I just returned from a month in Maine, and am ready to report on what I like to refer to as my Summer Reading Feast...28 days of good food, good movies, and good books. Prior ot my trip, someone asked me if I did any "professional" reading on vacation or whether it was just for pleasure. My reply to them sounded something like this: "I am always reading for pleasure - and I am always reading professionally. Since I read with my leadership lenses on, it is professional; and since I love to read so much, it is pleasureable." My Summer Reading Feast is often both a series of planned books (I put aside books all year long to take with me to Maine) as well as serendipitous (we have access to a great bookstore and my favorite public library in the world...not to mention Amazon). While I don't plan any themes, several often emerge. What follows is a quick overview of my Summer Reading Feast (with more to follow in weeks to come):
Fiction: I am a HUGE fan of fiction in that it helps me understand the "other" in my relationships with people. I have also come to realize that great fiction is often wasted on the young, so I try to re-read many of the great novels I read (or didn't read) in high school and college during this Summer Reading Feast:
- The Financier - Theodore Dreiser
- The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Sodom and Gommorah - Marcel Proust (vol. 4 of Remembrance of Things Past)
- The Odyssey - Homer (trans. Fagles)
- To Have and Have Not - Ernest Hemingway
- Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
- Olive Kitteridge - Elizabeth Strout (a collection of stories about life in Maine)
- State of Wonder - Ann Patchet
Non-Fiction: During the Summer Reading Feast, I get to spend about 8 hours a day reading, so it is time to tackle the "big books" that are sitting on my shelf all year long (sometimes longer):
- Che - Jon Lee Anderson
- Macolm X - Manning Marable (one of my favorite books of the summer)
- The Most Beautiful Walk in the World: A Pedestrian in Paris - John Baxter
- A Moveable Feast - Ernest Hemingway (okay, some fiction, some non-fiction)
- Falling Upwards: A Spirituality for the Second Half of Life - Richard Rohr
- A Kierkegaard Anthology - ed. by Robert Bretall
Graphic Novels: The Blue Hill LIbrary has a wonderful collection of graphic novels, so I decided to expand my repertiore in this area:
- My Friend Dahmer - Derf Beckderf
- Black Hole - Charles Burns
- Are You My Mother? - Alison Bechdel
- The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb
- Maus I - Art Spiegelman
- A League of Extraordinary Gentlemen - Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill
I will expand some thoughts on these books in future blogs, noting the leadership lessons learned while reading them. I hope everyone gets a chance to have some type of Summer Reading Feast, using the time for professional and pleasurable reading.
Can't wait to hear your thoughts on Falling Upward! I'm reading it right now and it's so thought provoking!
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