2026年5月19日 星期二

《十字架之路:高俊明牧師回憶錄》胡慧玲撰文;李喬序:台灣人原型》著有《我喜歡這樣想你》、《島嶼愛戀》等書。 


《十字架之路:高俊明牧師回憶錄》胡慧玲撰文;李喬序:台灣人原型》著有《我喜歡這樣想你》、《島嶼愛戀》等書。 



【我喜歡這樣想你】
今天是五一九白色恐怖記憶日
紀念1949年5月19日國民黨政府頒佈戒嚴令開始
那幾十年來無數人遭受束縛、苦難的時光
儘管對某部分人的記憶來說
那可能是一段艱苦奮鬥、愛拼就會贏的過往
記憶有很多面向
不需要取消彼此才能繼續前行
年輕時候偶然在BBS站上撞見
胡慧玲的〈我喜歡這樣想你〉
那時想必是有人一字一句敲打到網路上
黑底白字的文字,樸素直接迎面而來
彼時我不知她是誰也不知鄭南榕葉菊蘭又是何方人士
他們發生了什麼我一概不知
就只是讀,然後記得
後來在二手書店遇見這本同名的書
出版於1995年的書已經書頁泛黃長斑
我從中獲知更多我本來不知道的許多事情
又過了一些年
在另一家書店發現了一本POD二刷版本
立刻下手帶回家
-
今年的五一九,盧建彰導演拍攝了一支短片
配上作者胡慧玲親自朗讀〈我喜歡這樣想你〉全文
聽著聽著
又想起當年第一次在BBS的頁面上讀到的感受
細細緩緩,靜水深流,讓人記得很久很久
(影片連結下收留言區)



高俊明(1929年6月6日-2019年2月14日),臺灣牧師,臺灣臺南人。畢業於臺南神學院,肄業於英國Selly Oak College. 1957年至1970年之間擔任玉山神學院 ...


高俊明˙、高李麗珍口述,胡慧玲撰文《十字架之路:高俊明牧師回憶錄》台北:望春風文化,2001出版/再版


He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?
King James Version (KJV)8世人啊!上帝已指示你何為善,祂向你所要的是什麼呢:只要你行公義,好憐憫,存謙卑的心與你的上帝同行。   /8人啊!已通知了你,什麼是善,上主要求於你的是什麼:無非就是履行正義,愛好慈善,虛心與你的天主來往。


這是一部非常精彩的傳記文學。對二十一世紀的台灣文學史,做了驚豔的開場。  
作品橫跨百年時空,以史詩的宏觀視野,詩意優美的筆觸,深刻記錄一位宗教家的信仰之路,和追求真理堅定壯闊的情懷。  
對於長老教會在台灣的百年宣教史,及近二十年台灣艱辛的民主化進程,本書也提供第一手的珍貴史料。  
無論就文學或史學的觀點,這都是一部深具價值的作品。尤其書中處處閃耀愛與歡喜、溫柔與美善的靈光,對於追求性靈生活的人,格外親切可讀,值得細細品味。作者

簡介    胡慧玲1958年出生於台東。台大歷史系畢業。曾任《自由時代周刊》副總編輯,現任職陳文成博士紀念基金會。  著有《我喜歡這樣想你》、《島嶼愛戀》等書。 


高俊明牧師回憶錄--十字架之路(節錄)

台灣人原型


李喬序
我在《十字架之路--高俊明牧師回憶錄》出版前就拜讀了。一般說法是很意外的機緣,基督徒的感受則是上帝的巧妙安排。這是很奇特的閱讀經驗。近年來胸懷中堆積了不少垃圾雜碎,經《十字架之路》的沖刷:心靈上清明了一些。很感謝。

在一般人印象裡,台灣風雨動盪的二十年中,台灣基督長老教會總是會適時隱約出現,而高俊明牧師也成了鮮明符號。勿論百姓同胞,就是「敵對陣營」,甚至「反台灣集團」中人,對於這位高高瘦瘦、細語寡言的牧師,也都持七分敬意。高俊明牧師的身家經歷、內在世界、特殊看法想法等等如何?想一探究竟的人必然眾多,在台灣更為紛擾的今天出版《十字架之路》,正是時候。

實際上高牧師的家庭、親情、困頓求知生涯、義利中抉擇,面對時代苦難的境況…等等,幾乎相當代有志台灣人的遭遇完全一樣;也可以說,高牧師的生命行程模式,就是台灣人的樣板。然而,高牧師的「姿態」、高牧師的「步伐」,卻是獨特的,很「原始」的;世俗看來是「陌生」的--所以感到「陌生」,不是高牧師的問題,是「今日台灣人」的問題。

