12 Books for young people

Mar 12, 2014 12:43

Slate online magazine has a fascinating segment called "The Vault" where it pulls documents or artifacts from the past. Sometimes, they have a direct bearing on today's politics or ideas. Sometimes, they're just interesting pieces of a vanished world.

Today's article has a list of book recommendations for young people by Samuel Clemens. He was asked to divide them between boys and girls, but the only one he changed was Robinson Crusoe. Apparently, it was okay for boys, but girls ended up reading the poetry of Tennyson. He was cagey about favorite authors.

So.

My list of twelve books/authors every kid should read by the time they graduate from high school. I'm not dividing it by sex, and I'm not including anything aimed directly at the YA market on the theory that they'll find those books for themselves. I wish I'd had space for some Pratchett, though.

1. Little Women by Alcott -- It's a great starting point for finding out more about the US in the 19th century. The grand tour, the transcendentalist movement, the differing social expectations are all there and provide a little foothold for next steps. I read Emerson's essays because I'd read Little Women

2. anything by Mark Twain -- Everyone goes to Huckleberry Finn and it's covered in most high schools. I hate it. The plot's great. It deals with ideas of freedom and loss. And it's written in dialect which drives me bonkers. My personal favorite is A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, but he's such a lovely and lively writer, that I don't feel prescriptive.

3. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe -- I only got potted Defoe until I was in my twenties, and even then I read Moll Flanders first. There are problems with how Friday is treated, but it's still one of the great adventure stories. The thing that struck me most forcibly was how incredibly practical Crusoe was. The wreck was unstable, but still available to him at first. So he made decisions. The first thing he got off the ship was every working pulley he could find and carry. Then he went for all the steel or iron implements because he would have no facilities for smelting. I love any book that shows people thinking their ways through the current problems to a better outcome. Plus, it's the first novel written in English.

4. anything by Jules Verne -- There are three fictional characters that I have serious, serious crushes on. I was introduced to two of them when I was about ten and the other one, D'Artagnan, around the age of twelve. One of them was Phileas Fogg from Around the World in 80 Days. *sigh* He's another practical character. 20,000 Leagues under the Sea is another favorite of mine.

5. One comedy, one history, and one tragedy by Shakespeare -- He's so important to the development of the English language that he has to be here. My first Shakespeare was MacBeth which I chose at age 12 because it was the shortest of his plays. These days I'd suggest Othello for the tragedy, even though Coriolanus is my personal favorite. As You Like It is, in my opinion, the funniest and most perfect of his comedies. And either Henry V or Richard III for the history.

6. anything by Jane Austen -- I've always preferred Sense and Sensibility to Pride and Prejudice (Colin Firth's tight trousers not withstanding), but any of the six books would work.

7. Middlemarch by George Eliot -- I wish someone had pointed me at this book instead of the Bronte Sisters when I was a teenager. There are similar themes of bad marriages and adults needing to make choices as in Jane Eyre and the theme of forbidden love is handled more sensibly than in Wuthering Heights. Frankly, I gave up on Wuthering Heights when Heathcliff, jr. was hanging puppies in the kitchen. *shudder*

8. any slave narrative -- Seriously, we need to cover this from primary sources.

9. The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan Doyle -- Sherlock Holmes is my other serious literary crush. I encountered him around the same time as Phileas Fogg. I like The Hound of the Baskervilles best of the books, but a case can be made for any of them.

10. There are several treasuries of World War I poetry. I would want one that included the Americans and Canadians as well as the British.

11. Foundation by Isaac Asimov -- I'd like the whole trilogy included.

12. Winter's Tale by Mark Helprin -- I once told a friend that this was the best book ever written in English. I stand by that.

literature, wwi, books, questions

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