Reading “Hard” Books vs. Pretending to Do So
7. 1984, George Orwell: A great example of a book people think they have read because they have seen a television ad. On Youtube.
6. Democracy in America, Alexis De Tocqueville: Politicians are the worst about this, quoting and misquoting the writings of the Tocqueville without ever bothering to actually read this essential work. But politicians do this a lot – with The Federalist Papers and The Constitution, too.
Read the rest here.
I have read # 10, 7, 3 and 2 multiple times each and expect I will read them again. I’ve read de Tocqueville and Tale of Two Cities once. I have looked up stuff in Wealth of Nations but never read it despite having read von Hayek, von Mises, Galbraith, Friedman, Veblen and Marx. I can’t muster much enthusiasm either for Melville or James Joyce, though if forced to choose, I’d select the former.
There’s a lot of intellectual merit – and consequent pride, sort of a nerd throw-down bragging rights – in conquering a “hard” book. I’ve read many that didn’t make that particular list, but perhaps should – Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Montesquieu’s The Spirit of the Laws, Clausewitz’s On War, Aristotle’s The Politics, Herodotus and Thucydides and (in a more modern vein) Barzun’s Dawn to Decadence or Solzhenitsyn’s The Gulag Archipelago. But there’s many more I have not yet read and worse, may never get to, for lack of time or inclination. My hat is off to those who have slogged through Hobbes’ Leviathan or Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason because I’m dubious that I ever will; and while I will probably get around to The Muqaddimah, I’m not sure if I will ever dive into Montaigne or Spengler or most of the great twentieth century novelists. Our time is scarce and so we must choose.
This is of course, what makes book-phonies so worthy of ridicule. There’s something pretentious and absurd about holding forth on a book you have not yourself read as if you were an expert. It’s not remotely as morally serious as the “Stolen honor” frauds who are regularly exposed faking military heroics, but the “Stolen intellect” pretenders to knowledge have a similar motivation and in the end, they are only fooling themselves.
What “hard” books do you take pride in having read?
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Sean Paul Kelley:
December 14th, 2014 at 6:52 pm
I take pride in the following:
War and Peace, Decline and Fall, Grant’s Memoirs, Herodotus, Thucydides, all three volumes of Kissinger’s memoirs, plus Diplomacy. Ovid’s Metamorphoses. The Iliad, the Odyssey, Moby Dick, Caesar in the Latin, Crime and Punishment, Foucault’s History of Sexuality Vol. 1, Foucault’s “The Order of Things,” Dante’s Inferno (two different translations) and finally, On War. I’m sure I am missing quite a few.
Eddie:
December 14th, 2014 at 7:22 pm
Dawn to Decadence and de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America.
I e-read a lot but have escaped the ‘mark-up’ quandary by using notecards for chapter notes and pg #’s. I then hole-punch the corner or rubber band them together and file them.
I had to do this because so many of the books I was reading were from libraries and a notebook wasn’t getting it done.
Ray:
December 14th, 2014 at 8:02 pm
I have read, Hagar the Horrible in the comics section of paper. I also have read numerous history books on various cultures. Most recently I have read.”Patton’s Panthers: The African-American 761st Tank Battalion In World War II”
by Charles W. Sasser and “Geronimo’s Story of His Life”
by Geronimo, S.M. Barrett and “Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath”
by Michael Norman, Elizabeth M. Norman. This last on I read and compared it to the stories my Dad told me about this and his 4 years in Japanese POW camps. I enjoyed all of these but I admit I use SCIFI books as a mental break. Such as Star Trek and Dr.WHo.
T. Greer:
December 14th, 2014 at 8:06 pm
Does referencing a book when you have only read that excerpt fro it published in the New Yorker or a chapter in Google Books count as lying? Because I do that all the time.
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I’ve read Anthem, and The Fountainhead but I refuse to touch Atlas Shrugged. Just don’t have the time for that. Also read 8, 7, 6, 3, and 3. Read substantial sections of Tocqueville every year. Usually end up reading a new translation of Sunzi every year and a half or so(this one really should not count as a ‘hard’ book — translations are rarely longer than 100 pages!). Inevitably I come back to Machiavelli every few years or so with the hope that if I read him just once more time I will finally figure out why he is considered so brilliant. I am always disappointed. Read Les Mis this year for the first time. It took three months, but it was worth it.
I also recommend the musical.
Others I could say I am ‘proud’ of:
Sima Qian’s Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji)
Ibn Khaldun’s Muqaddihmah
Polybius Histories
Thucydides Peloponnesean War
Luo Guanzhong’s Three Kingdoms
History of the Mongols
Maybe a few more. I’ll have to think.
I realized a few weeks ago that I keep saying phrases like “Plato’s philosopher king’s” without ever having read The Republic. So that is on my bed-stand. Hope to finish it before the New Year.
Lewis Shepherd:
December 14th, 2014 at 9:34 pm
Here’s a book I avoided for a while because I thought it would be “hard” (Nobel-winning for its author after all): Elias Canetti’s Crowds and Power, which from the first few pages became a real page-turner. By the way, on the topic, my wife claims (with no source) that a journalist once asked Canetti, on seeing his voluminous office library, “My God, have you read all these books?” to which he replied, “Oh no, these are just the ones I have to read this week.”
