indeed fill a lot of time. You have hit upon the key to happy reading: read what you want to read and not what others say you should or must read. Thanks for the room call membranes as well.
I really get what you're saying, but my friends would say I definitely fit the category of difficult book 'collector'. I was very pleased with myself when I finished Ulysses! I would confess to a certain level of literary snobbery, but I always thought if these books had such a great reputation, I should read them and once started I have to finish - however long it takes 😊. Talking of difficult books - have you read Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry? One of my favourites.
I have not read Lowry. I’ve heard mixed things about it from people with similar taste to mine. About reading hard books to say you have: I don’t think that’s what you did. It sounds to me like you were curious and like to challenge yourself. And because you like more literary works books like Ulysses were ones you wanted to read. Those are of course great reasons to read them that are similar to my own. If I were approaching them now as a reader who had t read them there are a few I would skip. Thanks for the great comment.
Too kate in most cases, although I'm part way through DFW & Joyce and will persist at some point to get to the end of both
That is true. I cant' put a book down for a long time and pick it back up. For me it has to happen all in one go no matter how long that takes. I look forward to hearing your full thoughts about both of those books.
i think one of the reasons to read ulysses is, because you get much information about dublin in this time... it is maybe a good introduction to irish politics also... but maybe not so much people are really interested in these things... i agree, the marvel universe is maybe more fascinating...
That is very true. More than 100 years after it was written I think that detail adds to the confusion because there are so many references that today's readers have no idea about.
@@BookishTexan yes, but the same goes e.g. for "war and peace" by tolstoi...
@@robertschobesberger6300 Agreed. The m not reading War and Peace either.
I’ve read Infinate Jest 4 times , and still love it. I think it’s because I’m very intelligent but very scattered, so oddly I enjoy it. It’s my bedtime listening.
Glad you like it so much.
Thank you for this, it was excellent. I get the concept of feeling I must read certain titles (eg War & Peace) to have a black belt in reading, but I think even more is a feeling of curiosity. Both "why is this book considered so important?" and "is it really that good?" And maybe "is it enjoyable?" So I think maybe you're also giving me permission that after 50 pages or so I can dnf if it doesn't seem important (to me) or doesn't seem that good. Thanks!
I think that wanting to read the books out of curiosity is great. Obligation no. War and Peace is not a book I have read or intend to read. It’s just too long.🤓 Thanks for watching and commenting.
I've started PARADISE and, so far, have found it vivid and gripping. Same with BLOOD MERIDIAN. Yes, the subject matter is disturbing, but as with anything by McCarthy, you should expect that to be the case coming out of the gate. Odd that Bookish left out Joyce's FINNEGAN"S WAKE. It should've headed the list, as should have Gaddis's. THE RECOGNITIONS.
'Finnegans Wake' was the first title that came to mind for me too when confronting this topic. Most people find that text virtually unreadable, and it is unreadable in the ordinary sense (decoding would be a more accurate term describing one's engagement with the book).
I havent read or event attempted either of those so I did not include them. Paradis is very good and Blood Meridian is a true American classic.
Good news! Most people have already been opting out of these books.
And you're of course correct but there is a reason people challenge themselves with these hard books.
Very true. And there is nothing wrong with anyone challenging themselves with one or all of these books.
I've only read three of these and I doubt I'll read the others because I am not interested. I don't think we "have" to read hard books, but they can be rewarding if we push through. I didn't enjoy Ulysses, but I am happy to have read it and I understand the cultural references better. I felt after reading it that I would have understood it much more if I knew the history of Dublin. I felt somewhat the same after reading Swann's Way. I don't need to read the rest, but I have an understanding of references to it that I didn't prior. I need to reread The Sound and the Fury, but I don't know if I will. I haven't read it since college, but I have read a few other Faulkner books in the past decade and that may be enough for me.
I agree completely with everything you said here particularly with your view of Proust and Ulysses. I do think hard reads can be very rewarding, but I think it’s important to do it because you want to, not out of a sense of obligation.
I am on my third time through Ulysses and I get a little more out of it each time. I am on volume five of Proust, which I began in undergrad back in the early 80s!! It's not for nothing that it is the world's longest novel!!!
I’m glad you’ve joy them.
