<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the feminist librarian]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://thefeministlibrarian.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Anna Clutterbuck-Cook]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thefeministlibrarian.com/author/feministlib/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[four years ago today: &quot;personal&nbsp;canon&quot;]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><i>It&#8217;s been awhile since we did one of the <a href="http://annajcook.blogspot.com/search/label/four%20years%20ago%20today">four years ago today</a> flashback posts. So here&#8217;s a fun one I pulled from the Gmail archive. My friend Joseph and his brother had generated lists of the top ten novels in their &#8220;personal canon&#8221; and Joseph emailed to ask what mine would be. After some thought, this is what I came up with. Looking it over today, I can&#8217;t say there are any huge revisions to this list. </i><br /><i><br /></i><br /><b>From:</b> Anna<br /><b>To:</b> Joseph<br /><b>Date:</b> Tue, Dec 11, 2007 at 10:22 PM<br /><b>Subject:</b> Re: Personal canon of books</p>
<p>Hiya,</p>
<p>My canon is decidedly more &#8220;lowbrow&#8221; and than yours, but I am squelching my impulse to apologise for it on Nick Hornby&#8217;s firm orders (even though he loves Dickens&#8217; and writes tedious novels about men who refuse to grow up, so I am not sure how much I trust him . . .)</p>
<p>I have artificially controlled against all non-fiction and children&#8217;s literature (well, below the teen level).  Not sure if that&#8217;s quite what you had in mind, but there we are.  I discover my criteria are a) enduring &#8220;good read&#8221;&#8211;something I will go back to over and over again, as well as b) things that have had deep impact on how I answer the question, &#8220;how to live?&#8221; . . . these categories don&#8217;t always overlap.  There are books that have had great impact on how I think about the world, but which I&#8217;ve only read once . . . and books that I read habitually, but that I don&#8217;t really think of as life-shaping in any explicit way.  Maybe they&#8217;re just sneaker at it? And of course these change over time . . . I was just thinking today how <i>His Dark Materials</i> has really grown on me over the years.  And even though I have issues with some of his didacticism, his theological imagery really speaks to me.  And, I mean, who could resist the idea of a reversal of the whole Genesis/Fall/Eve story? (Um . . . wait . . . that&#8217;s right . . . a LOT of people 😉 ).</p>
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<p>That long introduction completed, here are my nominations. The <b>top ten</b> in a strictly alphabetical order. I figure once you make top-ten I&#8217;m not going to be judgmental. ALTHOUGH I do sometimes find myself paralyzed by the question of which book I would become if I were a character in <i>Fahrenheit 451</i> . . . possibly a clear indication of how troubled I actually am :).</p>
<p><b>Top Ten:</b></p>
<p>1. E.M. Forester. A Room With a View.<br />2. Shirley Hazzard. The Great Fire.<br />3. Haven Kimmel. The Solace of Leaving Early.<br />4. Robin Lippincott. Our Arcadia.<br />5. Michelle Magorian. Not a Swan.<br />6. Robin McKinley. The Blue Sword, et al.<br />7. Audrey Niffinegger. The Time-Traveler&#8217;s Wife.<br />8. Dorothy Sayers. Gaudy Night.<br />9. Martin Cruz Smith. Rose.<br />10. Tom Stoppard. Arcadia.</p>
<p><b>Some possible future candidates/honorable mentions:</b></p>
<p>Isabel Allende. Daughter of Fortune &amp; Portrait in Sepia.<br />Jane Austen. Persuasion.<br />A.S. Byatt. Possession.<br />Sheryl Jordan. The Raging Quiet.<br />Laurie R. King. The Beekeeper&#8217;s Apprentice, et al.<br />Barbara Kingsolver. Bean Trees.<br />David Levithan. The Realm of Possibility.<br />Gregory Maguire. Wicked, Son of a Witch<br />Philip Pullman. His Dark Materials.<br />Margaret Whelan Turner. The Thief, Queen of Attolia, King of Attolia.</p>
<p>Anna</p>
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