Yes... I see how these may not be classics in terms of age since Roman and 
Greek literature dates farther back than Hawthorne and Wells.  So what I meant 
was the challenge to read the works of literature that is more known than 
read.  

And Nisaba, good for you that you've read so extensively! I commend you and 
encourage others to follow in lead.
 
Karen M. Adrián  www.needywriter.deviantart.com  
http://escribeya.com/needywriter 

--- On Thu, 11/13/08, Nisaba Merrieweather <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: Nisaba Merrieweather <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [BookCrossing] Reading the Classics
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, November 13, 2008, 6:02 PM










    
            G'dday.



----- Original Message ----- 

From: "writerdeviant" <writerdeviant@ yahoo.com>

To: <BookCrossing@ yahoogroups. com>

Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2008 2:24 PM

Subject: [BookCrossing] Reading the Classics



> We've all heard of the classics written by renown authors like H.G.

> Wells, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Robert L. Stevenson, etc.,



Classics?



CLASSICS?



<hooting with laughter>



They're all Johnny-come- latelys!



Classics are classics: the plays of Plautus and Sophocles, the histories of 

Tacitus, Josephus, Herodotus, Thucydides and Suetonius, the epic poems of 

Homer (everyone must have at least heard of the Illyad and the Oddessy), and 

moving around a bit from the Graeco-Roman cultures to a more chthonic, 

Gilgamesh and the like as well.



Even La Morte d'Arthur (The Death of King Arthur, a French text from 

previous centuries on which the whole of modern Camelot mythology is based) 

is suspiciously new and fresh on the page, the ink has hardly dried yet.



As a teenager in the 1970s, I discovered (outside of school curriculum, just 

in my reading-for- pleasure) Plautus and Sophocles, imagine my delight a 

couple of years later when the Theban Plays of Sophocles were a set text! I 

had a huge head-start on the other kids - I'd read, loved and assimmilated 

the plays, and I had some understanding already that the violence (from 

killing fathers to gouging one's own eyes out) wasn't really a reflection of 

a more primitive time, but was more about symbolising emotional turmoil and 

what it means to be deeply human.



I go to Plautus whenever I want a laugh - he's the direct ancestor of 

Douglas Adams in that way. I go to Sophocles when I want to remember the 

depths and complexities of humans. I go to Homer when I need to be reminded 

of the sweep of human events and the turn of history on small individual 

choices. I go to Suetonius and Tacitus when I want to be grateful for what I 

have and feel my grattitude slipping. I go to Josephus when I want to win 

doorstep arguments with Jehovah's Witnesses and Mormons.



And I go to every single one of them for pure, unadulterated pleasure.



For decades I'd read modern historians who paraphrased Herodotus and 

Thucydides: last Christmas my sister-in-law gave me a book voucher which 

finally allowed me to bump Herodotus to the head of the queue without 

feeling guilty about other unread books, and I was simply enthralled and 

thrilled by his writing. Soon it will be the turn of Thucydides - I've been 

searching for him high and low, but so far have only scored an electronic 

copy which I flatly refuse to read, because books from two millennia or more 

ago HAVE to be read on at least paper, if not clay tablets, dammit! - I just 

can't wrap my head around reading Thycydides on a computer.



Oh, and your list of modern literature seems to have forgotten the Wind in 

the Willows, with the absolutely fabulous chapter "The Piper at the Gates of 

Dawn" and The Magic Pudding, by Norman Lindsay. If you're looking for new 

literature. <curmudgeonly hurumph>



Nisaba Merrieweather

.... Other people would probably say: I wasn't myself. But Granny Weatherwax 

didn't have anyone else to be. (Terry Pratchett)

ICQ: 361 565 370

guerillaG-subscribe @yahoogroups. com

http://nisaba. etsy.com

http://www.bookcros sing.com/ mybookshelf/ nisaba000

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