Bill Clinton's 21 Favorite Books

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Former President Compiles List For Clinton Library Exhibit In Ark.

Poll Results

OptionVotes
# "One Hundred Years of Solitude," Gabriel Garcia Marquez. 11
# "Invisible Man," Ralph Ellison. 7
# "Homage to Catalonia," George Orwell. 6
# "Living History," Hillary Rodham Clinton. 4
# "The Collected Poems of W.B. Yeats," William Butler Yeats. 3
# "The Denial of Death," Ernest Becker. 3
# "The Cure at Troy: A Version of Sophocles' Philoctetes," Seamus Heaney. 2
# "Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-1963," Taylor Branch. 2
# "Meditations," Marcus Aurelius. 2
# "The Four Quartets," T.S. Eliot. 1
# "Nonzero: The Logic of Human Destiny," Robert Wright. 1
# "You Can't Go Home Again," Thomas Wolfe. 1
# "King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa," Adam Hochschild. 1
# "The Imitation of Christ," Thomas a Kempis. 1
# "Politics as a Vocation," Max Weber. 0
# "The Confessions of Nat Turner," William Styron. 0
# "Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics," Reinhold Niebuhr. 0
# "The Evolution of Civilizations: An Introduction to Historical Analysis," Carroll Quigley. 0
# "Lincoln," David Herbert Donald. 0
# "The Way of the World: From the Dawn of Civilizations to the Eve of the Twenty-First Century," David Fromki 0
# "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," Maya Angelou. 0


and what, Monday, 10 November 2008 19:59 (seventeen years ago)

100YoS

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:00 (seventeen years ago)

# "Living History," Hillary Rodham Clinton.

and what, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:00 (seventeen years ago)

max otm

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:00 (seventeen years ago)

^^ as a side-note, it only just dawned on me that what was creepy about that username wasn't the cock, it was the UNCLE

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:01 (seventeen years ago)

P.S. I think I'm voting for Orwell

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:01 (seventeen years ago)

come sit on my lap nabisco

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:01 (seventeen years ago)

Didn't even pick the best Thomas Wolfe book.

Alex in SF, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

ew sorry ew ew

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

B-b-but I'm thinking about voting for Ellison (/Bradley effect)

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

4 quartz

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

trill clinton

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

The Cure at Troy

and hopelessness
and President Reagan

mookieproof, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:02 (seventeen years ago)

this is a pretty heavy list, huh

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:03 (seventeen years ago)

that book nonzero fuckin sucks

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:03 (seventeen years ago)

garcia marquez and wolfe are not my thing really. marcus aurelius or invisible man

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:03 (seventeen years ago)

i think the collected yeats poems is overkill. he should have just picked a few.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:03 (seventeen years ago)

turning and turning in the widening bubba

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:04 (seventeen years ago)

invisible man

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:04 (seventeen years ago)

"this is a pretty heavy list, huh"

Hilary is the comic relief.

Alex in SF, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:04 (seventeen years ago)

I would have preferred At Canaan's Edge, but Parting the Waters is almost as good. Either way, Taylor Branch.

C-L, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:04 (seventeen years ago)

Yeats guys, come on

begloved smoked salmon sandwich (wanko ergo sum), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:05 (seventeen years ago)

has anyone responding actually read all of these?

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:05 (seventeen years ago)

I haven't

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:05 (seventeen years ago)

i have read them all ten times

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:05 (seventeen years ago)

yes, those Taylor Branch books are ridiculously good reading.

list seems kinda like a smart undergrad's list (broad and kinda distracted), not that there's anything wrong with that

at once ultrahip and painfully earnest (Euler), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:07 (seventeen years ago)

I've read six (or portions of six, I don't think I've read every Yeats poem ever.)

# "The Four Quartets," T.S. Eliot.
# "Invisible Man," Ralph Ellison.
# "One Hundred Years of Solitude," Gabriel Garcia Marquez.
# "King Leopold's Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror and Heroism in Colonial Africa," Adam Hochschild.
# "You Can't Go Home Again," Thomas Wolfe.
# "The Collected Poems of W.B. Yeats," William Butler Yeats.

Alex in SF, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:07 (seventeen years ago)

I have read all but Hillary's.

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:08 (seventeen years ago)

collected yeats is a total copout, i want to know if bill is a easter 1916 kind of guy or an innisfree kind of guy or a byzantium kind of guy

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:09 (seventeen years ago)

Just kidding, I've read practically none of these

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:09 (seventeen years ago)

i read all of them and wrote five of them

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:09 (seventeen years ago)

and edited the other 16

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:09 (seventeen years ago)

this is bullshit when people do this about books they haven't read, but isn't confessions of nat turner supposed to be kind of an embarrassment?

