A handful
of other great choices for your reading on the beach this summer.
1)
Nathanael West, Miss
Lonelyhearts and The Day of the Locust
(1933 and 1939): Darkly cynical satires on human nature, Hollywood, and America
don’t get any more funny and fun than this!
2)
Betty Smith, A
Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1943): One of the most readable and engaging entries
in perhaps my favorite American literary genre: the multi-generational immigrant
family novel.
3)
Maya Angelou, I
Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969): One of the best American
autobiographies (or starting points for one—there are more volumes if you like
this one!), by one of our most important poets.
4)
Roger Zelazny, Doorways
in the Sand (1975): If you want a shorter work of sci fi than Tad
Williams’ series, try this slim but hugely entertaining and thought-provoking
novel by one of sci fi’s all-time greats.
5)
THIS SPACE FOR RENT: I’ll say it even before
the PS this time—the weekend’s crowd-sourced post needs your suggestions! What
should American Studiers read on the beach this summer?
That
crowd-sourced post this weekend,
Ben
PS. You know what to do!
7/13
Memory Day nominee: Stewart
Culin, the museum
researcher, archivist, and ethnographer whose work on games,
language, and objects, particularly in Native
American cultures but also around
the world, profoundly impacted
our understandings of those elements and cultures.
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