10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics

June 20th, 2007 by John WesleyPrint This Post Print This Post

The other day I came across some disturbing statistics on reading. According to a Jenkins Group survey, 42% of college graduates will never read another book. Since most people read bestsellers printed in the past 10 years, it follows that virtually no one is reading the classics. Although it’s unfortunate that the intellectual heritage of humanity is being forgotten we can use this to our benefit. By reading the classics to improve your mind you can give yourself an advantage. These examples illustrate 10 ways reading the classics will help you succeed.

1. Bigger Vocabulary

When reading the classics you’ll come across many words that are no longer commonly used. Why learn words most people don’t use? To set yourself apart. Having a bigger vocabulary is like having a tool box with more tools. A larger arsenal of words enables you to express yourself more eloquently. You’ll be able to communicate with precision and create a perception of higher intelligence that will give you an advantage in work and social situations.

2. Improved Writing Ability

Reading the classics is the easiest way to improve your writing. While reading you unconsciously absorb the grammar and style of the author. Why not learn from the best? Great authors have a tendency to take over your mind. After reading, I’ve observed that my thoughts begin to mirror the writer’s style. This influence carries over to writing, helping form clear, rhythmic sentences.

3. Improved Speaking Ability

Becoming a better speaker accompanies becoming a better writer because both are caused by becoming a better thinker. Studying works of genius will teach you to express yourself with clarity and style. By improving your command of the English language, you’ll become more persuasive, sound more intelligent, and enjoy an advantage over less articulate people.

4. Fresh Ideas

Isn’t it ironic that the best source for new ideas are writers who’ve been dead for centuries? I’ve derived some of my best ideas directly from the classics. It makes sense when you consider the competition. Everyone you know is reading the same popular blogs and bestselling books. Observing the same ideas as everyone else leads to generic and repetitive thinking. No wonder it’s difficult to sound original! By looking to the classics for inspiration you can enhance your creativity and find fresh subject matter.

5. Historical Perspective

I could argue this point myself, but why bother if Einstein has already done it?

Somebody who reads only newspapers and at best the books of contemporary authors looks to me like an extremely nearsighted person who scorns eyeglasses. He is completely dependent on the prejudices and fashions of his times, since he never gets to see or hear anything else. And what a person thinks on his own without being stimulated by the thoughts and experiences of other people is even in the best case rather paltry and monotonous.

There are only a few enlightened people with a lucid mind and style and with good taste within a century. What has been preserved of their work belongs among the most precious possessions of mankind.

Nothing is more needed than to overcome the modernist’s snobbishness.

6. Educational Entertainment

Reading great books is fun. The key is getting past the initial vocabulary barrier. It’s actually less difficult than you think. Even challenging authors use a limited vocabulary. After the initial learning curve, you’ll find the classics as readable as modern books and infinitely more stimulating. Classics have endured because of entertainment value. There’s a reason filmmakers keep remaking old books — they have the best content.

7. Sophistication

If you’d like to excel in conversation, knowledge of the classics is essential. These are books that keep coming up. They’re a part of human history that isn’t going to disappear in 10 years like 99% of books on the bestsellers list. By reading the classics you gain a deeper appreciation of ideas generally taken for granted. Plus quoting Aristotle or Voltaire is a great way to win an argument.

8. More Efficient Reading

I just finished reading The Road by Cormac MacCarthy. It’s so good that it won the Pulitzer Prize. Afterwards I read the first few chapters of Lolita. I was shocked by Lolita’s superiority. Truly great books don’t come around every year. If you only read contemporary literature, you’re drawing from a diluted pool. Why not make the most of your reading time by finding the best of the best?

9. Develop a Distinct Voice

If you’re a writer/blogger, ignoring the classics is a mistake. This has nothing to do with subject matter. Regardless of what you write about, you need to be persuasive and develop a distinct voice. The best way to learn is from the masters. I’ve seen several articles recommend examples of good writing — they’ve all been other blogs. I have a feeling most people reading this article already read enough blogs. Spending some time with the classics will give you an edge.

10. Learn Timeless Ideas

We like to believe, in our modern arrogance, that technology has changed everything. In truth, it feels the same to be alive today as it did a thousand years ago. The lessons of the classics carry as much weight as ever. They contain information that is directly applicable to your life. Don’t believe me? Try reading Ben Franklin’s Autobiography without learning something. Reading the classics develops an understanding of the human condition and a deeper appreciation of modern problems.

