Saturday, May 27, 2017

A Bookshelf of Inspiration

Reading has been a major inspiration for me throughout my life. Not only an inspiration for my own writing, but for life in general, for whatever philosophy I claim, for my career in academia, for the way I try to treat others. It would require many blog posts to list all the books and stories that have influenced me, but I can show you pictures of those works that have stuck with me the longest and which I continue to this day to pick up periodically and peruse.

First up are three books that reflect both my love of nature and of beautiful writing. All of these are nonfiction. The Snow Leopard, by Peter Matthiessen is my favorite work of all time.  I have multiple copies, and keep one at home and one at school. Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez is hallucinogenically beautiful. And Walden, by Thoreau! Nuff said.

Next, I didn’t discover Fitzgerald’s translation of Homer until college but when I did, I fell in love and memorized long sections of it. Some of those I still recall.  I didn’t discover The King in Yellow by Robert Chambers until grad school, but when I started writing Chambers’ work was right there with me, particularly a section of flash pieces called “The Prophet’s Paradise,” sections of which I also memorized.

Inspiration comes for me from every kind of work and every type of writer. The opening to Jitterbug Perfume is just about the most perfect piece of writing I’ve ever seen. House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday beings with another of those hallucinatory passages that fires my imagination. And Teot’s War by Heather Gladney is a gorgeously written fantasy novel.

Ernest Hemingway is the only writer with two books on my inspiration shelf. The Short Stories contains some absolute jewels of Hemingway’s work, “The Snows of Kilimanjaro,” “The Short Happy Life of Francis MaComber,” among them. But the piece simply headed by “Chapter V” on page 127 is a thing of beauty.  A Moveable Feast is not on my shelf because of particularly beautiful writing, but because it contains the best advice on writing and on being a writer that I’ve ever read.

Finally, we have two very different types of works. Charles Darwin’s “The Origin of the Species” is one of the best written scientific arguments ever produced, and it certainly helped inspire in me an interest in science and reason. The other book here, which you can’t see the title on, is a near polar opposite to Darwin. It is the Collected Poems of Dylan Thomas. I thought I disliked poetry until I read this book late in college. This made me realize that I wanted a sense of poetry to be at the heart of everything I did.


So tell me, what books have inspired you?


16 comments:

  1. The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly

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  2. Shadow, I've read several of his but not that one. I'll check it out

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  3. Very well shared, Charles.
    Walden
    Tao Te Ching
    The Fixer - Malmud
    Hesse
    I'm forgetting the best ones, I know....
    Psalms

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  4. Cloudia, good stuff to add for sure

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  5. Marlowe's sense of honor and integrity in "The Big Sleep."

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  6. Sidney, I certainly got a lot of philosophy out of books. the heroes taught me a lot

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  7. You have such a wide variety of taste in reading! Lots of books have inspired me...ranging from ones about journalism and activism to mysteries. Different kinds of inspiration.

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  8. Riot kitty, my tastes in music are limited, but in literature very wide for sure.

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  9. Cool & magic beans, Charles! Excellente. About half of these same books have also inspired me, also (the others I haven't checked out to this point).

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  10. Erik, I seem to have pretty much lived my life in books

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  11. I read four of these and really need to read "A Movable Feast" and reread "Snow Leopard"

    As for inspiration, different ages had different books. In my 20s it was probably Herman Hesse, in my 30s Edward Abbey, in my 40s Ann Lamott, in my 50s Rick Bragg... in another hour I might have a different answer

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  12. Charles, thanks for telling us about your influences via your photos. A fine list of books there.

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  13. sage, yes, there have been some changes in my thinking over the years, particularly between high school and grad school

    Oscar, thanks for reading, man

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  14. Hmmm. I'm not sure I've ever had a single book inspire me. I have a tendency of reading and finding snippets...elements that I like that I steal and morph to my own desires. If I had to pick a single work that had a large affect, it would actually probably be 'Aliens'.

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  15. Reading inspires one to become a better version of oneself. Thanks for sharing and greetings to you!

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  16. Robert Bennett, that's interesting. I definitely do absorb snippets from many books, but certain ones, like these, get to me as a whole.

    Blogoratti, I agree. Thanks for visiting.

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