Greetings, all --

Great to see all the suggestions and conversations around them. One author with 
a Santa Fe (and perhaps an SFI) connection not yet mentioned, I believe, is 
Douglas Noel Adams (DNA). I'd recommend the Adams translation of "The 
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy".

As to creating a reading group, the pedagogical technique at St. John's (sorry 
to be tedious) is to have the books lead the discussion, largely by having a 
person designated to ask an "opening question" and then encouraging people to 
focus on the text and have a conversation about it. After about two hours, most 
folks are suffering from caffeine/nicotine withdrawal and agree to discuss it 
further over a meal/scotch/cigarette. Works for us...

- Claiborne -

 

 


 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Pamela McCorduck <[email protected]>
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, Oct 9, 2010 9:08 pm
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] The Best 10 Fictional Works




On Oct 9, 2010, at 7:34 PM, Leigh Fanning wrote:



And I (also) say "Why English", why not World Literature or something  

more expansive... and for the benefit of the women on this list... why  

do we (mostly) read the words of "dead white men"?   Really?  Without  

going all feminist, I'd really like to have more submissions here of  

women writers.  Until 30 years ago, there weren't that many published...


Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, early 1800s, is a great book.  Is it literature?  
I'm not
qualified to say, but it's a fantastic story with beautiful writing.




Yes, I certainly think of it as literature. If I were world literature czar 
(well, czarina) I would insist every budding scientist read it.


The male dominated Western educational experience is what most of us have had.  
It's all we know, until we jump to other pools of thought and nonconform to 
the establishment that nurtured (controlled?) us in the tender years.




Some of the most unusual and ground-breaking English literature has been 
written by women. I mean in particular, Jane Austen, who was first to 
understand that the age of reading aloud was dying, and it was time to write 
for the reader who reads alone and in his or her own head. Before Austen, 
English novels were written to be read aloud to a group. She is also killingly 
funny about human nature. On these grounds alone, Columbia University's core 
curriculum admitted to the canon its first female writer in Jane. If you read 
Charlotte Bronte's "Wuthering Heights," the novel not the movie, you will 
hardly believe your eyes. Astounding stuff. "Jane Eyre" is the grandmother of a 
thousand and one derivatives, but is a stunning piece in its own right. 


So you see how futile a "top ten" is?


P.




 










"How quickly weeks glide away in such a city as New York, especially when you 
reckon among your friends some of the most agreeable people in either 
hemisphere."
    Fanny Trollope, "Domestic Manners of the Americans"












 

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