In closing, I’d like to briefly anticipate criticism. This is not an attack on everything modern. To read nothing but the classics would be as foolish as completely ignoring them. The aim is to combine the wisdom of the past with the innovation of the future. The two are inextricably linked — the best books are yet to be written.

Also, this is not an appeal to snobbery. Quite the opposite. Reading the classics is a cheap hobby. Used copies can be borrowed from the library or purchased for 1/20 the cost of trendy books that are the talk of high society. Please stop associating the classics with your English Lit. Professor.

Update: A number of people have asked for book recommendations. I’m can’t do this explicitly because it varies too much from person to person, but for an overview of different types of books check out this post: The 5 Types of Books that Increase Intelligence.

If you enjoyed this article, please bookmark it on del.icio.us!

Related Articles:

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (7 votes, average: 4.57 out of 5)
Loading ... Loading ...
If you enjoyed this article, subscribe via RSS feed or email updates because fresh content is posted daily.

105 Comments

  1. John,
    I love reading and my style does change when I have been a lot of one author: I have just finished a PG Wodehouse binge and have to be a bit careful with the “what-ho” and “tootle-pips”!
    Tony

  2. […] Original post by John Wesley […]

  3. I find you can gain a lot of wisdom about life from classic literature. Reading them always seems to remind me that some things really never change. Lifestyles we almost feel we invented have been around for hundreds of years, or more.

    Yeah, we have fancier toys now, but a lot of how we relate to other people and make our way through life is timeless.

  4. Great post. I’d love for you or some of your other readers to follow up with some of your/their favorite classics.

    My 8 year-old and I always read the same book at the same time separately. Then, over dinner we discuss it. Nothing formal. He never ceases to amaze me with his perspective.

    We are currently reading Moby Dick. I was astonished how he picked up on the similarities between the personalities of Captain Ahab and Moby Dick.

  5. Bravo John, a timely and important article. If you’ve been to my website, you know I’m all about studying the classics and how important they are to intellectual development. There is no substitute for what the classics contribute.

  6. Nice post! I am re-reading “Think and Grow Rich” to see how it’s applicable to blogging. ;-)
    Anyway, I skimmed it so that I could see what it covers and there is this one section where it talks about ‘applying for a job’ and it mentions sending a copy of your photograph/picture with a job application letter/resume! That is not allowed these days. By reading classics (I consider TAGR a classic), you learn how things used to be. You may then research why things used to be that way and on and on…
    Morningwoodnews: I just wanted to suggest reading Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Things_Fall_Apart . It is a classic. St Augustine’s “Confessions” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confessions_(St._Augustine) is another one. Enjoy your reading!

  7. I’d consider “Think and Grow Rich a Classic” too. It may not be one in the academic sense, but in this post I used the term ‘classic’ to refer to all older books of excellent quality.

  8. Katy Ballard (Reply)

    John, may I suggest that you follow Lolita with Reading Lolita in Tehran by Azir Nafisi. It’s a memoir that gets you thinking why we read things the way we do, and how much of a cultural lens we apply. It speaks to the transcendent quality of the classics that you have pointed out above. Thanks for this post!

  9. Katy,

    I’ve never heard of Nafisi, but after your recommendation I’ll have to check him out. Thanks for the suggestion!

  10. I love to read classics and I agree with you 100% on what you say. My favorites are Thomas Man, John Steinbeck, Dostoevsky, Sartre and Pearl Buck. I think everyone should read at least 15-20 classics.

  11. classixnerd (Reply)

    Good points! A question/observation on terms: “Classics” could mean a range of genres, from Classical Literature (everybody read Vergil!* woot!) to the Dead White Men canon (which, admittedly, encompasses the aforementioned Greeks and Romans) to the formerly extra-canonical books now being recognized as every bit as worthwhile enduring as the above DWMs (and far too few of whom I have read). All of them, of course, offer equally valuable but very different pleasures and lessons.

    *Don’t go all troll on me, I’m a Classics major. Publius Vergilius Maro spelled his name with an “e”; medieval scholars switched to the “i” spelling now accepted in English (”Virgil”) because they believed the poet had prophetic powers, associating him with the word “virga” (here, magic wand). I prefer the “e” spelling.

  12. Chad (Reply)

    Ok, I’m sold. How about a list of suggestions?

  13. That’s a good question, Chad, but very difficult to answer because of the enormous range of options. Is there anything in particular that interests you? A type of book or style you really like?