I DNF’d Cloud Atlas at 60% so happy to agree on that one 😂
Me and Alice are struggling through Ulysses at the moment, and will finish it out of pure stubbornness 😂
You’ve actually sold me on quite a few of these 😆
Haha! I do love some of the books on this list.
I still want to try Marcel Proust. One day maybe…
There is some beautiful writing in his books.
I'm British so my reading in American literature is poor, however, I'm trying to read some American history for Historathon. I like Umberto Ecco, and have read many of his books. Gravity's Rainbow is not only weird, but inaccurate in some of the London details. It might be a great book, but much of it was plain silly. I have read 3 books, so far by Cormac Mccarthy. The violence repells me. I am in possession of several Wm Faulkner volumes. I may get round to them, but shan't force myself. I want to read Emerson , the Trandendalists and other American classics, so don't think I am anti -American literature. I just haven't had much luck with some of these. This was a fine video, thanks.
I hope you’ll try a Faulkner if you feel like it. I want to read Emerson as well, but somehow I always forget. I’m interested to know what American History you are reading.
@@BookishTexan I'm building a selection of books War of Independence and the Civil War. I want to get the American perspective. I'm following Peg of the History Shelf and she is good on military History, but I need to find decent social histories of the period, so if you have any suggestions, I'd be open to them. I'm doing Historathon, so I have plenty of time to get them. I shall try Faulkner, which book would you start with?
@@battybibliophile-Clare Peg is the exact right booktuber to get suggestions from on those topics. She’s great! Some Civil War suggestions: This Republic of Suffering by Drew Gilpin Faust, Embattled Courage by Linderman, and Down by the Riverside by Joyner (this one is about culture on an enslaved community), Ghosts of the Confederacy (about Reconstruction and post Civil War)
Faulkner wise if you are interested in his Stream of Consciousness books I’d Start with As I Lay Dying. If you want to get your feet wet with a more straight forward book The Hamlet or maybe The Unvanquished.
@@BookishTexan I have the series including the Hamlet. Yes, Peg is one of my favourite booktubers, she's so enthusiastic. I have noted your suggestions and am off to look for them. I do appreciate your suggestions, thanks.
🤣🤣🤣 Well, I'm glad you absolve me, because although I do not shy away from a challenge (heck, I finished all of Tale of Genji last year), almost all of those are on my list of... nope. I did read Cloud Atlas and then go on to read (and enjoy) the rest of David Mitchell's oeuvre thus far, that's the one exception. I'm reading Bolaño's Savage Detectives right now, partly so I can check that box and *not* have to read 2666!
I've enjoyed everything I've read by Toni Morrison and haven't tried Paradise yet, but Kim at Middle of the Book March just DNF'd it for the second time, and that along with your 'warning' is going to put it at least last on the books of hers I try!
Paradise is a very good book, but it is very dense in biblical allusions and allegory. I have read three Mitchell books and like The Thousand Autumns of JDZ the best. I think I have Genji in a video that contains a list of classics I have no intention of reading.🤓
I read only an excerpt from Joyce's "Finnegan's Wake." Since it didn't make the list here, do I have to read all of it now? Damn it! I was looking for an excuse to save me the chore. I read "Blood Meridian" twice and never felt I wasted my time, but then again I invoke the qualifier, "Unless You Want To."
I only included books I have read or tried to read. I haven’t tried to read Finnegan’s Wake. I herby absolve you of having to read it. Blood Meridian is a classic.
@@BookishTexan > Thank you. But the question now becomes do YOU HAVE to read FW? Unless you can find someone who says you don't have to, (unless you want to) you may have to include it on your books to read bucket list, and you may HAVE TO to read it my friend, otherwise you could lose your Bookish status. Since you gave me a pass, again I thank you. I couldn't get pass the excerpt, but I don't know how YOU can get a pass. 🤥
@@delstanley1349 My powers of absolving people from reading extends yo myself. I’ll never read Finnegan’s Wake.
Prousts‘ „In search or lost time“ is also super funny. Read the first three volumes and definitely plan to read it all at some point
One of my weaknesses as a reader is picking up on humor in novels. But you are right that there is humor in Proust’s books.
