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Topic: 100 Great Books in Haiku (Read 23564 times) |
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Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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100 Great Books in Haiku
« on: 2007-02-11 12:20:46 » |
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[Blunderov] Brevity is the soul.
100 Great Books in Haiku by David Bader Penguin books ISBN-10:0-670-91577-7
1 The Cantebury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer
Pilgrimmes on spryng braecke - roadde trippe! Whoe farrtted? Yiuw didde. Noe, naught meae. Yaes, yiuw.
2 The Iliad Homer
Sing, Goddess, of how brooding Achilles' mood swings caused him to act out.
3 Oedipus Rex Sophocles
Chorus: Poor bastard. Oedipus: This is awful! Blind Seer:Told you so.
4 Remembrance of Things Past Marcel Proust
Tea-soaked madeline - a childhood recalled. I had brownies like that once.
5 Phaedo Plato
By Zeus, Socrates! It seems you're right once again! Time for your hemlock.
6 The Odyssey Homer
Aegean forecast - storms, chance of one-eyed giants, delays expected.
7 De Revolutionibus Orbium Caelestium Nicholas Copernicus
Guessus whatibus? Earthus orbits the Sunnum! Ptolemy doofus.
8 Beowulf
Hrothgar's hall, haunted. Dauntless Danes die. Grendel-gored. Why not hrelocate?
9 Meditations Marcus Aurelius
As grapes become wine, so must one accept one's fate. Die well. Like a grape.
10 The Inferno Dante Alighieri
Abandon all hope! Looks like everyone's down here. Omigod - the Pope.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #1 on: 2007-02-12 07:08:26 » |
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[Blunderov] More brilliant witticisms from David Bader.
11 Moby Dick Herman Melville
Vengeance! Black blood! Aye! Doubloons to him that harpoons the Greenpeace dinghy.
12 Bleak House Charles Dickens
Fog, gloom, men in wigs – The Chancery Court blights all. See where law school leads?
13 The Prince Niccolo Machiavelli
What I learned at court: Being more feared than loved – good. Getting poisoned – bad.
14 Discourse on Method Rene Descartes
If I think, I am. If I don’t exist, how do I know about me?
15 Clarissa, or, the history of a young lady: comprehending the most important concerns of private life and particularly showing the distresses that may attend the misconduct both of parents and children, in relation to marriage. Samuel Richardson
To Miss Howe: send help! I’ve been raped in Volume Six With three more to go.
16 The Epic of Gilgamesh
Part god, part mortal, Offspring of a mixed marriage King Gilgamesh copes.
17 As I lay dying William Faulkner
Addie: I’m dyin’. Darl: I’m nuts. Mules: We’re drownded. Anse: Need me some teeth.
18 Robinson Crusoe Daniel Defoe
Alone for twelve years, Then a footprint in the sand. Thank God! A servant!
19 Madame Bovary Gustave Flaubert
Poor foolish Emma, Ruined by romance novels. Could haiku have helped?
20 The Wealth of Nations Adam Smith
Supply meets demand. The invisible hand claps. Capitalist Zen.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #2 on: 2007-02-13 12:12:24 » |
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[Blunderov] It is better to trust the ear Than count the syllables Honestly.
More from David Bader.
21 Das Kapital Karl Marx
October winds blow. Your contradictions doom you, capitalist swine.
22 The Histories Herodotus
Go tell the Spartans – The Persian hordes are fierce and wear funny slippers.
23 Gulliver’s Travels Jonathan Swift
Thus I was first great, Then small and much vexed to learn That size does matter.
24 Little Women Louisa May Alcott
Snowdrops hang like tears. Shy, sweet, saintly Beth has died. One down, three to go.
25 Lord of the Flies William Golding
‘Kill him! Spill his blood!’ Marooned boys hold savage rites. Choirboys learn to prey.
26 The Count of Monte Christo Alexander Dumas
Gallant avenger. Egg-dipped cheese sandwich. Thy name Is Monte Cristo.
27 Waiting for Godot Samuel Beckett
Act 1. ‘It’s hopeless. My boots don’t fit. Where is God?’ Act 11. The same thing.
28 Brideshead Revisited Evelyn Waugh
Gay Catholic toffs – what else to expect from a man named Evelyn?
29 Don Quixote Miguel de Cervantes
Dusk – the windmills turn. Is the Don mad, or are we? No, it’s him alright.
30 Hamlet William Shakespeare
‘His mother wed his dead murdered father’s brother!’ Next Jerry Springer.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #3 on: 2007-02-28 17:00:08 » |
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[Blunderov] David Bader continues. ( Do I imagine it or are there some shades of Ogden Nash from time to time?)
31 The Scarlet Letter Nathaniel Hawthorne
Grim, grey New England - all adulterers receive free monogramming.
32 (Bl. My personal favourite) Metaphysics Aristotle
Substance has essence. Form adds whatness to thatness. Whatsits have thinghood.
33 Candide, or, Optimism Voltaire
A naive young man learns that bad things do happen to smug philosophes.