    One way that I’ve found new classics to read is by browsing famous quotes pages. When I find an author whose quotes resonate with me I dig deeper. One good book always leads to several others.

    http://www.quotationspage.com/

  14. Jeff Bauer (Reply)

    I’d recommend Cormac McCarthy’s “Blood Meridian”. It will expand your vocabulary.

  15. Bob (Reply)

    Having completed engineering schools and a 40 year career as an engineer, I missed out on most of the classics.
    I am now reading the Great Books series that starts with Homer and am amazed at what I have missed, even including mathematics and science.
    Currently I am reading St. Augustine’s “City of God”, having just completed his “Confessions”.
    I hope others start sooner than me, as the benefits you describe are readily apparent.

  16. […] [link][more] […]

  17. Xtal (Reply)

    What good does an expansive vocabulary do you if people can’t understand what you’re saying? I love using the best, most precise word, but oftentimes it is an impediment to good conversation.

    And, people think I’m a jerk.

    A good education is wasted if you don’t have anyone to share it with.

  18. I share you’re frustration sometimes, Xtal. Maybe that’s what drives us online?

    I don’t think it’s always true though. For example, there are many words we know the meaning to somewhat, but don’t regularly use. Having a big vocab sometimes means using words that are known but still uncommon.

  19. Ibo Wilson (Reply)

    ‘The Road’ is about style - not substance. It is an over-rated hack novel that appeals to those who suffer from the inability to concentrate. Cormac is a hack - plain and simple. There are better short stories written by children in grammar school.

    The comparisons to (the also over-rated) Elliot ‘Wasteland’ never end.

    Please don’t try to compare great (or even mediocre) ‘classic’ works with this novel.

  20. george (Reply)

    i might be blind, just might, but it would be nice, if a listing of some or the best ‘classics’ was provided. rather than writing an article to encourage a call to action without the resourc being avail.

    so, is there a listing of the most relevant classics? or jsut a broaud umbrella of classics? anything of the sort?

    again, i might be blind and not see the link if so i apologize for my douchery in advance.

  21. george (Reply)

    spell check also helps me avoid douchery!

  22. C. (Reply)

    Ah, yes. The classics.

    I find it depressing that we have to convince each generation of the significance of older works. The Asians have got an edge on us in math, science, and…this. As part of the humanities curriculum, for instance, Taiwan MIDDLE schools require students to study Confucius’s Analects until they’ve pretty much got it memorized back to front. Poetry, historical works of significance, philosophy - all this is already REQUIRED reading in other countries in the primary school level! It’s an intellectual goldmine that many, unfortunately under-informed students are missing out on. Why, we praise a kid just for taking up a Harry Potter book! Anyone else catch on to the trend here? I’m worried…

  23. C. (Reply)

    george, the classics is a term that has umpteen meanings (each generation has basically redefined it on the basis of its own whims, the latest being that of “modern” classics like GS), but the two that have generally endured to this day as the most solid (and traditional) are these:

    1) Latin literature (i.e., Greek) - if you hear about someone who has a degree in “the classics”, he/she is studying Greek thinkers like Plato or Aristotle

    2) (the one you’re probably most wanting to know about) literature that is generally acknowledged by the academia as being of the highest standard of writing - Charles Dickens, Jane Austen, Thomas Hardy, and so on. This is the genre that constitutes all the famous Victorian authors you’ve heard about, and then some. There are so many that many major publishers (Penguin, HarperCollins, etc.) have specialized lines focusing on these classics and these classics alone. The cheapest, I’ve found, is a series by Wordsworth Press. These retail typically for about a few dollars (I got ‘em at 1.99 Canadian dollars each), and you can quickly build up a reading library. Of course, the public library is always an option, but if you’re loath to go out or spend money, there’s always the Internet. http://www.bartleby.com and http://www.bibliomania.com are two to start with - free online texts that may be considered classic in the conventional sense. There are many, many more - check out http://bookspot.com/onlinebooks/ for the best of the best, and which should last most readers for a lifetime. A word of warning: many prefer to own their own books, to take notes on and such until they’ve ended up with a “personalized” copy - almost a record of their reading/learning experience (for the two often, and should, go hand in hand). You may want to consider ownership as an option, then.

    As for where to start, http://classiclit.about.com/ could be your first stepping stone to literary enlightenment, with all the necessary instruction articles (”How to Read a Difficult Book”) and author/title profiles. Dig a bit, and you’ll find definitions, too. http://classiclit.about.com/od/forbeginners/a/aa_whatisclass.htm

    In terms of lists, this should do nicely. http://classiclit.about.com/od/booklists/Book_Lists_Reading_Lists_Literature.htm

    As should this. (scroll down for the more recent works) http://www.anova.org/

    Happy reading (and hopefully learning along the way as well)!