@@BookishTexan does this mean, that you can't identify a funny take at all, or more that you can't lough even though you think this take is funny? Have you read any russian or german literature? I'm german, and my reading journey is taking place through the afro-german lense :)
I picked up Infinite Jest and immediately got intimidated by the footnotes. Don’t think I made it five pages. (And your sleepy pup in the background is adorable!)
IJ is a lot. I honestly don’t think you are missing much by not reading it. Zelda (my dog) is always asleep or sleepy.
When it comes to Faulkner, I found Absalom, Absalom to be far more difficult than The Sound and the Fury, at least in terms of density. I would also add to your list The Sot-Weed Factor, Moby Dick, and The Brothers Karamozov, which are the only books I've ever DNF'ed.
I agree about AA, but people talk about it less so it is, I think, less often pushed on people. I agree with your list.
I thought that everyone knew that no one is a serious reader until they’ve read The Critique of Pure Reason.
😱
My father is a fan of that book! He keeps trying to turn my mother on to it, but she constantly demurs. And thanks for the reminder that great, canonical literature is not confined to fiction.
Ha! Guess that proves that I am not a serious reader.😁
@@barrymoore4470Wow , really? Is your mom a philosophy student? The 1st Critique is a great book but not so much because of its literary aspects-it’s a clunky, difficult read, even in the German; but the ideas will blow you away!
@@Summalogicae My mother's actually not a keen reader of philosophical literature per se, but my father thinks exposure to Kant would be edifying, and promotes his classic work for that reason. Kant is definitely a cornerstone of modern Western philosophy, but notoriously difficult.
@@barrymoore4470I would suggest trying something much easier by Kant; namely, the essay, “What is Enlightenment.”
Of course no one has to read any book, and I am delighted that you included books that you yourself love here. That being said: The first section of “Cloud Atlas” can be a slog, but after that it really gets going and there are many, many delights to be had, especially the hilarious nursing home sections. I too love Faulkner, and my favorite is “Absalom, Absalom,” which I frequently recommend unsuccessfully to others 🤣. As for “Ulysses,” I get it, especially when you hit that third Telemachus chapter, but I’m of Irish descent and hate to see it here. I don’t think you need to explore all the references or think about them at all, unless you’re of an arcane mind. Essentially it is a tragic-comic story of a married couple who love each other but whose sex life has been aborted by the death of a son, and of a son who has lost a mother and (at least figuratively) a father, how their paths intersect during one day, and how that day is a microscopic acceptance of the whole universe. There’s poetry, heartbreak, and hilarity in it. You don’t have to read it, but your world might become larger if you do.
You wrote: "You don’t have to read it, but your world might become larger if you do." Beautifully put...this is the impetus to investigate literature (and art in general) in a nutshell.
I like most of the books on my list, love several and have read them more than once. What I am against is the idea that these books must be read and the parallel idea that reading certain books qualifies one as a “serious reader.”
I think there are some books with a reputation for being difficult that are important to read in order to be part of the conversation that books have between “themselves” and with other readers. .. to get the references and therefore the deeper meaning
That being said, I agree that *most* of the books on your list are not necessary to be a “well read” person. In my opinion, Ulysses and Proust and some Faulkner and some of Morrison are pivotal and important reads.
DFW: no, not necessary. Gravity’s Rainbow: not necessary. Pendulum, not necessary. Etc. Etc.
I enjoy being part of the conversation with other readers and the conversation with the book I am reading, so I forge on with a lot of big books that have the reputation for difficult for that reason and for the feeling of having accomplished something outside my zone of comfort.
Thank you for your blessing and absolution. I need all of both of those I can get.
I certainly agree that having those books as a background to engage in conversations is a good reason to read them. But I’m not sure every reader wants that. Agree about IJ and GR.
@@BookishTexan Partly I was speaking metaphorically about difficult books being in conversation with each other, referencing symbolically a great work that came before it and the reader not understanding the reference if the original (difficult) book was not read. (WOW that sounds like a big bowl of word salad.. too tired to fix it)
@@TKTalksBooks Haha! I love word salad. Probably why I like Faulkner and Joyce. I know what you mean and yes if a reader wants to be able to see that progression and those connections reading these books would be important.
They are undeniably great parts in Ulysses, that make it hard to dismiss outright. But there are also large chunks, like the Nighttown sequence, that are utterly awful and unreadable. I think it's one of those books (like Don Quixote) that improves the longer ago you read it, so that you remember the good parts and forget the bits that made you want to chew your own arm off.
