The Good Life: Tuck Into a Good Book
When I was living in Japan in 1993, I eventually tired of visiting the local bars with my Japanese colleagues and decided instead to start reading all those books that I was supposed to have read in college but didn't. As it turns out, the works that I had missed or passed over were some of the best books that I have ever read.
With fall approaching, and a warm fireplace and chair at the ready, I want to pass along my reading suggestions, with notes I have collected over the years about the authors. I chose the selections based on a primary criterion: These are books that are assigned in most college literature courses, but unlike some of those heady selections, these are fabulous reads. If literature is not your thing, don't despair. Pulp has its place, and with that in mind, I've scraped together a few mainstream titles that are good reads. But first, the "Didn't Read in College" list: 1. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway spent some of the 1920s in Paris and chronicled his outings with Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein in his memoir, A Movable Feast. Already a drunk, Fitzgerald shows up smashed at a Paris bistro to meet Hemingway and he tells him that he's just written one of the world's greatest novels. Fitzgerald was correct. The tale of Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan is relentlessly entertaining and a very quick read. Like many writers of his time, Fitzgerald's life was tormented by booze and a bad marriage. He died in Hollywood in the apartment of his mistress on Dec. 21, 1940. He was 44 years old. 2. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy Hollywood has yet to do this masterpiece justice. Regarded by some critics as the greatest novel ever written, Anna Karenina is the classic tale of a woman who leaves her husband for her lover and, alas, meets with brutal ruin. Don't be intimidated by the novel's length. This book is a beautifully written page-turner that is eloquent from the first word to the last. Too bad none of Tolstoy's biographers say the same of his life. In his early years, Tolstoy lived life with gusto and was treated for venereal disease more than once. In his late life, he decided to be a moral guide to the world and gave away his fortune to wander Russia. He died Nov. 20, 1910, of pneumonia at a remote railway station. He was 82 years old.| Greatness Celebrate the fall with a great book |
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