FoxTrot Classics by Bill Amend for November 14, 2011
Transcript:
Paige: We get to read the most wonderful book for homework this week! The whole class applauded when miss Christopher held it up! Andy: What is it? Dickens? Austen? Vonnegut? Paige: I forget. But it's this thin, mother! This thin! Andy: If English majors are a dying breed, it's only because their children are killing them.
x_Tech about 13 years ago
The heck with “The Great Gatsby”, but give Asimov’s Foundation series and I’ll read like the Dickens.
NE1956 about 13 years ago
Even with my sometimes outragous work schedule, I read a book every 10 days at worst. Daniel Silva, Vince Flynn, Steve Berry, Brad Thor … it’s all their fault. I not a fast reader unless I’m deep into one of their books. “Thin” is for magazines.
Kroykali about 13 years ago
I’ll never forget sludging through “Lord Jim” during English Lit, which was written during a time when authors were paid per word. Yep, paid per word. Awful book.
davidf42 about 13 years ago
If you like horror, try Frankenstein, The Invisible Man, Dracula, or Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
twj0729 about 13 years ago
Anything by C.S. Forester. the entire Hornblower series, The Last Nine Days of the Bismark, African Queen!
jpsomebody about 13 years ago
I prefer Larry Niven and Douglas Adams.
Xane_T about 13 years ago
The Scarlet Letter was pretty thin and it was possibly the absolute worst book I’ve ever read (both in plot and in writing skill), even the teacher said “don’t even bother reading the introduction, just skip to the first chapter.” Things Fall Apart wasn’t badly written but I hated it start to finish. Gatsby bored me to death as well. I actually like Shakespeare but I don’t see why we force kids to read it when they’re probably not ready to appreciate how witty it is anyway, even if they don’t mind reading it.I pretty much read nonstop through my childhood, classics to modern, but I mostly agree with Nab, a large amount of what people call “classics” and throw on that forced summer reading list are either badly written or just bad overall (and it’s not always because they’re dated, I could read Verne until the cows come home).
TheSpanishInquisition about 13 years ago
This strip is ridiculous. I’m 14 and I read everything I can get my hands on, as do all my friends. I read my first Shakespeare play at 12.
Ooops! Premium Member about 13 years ago
Paid per word? A lot of things make sense now! I like to read books that have a nice flow, not books that make me want to take out a pencil and start editing. Nobody should need a dictionary with you to look up more than 10% of the words in a fictional novel. Nope, uh-uh, no way.
bfrg45 about 13 years ago
To each his own. The Scarlet Letter was and is my most favorite book — exquisitely written. I have never liked to read Dickens. Shakespeare is so much fun! Jane Austen is lovely, although she does go on about her most irritating characters.
thestargazer1682 about 13 years ago
An updated run of this strip – the next day Paige and the class find out it’s actually an e-reader with a copy of “Pride and Prejudice” on it.
darkandstormynight about 13 years ago
I for one loved The Catcher in the Rye and The Great Gatsby when I read them in high school. (And Nabuquduriuzhur, you should try another book by Salinger before dismissing him completely. He wrote The Catcher in the Rye as a teenager would speak; that’s not how Salinger writes. His other books, told from other points of view, really illustrate this. I particularly enjoyed Franny and Zooey). My English teacher at the time also loved those books, and I think that makes a big difference. Of course the teacher liking a book doesn’t guarantee that the students will too, but I think it definitely helps. Their excitement for the book tends to be contagious. Conversely, when I had to read Great Expectations, my teacher openly admitted to hating the book, and no one else really enjoyed it either. If the teacher is excited about the book, that will lead to energetic class discussions and a deeper understanding of the books.
NightOwl19 about 13 years ago
I remember liking Catcher in the Rye, but I didn’t really get Gatsby at the time. I just read Bleak House (Dickens) for the first time and absolutely loved it, although I wonder if I would have gotten as much out of it if I had been required to read it in high school. Certainly I got much more out of Jane Eyre as an adult, even though I enjoyed it as a teenager. BTW in response to whoever thought that Jane Austen dwelt on her irritating characters, I suspect that may have been because she was forced to interact with Mr. Collins-types a great deal, and used her writing to vent a bit.
rgcviper about 13 years ago
In my mind, for good suspense fiction, you can’t beat Michael Crichton. His books keep me on the edge of my seat, no matter how many times I’ve read them.
DerkinsVanPelt218 about 13 years ago
My teacher asked me if Frankenstein and To Kill A Mockingbird should be removed from the curriculum. I responded in absolute disgust.
Miserichord about 13 years ago
Shakespeare’s writing is full of swearing.
The School Board recommended “A Wrinkle in Time” as an introduction to Science Fiction. An excellent book, but Fantasy rather than Science Fiction.
In Honors English my senior year, the teacher handed out a three page, double columned list of books, with instructions to select and report on six books we had never read.I explained I had read all but one on the list.Ended up supplying her with another two page list of recommended books I had read, and wrote reports on six books out of the hundred or so book I read for pleasure that year. ( I eventually read the one book on the list my Sophomore year in college. Didn’t care for it.)
Modoc about 13 years ago
Part has to do with the teacher’s personal bent. I had one who was very much into the “Man’s Inhumanity to Man” and always focused on that theme, even though there were many others to be found in the "required literature. Plus when you are already depressed about things, having a depressing reading list is not good. I enjoy Kippling, Clancy, Heinlin, Schmitts, Twain, L’Amour and Cussler for my leisure.
Sillstaw about 13 years ago
“Catcher in the Rye” is “a compendium of cusswords?” I can only recall one curse word being used in the book, and the main character was pretty aghast.
Part of the problem is that people have limited patience. I like to try and read older classics, but sometimes it’s tough going. But get enough time, and really read it, and you can enjoy them.
Oh, and authors used to be paid by the word? Shocking. Good thing modern authors aren’t and as such NEVER write long, padded out books (cough-cough Stephen King cough).
ishannon5289 about 12 years ago
The real problem is that school admins are so skittish they allow only the most drab and inoffensive books to be used.