I suspect for me that what you said about Ulysses aging better in your mind than the actual experience at the time is true for me. I couldn't get past page 100 of Don Q.
All readers are equal, but some readers are more equal than others 😄. I have Could Atlas buried on my book case. I should dig it out, it sounds great.
I hope you like Cloud Atlas.
Thank you :)@@BookishTexan
The books/authors of these I've read I've generally enjoyed, I often like reading the "harder" stuff, a lot of these are appealing to me...
... but man, the effort involved in Ulysses, I dunno if I'm likely to get to that one. (and that's okay!)
Almost all of the books on the list are ones I like and some I truly love. I’m not sold on the idea of reading something just because it is hard, but I have done it.
I felt I must read _Ulysses_ in order to know what people were talking about - I’m glad I did, mainly for that purpose. I read _The Sound and the Fury_ because I had to - for a class. If this video had existed I would have shown it to my teacher & said it gave dispensation. Proust I read 2/3rds of _Swann’s Way_ and also feel no compelling reason to pick it up again - not that I’m opposed.
Let’s see, glanced at _Infinite Jest_ and went meh; tried _Savage Detectives_ and couldn’t get into it, so have not hankered after Bolaño’s posthumous opus. Of the others, I’m glad to be absolved.
Same for me on Ulysses and Proust. Infinite Jest is easily the least worthwhile book on this list. You are hereby and in perpetuity granted dispensation.
Haha, I was like I wonder if Infinite Jest is going to be on the list and it was first. Honestly, I never felt pressure to read it, but I thought it was super cool.
I’m glad you liked it. I bought it in hardback when it was published and read it pretty quickly (for me). I thought it was very ambitious and at times excellent.
Ulysses and The Sound and the Fury were required reading for two different college literature courses I took. I would not have read either for personal enjoyment.
Those sound like tough courses. Did you like either of them?
They were difficult courses, but I did like them. I felt that I worked hard to get the A's in those courses.@@BookishTexan
You don’t have to read any book!
Exactly
@Rellgood elaborate
You dont have to, thats true. But whats the purpose of not reading?... unless you dont like to read any kind of book of any genre.
You don’t have to do anything, except may be eating.
@@MrSyntheticSmile sure... but if you are here, watching this video, you might be searching for something outside eating and sleeping and breathing.
I’ve read Infinite Jest, Ulysses, Gravity’s Rainbow, all of Proust, and The Sound and the Fury. I think they are all worth reading and re-reading (read Pynchon Joyce and Faulkner all more than once, but I doubt I will ever get around to rereading all of Proust). But I agree that you don’t have to read them, or anything for that matter. On the other hand, I think your whole video would take on a different tone if you started with Faulkner, which you love, instead of Wallace, which you obviously dislike.
They are all worth reading if a person wants to. I was just thinking about your last point, where to put the emphasis/ strongest point the other day. My whole life o have almost always saved what I thought of as the strongest point till the end based on the idea of leaving the reader/viewer with the most powerful argument. But when I was a teacher grading essays a lot of my students would start with their strongest point and put their weaker points at the end. It drove me crazy until I realized there isn’t really a rule it was just a style thing. But in this case I think you have a good point. Starting with my favorite would have communicated the tone of the video more clearly.
@@BookishTexan As I said before, I agree with the main point, at least until I start thinking a bit more deeply about it. What makes me want to read a book? This turns out to be a much more difficult question to answer in the abstract than I would have thought. I’m in the middle of reading, for example, Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. One of the reasons I started it is because it’s one of the classic history books I thought I should read, based upon its reputation. It would not be too far off the mark to say that I, at least in part, wanted to read this book because it’s one of those books you “have to” read. Was that illegitimate? I think not - but it largely depends on how you phrase it.
Where I see a real tension is in my finishing books that I’m not enjoying. On those, I don’t want to finish them because I’m not liking them. On the other hand, I do want to finish them because I hate not finishing books. What do I actually “want” in these cases? I think the answer is mostly determined by the result, which almost always means that I want to finish them, even though I don’t like them.
All readers are equal, but some are more equal than others.
