The Catcher in the Rye
discussion
The Most Overrated Books

Some specifics?

"Anything that involves the spirit of the age is often lost quickly no matter how good at the time."
And yet there are certain genres that are age..."
I would go back even further than Beowulf. A good translation of Homer is very readable even today. Also variations of the Faust Legend or the idea of selling your soul for worldly benefits is a genre that can always be rewritten to suit contemporary readers.

I agree with your statement to a great extent. "To kill" is most certainly a great book, no getting away from that fact, well written, well plotted and with great intentions. Yet I feel that it has become lost in a period of time that no longer exists. Populations have mixed, tolerance holds sway (I agree that the book we speak of may have had a hand in that later mixing) and there is little to none of the tension, once felt in sixties America compared to the comfortable coexistence of today.
I do not suggest for a second that it is not a great book, simply that It was a book of a different time and thought.



And the man with support from half the country spews hatred toward women, immigrants and religious minorities, and his popularity doesn't waver.

Please, let us leave politics out of this particular discussion. We're so inundated that I fear I'm going to scream if I see one more ad or another survey company calls. Living in Ohio is a burden!!!


I agree, people here in the U.S. are too inclined to leave politics or anything over which they might disagree out of discussion. That is part of the problem here; not enough real analysis and discussion. I doubt this is true in Europe. Anyway . . . what great book does not have political implications? 'The Invisible Man' That would be my favorite about race, and it is political start to finish.
Amanda wrote: "Another "Classic" I hated...Wuthering Heights. I know...shoot me. I could not stand Heathcliff OR Cathy. Simpering fools. I was straight up angry that I had to read that in high school. So many gre..."
I cannot get the Brontes, and many other 19th century classics. I loved Dickens as a child but not as adult. Thackerey's Vanity Fair and many Jane AUsten's books were an exception from my feeling that it is all too romantic - like chick lit.
Politics? Lots of my favourite books are about that- but I am of course a Central European...
I cannot get the Brontes, and many other 19th century classics. I loved Dickens as a child but not as adult. Thackerey's Vanity Fair and many Jane AUsten's books were an exception from my feeling that it is all too romantic - like chick lit.
Politics? Lots of my favourite books are about that- but I am of course a Central European...


Be careful what you wish for. What if it led to reactionary literature that promoted all of the evils that you are concerned about?

Should everyone follow the group think? Why not let individuals form their own opinions? Isn't that what these discussions are all about?

I think that you spelled it out:
"These books are about the very things that are at the core of the evil in our country exposing its ugly head right now."

Ridiculous people like Rush Limbaugh and Bill O'Reilly pump out crappy books all the time, but it surely isn't "literature," is it?



But if that doesn't work for you, I'd suggest you turn to the folks with the credentials and the years of wisdom and experience to back it up, the critics and professors and experts who don't waste their time on Goodreads discussion threads.
Does cultural relativism determine best practices and treatments in medicine? Does it set standards in air traffic control or HVAC repair? Was your plumber influenced by it or the mechanic working on your car?


For example, let's say, Their Eyes Were Watching God is a great piece of literature, no doubt about it. It was great when it was written; it was great when it was ignored by the general public and Hurston died in obscurity, and it is great today now that it has joined the reading lists of America's great books. But its "greatness," its quality and inherent worth did not shift or change over the years. It is not better today than it was in 1950 when it was ignored. We are better. The book remains the same.
The same cannot be said for 50 Shades, the YA flavor of the day, the latest book club favorite, or whatever schlock or piffle that Bill O'Reilly or Rush Limbaugh vomits out next.



"I agree, people here in the U.S. are too inclined to leave politics or anything over which they might disagree out of discussion. That is part of the problem here; not enough real analysis and discussion. I doubt this is true in Europe. Anyway . . . what great book does not have political implications? 'The Invisible Man' That would be my favorite about race, and it is political start to finish."
I have no problem discussing the politics of a certain book, but personal discussion of politics I stay away from online, at work, etc. There are very few people I can talk politics with in a respectful manner. I can count on one hand these people- they are the ones who can respectfully disagree with me or I with them. There is very little tolerance out there.

"I agree, people here in the U.S. are too inclined to leave politics or anything over which they might disagree out of discussion. That is part of the problem here; not enough real a..."
We never learn what we don't practice out of fear of offending people. That is a problem here; we don't learn how to disagree. And that holds in the context of literature. A lot of times people's most vitriolic comments come from disagreeing with a books politics, though that is veiled in other attitudes and verbiage.

