A longtime reader, a retired attorney in Philadelphia, writes:
“[A]n intrusive suggestion
for a blog post: what books MUST your readers read before reaching the end
zone? Or what have they required themselves to read before the clouds darken
the horizon? Also, anent the above, do your readers shape their day around their
reading ? Quite simply, in what works do readers discover ‘Joy in the Morning’?”
The “MUST” part annoys me but
I get the idea. Reading is strictly a laissez faire way of life. I always resent
being told what I must read, though I’m wide open to interesting suggestions.
I’d like to think that everyone will get around to reading Proust. I do keep a
mental list of writers and books I intend someday to read. In no particular
order:
Thomas Carlyle’s The
French Revolution, William James’ Principles of Psychology, George
Santayana’s The Last Puritan, Lady Murasaki’s The Tale of Genji,
at least a couple of Anthony Trollope’s novels, Winston Churchill’s The
River War.
Like other resolutions,
this list is probably a delusion, exposing my childish, deeply selfish strategies
for reading. I’ve never had anything like Clifton Fadiman’s “Lifetime Reading
Plan.” The way I read is so subjective, so curiously unpredictable even to me,
that not reading any of these books will not surprise me. I’ve set out to read
in their entirety, chronologically, the works of only two writers: Shakespeare
and Melville. But I was young and had bottomless energy. By chance, also on Saturday,
I happened on an interview with the poet Aaron Poochigian. Asked to name a book
everyone ought to read, he replies:
“It’s thick, but I would
recommend the English poet W. H. Auden’s Collected Poems. It’s like a
Bible for living in our contemporary world. He turns the British idioms of his
day into incantatory magic. He captures the Zeitgeists of the several ages he
lived through. Still more, he was so clearly a good person. His conscience
spoke loudly in him, and he refused to become desensitized to violence and
other vices that recur in the human condition.”
Poochigian says Yeats’ The
Tower had the biggest influence on him: “W. H. Auden and Philip Larkin are
my heroes. Yeats is my god. When I assess the merits of my own work, I ask
myself, ‘Is this poem good enough to be in Yeats’ Tower.’ He is my
weathervane and lighting rod.”
He tells us he is rereading Shakespeare: “I started with the earliest plays, the ones about the Wars of the Roses. I have just finished Henry VI, Part III. It gives me great pleasure to see Shakespeare emerge as a genius as I make my way chronologically through his works.”