Also, looking for the source of that (unsuccessfully) I came upon this, by Canetti in The Human Province:
“There are books, that one has for twenty years without reading them, that one always keeps at hand, that one takes along from city to city, from country to country, carefully packed, even when there is very little room, and perhaps one leafs through them while removing them from a trunk; yet one carefully refrains from reading even a complete sentence. Then after twenty years, there comes a moment when suddenly, as though under a high compulsion, one cannot help taking in such a book from beginning to end, at one sitting: it is like a revelation. Now one knows why one made such a fuss about it. It had to be with one for a long time; it had to travel; it had to occupy space; it had to be a burden; and now it has reached the goal of its voyage, now it reveals itself, now it illuminates the twenty bygone years it mutely lived with one. It could not say so much if it had not been there mutely the whole time, and what idiot would dare to assert that the same things had always been in it.”
Terry Barnhart:
December 14th, 2014 at 10:03 pm
Exceptional quote Lewis. It speaks to much of my moving history. Thank you!
carl:
December 14th, 2014 at 10:33 pm
Books on tape, cd, disc or whatever the currently leading edge of tech is nowadays make it a lot easier to learn what is in a ‘hard’ book.
Grurray:
December 14th, 2014 at 11:44 pm
I read The Glass Bead Game this summer after reading about it over and over in Charles’ posts. I thought it would be “hard”, but it was really rather pleasant and at times quite amusing in parts. Thankfully, I had the hipbone/sembl background to understand the game.
The Fountainhead was for me the book described in Lewis’ quote. Both my wife and I had separate copies for years but neither one of us ever read it. Finally one day I finally pulled if off the shelf and read it. The best part was chp 11 when Roark and Wynand were on the yacht discussing ‘second handers’. That’s probably the only thing you need to read to understand Rand’s philosophy. Everything else is redundant.
Grurray:
December 15th, 2014 at 1:01 am
I should add that there was an unpleasant part about Glass Bead Game in the narrative sense. There were three short stories at the end that were sort of Twilight Zone-ish, but in a good way.
zen:
December 15th, 2014 at 1:49 am
Hi bookish Gents,
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Sean Paul, I envy you your having read Grant, Ovid and Caesar in the original. Nice!
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Eddie – note taking could be another post in itself. I’ve never found any one way satisfactory.
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Ray – I have not thought of Hagar the Horrible in years though I recently read of Olaf Crowbone
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T. Greer – Certainly not. citations have their own rules and in academic research, outside of classics which are fundamentals in a field and need to be read, scholarship would grind to a halt if every book in a bibliography of even a short book had to be read cover to cover before it was used. I think with academic work we act on the presumption that a scholar has a working familiarity with the literature of their field and come to their research with an established context in which the research is taking place (which may account for the blindness/cognitive dissonance when somebody stumbles upon a revelation that overthrows a major assumption of the field).
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Lewis – adding Crowds and Power to my list. Great anecdote!
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Carl – true. You can grasp more, faster and with less work in a “good enough” way
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Grurray – I need to read the Glass Bead game too. I thumbed through a copy at Scott Shipman’s house once but that is as far as I got. Agree that is a key chapter, though you could pull a few speeches from Atlas Shrugged that hit similar notes.
Lexington Green:
December 15th, 2014 at 4:04 am
The Canetti quote is perfect. This has happened to me many times.
I am happy to have read all of On War, which many of us did together a few years ago as an online roundtable. I am also happy to have read all of Democracy in America, straight through but in small digestible chunks with a few friends who met periodically to go through it together. I would like to do the same thing with the Wealth of Nations one of these days.
Grurray:
December 15th, 2014 at 4:09 am
I read One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich and 1984 when I was young.
I tried to read Ulysses once and got about 80 pages into it before just tossing it aside. That stream of consciousness nonsense was unbearable.
I did get through Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow which at least had some historical context and conspiracies to keep it interesting but was almost as ridiculous as Joyce.
J.ScottShipman:
December 15th, 2014 at 8:12 pm
This Churchill quote will be included in an upcoming post:
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Barzun’s Dawn to Decadence and Polanyi’s Personal Knowledge stand out. I took on On War the way Lt Gen Van Riper suggested—used other writers to back into the work. (Gray, Houser, Strachan, and Sumida worked for me)
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Canetti is on the shelf, but I’ve not read it—like Lex has said, “I need to.” On Rand—her books simply don’t interest me. I’ve started Atlas several times and was bored stiff…
Lexington Green:
December 16th, 2014 at 2:30 am
That quote from Churchill is excellent.
Justin Boland:
December 25th, 2014 at 7:24 pm
Last year I read Alfred McCoy’s “The Politics of Heroin,” which convinced me that the folks who recommended it to me hadn’t read it at all.
zen:
December 25th, 2014 at 9:27 pm
Ba ha ha ha ha! you might be right!