Reading a good book about great books is good, but probably not good enough. But maybe the better aspiration is to write good books, not just to read great ones.
“In the subtitle to this book, the one you’re holding, I joke that you should read these books “even though it might destroy you.” There is certainly a sense in which the Great Books ruined me. At fifteen, all I wanted was to write adventure stories about a chosen-one hero who saves the universe. Now, at forty, I am writing a book where I argue that everyone ought to read Proust.
But if I was destroyed by these books, it’s a destruction I chose. These books don’t act mechanically on the nervous system, forcing people to adopt certain viewpoints. Instead, when you open the Great Books, you enter into a conversation with the past. You experience a much broader diversity of opinions than is possible if you stick primarily to contemporary literature. And from that diversity, you start to see possibilities that you hadn’t previously perceived. Whatever is best and most appealing in these books becomes a part of you, inextricable from your sense of self.
And in the end, when you look back on these books, it’s impossible to say what came from them and what was inside you all along. That’s one of the paradoxes of the Great Books—everyone who’s read them has felt altered by the encounter, but they’ve often been altered in very different ways. Some people read Plato and become skeptics, while others become Neoplatonists.
My aim in this book isn’t to tell you exactly what’ll happen if you read the Great Books, it’s just to convince you that there is a good chance something will happen. Because I think the real fear isn’t that the Great Books might destroy us—we long to be destroyed, long to be altered. The real fear is that we’ll spend a lot of time slogging through these old tomes and experience nothing at all. And that, I think, is a fear that is usually without merit. If you spend enough time with the Great Books, I am certain that you will be altered by the experience.” — What's So Great About the Great Books?: Why You Should Read Classic Literature (Even Though It Might Destroy You) by Naomi Kanakia
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