由《十字架之路》可知,高牧師來自基督教家庭,但那是保有早期台人勤儉、樸素、正直、謙恭諸美德的「台灣家庭」。高牧師主要求學時代在日本。傳中雖然交代不夠詳盡,但在其言行中透露一種信息:日本古老傳統文化的簡素、正直、忠誠諸美德,已是其人格特質的一部份。

高牧師在就任長老教會總會總幹事之前,主要的佈道工作在原住民部落。與原住民弟兄姐妹手創的「玉山神學院」,不但落實本上神學,在共事相處的歲月中,很自然的原住民文化精髓也進入高牧師的心底。想來真是上帝的巧妙安排:「超越性」(Transcendence)的基督教信仰基點是「謙卑與敬畏」,而原住民的文化特質正有豐滿的「敬畏與謙卑」心。高牧師身在其中,心入其內,其中造就與恩典應是奇妙十分。

讀了《十字架之路》,個人經常思索的議題又浮現出來:台灣人是怎麼樣的一種人?嚴肅地說:台灣人的生活方武、思考模武、行為模武,以及隱藏其中的「價值觀」如何?更重要的是「應該如何」?在《十字架之路》裡,個人似乎找到「神祕答案了」。

一個族群的生活、思行與價值觀,跟其歷史累積、生態背景,以及對應的世潮大趨勢有關。台灣脫離草萊榛極不遠,台灣是移民社會,而台灣是處於亞熱帶多民族多族群的海洋文化國家。這樣的「生活基地」,「應該」生活著一群熱情開放、簡樸正直的人民才對。回首以觀,高牧師的為人思行,不正是具備這些「質素」嗎?

在文學理論有「原型」(Archetypal pattern)的說法:意味著人類的行為或行程,猶如始祖亞當、夏娃因罪被斥出伊甸園,於是走上「流浪」「狩獵」追尋」等等--這些文學的主要主題,正與人類基本行程隱隱呼應。個人以為「原型」的觀念,可用在文化思考,即如上述某族群的歷史生活條件之下,其生活思行價值觀「應該」如何?「事業」如何?兩相比正是可行的反省基礎。

個人的意思足:從《十字架之路》梳理出那種簡樸、純粹、正直、忠誠的文化特質是台灣人思行價值觀的「原型」,也就是「台灣文化的原型」。從這個角度讀《十字架之路》,然則《十字架之路》豈止是一個人的自傳而已?再就宗教角度看二這個人如果減掉「信仰上帝--行上帝的路」這個「成份」這個人就「什麼都沒有了」高牧師身上可以體會到下「仰的力量」以及「人得救的可能」高牧師的傳記幾乎無一字「說教」讀後一定會體悟到:他是怎麼樣的一個人?絕對的信仰是支持他唯一的力量,他憑這個力量,以行動愛這塊土與人民。而吾人一定會感受到:苦難是希望的過程,最重要的是不能放棄希望。這是掩卷的感想。

--由絕對信仰、無邊的苦難,自然地會想到二七OO年前那位號稱「哀哭的先知」耶利米。這位先知生於政治腐敗、社會墮落、強敵在外、危在旦夕的時候。然而耶利米的號告哀求,當道與百姓卻是漠然不應,眼睜睜看著國破人亡。今日台灣內奸作亂媒體作怪、外敵嗜血冷笑,百姓隨股票而瘋狂。吾人擁有「台灣型的耶利米」、「台灣原型人物」在邇。二七OO年前後相對,無言無言;請細讀《十字架之路》,然後放聲一哭。

謹此寫就不成格局的序為序,也是時代見証。

寫於二OO一年二月五日核四廢建不決的哀傷之日


精選集在荒誕和殘酷中尋找幽默《諷刺與幽默‧對話》1989.5.5;謝三泰《吼叫 一九八九》;圖輯:1989年春夏之交天安門 BBC


謝三泰報導者 The Reporter 都分享了 1 條連結

精選集在荒誕和殘酷中尋找幽默《諷刺與幽默‧對話》1989.5.5;謝三泰《吼叫 一九八九》;圖輯:1989年春夏之交天安門 BBC


「習川會」為中國網民提供笑料:在荒誕和殘酷中尋找幽默

川普總統週四抵達北京時受到了孩子們的歡迎。
川普總統週四抵達北京時受到了孩子們的歡迎。 Kenny Holston/The New York Times

.我比較期待姚明和習近平見面,」他指的是身高2.29米的前NBA球

儀式化的語言——「百年變局加速演進」、「國際局勢變亂交織」和「世界又走到新的十字路口」——必修課《習近平新時代中國特色社會主義思想概論》中灌輸給他們的詞彙,是他們必須通過的大學考試。

