What's So Great About the Great Books?

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Title
A01=Naomi Kanakia
Aesthetic
Allan bloom
Anna
Anna karenina
Aristotle
Author_Naomi Kanakia
autodidact
Bourgeois
canon
Category=DSB
Category=JNA
Category=JNAM
Category=JNM
Category=JNS
Century philosopher
civilization
classics
Clifton fadiman
Critique
cultural literacy
Dave chappelle
Edith wharton
Eliot
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Ethnic nationalism
Ethnic nationalist
Explicitly
Fiction novels
forthcoming
George eliot
great books
Greek latin
Henry james
humanism
Humanities
Influential
James
Jane austen
Jeremy wayne
Jeremy wayne tate
Kant
Liberal arts
liberal arts education
Liberal education
literature
Martin luther
Morrison
Nietzsche
Novel
Philosopher
philosophy
Plato
Racist
Ralph ellison
Revolutionary road
Rhetoric
Richard wright
Saxon
self-education
Shakespeare
Socrates
Sophist
Tolstoy
Toni
Toni morrison
tradition
trans
transgender
truth
Wayne tate
western canon
Wharton
wisdom

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691251929
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 19 May 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A popular novelist and literary blogger answers those who claim the classics are too difficult, too problematic, and too white—and explains what we gain by reading them

When she was in her early twenties, then-aspiring writer Naomi Kanakia set out to read the Great Books—humankind’s most highly regarded literary classics, representing “the best that human beings have thought or said,” as determined by the two elderly intellectuals who’d written the guidebook she consulted. After twenty years, she has made her way through about two-thirds of these books, and she’s found reading them to be an immensely pleasurable and insightful activity. Plato, Milton, Tolstoy, Proust, all those dead guys—their books have stood the test of time.

But since beginning her journey, Kanakia has found that although reading the Great Books is part of a longstanding tradition of engaging with the thought of previous generations, it is also a highly contingent activity that arose out of a specific time and place, the brainchild of a small group of early twentieth-century popularizers associated with Columbia University and the University of Chicago. And people have always been skeptical about the idea of reading the Great Books, asking if this is truly a realistic or even desirable goal for the ordinary person. A more recent and growing group of Great Books skeptics asks if these works are too problematic, reactionary, and irrelevant to bother reading. Kanakia, a self-described “left-of-center person,” grapples with these objections, attempting to restore context for the Great Books even as she sticks up for them. Because books that expose us to fundamental truths about the nature of beauty and reality are worth fighting for.

Naomi Kanakia writes a popular literary blog, Woman of Letters, that’s been praised by The New Yorker, Vox, and New York Magazine. She is also the author of three YA novels and a literary novel for adults.