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The first answer is far easier than the second. Tom Send a noteboard - 01/04/2011 08:53:30 PM
I thought about the books that I like the best and decided that Dostoevsky loses to Pasternak. Doctor Zhivago is an excellent book at a lot of levels. It's an anti-utopian novel that isn't dystopian. It's a love story that isn't conventional. It's a poem in prose stylistically. The ideas are postmodern but somehow classic. There's a very historic element to it, yet it is purely fictional. There is an apocalyptic element to it, as well as a set of characters based on actual people Pasternak knew, so the novel is filled with inside jokes and universal symbols at the same time. Yes, if I had only one book to pass on, this would be it.

The problem is that it was published before I was born. Even some of the edgier, crazier books that I might be tempted to choose in a fit of drug-inspired cultural destructiveness, like Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, were published before I was born.

After some reflection, one of the only books that I think has been published in my lifetime that is worth passing on would be Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being. I think that, other than Kundera, only Eco was considered.
Political correctness is the pettiest form of casuistry.

ἡ δὲ κἀκ τριῶν τρυπημάτων ἐργαζομένη ἐνεκάλει τῇ φύσει, δυσφορουμένη, ὅτι δὴ μὴ καὶ τοὺς τιτθοὺς αὐτῇ εὐρύτερον ἢ νῦν εἰσι τρυπώη, ὅπως καὶ ἄλλην ἐνταῦθα μίξιν ἐπιτεχνᾶσθαι δυνατὴ εἴη. – Procopius

Ummaka qinnassa nīk!

*MySmiley*
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If you could pass on only one book to the next generation, what would it be? - 01/04/2011 10:29:47 AM 1741 Views
good question - 01/04/2011 12:05:20 PM 1243 Views
The Kama Sutra *NM* - 01/04/2011 01:35:42 PM 403 Views
Since you didn't exclude religious books... - 01/04/2011 04:52:56 PM 865 Views
GRRM's SoIaF, maybe they will live long enough to see the series ended - 01/04/2011 07:59:58 PM 1071 Views
You live in hope, I see. - 01/04/2011 08:15:05 PM 808 Views
Norton's Anthology *NM* - 01/04/2011 08:44:18 PM 399 Views
Lord save me. *NM* - 01/04/2011 08:46:13 PM 378 Views
quantiy over quality - 03/04/2011 07:16:13 PM 876 Views
Re: quantiy over quality - 03/04/2011 07:18:13 PM 864 Views
I was mostly pissed that I had to $60 for it and everything we read was available for free - 03/04/2011 11:27:24 PM 787 Views
That is a problem. - 03/04/2011 11:59:28 PM 945 Views
Volume two hands down - 04/04/2011 02:48:12 PM 750 Views
The first answer is far easier than the second. - 01/04/2011 08:53:30 PM 890 Views
Someone needs to mention the important stuff - 01/04/2011 09:21:48 PM 1124 Views
I was worried you were going to drag Jordan into this. *NM* - 01/04/2011 09:23:11 PM 363 Views
cookery is important... - 02/04/2011 12:51:16 AM 1105 Views
I'm tempted to say 1984 - 02/04/2011 01:32:22 PM 851 Views
Oooh, good choice. - 02/04/2011 01:33:27 PM 780 Views
I'd go with Brave New World, actually. - 02/04/2011 10:36:20 PM 964 Views
I think Huxley has a better understanding of human nature and less politcal motive - 03/04/2011 04:48:19 AM 762 Views
I love your opening sentence - 03/04/2011 02:34:45 PM 896 Views
thank you - 03/04/2011 07:09:35 PM 909 Views
You'll be interested to know - 03/04/2011 02:33:25 PM 902 Views
That was very good. - 03/04/2011 02:46:30 PM 881 Views
Some parts of Orwell's dystopia did in fact come true, though. - 03/04/2011 03:07:07 PM 819 Views
you really need to read Brave New World - 03/04/2011 07:14:04 PM 768 Views
We agree again. *NM* - 03/04/2011 07:45:06 PM 415 Views
stop that your scaring me *NM* - 03/04/2011 11:27:52 PM 362 Views
I can berate you for writing "your" instead of "you're" if it makes you feel better. *NM* - 03/04/2011 11:30:14 PM 357 Views
thats OK I'm good - 04/04/2011 02:49:45 PM 783 Views
Re: thats OK I'm good - 04/04/2011 02:51:34 PM 712 Views
Stranger in a Strange Land - 02/04/2011 05:37:05 PM 777 Views
on second thought - 02/04/2011 05:41:14 PM 870 Views

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