DISQUS

Kim Werker Blog: High School Books I’d Like To Revisit

  • John Markos O'Neill · 1 year ago
    Not so many high school books, but a few college ones.

    Don Quixote: someone (Aubrey Bell, says Google) once said that a person should read Don Quixote as a youth, then in midlife, and finally again in old age.

    War and Peace. Seriously. It's an amazing book, and I must admit I skimmed the ending.

    I always meant to read Ulysses, but never did: we didn't read that one in college.
  • Julie · 1 year ago
    Books I would like to revisit
    Animal Farm (read it on my own at the time, so totally didn't get it)
    The Pearl

    Books I didn't read in HS but would like to now
    Lord of the Flies (started, on my nightstand)
    To Kill a Mockingbird (read it last summer)
    Anna Karenina
    A Farewell to Arms

    Books I loved in HS
    Farenheit 451
    Orwells 1984
    Crime and Punishment
    The Metamorphosis

    Books I didn't love in HS but maybe I didn't get them
    Sister Carrie
    Tess of d'Uberville

    I was supposed to read War and Peace over summer break, but I didn't. And I had to read Catch 22 twice.
  • Cynthia · 1 year ago
    OMG A Tree Grows in Brooklyn- my all time favorite book ever. You'll love it! The original movie is great too.
    We read the Outsiders in gr. 8 which I'd love to at least re-watch the movie- I remember feeling so scared and sympathetic for Ponyboy and his pals...
  • blondechicken · 1 year ago
    Oh that's weird, I read your first paragraph and my first thought was "A Separate Peace"...and there you are with it! I remember that I found it depressing (and I was already pretty down in HS) but I'm curious about how I'd process it as an adult!
    I'm embarrassed by all the books I DIDN'T read in HS (they were never assigned), as I've always been a big reader:
    Crime & Punishment
    Ferenheit 451
    War & Peace
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    The only one of those three I've read is Fahrenheit 451, which is a
    wonderful book (and a quick read). I don't know that I'll ever read War &
    Peace, though I did read Anna Karenina around eight years ago, and I'm very
    glad I did.
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    Maybe we should make a little book club for ourselves. Not a terribly ambitious one; maybe set a goal just for two or three books in 2009. So we can get the best of both worlds: To revisit (or read for the first time) these "school" books, and be able to discuss them.

    Anyone interested?
  • haley · 1 year ago
    Oh you'll love Animal Farm with an adult brain! It's such a great parallel to what was going on in the political world at the time.

    And I think you'll also enjoy A Separate Peace. Lovely book.

    I can't think of any I read in high school that I would like to revisit. I just finished my M.A. in literature so I think I'm good for now... I think I'll take up reading Cosmo for a bit.
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    Yes, I hear they have great photos. :)
  • LisaBurrito · 1 year ago
    War and Peace totally got a rap for being stupidly long but I read it in high school (Peter makes fun of me because I told him I was reading it at the beach) and loved it. You just have to ignore the ending where he goes on a lecturing rant. Really, I remember it being quite the page-turner. I mean, the last Harry Potter book is probably longer. ;) (That said, I also read Crime and Punishment during grade 11 math class so my tastes at the time clearly ran to the depressing Russian genre.)
  • Amie · 1 year ago
    The Catcher in the Rye. I've always related so well to that book. Oh, and Our Town. There's something so cut and dry about that one. Again, I relate to it. It's very much my personality at times.
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    My experience of The Catcher in the Rye in high school is one of the few I
    have a very clear memory of. I don't think I'll re-read it anytime soon,
    though I'm curious about what my take on Holden would be as an adult. As a
    teen, I got very, very annoyed with him.

    I could do with revisiting Our Town, for sure.
  • marikka · 1 year ago
    You know, as a fourteen-year-old, I did not like or get Holden Caulfield, but deep down I knew I would get him later, which was why I tried again at twenty, while living in Wyoming. That was the first high school book that I revisited, although I was still in college (re-reading Jane Eyre and Things Fall Apart don't count because I did that for college English classes). And as a twenty-year-old, I loved the book, which I think has more to do with my college experience than anything; I think I needed to grow up and live through more to see Holden as anything more than whiny.
  • Melf · 1 year ago
    How about A Catcher in the Rye?
  • Melf · 1 year ago
    Oh, duh. Didn't read the comments first. Oops.
  • Melf · 1 year ago
    Flowers for Algernon. Loved it.
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    I remember you loving that. I still haven't read it. I'm adding it to my
    list!
  • Jocelyn · 1 year ago
    A Tree Grows in Brooklyn is my all-time favorite. I remember crying like a baby.
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    I can't wait for the holidays when I'll be able to sit for longer than
    fifteen minutes at a time with it. :)
  • kristi · 1 year ago
    I remember reading _The Pearl_ in 8th grade. Vividly. Like the teacher's handwriting with the vocabularly words on the board. I always feel like I should re-read _Grapes of Wrath_. I hated it the two times that I tried to read it in my callow youth. Now I see more clearly that that was actually a lot of my father's experience (born in 1933, with a single mom in southern midwest during the depression. They really did work their way across the country to California... or maybe I knew it then and that's why I hated it...) and I should read it. My favorite Steinbeck is _Travels with Charley_ though!

    Read Hemingway too, which I think I enjoyed at the time, but don't remember at all clearly. Didn't read Melville.

    _A Tree Grows in Brooklyn_ I loved. A Separate Peace. To Kill a Mockingbird. I read all those again and again, starting probably in middle school.

    I didn't read Anna Karenina ever -- or any Russians that I can think of until college.

    I have very strong memories of Animal Farm and The Lord of the Flies. I spent my Junior year of high school as an exchange student in Germany. I didn't have very many books in English, but I had those two (I think they were used in the HS English class there), so I ended up reading them over and over, even though they were dark and ugly and totally not the thing to have to read when you're feeling isolated and disconnected anyway.
  • Kim Werker · 1 year ago
    I can only imagine how significantly your experience in Germany was coloured
    by those books. I managed not to get through The Grapes of Wrath the couple
    of times I tried, either, which is surprising, and I'm sure I'd love it now.
    I'm putting it on my list. East of Eden, though, is one of my favourite
    books.

    I read some Chekhov in university, and I'd like to revisit him; I even still
    have a book of short stories. My prof at the time was a Freudian fiddler
    with a wandering eye, and those were the most salient aspects of the class
    for me (also the part about how I said, "*This* is literary interpretation?
    Time for a new major").
  • marikka · 1 year ago
    The book I know I need to revisit is Beloved by Toni Morrison. I continue to be amazed that someone had sixteen-year-olds read that book and expected them to understand it in any capacity. And there's a part of me that thinks that finally reading Cry, the Beloved Country and Love in the Time of Cholera should be done, but then the rest of me starts thinking about when I get the final books to the Y: The Last Man series. Plus, Gabriel Garcia Marquez and I only get along in short stories for some reason.

    And The Great Gatsby. I know I should re-read that one, except I hated it with such an intensity that I'm afraid to even touch the book. And because I interview kids for my alma mater, I always encounter The Great Gatsby as a favorite of theirs and I always struggle to hold my tongue. And this isn't like the Catcher in the Rye dislike, because I knew I was missing something there; this is all a matter of just not liking or caring for a single character, which is my one prerequisite for a book. If there isn't one thing redeeming to the story, my brain shuts down.