  24. Thanks for answering that, C.

  25. kokopelli (Reply)

    And who decides what the classics are?

  26. James (Reply)

    The best, and most comprehensive *set* of lists (e.g., asian classics, western classics, etc.), which can be viewed also as a chronological listing combining all lists, is at:
    http://www.interleaves.org/~rteeter/greatbks.html

  27. Rick Taylor (Reply)

    I’m sorry, but this is idiotic. Suggesting that older books — “classics” — are more important and intellectual and of greater value to personal improvement while more recent best sellers are just pulp is like suggesting that only history that occured more than five hundred years ago is important and that focusing on the history of the last two hundred years is frivolous. As if studying ancient Egypt or the period of the black plague is somehow more valuable to humanity and personal development than studying the Revolutionary War and the Industrial period.

    As for not reading after graduating college - that’s ridiculous. I never went to college. In fact, I dropped out of highschool in my first year. I suppose you’ll look down on that as well, even though I’m a recognized contributor to my entire field (and also a published author). I can tell you that I read an enormous amount as an adult. I suspect that most people in other fields do, too.

    Sure, we’re not sitting around reading Wuthering Heights (and really, why would you?), but I probably read more than 98% of the population each year. My material just happens to be hundreds and thousands of pages of technical and field related material. I’m sorry if I don’t have two days to trudge through Fannie May so I can be an elitist when discussing literature, but that time is valuable to me and I would rather spend it reading material that actually matters toward my professional growth and knowledge.

    Yes, I’m sure we all wish we had endless hours to read a bunch of Victorian romance crap — but we don’t. We have lives and careers. More importantly, spending two days reading the dullest books just because you hope that there may be one or two occasions in your life where you can recall an item from said book to make yourself look smarter and more sophisticated than you are in front of other people is a poor investment.

  28. Rintrah (Reply)

    The Road was great. I loved everything about it. It’s the bleakest, most soul crushing book I’ve read. In fifty years it will be considered a classic.

  29. Reading the classics is about understanding the life, the human condition, and the challenges we as humans face. It’s not about being better than anyone else. It’s also about sharpening our thinking, reading and writing skills.

    If we spend a little less time watching TV and playing video games we would have more of it to read. Of course, it is entirely up to the individual how they choose to spend their free time.

  30. I have to say that I think the statistics you link to are highly suspect. What raises the red flag for me is that 80% of the population wants to write a book, yet 43% will never read another book. Why would so many people want to write a book if they never read?

    Also, if none of these people are reading or buying books, then why is Barnes & Noble always so crowded?

    Now if it was 80% of people want to be on TV, I might believe it.

    I think what this all points to is that we learn how to be better critical thinkers, whether that’s by reading classics or some other means.

  31. @Rick — Regarding your disagreement that older classics are more valuable: If you have to pick a good book from 25 books that are well know after being in print for 300 years as opposed to picking a book from 25 that are well known after being in print for 2 months which one do you think is likely to be of better quality?

    It isn’t that no books from the present are of enduring quality, but it is going to be very difficult to determine which books these are. I haven’t read anything printed in the past 2 years that I expect to still be in print 200 years from now. Have you? Of course if all you read is technical documentation, it is unlikely that anything you read is going to be in print 200 years.

    Also regarding the fact that you didn’t go to college: According to the statistics, people with only a high school education are more likely to read another book (66%) than a college graduate (58%).

    @Shannon — I share your feeling that the statistics seem hard to believe. I’m guessing that there are specific definitions used. For example, it might only count non-fiction books with more than 200 pages that are read straight through within 3 weeks.

  32. Great post John, you’ve inspired me to pick up something ‘classic’ to read over my forthcoming holiday. Might also check out ‘The Road’ to see what all the fuss is about.

  33. Bruce, that’s great. I hope you find a good read. The Road is definitely worth picking up. Even though it’s not one of my all time favorites, it’s very readable and definitely has some powerful passages.

    Regarding the stats, I agree that they may be suspect. That’s the nature of statistics, they’re easy to manipulate. I used it because it’s provocative. Regardless, I do believe people are reading less and less.