揮舞著鮮花和中美兩國國旗,蹦跳著高呼歡迎口號。「我想那些孩子給我留下了特別深刻的印象!」川普對習近平說。「他們很快樂。他們很漂亮……那些孩子太棒了。他們代表了太多東西。」

感覺像是在倒退。一些社群媒體用戶評論說,甚至孩子們的衣服也讓人覺得老氣。

這場歡迎儀式暴露了一種熟悉的政治美學:熱情必須經過精心編排,情感必須經過排練。由於他仍然會回中國探親,並擔心遭到政府的報復,他要求不透露自己的真實姓名。
「中國是不是又在往回走?」他問道。「一個社會真正自信,不需要靠孩子喊口號來證明熱情。一個國家真正開放,也不需要把外事活動重新包裝成集體表演。


.我比較期待姚明和習近平見面,」他指的是身高2.29米的前NBA球

儀式化的語言——「百年變局加速演進」、「國際局勢變亂交織」和「世界又走到新的十字路口」——必修課《習近平新時代中國特色社會主義思想概論》中灌輸給他們的詞彙,是他們必須通過的大學考試。

揮舞著鮮花和中美兩國國旗,蹦跳著高呼歡迎口號。「我想那些孩子給我留下了特別深刻的印象!」川普對習近平說。「他們很快樂。他們很漂亮……那些孩子太棒了。他們代表了太多東西。」

感覺像是在倒退。一些社群媒體用戶評論說,甚至孩子們的衣服也讓人覺得老氣。

這場歡迎儀式暴露了一種熟悉的政治美學:熱情必須經過精心編排,情感必須經過排練。由於他仍然會回中國探親,並擔心遭到政府的報復,他要求不透露自己的真實姓名。
「中國是不是又在往回走?」他問道。「一個社會真正自信,不需要靠孩子喊口號來證明熱情。一個國家真正開放,也不需要把外事活動重新包裝成集體表演。


一影像/如果1989年能重來——專訪天安門廣場40天記錄者謝三泰 - 報導者 The Reporter




.我比較期待姚明和習近平見面,」他指的是身高2.29米的前NBA球

儀式化的語言——「百年變局加速演進」、「國際局勢變亂交織」和「世界又走到新的十字路口」——必修課《習近平新時代中國特色社會主義思想概論》中灌輸給他們的詞彙,是他們必須通過的大學考試。

揮舞著鮮花和中美兩國國旗,蹦跳著高呼歡迎口號。「我想那些孩子給我留下了特別深刻的印象!」川普對習近平說。「他們很快樂。他們很漂亮……那些孩子太棒了。他們代表了太多東西。」

感覺像是在倒退。一些社群媒體用戶評論說,甚至孩子們的衣服也讓人覺得老氣。

這場歡迎儀式暴露了一種熟悉的政治美學:熱情必須經過精心編排,情感必須經過排練。由於他仍然會回中國探親,並擔心遭到政府的報復,他要求不透露自己的真實姓名。
「中國是不是又在往回走?」他問道。「一個社會真正自信,不需要靠孩子喊口號來證明熱情。一個國家真正開放,也不需要把外事活動重新包裝成集體表演。

















謝三泰

Hong Kong Free Press HKFP

[From 2018] Exclusive: HKFP’s Ilaria Maria Sala shares unseen photos from the 1989 #Tiananmen protests, showing the hopeful student-led movement before the government violently suppressed it.

🕯Part 1, in full: http://bit.ly/2kMXIFu
🕯Part 2, in full: http://bit.ly/2Jt3IBa


HONGKONGFP.COM

EXCLUSIVE: Before the tanks - More previously unseen shots of the 1989 Tiananmen Sq. student movement | Hong Kong Free Press HKFP






BBC 中文網(繁體)
·
從抗議到鎮壓,30年前的照片記錄了1989年春夏之交,八九民運那段震撼中國和世界的歷史。
關於這個網站







《諷刺與幽默‧對話》1989.5.5,出自 謝三泰《吼叫 一九八九》台北:允晨,2019



---我在台北,買過《諷刺與幽默》精選集,找出來在分享!