34 Wuthering Heights Emily Bronte
Wild. Strange. A bit damp. Heathcliffe waits for Cathy's ghost. Women. Always late.
35 Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica. Isaac Newton
Cherry blossoms fall with Force equal to Mass times Acceleration.
36 Lady Chatterley's Lover D. H. Lawrence
On the grounds, fresh game. On the new gamekeeper, fresh Lady Chatterley.
37 The Jungle Upton Sinclair
Slaughterhouse karma - the dying ox returns as Durham's Potted Meat.
38 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Edward Gibbon
From (1) rule (2) to (3) ruin.(4) Rome's (5) last (6) words (7):Help! I've fallen and can't get up. (
1 Tertullian. Apol. c 6 p. 80. 2 In the 2nd century of the Christian era, this ancient and reknowned power, the Imperium Romanum, amplitudae quae fruit Roma - you know, Rome - held dominium over lands spanning three continents, from ocean front property in Spain to valuable time share in the Euphrates valley it's gentle yet powerful influence comprehending the most civilized portion of mankind and most of the best restaurants. 3 Pliny the Elder Hist. Natur. 1 v1. c. 32. Also Pliny the Younger, Letters, v1, xiv. In fact the whole Pliny family agrees on this. 4 For such was its state when Rome, suffering from its own immoderate greatness, it's aims achieved by conquest undone by misrule (Bl. My, doesn't that sound familiar?) its martial spirit enfeebled by religion, its defences breached by barbarism, its head throbbing and its tongue fuzzy from a major post orgy hangover, (Bl. My, doesn't that sound familiar?) moaned, staggered a few steps, and just keeled over. For more on the orgies, see Lacivius, De Perversitate (Leyden ed.) 5 See fn. 2, supra. Seven Hills. All roads lead to it. Enough said. 6 The sedulous reader, feeling the exasperation of a long journey whos destination seems ever out of reach, anticipating tha the attainment of the goal may require some fortifying infusion, following th example of the author who, himself, has needed a bracing libation on not a few occasions, particularly during his digression on Bulgarian armaments, may find it salutary to avail himself of the revivifying powers of spirits, perhaps a double. 7 For a few words on the decline of the Eastern Empire and the career of Mahomet, including his summer jobs, see volumes V - V1. 8 'Succerre! Cedici nec, surgere possum.'
39 Old Goriot Honore de Balzac
His two spoiled daughters - they don't write, they don't visit. This is gratitude?
40 Crime and Punishment Fyodor Dostoyevsky
I, Rodya, killed her to prove my theory. Uh oh. Back to square oneski.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #4 on: 2007-05-07 04:31:39 » |
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[Blunderov] Some more of this rather nice stuff.
41 The Life and Opinions of Tristam Shandy,Gentleman. Lawrence Stern
I've torn out line two.
Reader, it was dull.
42 Lolita Vladimir Nabokov
Lecherous linguist - he lays low and is laid low after laying Lo.
43 The Critique of Pure Reason Immanuel Kant
We are born knowing circles to be circular. We just don't know it.
44 The Cherry Orchard Anton Chekhov
Their bankrupt estate sold to a former servant. Nobles down, serfs up.
45 Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Michel Foucault
Carceral discourse polyvalently deployed. Hot air gently blows.
46 Reflections on the Revolution in France Edmund Burke
Rights of man? Humbug! And ladies? I pine for you, Marie Antoinette.
47 Frankenstein Mary Shelley
A mad scientist creates a ghastly Monster who just wants a hug.
48 The Metamorphosis Franz Kafka
'What have I become?' Uncertain, Gregor Samsa puts out some feelers.
49 1984 George Orwell
Love is a thoughtcrime. The Thought Police make Winston forget whatsername.
50 Phenomenology of the Spirit George Wilhelm Friederich Hegel
Thesis: A whole pig. Antithesis: Butcher shop. Synthesis: Schnitzel.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #5 on: 2007-05-16 14:52:19 » |
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[Blunderov] More of David Bader's marvelous wit and erudition.
51 The Tale of Genji Lady Murasaki Shikubu
Two wives, ten consorts - under the wisteria, many warm futons.
52 The Life of Samuel Johnson James Boswell
That night, as we supped, he roared 'Pass the salt, blockhead.' The great man liked me.
53 Jane Eyre Charlotte Bronte
Oh woe! His mad wife - in the attic! Had they but lived together first.
54 Doctor Faustus Christopher Marlowe
A scholar trades a few fun years for endless Hell. Maths was not his field.
55 Two Treatises of Government John Locke
Orange butterfly you have no divine right to be called the 'monarch'.
56 One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Plagues, incest, madness, human pig children. Dios! Where does the time go?
57 Tartuffe, or, The Imposter Moliere
They try to outwit a self-righteous hypocrite - the first sitcom writ.
58 An Essay on the Principle of Population Thomas Malthus
People multiply, food does not. The good news is there are wars and plagues.