  34. I’ve been meaning to read The Road for a long while now… how is it?

  35. arin (Reply)

    hey if we all had time then we just might
    think abt picking up some oldies, but going too far back, please
    just blog me the bits that excite you abt your selections.
    maybe i just want
    to be a global citizen with friends from all over
    telling me about their places, food, etc but Rick, i
    have moments when i will need to be as focused as you are,
    and to everyone, thanks for the bits and bits..
    so now i am thinking where i can get free reading
    for The Road. But Aristotle and Socrates is sooooooo
    taxing especially that you have to turn out some philosophical
    stuff and pretend to get it….haaaa, that’s hard for me.
    as to Og Mandino stuff, you peek and say ahhh.
    As to Konosuke Matsushita story, he never got to College,
    but wow!!!
    Hey maybe you just muddle through life this way?

  36. Funniest quote of the post:

    You’ll be able to communicate with precision and create a perception of higher intelligence that will give you an advantage in work and social situations.

    Should we be concerned about the perception of intelligence or the reality of the thing?

    I prefer to view it in terms of marketing. In my humble opinion, most modern books become best-sellers because they can either be read in a single sitting or they are so darn episodic that one feels like one is watching television. Take the Dan Brown or Harry Potter books as an example. Each chapter, as short as it is, conveys a quick scene or an exciting tidbit. This really draws the reader in, but it erodes our ability to appreciate subtlety.

    There’s no finesse in modern literature. You’re either hit on the head with a brick or left out to dry. Then again, I’ve been out of the mainstream English literary scene for a while as I’ve been living abroad. The last modern book I’ve read was The Historian. I thoroughly enjoyed that book, but I wouldn’t call it exalting. It was something you read as a very long dessert.

  37. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics Reading is essential to everyone (tags: self-improvement reading classic. mind) […]

  38. I’m surprised nobody’s mentioned Project Gutenberg yet. It’s THE place for classic literature. Essentially, they digitize literature in the public domain (which many classics are, since the author’s copyright has expired) and store it in ASCII (plain-text) format for download.

    http://www.gutenberg.org

  39. All disputing aside, this was an intriguing post. Reading in general does unfortunately appear to be on a steady decline.

    I’m an avid reader, and it’s not unusual for me to devour two or three books a week. Regardless of what topics or genres are chosen to satiate frenzied appetites, reading is still an excellent way to tantalize the intellectual taste buds. As far as the Classics, I say Bon Appétit!

    =^..^=

  40. […] 10 Ways to improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics - and who can argue with that? Read - it is good for you! […]

  41. […] Article intéressant écrit par John Wesley qui donne plusieurs bonnes raisons de lire les classique…. Voici les quelques points que j’ai retenus. […]

  42. Robert (Reply)

    I couldn’t disagree more. Classics are classics because other people think so. To that end many people are only espousing their “classicness” to be in the intellectual group.
    Reading books from our past is a great way to unify the human condition, you see the similarities that occur now in a completley different setting. But why would you want to have another writer’s voice? and how could having someone else’s ancient voice make you a better writer.

    Also, why would knowing more words give you an edge? If you’re the only person who knows what euphonius means why use it? It’s as effective as a made-up word. Get off your high horse and read what you like and find out why! If that’s the classics so be it, but don’t read them because other people say you should, or because it will give you an advantage.

    You make reading look like body building.

  43. Biographies of great men also helps.

  44. Mark (Reply)

    Awesome post. I had someone turn me on to the classics a few years ago and have enjoyed the experience immensely. I wanted to add a few things.
    First:
    Classics are not just in literature. Every field has it’s classics. Literature has Shakespeare, Dickens, Pope and Swift. Philosophy has Socrates, Aristotle, and Nietzsche. Biology has Darwin and Agassiz. Physics has Kepler, Newton, Galileo, and Einstein. Music has Mozart, Beethoven, and Bach. Find the works that everybody quotes and refers to and to you will probably find the classics.
    Second:
    There are several reasons to read the classics, but the two most important are: they are old and they are difficult. Unfortunately these are also the reason most people do not read the classics. But classics are classics because they last. Three hundred years from now people will still be reading Shakespeare and Euclid; they may not be reading The Road. The classics last because they are the best. But they are also difficult. At first, reading the classics is hard. In the case of Newton, almost impossible. But the more you read the easier it gets. In the process you learn to think deeply. After reading Newton or Shakespeare you begin to think somewhat like Newton or Shakespeare. Once someone reads Shakespeare, they begin to recognize carefully crafted language. Once someone reads Newton they begin to understand problem solving. Hard? Yes. Worth it? Absolutely.
    Last:
    In its strictest sense the Classics are the Latin and Greek writings from the around the time of Homer, Socrates, Aristotle, Livy, etc. If you were to major in “The Classics”, you would be reading these authors. A good source for these is the Loeb Classics Library published by Harvard University Press: http://www.hup.harvard.edu/loeb/index.html. This definition is no longer used very often.

