Books to Read Over J-Term
J-Term will officially begin on Jan. 4, but we at FlyBy know better than anyone that it will be difficult to make the coming three weeks into anything other than a colossal waste of time. So, in the spirit of genuine or—who are we kidding?—feigned intellectualism, we've compiled a list of reading recommendations from several campus mailing lists. We've also provided, of course, the requisite value judgment on each title.
Some of these books are ones you've probably heard of before, others are ones you haven't. But since none of them are assigned in any classes you’re currently taking, all are sure to qualify as reading you might actually do.
Because we know both how good it feels to actually finish a book and how rarely that actually happens at Harvard, the titles are arranged roughly from shortest to longest. (Thanks to the members of the Eliot, Mather, Pfoho, and FUP mailing lists for providing the recommendations.)
Now, without further ado, the list:
Best way to remember what life was like before Expos
Curious George and Me
Author: H.A. Rey
Page Count: 56
Pitch: Aww, you don't need us to explain this one.
Best short classic
Mrs. Dalloway
Author: Virginia Woolf
Page Count: 216
Pitch: Taking place in a single day, this novel follows a London society woman (Mrs. Dalloway) as she prepares for a party that she is to give that night.
Best way to be an eighth grade nerd all over again
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Author: Douglas Adams
Page Count: 224
Pitch: A classic, funny, science fiction novel you just have to read at some point.
Best (pretty short) philosophical novel
Ishmael: An Adventure of the Mind and Spirit
Author: Daniel Quinn
Page Count: 263
Pitch: A Socratic dialogue between a man and a gorilla named Ishmael who attempts to debunk the “myth” of human supremacy.
Best collection of bizarre short stories
Salmonella Men on Planet Porno: Stories
Author: Yatsutaka Tsutsui
Page Count: 272
Pitch: The title says it all.
Best book-that-was-so-much-better-than-the-movie
The Road
Author: Cormac McCarthy
Page Count: 304
Pitch: An apocalyptic journey of a man and his son.
Best book for learning how to…well, you know
The Kama Sutra
Author: Philosopher/scholar Mallanga Vatsyayana, aka some Indian dude of antiquity
Page Count: 320
Pitch: An illustrated guide to every sex position under the sun.
Best book to make you seem like a post-modern intellectual
The Unbearable Lightness of Being
Author: Milan Kundera
Page Count: 320
Pitch: A philosophical novel of Prague during the tumultuous year of 1968.
Best book to make you seem culturally aware
The God of Small Things
Author: Arundhati Roy
Page Count: 336
Pitch: A controversial Booker Prize winner about two brothers siblings, India, and circumstance.
Best forgotten classic
The Master and Margarita
Author: Mikhail Bulgakov
Page Count: 350
Pitch: A novel about the Devil visiting the atheistic USSR.
Best book by a Cambridge local
The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
Author: Junot Diaz
Page Count: 352
Pitch: A poignant and funny novel about an overweight Dominican boy in New Jersey.
Best pretentious book by an author absolutely no one has heard of
Dictionary of the Khazars
Author: Milorad Pavic
Page Count: 352
Pitch: This novel, written in dictionary form, doesn’t have a conventional plot or structure, although it’s loosely based on the mass conversion of the Khazar people to Judaism in the 8th or 9th century. According to the author, there’s also an allegorical connection with Serbia...
Best contemporary classic
Atonement
Author: Ian McEwan
Page Count: 368
Pitch: A beautiful novel about a girl, the devastating consequences of a lie she tells, and her attempts to atone for it later in life.
Best beach read
How To Be Single
Author: Liz Tuccillo
Page Count: 368
Pitch: A spunky novel that follows the love lives of five New York women.
Best selection from Oprah’s Book Club (even though it's now kind of a joke)
The House of Sand and Fog
Author: Andre Dubus III
Page Count: 365
Pitch: A darker novel about the conflict between an unstable woman trying to get her house back and the Iranian family that now lives in it.
Best book about food
The Omnivore’s Dilemma
Author: Michael Pollan
Page Count: 464 pages
Pitch: A seasoned journalist’s quest to uncover the origins of the foods Americans eat everyday.
Best book that spawned an international controversy and several deaths
The Satanic Verses
Author: Salman Rushdie
Page Count: 576
Pitch: Inspired in part by the life of the Prophet Muhammad, this contemporary novel angered segments of the Muslim community so much that the Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa against its author in 1989. Despite all the threats, however, Rushdie has spoken at Harvard before.
Best big, engrossing page-turner
The Poisonwood Bible
Author: Barbara Kingsolver
Page Count: 576
Pitch: A powerful novel about a missionary family who moves to Belgian Congo in 1959.
Best long novel on the list that’s more than worth the time it takes to read
A Prayer for Owen Meany
Author: John Irving
Page Count: 672
Pitch: This novel tells the story of Owen Meany, an unforgettable character who believes himself to be an instrument of God.