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:10 (seventeen years ago)

i have read the list posted at the top of this thread

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:10 (seventeen years ago)

I have read all but Hillary's.

Poems?

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:11 (seventeen years ago)

Obama seems more capable of a defense of early vs late period Yeats.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:12 (seventeen years ago)

I get "the collected poems of" shit all the time for poets I've never read

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:12 (seventeen years ago)

I did that with c.k. williams recently

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:12 (seventeen years ago)

i don't doubt that he owns it, but it's not a very revealing selection.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:13 (seventeen years ago)

this is the first c.k. williams poem I found on google

A basset-hound with balls
so heavy they hang
a harrowing half-
inch from the pavement,

ears cocked, accusingly
watches as his beautiful
mistress croons
to her silver cell-phone.

She does, yes, go on,
but my, so slim-
waistedly
does she sway there,

so engrossedly does her dark
gaze drift
towards even
for a moment mine …

Though Mister Dog of course
sits down right
then to lick
himself, his groin of course,

till she cuts off, and he,
gathering his folds
and flab, heaves
erect to leave with her …

But wait, she's turning to
a great Ducati
cycle gleaming
black and chromy at the curb,

She's mounting it, (that long
strong lift of flank!)
snorting it to life,
coaxing it in gear …

Why, she's not his at all!
No more than mine!
What was he thinking?
What was I? Like a wing,

a wave, she banks away
now, down-shifts,
pops and crackles
round the curve, is gone.

How sleek she was, though;
how scrufty, how
anciently scabby
we, he and I;

how worn, how
self-devoured,
balls and all,
balls, balls and all.

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:14 (seventeen years ago)

xpost yeah pretty boring list

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:14 (seventeen years ago)

Give him a break, he has uncollected Eliot and Heaney

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:14 (seventeen years ago)

#22: The Game by Neil Strauss

at once ultrahip and painfully earnest (Euler), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:14 (seventeen years ago)

I bet Leaves of Grass is one of his real favorites but he left it off because of Lewinsky shame.

Nicolars (Nicole), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:15 (seventeen years ago)

I heard Hillary's into The Secret.

at once ultrahip and painfully earnest (Euler), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:15 (seventeen years ago)

i just meant that saying the entirety of yeats's output is your "favorite" doesn't say all that much, not that the list as a whole doesn't.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:15 (seventeen years ago)

I'd really love a pic of Bill reading Living History under a space lamp, quietly chuckling to himself, savoring the prose aloud.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:16 (seventeen years ago)

and yeah what is the deal with that nat turner book? i can't remember.

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:16 (seventeen years ago)

Considering that poetry is not exactly the most widely read literary genre, listing a "collected poems" of a favorite poet does not really strike me as a cop-out -- it's a little different with Yeats, okay, but still.

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:16 (seventeen years ago)

# "Garfield Gains Weight," Jim Davis.

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:17 (seventeen years ago)

read the paris review interview w/ styron

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:17 (seventeen years ago)

i see clinton as a late-period yeats fan

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:18 (seventeen years ago)

would certainly match the ponderousness of the rest of the list.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:18 (seventeen years ago)

i didn't mean that as an insult.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:18 (seventeen years ago)

speaking as william butler yeats, i am very insulted

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:19 (seventeen years ago)

ilx: no country for old men

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:19 (seventeen years ago)

ew unnecessary thoughts about william butler yeats's cock

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:19 (seventeen years ago)

No results found for "gina gershon's favorite books".

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:20 (seventeen years ago)

what rough beast, shaved at last

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:20 (seventeen years ago)

oh no!

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:21 (seventeen years ago)

ew unnecessary thoughts about william butler yeats's cock

didn't he enlarge it in the thirties?

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:22 (seventeen years ago)

Rebels with razors. In the 1890s, Aubrey Beardsley, William Butler Yeats and Oscar Wilde were among the artists and writers who went for the clean-shaven look so they could feel superior to the money-grubbing men of the mercantile class who wore beards.

cool app (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:22 (seventeen years ago)

I long for the day when a pol will cite a Henry James novel (no Clinton "Turn of the Screw" jokes, suckas).

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:23 (seventeen years ago)

I bet Leaves of Grass is one of his real favorites but he left it off because of Lewinsky shame.