Nope. I wont agree to that even in jest.😁
If I'm going to read a hard book, generally I'd rather read a nonfiction book. I guess it shouldn't be that way. I should be willing to read hard fiction too I suppose. So far in my adult reading I've treated fiction as being for fun.
Just as I don't think you should feel obligated to read these books I don't feel that you, who enjoys nonfiction more, should feel obligated to read more fiction
I really interesting list. I have read 8 out of 10. Cloud Atlas and Paradise withstanding. I only read the first two of In Search of Lost Time .
I’m rereading Ulysses in June with Allen and others.
There are tentative plans for a Year of Proust in 2025.
I’m more or less glad about reading the 7 I completely finished. I agree that no one should feel compelled to read these.
I think most of the books on my list are good books (Infinite Jest being the exception) and I am glad I read them. The year of Proust might motivate me to pick up where I left off. I hope the Ulysses group read goes well.
Ulysses is only "hard" if you want to understand everything about it. My favorite non-fiction hard books, VERY much worth reading: The Restless Clock by Jessica Riskin (about the fascinating history of the mechanistic world view and how that's not the only way to think) and The Master and His Emissary by Iain McGilchrist, about the dominance of the "left brain" in our culture and how it has destroyed the world. It has a LOT of detail about the functioning of the brain. The two books go together in my head and have changed my approach to the world.
I approached Ulysses on the way you described and I liked it and even at times enjoyed it. Non-fiction, particularly the sciences, are usually my most challenging reads.
Hi Brian. I definitely agree with the premise of your video. I abandoned Infinite Jest and have no desire to go back to it, and I don't feel bad about that. I read a lot of Pynchon in graduate school, and he leaves me cold. Faulkner and Joyce, however, will always be incredibly important to me. I read Ulysses for the first time in graduate school with a brilliant Joyce scholar. Believe it or not, I was taking a Joyce/Yeats seminar at the same time that I was taking a 19th Century European Novel course, and I found myself reading Anna Karenina and Ulysses at the same time because of the way the syllabi worked out. It was the MOST intense reading experience of my then young life. I remember that I actually dreamt about Ulysses, I was so totally immersed in it. I don't know that that kind of reading experience would happen to me at this point in my life. Sorry for rambling. Thanks for another thoughtful video that gets us all to think. 😊
I enjoyed Ulysses as well. I think it is remarkable, but I think too many people feel either bullied into reading it or feel like they arent "serious readers" if they don't. Of all the books on the list Infinite Jest was, for me, the worst. It really felt like a waste of a lot of time. I've only read two Pynchon novels, Gravity's Rainbow and Mason and Dixon. I liked Mason and Dixon much, much better.
@@BookishTexanI know what you mean about how people feel about Ulysses. If I had not been reading it with the professor I had, I don’t know that it would have been such a powerful experience for me. I remember reading Pynchon’s novel, V, in a graduate course, and I just didn’t see what was so important about it. At all. I got nowhere with Infinite Jest. Gave up and had no interest in going back to it. Thanks for this video, Brian. Very thought-provoking.
@@BookChatWithPat8668 Thank you Pat.
made quick guesses based on my own dnf list: guessed: ulysse and infinite jest, .didn;t think of gravity's rainbow, but would have guessed it if i had. still want to finish it. thought war and peace would be on there. enjoyed and finished foucault's rainbow, it's in my conspiracy wheel house, proust and faulkner are on my want to read list. cloud atlas couldn't finish book or movie even with halle berry.
If Halle Berry cant get you through a movie that movie is definitely not for you.😁
I talked about not reading War and Peace in a video from about a year ago, so didn't include it hear. I have you will read Proust and Faulkner, but only if you really want to and not because you feel like you have to.
Of those books I have only read Cloud Atlas and The Sound and Fury. Many of the books are the usual suspects when people talk about hard books... Ulysses, Infinite Jest, Gravity's Rainbow... I was surprised you didn't have Finnegan's Wake on the list. I have Cryptonomicon on my March TBR, which is a mammoth and I've heard it is difficult (I DNFed it last March but didn't get very far into it).
I have never even attempted Finnegan's Wake so I didn't feel comfortable talking about it. Though my total lack of interest in it is, I think, a good example of me choosing not to read a hard books.
Great recommendations for me, thanks!
Glad you found some books that you want to read. I like/love most of the books on my list.