  45. Thanks a lot John,
    It’s an amazing article & soon i’ll be taking up my first classic. Probably Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy. :)

  46. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics - [PickTheBrain] digg_url = ‘http://www.lifehack.org/articles/lifestyle/read-the-classics-to-improve-your-mind.html’; ( function() { var ds=typeof digg_skin==’string’?digg_skin:”; var h=80; var w=52; if(ds==’compact’) { h=18; w=120; } var u=typeof digg_url==’string’?digg_url:(typeof DIGG_URL==’string’?DIGG_URL:window.location.href); document.write(”"); } )() Author: Craig Childs Posted: Thursday, June 21st, 2007 at 8:15 am Tags: brain, mind, reading Bookmark or Share this with a friend! […]

  47. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics - [PickTheBrain] […]

  48. […] http://www.pickthebrain.com/blog/improve-your-mind-by-reading-the-classics/ […]

  49. Classics do enlarge your perception, by its conception and inspiration from a different age. There is only one thread common in the fabric of present and past, the human condition and each time period provides titillating insight into it, by unique circumstance. It is these insights, as applicable yesterday as today which survive, which continue to provoke. There’s two paths to personal development: observation and experience. With the latter, there are limitations, your life has limitations. With the former, by accessibility to entire landscape, the opportunities for growth are innumerable. It can also be said observation (reading a subdivision) is an experience itself.

  50. […] pick the brain: 10 ways to improve your mind by reading the classics und ein ganz wichtiger hinweis: «please stop associating the classics with your english lit. professor». (tags: literatur bildung schreiben klassiker bücher lesen) […]

  51. damn dude, you’re getting a whole lot of link backs to your site…. I bet you’re making bank with all the ads and stuff now..

  52. Haha. This post did pretty well ;). Though believe me, the money isn’t too big yet. It takes years for that to build up and I’ve only been going 6.5 months. Hopefully the site will continue to grow at the same rate.

  53. I found your blog through some links Ziki sent. Glad they did. Good stuff, and I heartily agree with your points. I can attest to the fact that the latest generation are not up on reading. I have recently gone back to school and from what I have encountered in my English courses, their reading skills leave a lot to be desired. They are a very intelligent group overall, but they do not care to read anything other than what their teachers have had them do. Scary stuff.
    Thanks for the post.

  54. No way can I believe that statistics. Really now. 46% of college graduates never reading a book afterwards? No way. No.

  55. David (Reply)

    I’m surprised at the rant from Rick, especially the swipe taken at Wuthering Heights.

    A few years ago, I started on my own journey reading the classics. I discovered Anna Karenina (now a favorite), Les Miserables (unabridged - and a favorite too), Ethan Fromme, and more.

    One that I liked was The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, by one of the Bronte sisters: so I say, don’t knock it till you’ve read it.

    Secondly, “What are the classics?” is a fair question. In my mind (and my journey) it is mainly 19th century fiction - which includes Ethan Fromme, The Raven, The Scarlet Letter (a favorite!), and more. It does (for me) leave *out* Catch-22, Of Mice and Men, and Stranger in a Strange Land.

    Personally, anyone reading “the classics” will have to make their own determination: what are the classics they are interested in. Some folks would find Ethan Fromme and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall boring (both are mostly romantic novels) but what about Dracula, Les Miserables, or even Mallory’s Morte d’Artur (the story of King Arthur as told by this 16th century author). There is The Raven and Annabelle Lee (both by Edgar Allen Poe) and The Invisible Man. None of these are exactly romances.

    I also have found myself reading old children’s classics (find them in an unabridged form!) such as Little Lord Fauntleroy, The Secret Garden, Alice in Wonderland (Martin Gardner’s Annotated Alice is wonderful!), Through The Looking Glass, and Peter Pan. Remember: original and unabridged….. might be harder to find some in this state than others.

  56. Before you dismiss Cormac McCarthy pick up Suttree. That is a challenging title. Most people give up during the first 3 pages.

