than another to the point of exclusivity. I read posts where Dickens is disliked and Tolstoy is praised and vice versa. Now that I have reached the supposedly golden years, I am reading mostly the classics which I haven't read yet. But to give an example, I look on all authors as friends. I have read most of Dickens and the four major novels of Tolstoy. I don't think of one as being better than the other. I wouldn't want to read one exclusively over the other. Both authors have a lot to give the reader. Whether I am reading Sinclair Lewis or Hemingway, Tolstory or Dostoevsky, Pynchon or Salinger, I enjoy the writing and wouldn't want to read one over the other. I have many friends, and they are all different. But I wouldn't want to choose one over the other, treating one as a friend and abandoning the other. If a writer has reached the stage where he is considered a composer of classic literature, I want to read him/her so that I can further learn from the experience. I want to read somthing from every classicist writer be it Fielding, Sterne, Dickens, or a modern such as Scott Fitzgerald.


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) culture worth hanging on to. There's only so much room, so inevitably some authors (i.e the one's you don't particularly like) don't make the cut. Of course, that's entirely the wrong way to approach it, but I suspect that's how it often plays out. Moreover, it seems to me that lists and rankings are a pervasive element of modern life. It's the 'top 5 desert island' syndrome. A list is digestible and convenient. It can be recited and evaluated quickly. Serious discussion takes time and thought.