But that is propaganda, not literature. As for cultural relativism, I will probably read Moby Dick again because I can relate to the masterfully written dynamic of well-drawn characters, adventure, a megalomaniac who endangers others, etc..

"We never learn what we don't practice out of fear of offending people. That is a problem here; we don't learn how to disagree. And that holds in the context of literature. A lot of times people's most vitriolic comments come from disagreeing with a books politics, though that is veiled in other attitudes and verbiage."
Yep! I can argue politics with my husband daily, and we do. Perhaps because I know it would never come between us. Disagreeing can be fun and productive.


But that is propaganda, not literature. As for cultural relati..."
Propaganda? Maybe so, but doesn't all literature have an element of propaganda?
“There is no such thing as a good influence. Because to influence a person is to give him one's own soul. He does not think his natural thoughts, or burn with his natural passions. His virtures are not real to him. His sins, if there are such thing as sins, are borrowed. He becomes an echo of someone else's music, an actor of a part that has not been written for him.”
― Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

But that is propaganda, not literature. As for ...
Propaganda? Maybe so, but doesn't all literature have an element of propaganda?"
No. Propaganda is to harm, damage or otherwise degrade a concept or thought or group or country/nation etc. Propaganda by definition is always negative and isn't about a redeeming quality at all. It may bear a false flag of truth buried behind it's arguments while exploiting thusly a suspension of disbelief.
Dorian Gray sold his soul. Not a wise move and thus the moral of the tale. Wilde did something similar. The social whole of the era in which he lived was misjudged by Oscar Wilde. If anything this quote is a prophetic utterance by Wilde about what would be his unfortunate and sad end.

Very well put, but it raises another question:
Outside of the the hard sciences, where things are more clear cut, are there are such things as universal truths?

Sorry again, A mental person.

Outside of the the hard sciences, where things are more clear cut, are there are such things as universal truths? "
"Science is the search for truth . . ." Linus Pauling
It's not a total answer and is Pauling really speaking about the quest for peace as much as science. An interesting 'truth' in itself!
I think every philosopher, intellectual, and all the rest of the great thinkers have weighed in on the topic of truth.
There is one universal truth I count on, Gravity.

"...To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Every one that is of the truth heareth my voice. Pilate saith unto him, What is truth? And when he had said this, he went out again..."
John 18:37-38

The historic Pilate was a ruthless ruler who would not hesitate to slaughter the Jewish insurgents.
The Pilate of the Gospels was more of an enigma. He was ambivalent in his dealings with Jesus and Jewish population.

Anything except short stories by Ernest Hemingway
Emma
Anything by Kafka
Way too much about the farmer in "Anna Karenina." Maybe it was the translation but I didn't like the writing. Hemingway's books are so boring. I think I would have appreciated "Emma" back in its day; it was probably the equivalent of a series today. However, I just got frustrated with so much text devoted to dinner parties. I wanted to like Kafka so much, but I just didn't.


I was forced to read this "classic" in high school in the 1960s, Somehow, as a cab driver's son, I was attending an expensive Catholic high school, and I was too busy trying to lift myself up by my bootstraps to be concerned about Holden Caulfield's phony angst. I just wanted to avoid pumping gas for the rest of my life.
He was the kind of guy that I would have enjoyed punching in the face. And if he lived in an environment where that happened frequently, he would have spent a lot less time feeling sorry for himself.
If you don't have to read this book, don't.

Curious: have you read it since?

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"Anything that involves the spirit of the age is often lost quickly no matter how good at the time."
And yet there are certain genres that are ageless. They seem ..."
I agree completely Matthew. In the early eighties there was a contemporary romance in which one of the protagonists dies of AIDS. It was a great book and sold well but as focus changed and medicine stepped in the whole Idea of the book sounded silly in the twenty first century. That made the book no less good nor notable but it became one that no one wanted to read anymore. Bestseller to non seller in twelve years. I believe it is more the reputations of Lee and Capote as well as many other notables rather than the validity of their novels in a more enlightened age that keep them selling. I do not mean there that they are terrible novels as they most certainly are not but rather that they were products of their time.
Stranger in a strange land and lord of the rings were two other great books of the sixties. Both were a phenomenal success and drew people to literature (both to be lauded for that) yet "Stranger in a strange land" (arguably the better book) pretty much disappeared with the sixties yet LOTR (set in no time period other than a fabled middle England) has continued to sell consistently.