Yeah, I thought he'd given it to another of his paramours as well.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:23 (seventeen years ago)

I bet Leaves of Grass is one of his real favorites but he left it off because of Lewinsky shame.

ditto, as hard as it is to imagine Billy Blythe being calculating about such a list

Dr Morbius, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:25 (seventeen years ago)

or ANYthing

Dr Morbius, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:26 (seventeen years ago)

Maya Angelou kind of blows imo

bnw, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:30 (seventeen years ago)

that book is better than her poetry. i think its presence + that of confessions of nat turner are sort of sweet--it's not just a critics' favorite list.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:31 (seventeen years ago)

you guys

http://www.cultfiction.com.au/images/vox-nicholson-baker-phone-sex-novel1.jpg

jaymc, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:32 (seventeen years ago)

No Pitchfork 500, no credibility

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:34 (seventeen years ago)

Wait

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:35 (seventeen years ago)

I think that's the only thing that could make me hate him more. xp

Nicolars (Nicole), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:35 (seventeen years ago)

i hated that maya angelou book, along with 'a separate peace', when i had to read them in middle school

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:36 (seventeen years ago)

at least he didn't pick to kill a mockingbird, ugh

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:37 (seventeen years ago)

lay off to kill a mockingbird!

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:37 (seventeen years ago)

to kill a mockingbird is great. . . when you're in 10th grade

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:38 (seventeen years ago)

i will defend all this middlebrow middle school favorites! except for a separate peace.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:38 (seventeen years ago)

separate peace is pretty awful

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:38 (seventeen years ago)

he jounced the limb!

bnw, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:39 (seventeen years ago)

# "Watership Down", Richard Adams
# "The Chosen", Chaim Potok

at once ultrahip and painfully earnest (Euler), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:39 (seventeen years ago)

i will also defend:

catcher in the rye
okay anything else we had to read in middle school.

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:40 (seventeen years ago)

catcher in the rye is awesome, and holds up way better than anything in nine stories

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

The one about the man you can't see because he is black, that particular Invisible Man.

Abbott, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:41 (seventeen years ago)

4 q's are ugh

shit i had to read silas marner in 9th grade!

goole, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:44 (seventeen years ago)

Potok would have been a good counter to having T.S. Elliot :P

bnw, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:45 (seventeen years ago)

Dude that book is rad bcz this lady is having LAUDANUM FREAKOUTS in the attic, I mean how Naked Lunch is that? (NB: That is the only scene I remember from Silas Marner and I was readin Naked Lunch at the same time...tenth grade...memories blur.)

Abbott, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:46 (seventeen years ago)

catcher in the rye is awesome, and holds up way better than anything in nine stories

Wait wait seriously? Anything in Nine Stories? Including "The Laughing Man?"

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:46 (seventeen years ago)

tincture of laudanum

(Imagine that is in fancy script instead of just itals)

Abbott, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:47 (seventeen years ago)

It holds up better than Raise High the Roof Bring, Carpenter.

THAT IS CORRECT I BROUGHT CHALLOPS.

Abbott, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:47 (seventeen years ago)

Everyone please forgive my recent deterioration in language usage.

Abbott, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:48 (seventeen years ago)

iirc silas marner was pretty great in the end but i'd kill to have been assigned the teenage standards, or at least something a little more lively. because it's not like i'm allowed to read them now.

i never had to read any mark twain either, wtf

goole, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:48 (seventeen years ago)

i bet bush is a catcher in the rye fan

Uncle Shavedlongcock (max), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:48 (seventeen years ago)

i can feel that this is very annoying, making this thread a salinger fight, but let me just say that that is crazy talk, abbott!

horseshoe, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:48 (seventeen years ago)

i like Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters

gonna have to go back and look at the Laughing Man. . . but yeah when i looked at that collection a few years ago, ugh.

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:50 (seventeen years ago)

haha I was about to post what horseshoe just posted

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

let us now speak of things that are not Salinger

nabisco, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:52 (seventeen years ago)

oh c'mon

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:53 (seventeen years ago)

You will note I discussed Raise High the Roof Bring, Carpenters, a bio ("with eight-page full color photo insert") of the Carpenters before Karen got skinnyitis.

