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Thread: books every home library should have

  1. #76
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    It doesn't cease to amaze me that with a million books out there to choose from there are some people that select a few which every home library should have. If they were recommending a book they liked, it's okay. But "should have" is utterly stupid.

  2. #77
    Registered User hawthorns's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by k.brignell View Post
    Hey, we just brought a new house and I have been given the spare room to start my own library. I have quite a few books but was just wondering what fiction and non-fiction is essential for my library, thanks
    No such thing--whatever you're into.

    I might argue my mom has a substandard library owing to the fact that there isn't a classic to found. But since she iced the SAT's verbal...well...LOL

    Instead, she has three walls and 2-3 thousand mysteries.

  3. #78
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    I would say to keep latin american classics in mind... stuff by Marquez, Borges, Mario Vargas Llosas and so forth

  4. #79
    Registered User hannah_arendt's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fantods1 View Post
    I would say to keep latin american classics in mind... stuff by Marquez, Borges, Mario Vargas Llosas and so forth
    Agreed

  5. #80
    Registered User ralfyman's Avatar
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    Library of America
    Everyman
    Great Books of the Western World
    Oxford Library of Latin America series
    Science Fiction Masterworks
    various anthologies (Norton, etc.)

    and more.

  6. #81
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    Quote Originally Posted by beroq View Post
    Don Quixote, no matter what speciality is attributed to it, is but a book that satires chivalry. As these books are hardly read by anyone but experts and even a hero like King Arthur is unable to inspire younger generations, anyone reading Cervantes might think that the author is whipping an already dead mule...
    Well you could say that Monty Python's "Holy Grail" is just a film that satires chivalry, but it shows that chivalry, and its mockery, is far from a dead topic. And what kid doesn't like tales of knights of old? Given that the Python gang were clever clogs, they had no doubt read Cervantes, and realised a good thing when they saw it.

    This is certainly one for the library, get the excellent Everyman hardback... it's a good, readable, translation. Note, I'm a common person, no literary titles to my name, and I found this book wonderful. That's why it's available in Everyman, Penguin, and all the main mass market publishers... it is indeed for ever man (& woman).

  7. #82
    Ecurb Ecurb's Avatar
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    In the past I would suggest that every home library should have a good dictionary, a good atlas, and a good almanac. Now that everyone has computers and internet access, these are no longer necessary.

  8. #83
    I just want to read. chrisvia's Avatar
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    I know this doesn't list specific books, but I decided a while back (when trying to reduce the size of my library) that every great home library should include only those books that one will/should (the difference between will and should is where we keep getting tripped up on the subjective) reread.
    "J'ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage."
    - Rimbaud

    "Il est l'heure de s'enivrer!
    Pour n'être pas les esclaves martyrisés du Temps,
    enivrez-vous;
    enivrez-vous sans cesse!
    De vin, de poésie ou de vertu, à votre guise."
    - Baudelaire

  9. #84
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    The Glasgow cook book!

  10. #85
    Registered User Calidore's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ecurb View Post
    In the past I would suggest that every home library should have a good dictionary, a good atlas, and a good almanac. Now that everyone has computers and internet access, these are no longer necessary.
    Power can go out and the internet can be inaccessible. I think those are still good suggestions.
    You must be the change you wish to see in the world. -- Mahatma Gandhi

  11. #86
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    I agree with the line of thinking that says one should build a collection of books known to stand the test of time as great works of human thinking and imagination, and that a library should also reflect that person's specific interests.

    I have many works that are near universally agreed to be some of the best western works in human history, but I also have books on Ninjutsu, strength training, and sci-fi/fantasy that I thoroughly enjoy, and are representative of some of my most personal passions and interests since childhood.

  12. #87
    Registered User ashulman's Avatar
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    Shakespeare
    Bible
    Divine Comedy
    Canterbury Tales
    Don Quixote
    Persuasion
    All major Dickens
    Middlemarch
    Wuthering heights
    Jane Eyre
    Checkov Stories
    Kafka stories
    Most Tolstoy
    Most Dostoevsky
    Moby Dick
    Norton poetry anthology
    The Waste Land
    In Search of Lost Time
    Ulysses
    Magic Mountain and Mann stories
    USA Trilogy - Dos Passos
    The Sun Also Rises
    Great Gatsby
    Waiting for Godot
    Blood Meridian
    White Noise
    Lolita
    The Stranger
    Catch 22
    American Pastoral
    Sabbath's Theater
    Gravity's Rainbow
    Crying of Lot 49
    High and Low Podcast
    From Snooki to Shakespeare
    www.highandlowpodcast.blogspot.com
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    Music/TV/Film Reviews
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  13. #88
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    Les Miserables - Victor Hugo
    Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov
    Tess of the d'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy
    Jude the Obscure - Thomas Hardy
    The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
    Shakespeare's Sonnets
    Anything by Jane Austen
    A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
    Whatever today may be, tomorrow will be peace.
    -Les Miserables

  14. #89
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    Potter series.

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