Gem & Alice are reading Ulysses and it seems very intimidating. As always I think you make some valid points 😊
Thank you Charlie.
Great list. I agree 100% Moby Dick and Don Quixote are difficult to read, but are worth the effort…
Thanks. Read MD (it’s great). Tried DonQ DNF’d after 100 pages.
First I'd like to say that I agree with you; people shouldn't read a book so they can say they've read it. It should always be to enjoy the book. I've read Ulysses from cover to cover and occasionally randomly read pages, which might be good for most people. I read Proust's great novel; it took me a year, but I think it was worth it and intend to reread it. I'd like to repeat that no one should read a book because they feel they have to or to say they've read it. Read to enjoy; if you're not enjoying it put it aside. Maybe try again later in life. Just enjoy.😀
Exactly. Ulysses and Proust are great, but only if you want to read it for the right reasons.
Cloud Atlas is the only book I have read from this list. I remember going to see the movie by myself and being the only person in the theatre who understood what was happening at any time in the movie 😅
Reading the book definitely helped me decipher the movie.😄
I’m old and am not wasting my time left on pretension in my entertainment😅
Preach!
Haha. My wife gave me Ulysses a couple of years ago, but it defeated me after a few pages. I loved Dubliners and studied some Irish lit at QUB, but Ulysses will require more effort.
Infinite Jest does not interest me at all.
I think Proust is fun to read randomly from time to time.
I'm surprised you didn’t like Blood Meridian, but I think it was less impactful than Absalom, Absalom! (McCarthy overrated?)
My best philosophy professor's favourite book was Gravity's Rainbow, so I feel compelled to struggle through it. But will I go to Hell if I don't read it? Will i go to Hell if I don't like it? 😂
For me the key to Ullyses was to let go of the feeling that I had to understand it all and just try to follow the basic action, pick up on the characterization, appreciate what Joyce was trying to do, and catch as many jokes as I could.
I support your decision about Infinite Jest and like your approach to Proust.
I like Blood Meridian very much. It is a true masterpiece.
Good luck with Gravity's Rainbow. It has its moments. Reading it might feel like hell, but I'm pretty sure you wont wind up there if you dont read it.
James Joyce's swansong 'Finnegans Wake' comes to mind immediately for this category; I've never encountered anyone who has actually read that book word for word to the end (or circular beginning, rather). It's debatable if the novel is even a work in English, so idiosyncratic is the author's permutations of language, densely allusive throughout. Many intrepid explorers of literature find this book to be literally unreadable, so just as climbing Everest doesn't have to be on everyone's bucket list, neither does tackling perhaps the most intractable work in the modernist canon.
I like your Everest analogy. I’ve never attempted Finnegan’s Wake so I didn’t put it on my list. I do know someone who has read it and studied it - Allen from the channel Big Hard Books and Classics.
@@BookishTexan Thanks for alerting me to that channel; I'll check it out.
Incidentally, I have watched (online) the very odd film adaptation of 'Finnegans Wake', from 1966, entitled aptly if inelegantly 'Passages from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake', and directed by the late Mary Ellen Bute (a fellow native Texan, who was best known for her work in abstract animation). She had amazing chutzpah to even attempt to grapple with a screen version of this work, and the results are interesting though definitely bewildering--a true cinematic curio.
I'm rather surprised that Cloud Atlas is included here, I've never heard it described as a difficult book - it's not particularly long, particularly esoteric or particularly complex, certainly not when compared to Ulysses, Infinite Jest or Foucault's Pendulum (this last one is truly a slog but the ending justified the whole for me). I've only read Swann's Way but I'm saving the Whole of Lost Time for when I retire :) It's rare for me not to finish a book that I've started (I'm obstinate like that) but The Sound and the Fury is one of the rare ones that defeated me.
I have been working hard on not forcing myself to finish books I’m not enjoying. I included Cloud Atlas because I have seem several people describe it as confusing. I agree with you about Ulysses .
I read 'Turn of the screw' by Henry James because it was short and he is recognized as 'a great writer' . Lets just say I'd hate to have to read a long Henry James novel,. Thanks for your video.
Thank you. I read The Turn of the Screw. Its my favorite Henry James. Which for me is a little bit like saying its my favorite poke in the eye. I read The Wings of the Dove and it was a chore. James is definitely not the writer for me.