59 War and Peace Leo Tolstoy
Guns roar, Russia burns. Where's Andrey? Who is Petya? Confused, France retreats.
60 To the Lighthouse Virginia Woolf
Boy, death, art, earwig- summer at the beach recalled, minus some details.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #6 on: 2007-05-21 02:32:15 » |
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[Blunderov] Another 10 to make y'all smile.
61 Being and Nothingness Jean-Paul Sartre
Gentle Left Bank sun- blubirds chirp their empty songs. We are all condemned.
62 Ivanhoe Sir Walter Scott
'Who dat fine knight be?' asked the saucy Moorish wench. 'Dat be Ivan, ho.'
63 The Mayor of Casterbridge Thomas Hardy
Undone by his past - he once sold his wife and child. Nobody's perfect.
64 Relativity: The Special and General Theory Albert Einstein
Cherry blossoms fall at light speed through curved space-time and land with a thud.
65 The Magic Mountain Thomas Mann
The TB 'restcure'. Haus Berghof. Death, Eros, and all meals included.
66 Kama Sutra Vatsayana
Advice for those in a difficult position. First be flexible.
67 Walden, or, Life in the Woods Henry David Thoreau
Morning: Pond-gazing. Afternoon: Berry-picking. What a hectic day.
68 Saint Joan George Bernard Shaw
Strange girl, hears voices. but, by Jove, even in death she lights up a room.
69 The Importance of Being Earnest Oscar Wilde
Earnestly posing as Ernest, Jack learns he's named Ernest in earnest.
70 Siddartha Hermann Hesse
The Cycle of life - as with spicy vindaloo, all things return. Om.
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Blunderov
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Re:100 Great Books in Haiku
« Reply #7 on: 2007-05-30 19:20:09 » |
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[Blunderov]This is the last of the wine, the lingering dregs. All things must pass.
71 The Catcher in the Rye J.D.Salinger
I flunked out again. Crumby prep schools. Bunch of dopes. Boy, I'm not kidding.
72 The Origin of Species Charles Darwin
Galapagos finch - the same beak as Aunt Enid's! A theory is born.
73 The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald
Beauty to weep for - coral, azure, apple green. His custom-made shirts.
74 The Social Contract Jean-Jaques Rosseau
All vote. All consent. It's like a big family. Not mine, but someone's.
75 Father and Sons Ivan Turgenev
A nihilist dies without having achieved much. Mission accomplished.
76 Nana Emile Zola
Paris Courtesan- in her salon, men admire her French Empire chest.
77 Also Sprach Zarathustra Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
Kindness is weakness! Abhor pity, worship strength! Be an uber-jerk!
78 Finnegans Wake James Joyce
Riverrun on and by Jaisus s'dense! Bien alors, scribbledehobbl.
79 Vanity Fair: a Novel without a Hero William Makepiece Thackeray
No title, no wealth. Stil, Becky climbs in Mayfair. But how? Lying helps.
80 Portrait of a Lady Henry James
Will she inherit? Which suitor will she marry? When will tea be served?
81 The Varieties of Religious Experience William James
Let's be pragmatic. Saints,monks, mystics - their faith works. So what if they're nuts?
82 The Tin Drum Gunter Grass
A shrieking, drumming dwarf winds up in a madhouse. It's a long story.
83 The Wild Duck Henrik Ibsen
She has shot the duck! No, Hedvig has shot herself. [offstage, relieved quacks.]
84 Utopia Thomas More
An austere commune- 'Utopia'. It's Greek for 'Nice, if you're a monk.'
85 Paradise Lost John Milton
Oe'r and oe'r God warned, 'Eate not th' Apple!Man dids't and God ballistick went.
86 Brave New World Aldous Huxley
Euphoric drugs, sex, cloning, the past forgotten. So what else is new?
87 The Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck
Okie exodus - Ma Joad's fambly keeps movin' Where are the darned grapes?
88 Faust Johan Wolfgang von Goethe
He's damned - no, he's saved! For German engineering, another triumph.
89 Heart of Darkness Joseph Conrad
The darkness darkened. Oh, the horror, the horror. It was horrible.
90 The Interpretation of Dreams Sigmund Freud
Old pond. Frog jumps in. Repressed sexual desire, clearly Oedipal.
91 The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious Carl Gustav Jung
A patient says he sees the phallus of the sun. But then, who doesn't?
92 The Wasteland T.S. Eliot
April, cruel month! Zerstort. Damyata. Shantih. And May's no picnic.
93 Essays Michael de Montaigne
Genteel French musings - life, death, odd smells, my moustache. Today's topic: Thumbs.
94 The Call of the Wild Jack London
Alaskan tundra - a dog finds his inner wolf. White snows turn yellow.
95 Middlemarch George Eliot
Stifling social roles, small-town gossip - beware the eyes of Middlemarch.
96 The Sun Also Rises Ernest Hemingway
'Why can't we?' she said. 'War wound,' I said. 'Oy,' Cohn said. Back to Harry's bar.
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