Everyone has those embarrassing reading gaps, and today, I am going to share some of mine…
- Leo Tolstoy. So far, I’ve only read his pacifist essay “Thou Shalt Not Kill.” And I own a copy of War and Peace. Baby steps, right?
- Alexandre Dumas. I read a sizeable chunk of The Count of Monte Cristo many years ago, but it didn’t hold my interest for whatever reason. I want to try it again one of these days.
- Gabriel García Márquez. I fully expect a magic realism phase in my reading future. It’s just a matter of time!
- Voltaire. I borrowed Candide from the library a long time ago and couldn’t get into it. That’s another novel I’d like to try again, with a bit of historical and philosophical prep work.
- Isaac Asimov. Feel like I should read at least one book by him.
- Stephen King. I have no desire to read gruesome or perverse horror. I might try one or two of his books someday, but they’re not high on the list.
- Shirley Jackson. My preconception is that Jackson writes horror of a “quieter” variety than King. I would like to try her short stories and The Haunting of Hill House.
- Salman Rushdie. I’m not that interested in his books, but I am curious about the controversy and deaths/injuries related to it. Maybe I’ll just read his memoir.
- JD Salinger. The Catcher in the Rye is one of those classics I suppose I should read, I just haven’t got around to it yet.
- Upton Sinclair and Sinclair Lewis. I’m putting the two Sinclairs together as authors which, as far as I understand it, wrote as much to drive home a point than to tell a story. I don’t enjoy these kinds of books as much as I once did, but I do have The Jungle on my shelf and look forward to learning a bit of history from it. My great-grandfather was a meat inspector, so I’m curious what things were like before his job existed.





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