  57. Great post. You certainly make a good writer and reader based on your tips.

    I haven’t considered reading classic books. With all the new books available to read, it’s definitely an easy choice between new and old books. But since you mentioned it, I think I’ll try it too.

  58. […] of diplomas? Are Americans too busy, too stressed, too lazy, or too preoccupied to take time to enhance their minds with a good book? Has television and the internet killed the comfort that reading once brought us? […]

  59. I read Dostoevsky’s “Crime and Punishment” on a whim last summer. It was not only a wonderful book and completely enjoyable, but thoroughly modern. It could have as easily been taken place last year as in 1800s Russia. The classics are famous for a reason.

  60. I totally agree. “Crime and Punishment” is one of my all time favorites.

  61. David (Reply)

    One word of advice (from one of my favorite authors, CS Lewis): many classics will start with an introduction or a guide to understanding the book and the author. While they are sometimes useful, if you find your eyes glazing over by the second paragraph, immediately skip the introduction and go straight to the book itself. Chances are it will be clearer and easier to understand than anything Professor J. McStuffypants had to say about it.

  62. n00b (Reply)

    One cannot think about things for which there are no words. Rick should consider how his attitude may be limiting his thought patterns.

  63. I am a nontraditional student and have benefited enormously by a World Literature Course. Reading The Odyssey, The Aenid, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Beowulf, and other classics has brought home to me and my writing the importance of poetic prose, utilizing pyschologically embedded themes and motifs to make a modern connection and it has helped in developing my critical thinking skills.

    Excellent article.

    For my own Modern Musings www.taureandevi.blogspot.com

  64. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics WebShare This […]

  65. […] the Brain gives us 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics.  Reading will also help you become a better writer and blogger, two incredibly important skills […]

  66. […] the classics, I thought more people picked up a bestseller on a regular basis. After reading the benefits of reading the classics, I may just pick up some Jane Austin this […]

  67. […] inspiration from John Wesley, here’s why I have read, re-read and continue to read the classics (and everything else, for that […]

  68. […] http://www.pickthebrain.com/blog/improve-your-mind-by-reading-the-classics/ […]

  69. […] O site Pick The Brain publicou uma lista de como os clássicos podem expandir sua mente. Claro que esses são os motivos […]

  70. You certainly made a good point regarding ideas. Since almost everybody is reading new books, it would be hard to come up with a unique idea.
    Our source is very vast and we have to search on areas where less people are searching..

    1. hi
      i think i have ideas on the mind reading thing i will like you to get me some stuff about it i can really think fast i wish i could be great in this field i am really a computer guru i wish i can lay my hand on your shuff i could make dream wish can come reality not only to me but to the generation.
      i will want this to be treated fast i am concernabout this thanks very much

  71. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics, from Pick the Brain […]

  72. You are right about old books which offers a wide variety of words. As long as we enjoy reading it, it doesn’t matter if it’s old. It’s even better if we are learning much more when compared to new books.

  73. […] Wesley turns us on to10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics posted at Pick the Brain. Some great reminders about why a wide and varied reading selection is […]

  74. […] 10 ways to improve your mind by reading the classics. […]

  75. hi,
    hey i think your style of writing is too
    cool nd ithink more and more people should look at your style
    and rate it
    ….why dont you join
    http://www.bloggingtofame.com
    has some cool stuff for good bloggers…..i had a personal nice exp
    and looking at your blogging abilities i would like you to chk this oneout

    regards:-
    andy
    dashingdude2310@gmail.com

  76. […] Also, this is not an appeal to snobbery. Quite the opposite. Reading the classics is a cheap hobby. Used copies can be borrowed from the library or purchased for 1/20 the cost of trendy books that are the talk of high society. Please stop associating the classics with your English Lit. Professor. Autor: John Wesley.Source: www.pickthebrain.com […]

  77. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics […]

  78. Lists aboud, apparently, but I found the stuff I read (or was supposed to read) in high school did nothing for me in my teens, but tends to do a little something for me in the my 30s.

    Clearly, To Kill a Mockingbird would not be considered one of the “Classics,” but such is some good literature.

    I actually do read a lot of the Classics as well (e.g., Plato, Aristotle, etc.), but my impression from the post was to read and not just read new stuff.

    Of course, being new don’t make it bad … any more than being old made/makes it good.

  79. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics […]

  80. […] SigT se publicó un post muy interesante. Una traducción de 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics (10 formas de entrenar tu cerebro leyendo a los clásicos) que me parece […]

  81. Jason (Reply)

    I went to a school - St. John’s College, where all we did was read the classics. Here - http://mtprof.msun.edu/Fall2001/BrannArt.html is a great speech on why classics should be read.