維基百科,自由的百科全書
跳至導覽跳至搜尋
《諷刺與幽默》中華人民共和國的一份周報,由人民日報社主管,環球時報社主辦。《諷刺與幽默》也是中國大陸創刊最早的漫畫報紙,是迄今中國大陸持續時間最長的漫畫刊物[1]
《諷刺與幽默》創刊於1979年1月20日,原為《人民日報》漫畫增刊[2]。創刊時半月刊,後改為周刊,每周五發行。報紙內容以漫畫為主,也會刊登一些相關文章。

參考資料[編輯]


^ 本報紀念出版1000期座談會在京舉行. 人民網. 諷刺與幽默. 2013-07-19 [2017-08-20].
^ 英韜與《諷刺與幽默》. 深圳晚報. 2012-03-29 [2017-08-20]. (原始內容存檔於2017-08-20)

2026年5月13日 星期三

1812年的今天,英國藝術家、音樂家、作家兼荒誕文學先驅 Edward Lear.愛德華·李爾出生。讓我們跟隨這位壽星漫步(甚至飛翔),欣賞這組創作於1860年的珍貴素描作品《在風中漫步》:《未晚齋雜覽》呂叔湘。對J.M. Barrie 作品的知遇。昔日將《未晚齋雜覽》(呂叔湘) 送張瑞麟兄 主要是他在翻譯 Lear 的"胡說八道nonsense 詩" 而呂叔湘示範幾首......


 1812年的今天,英國藝術家、音樂家、作家兼荒誕文學先驅 Edward Lear.愛德華·李爾出生。讓我們跟隨這位壽星漫步(甚至飛翔),欣賞這組創作於1860年的珍貴素描作品《在風中漫步》:《未晚齋雜覽》呂叔湘。對J.M. Barrie 作品的知遇。昔日將《未晚齋雜覽》(呂叔湘) 送張瑞麟兄 主要是他在翻譯 Lear 的"胡說八道nonsense 詩" 而呂叔湘示範幾首......




1812年的今天,英國藝術家、音樂家、作家兼荒誕文學先驅愛德華·李爾出生。讓我們跟隨這位壽星漫步(甚至飛翔),欣賞這組創作於1860年的珍貴素描作品《在風中漫步》:https://buff.ly/2q9Kztk

Born on this day in 1812, the English artist, musician, author and pioneer of nonsense literature Edward Lear. Take a walk (and flight) with the birthday boy in this wonderful series of rare sketches from 1860, "Walk on a Windy Day": https://buff.ly/2q9Kztk




2011/9/4 昔日梁實秋翻譯《彼得潘》的序是葉公超先生寫的.....
昔日將《未晚齋雜覽》(呂叔湘) 送張瑞麟兄
主要是他在翻譯 Lear 的"胡說八道nonsense 詩" 而呂叔湘示範幾首......


簡談J. M. Barrie《可敬的克莱登》和《彼得潘》


hc 留言(6/6/2005;corrected):「 I stepped from Plank to Plank

也許,了解諸如Peter Pan等故事的人,會想起/就知道:水手每回(天)在命令下步上那厚木跳版(下海),就是訣別人間……多年前,看呂叔湘先生的『未晚齋』(文集),就很感動他對J.M. Barrie 作品的知遇。希望rl有空幫我們摘述。

(有感而發:剛才在台大看半部《尋找新樂園》(Finding Neverland)---【根據亞倫克尼(Allan Knee)所寫的舞臺劇“那位曾經是彼得潘的男人”改編而成。故事後台設在1904的倫敦,敘述蘇格蘭劇作家詹姆斯貝瑞和一名寡婦以及她的三個孩子的友 情,這對友誼並啓發了詹姆斯貝瑞的靈感,…. 】)」

----
rl 留言(re: 呂叔湘先生的『未晚齋』(文集)--為了這篇作業不想作晚飯的rl ):「
吕叔湘:《未晚斋杂览》为32开本,全书不到百页,收录七篇文章:

