The Federalist: Top 10 Books People Lie About Reading

Conversation starter.

The truth is, there are lots of books no one really expects you to read or finish. War and Peace? The Canterbury Tales? The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire? Announcing that you’ve finished those books might surprise a lot of people and make them think you’re abnormal or anti-social, unless you’re an English or History major who took their reading very, very seriously. Perhaps the shift to ebook format will diminish this reading by osmosis – and book sales, too – since people can afford to be honest about their preference for 50 Shades over The Red and the Black since their booklists are hidden in their Kindles and iPads.

So here’s my attempt to drill this down to a more realistic list: books that are culturally ubiquitous, reading deemed essential, writing everyone has heard of… that you’d be mildly embarrassed to admit you’ve never read.

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I’ve only completely read four of the ten (Atlas Shrugged, Democracy In America, Moby Dick and Ulysses). I have read parts of The Art Of War and On The Origin of Species.

How about the rest of you? Anybody ten for ten (truthfully!)?

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