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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/sawpub/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114\u201cIt\u2019s not what it used to be!\u201d<\/p>\n
Yes, we hear it all the time. Hear it about candy bars and Christmas tree prices; church singing and Captain Crunch; car parts and cauliflower. The world is not what it used to be.<\/p>\n
Neither are our books.<\/p>\n
I can remember, as a pretty small child, hearing my mom lament the lack of well-written picture books.<\/p>\n
\u201cBut how could a picture book be well-written?\u201d I wondered. \u201cNobody writes a picture book with \u201cthees\u201d and \u201cthous.\u201d<\/p>\n
We had been having Howard Pyle\u2019s Robin Hood read aloud to us, that year. Somebody had said it was well-written, so I\u2019d done the math.<\/p>\n
Yes, there are people who hate the classics. It\u2019s stereotypical to hate the classics. Stereotypical\u2014but somehow, not stereotypical of you<\/em>.<\/p>\n You, the inveterate bookworm. You, the homeschooled highschooler, with a passion for six-hundred-page tomes. You, who love Jo March, and Elizabeth Bennet, and Anne Shirley as if they had been living people.<\/p>\n As if???<\/p>\n Okay, we\u2019ll leave that alone for a minute.<\/p>\n The point I\u2019m trying to make is\u2014you love the classics. You value the classics. You get that the authors of the past did something very few people can do today.<\/p>\n That is a simple fact. The genius of past writers\u2014at its full strength\u2014is very difficult to reproduce today. The best books of 100 or 200 years back easily trump their modern counterparts when it comes to their complexity of language, their depth of vocabulary, their vivid and detailed development of complex, slowly-unfolding characters.<\/p>\n As Christians, we appreciate their setting in worlds where at least certain aspects of Christianity are more openly accepted as normal.<\/p>\n And of course, those of use who love history just love\u2014the history! It\u2019s hard to beat a Victorian novel for immersing you in Victorianism! All these are wonderful reasons to love the classics, but they may still be overlooking one important viewpoint.<\/p>\n Yes, once-upon-a-time, the classics were new. New!<\/p>\n Not new, as in shiny-off-the-press (though they were that, too) but new as in, a new idea.<\/p>\n New, as in \u201cnot what it used to be.\u201d<\/p>\n The classics were written by men and women who took radical departures from status quo. They created their masterpieces, not, it is true, by carelessly throwing away the literary greatness that went before them, but most certainly by contributing something freshly and uniquely their own.<\/p>\n My dad and I are in the process of (slowly) reading our way through Sir Winston Churchill\u2019s History of the English Speaking Peoples<\/em>. And something I\u2019m absolutely loving about it is the way Churchill captures history as a continuous process\u2014something that builds on the past, and provides a foundation for the future.<\/p>\n And I think that just might be the way to look at the books of the present, too.<\/p>\n They don\u2019t come as competition to the books of the past. They come rather as a continuation.<\/p>\n Their strengths and their weaknesses are in different places.<\/p>\n And honestly\u2014we need them both!<\/p>\n Yes, it\u2019s true! The books of today are not what they used to be. They are\u2014by and large\u2014lighter, faster, more approachable reading than the books of the past. They are created in a more disciplined, more structured\u2014and also, at times, a narrower\u2014way than the novels of the past.<\/p>\n They are written to be read in the 21st<\/sup> century.<\/p>\n They are the product of the era into which they came.<\/p>\n And like every other book that came before them, they are a unique product of everything that went into their construction.<\/p>\n The best books of the past are masterpieces. So are the best books of today!<\/p>\n Agree? Disagree?<\/p>\n I\u2019d love to hear what you love and what you don\u2019t love about both classic and modern literature in the comments section below!<\/p>\n Looking for some fun fall book recs? See out previous post:<\/p>\nThe Golden Age of Novels<\/strong><\/h5>\n
When the Classics Were New<\/strong><\/h5>\n
Different\u2014But Valuable<\/strong><\/h5>\n
Not What It Used to Be?<\/strong><\/h5>\n