Kim (1901) by Rudyard Kipling
The classics are “classics” because they are written in a style that is no longer preferred.
Where Books and Readers Come Together
The classics are “classics” because they are written in a style that is no longer preferred.
One of the last sections is “The Functioning of Myth” and Campbell goes into great deal to extrapolate the introductory section. “The ends for which men strive in the world,” writes Campbell, “are three — no more, no less; namely: love and pleasure (kāma), power and success (artha: pronounced ‘art-ha’), and lawful order and moral virtue (dharma).”
Much of the book is loosely based on experiences of racism in Monroeville, Alabama.
One of the nice perks of this book is that Tobias includes quotes by other authors to introduce the chapters.
Reading Lolita in Tehran by Dr. Azar Nafisi is a memoir of a woman teaching literature in Islamic Iran.
If you want to find out what REALLY happened to Rambo, then you’ll just have to read the book.
I came across an English translation of The Sorrow of War (1993) and opened it up.
“Your generalization is beautifully epigrammatic.”
“You must be prepared to work always without applause.”
“There could not have been a lovelier sight; but there was none to see it except a strange boy who was staring in at the window.”
Earth has been invaded twice by an alien species called Formics.
The American Novel by Chase has a great chapter called “Three Novels of Manners.”
Airplane Fiction is simply another genre, and one that Lee Child has mastered.