Abbott of the Trapezoid Monks (Abbott), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

someone read & defend This Sandwich Has No Mayonnaise, I triple dog dare you

http://www.freeweb.hu/tchl/salinger/mayonnaise.html

Mr. Que, Monday, 10 November 2008 20:55 (seventeen years ago)

dint understand antiquated terminology in 1st sentence, gave up

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 20:58 (seventeen years ago)

do you think W. even has 21 favorite books?

akm, Monday, 10 November 2008 21:15 (seventeen years ago)

I'd be surprised if he's really read many books besides the bible.

Nicolars (Nicole), Monday, 10 November 2008 21:19 (seventeen years ago)

according to the movie "w." hes read barry goldwaters autobiography and his favorite musical is cats

SNAKES! (ice crӕm), Monday, 10 November 2008 21:20 (seventeen years ago)

Cure at Troy

Human beings suffer,
they torture one another,
they get hurt and get hard.
No poem or play or song
can fully right a wrong
inflicted and endured.

The innocent in gaols
beat on their bars together.
A hunger-striker's father
stands in the graveyard dumb.
The police widow in veils
faints at the funeral home

History says, Don't hope
on this side of the grave.
But then, once in a lifetime
the longed for tidal wave
of justice can rise up,
and hope and history rhyme.

So hope for a great sea-change
on the far side of revenge.
Believe that a further shore
is reachable from here.
Believe in miracles
and cures and healing wells.

Call the miracle self-healing:
The utter self-revealing
double-take of feeling.
if there's fire on the mountain
or lightning and storm
and a god speaks from the sky.

That means someone is hearing
the outcry and the birth-cry
of new life at its term.

Would be good at the next inauguration.

Eazy, Monday, 10 November 2008 21:20 (seventeen years ago)

two months pass...

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Monday, 19 January 2009 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

Oh thanks for reminding me about this!

I remember seeing this a year or two ago and being SHOCKED upon seeing Denial on his little list, especially since its wedged between so many mediocre liberal appeasements. It was then I realized that he -- along with most other politicians, in all likelihood -- is an utter phony. He's way, way more self-aware and intellectually curious than he put on. Actually, come to think of it, through all his TED Talks and the like he's 'coming out' somewhat.

The big mark of phoniness is this: he can't be authentically religious if he truly loves the book. Can't. Even a little bit. All politicians (especially presidents/hopefuls: Clinton, Bushes, McCain, Obama) pretend so much but Clinton (probably Hillary too) makes for an extreme example.

p.s. Denial of Death is one of the most profound works ever on the problems of human nature, strife, meaning, etc. You read it and you're shocked at just how incredibly brave it is, to look so inward.

Kyle Clewett (bassace), Monday, 19 January 2009 02:11 (seventeen years ago)

Catalonia is a curious pick, too. Perhaps he admires him some of that anarchist utopia?

Kyle Clewett (bassace), Monday, 19 January 2009 02:13 (seventeen years ago)

he probably can be authentically religious and truly love denial of death

8====D ------ ㋡ (max), Monday, 19 January 2009 02:44 (seventeen years ago)

Yeah, I'm definitely going to back off that statement. There must be enough room in a person's mind for interest-in-a-certain-piece-of-literature and religiosity to cohabitate comfortably.

I'd love to hear him talk about it, in any case.

Kyle Clewett (bassace), Monday, 19 January 2009 02:54 (seventeen years ago)

Hey, I've read King Leopold's Ghost!

Someone Still Loves You Evan and Jaron (Tape Store), Monday, 19 January 2009 03:05 (seventeen years ago)

It is impossible to take any such list very seriously.

I'm sure a few of the odder things are there because Bill read them in the last decade and found them fascinating. I expect most of them are just decorative furniture, chosen with an eye to the impression they will make, altnhough he probably did read most of them, or much of each of them.

I'm certain he yearned to put his own autobiography on there, but knew it would be ill-taken. Hence, Hillary makes it as a stand-in. He appears in it once or twice, too.

Aimless, Monday, 19 January 2009 05:41 (seventeen years ago)

Hillary makes it as a stand-in. He appears in it once or twice, too.
Nascent double entendre.

M.V., Monday, 19 January 2009 06:13 (seventeen years ago)

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Tuesday, 20 January 2009 00:01 (seventeen years ago)

three years pass...

for comparison, here's john f kennedy's 12 favorite books (plus some others):

http://www.jfklibrary.org/Research/Ready-Reference/JFK-Miscellaneous-Information/Favorite-Books.aspx

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 10 December 2012 23:16 (thirteen years ago)

oh like the guy read anything other than James Bond novels

the little prince of inane false binary hype (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 10 December 2012 23:16 (thirteen years ago)


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