  82. Francis X. Bushman (Reply)

    Hi Rick. Knock the chip off your shoulder. Hope this helps.

  83. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. How to use the wisdom of the classics to become a better writer, thinker, and speaker. […]

  84. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. How to use the wisdom of the classics to become a better writer, thinker, and speaker. […]

  85. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. How to use the wisdom of the classics to become a better writer, thinker, and speaker. […]

  86. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. How to use the wisdom of the classics to become a better writer, thinker, and speaker. […]

  87. […] I’m constantly tossing interesting websites into what I call my blogpile. Some of them find their way here in the form of regular posts, but more often than not they languish and get buried deeper in the pile. The end result is that I have to go back and do a bit of shoveling. Today’s item is Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. […]

  88. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. How to use the wisdom of the classics to become a better writer, thinker, and speaker. […]

  89. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. How to use the wisdom of the classics to become a better writer, thinker, and speaker. […]

  90. med (Reply)

    we analize your article mr john in OUM EL KOURA estab .for learning English in morocco. the more important is that we criticize it so much .

  91. Anton (Reply)

    Also, try listening to classical music and classics and at the same time read poetry, and foreign literature, like Russian, or something from France and Italy fro the last say 500 years. This is just an example of course but the more you read something from the past, the more intelligent you become.

  92. […] Improve the Mind with Literature Classics By reading the classics to improve your mind you can give yourself an advantage. These examples illustrate 10 ways reading the classics will help you succeed. (tags: academic education cool inspiration lifehacks book) Tags….Popularity: unranked [?] […]

  93. Rabid Bibliophile (Reply)

    I’ve returned to this site to add a bit of commentary: reading ‘great’ books has also added a depth of understanding I tend to take for granted when reading more current literature. The specific book I’m thinking of is “Ghost Map” by Steven Johnson, which details the history of a cholera epidemic in London, in 1854. The author does a marvelous job of ’setting the scene’ for the later outbreak, but I didn’t *NEED* an enormous amount of detail because I’d read Dickens, RL Stevenson, and AC Doyle (both writing a couple of decades later), along with reading about Florence Nightingale (who was a very renowned figure at the time of the outbreak).

    I didn’t even *see* the depth of intercontextualization at first. I felt that the modern book spent ‘too much time’ trying to explain the day-to-day difficulties which contributed to the cholera outbreak, simply because my picture of ordinary life in the era was fairly well-developed.

  94. Jim (Reply)

    I’m a big fan of the classics, but I stopped reading in the first paragraph with the obviously and demonstrably wrong statistics.

  95. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics. […]

  96. I totally agree. In fact, from Jan 1 - Feb 1 I’m reading a book a day: mostly biographies and, of course, the classic books. There’s a great list, for anyone out there who wants to read them, on anova.org. Cheers!

  97. […] build on yesterday’s entry, I found a great blog that discusses 10 ways you can improve your mind by reading the classics. Why read the classics? […]

  98. […] 10 Ways to Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics - bo czasem zamiast bezmyślnie siedzieć nad skryptami bardziej opłaca się przeczytać dobrą książkę… […]

  99. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics […]

  100. […] Improve Your Mind by Reading the Classics […]

  101. You got to read the classic Think and Grow Rich. Its the book more rich people in the world have read than any other.
    Ive read it 25 times, and I share my insights with you (for free) at http://tagrblog.blogspot.com/

  102. classics are great at least to enjoy also to improve writing and skills

    1. Hi webmaster!

  103. […] knead & bake home-made yeast, cinnamon rolls and croissants - but try as I did, I could never grasp the technique of making southern-baked […]

Leave a comment


About Us Welcome to PickTheBrain
a website focused on self improvement. We provide tips and advice to help you live a little smarter.
Ad Network
Share Our Content

Get our Facebook App

Recent Comments

Graham Lawrence: Thanks for sharing!...

Overcoming Lifes Obstacles: Love the article. I used to have a problem with #1, generalization....

Stephen Martile: Love #8 - Shoulds You totally hit the nail on the head when you sai...

James: Great practical advice Tejvan. I would add that fear comes from la...

Eugene (Editor, Varsity Blah): “We are what we think; as we desire so do we become! By our thoughts...

Self Improvement Products

PhotoReading

Paraliminals

Personal Growth