霭理士论塔布及其它
赫胥黎和救世军
葛德文其人
李尔和他的谐趣诗
《第二梦》
《书太多了》
买书‧卖书‧搬书
最後談到搬書,這實在是非常苦惱的事情。Squire講的是搬書是要求插架井然,要什麼書一索即得。在我輩看來,這個要求是太高太高了。我們的最高要求僅僅是有足夠的空間把所有並不太多的書安頓下來,並且能夠按常用不常用的順序分別安排在容易拿、比較容易拿、難拿、十分難拿的地方。如此而已。這是就已經定居的地方而論,要講到連人帶書一塊兒搬家,那個苦惱就更大了。
──呂叔湘〈買書˙賣書˙搬書〉,《未晚齋雜覽》(北京:生活˙讀書˙新知三聯書店,1994年3月北京1版1刷)頁93。
其中的李尔和他的谐趣诗就是日前我每日一诗的诗人Edward Lear;校长所提的J.M. Barrie作品指的是Dear Brutus,则是在《第二梦》这篇文章里,我个人因为并未阅读过这部作品,所以对此无动于衷。文中大致介绍这是三幕剧剧本,剧名取自第三幕,剧中人引用 莎翁的两行诗:
Casius The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves, that we are underlings.
(以上英文无误地抄自该书,显然版面需要加以订正)

书中提到朱生豪的译文,并对朱译underlings作「受制于人」有意见。
文章取名《第二梦》是作者曾在协和医学院看过燕大毕业演出的一个话剧,剧名就叫《第二梦》,作者觉得情节与Dear Brutus十分相似,认为是译本或改编本。文章其余部分开始介绍第二梦的故事和一些对白。

文末始介绍J.M. Barrie一生写了38个剧本,其中以《可敬的克莱登》和《彼得潘》最有名。」

*****
由於讓RL晚餐誤點,準備介紹 Sir J.M. Barrie。發現電影之原作:
參考:
http://www.newyorker.com/critics/atlarge/?041122crat_atlarge

LOST BOYS
by ANTHONY LANE
Why J. M. Barrie created Peter Pan.
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J.M. Barrie 的介紹和電子檔,英國和日文都很豐富。

我們可以從更寬的視野看Sir J.M. Barrie在英國/蘇格蘭/世界文化的主要業績,參考下書所特別介紹的這些作家(這本書hc還沒讀過):

Jackie Wullschlager, Inventing Wonderland: The Lives and Fantasies of Lewis Carroll,
Edward Lear, JM Barrie, Kenneth Grahame, and A A Milne, 1996. 日本翻譯:『不思議の国をつくる:キャロル、リア、バリー、グレアム、ミルンの作品と生涯』
「…..文末始介绍J.M. Barrie一生写了38个剧本,其中以《可敬的克莱登》和《彼得潘》最有名。」


這兩本/齣劇本的書名都成為英國(文)的常用名詞。
《可敬的克莱登》就是The Admirable Crichton, J. M. Barrie在 1902的作品。(日本翻譯: 「天晴れクライトン」 (1902年初演)【天晴れ(あっぱれ) 意思: Bravo!/ Well done!・~な splendid; admirable; glorious.】 http://www.answers.com/topic/the-admirable-crichton-1?hl=crichton

要了解The Admirable Crichton作為類型人物,先要了解劇情/歷史。
The Admirable Crichton指「無所不能、面面俱到/俱佳的人」。

Peter Pan 為長不大的小孩。這成為商標。1960年代,美國流行一種通俗心理學TA,說法是人人的人格中都還有一CHILD要照顧……

2026年5月8日 星期五

Books That Changed America 改變美國的書,彭哥譯,台北:純文學,1971: MAHAN 。接下來講:The Tragic Decline of the American Navy May 1, 2026 The Maltese Falcon、"Leaves of Grass"..."The Jungle" (1906)

Books That Changed America   改變美國的書,彭哥譯,台北:純文學,1971: MAHAN 。接下來講:The Tragic Decline of the American Navy May 1, 2026  The Maltese Falcon、"Leaves of Grass"..."The Jungle" (1906)



"Samuel Spade’s jaw was long and bony, his chin a jutting v under the more flexible v of his mouth. His nostrils curved back to make another, smaller v. His yellow-grey eyes were horizontal. The v motif was picked up again by thickish brows rising outward from twin creases above a hooked nose, and his pale brown hair grew down-from high flat temples-in a point on his forehead. He looked rather pleasantly like a blonde Satan."
--from "The Maltese Falcon" (1930) by Dashiell Ham⋯⋯
更多






  • Books That Changed America, Macmillan, 1970.
  • Books That Changed America Paperback – January 1, 1971
by Robert B. Downs (Author) 改變美國的書  ,彭哥譯,台北:純文學,1971

Robert Bingham Downs (May 25, 1903– February 24, 1991) was a prolificAmerican author and librarian. Downs was an advocate for intellectual freedom as well.[2] Downs spent the majority of his career working against, and voicing opposition to, literary censorship. Downs authored many books and publications regarding the topics of censorship, and on the topics of responsible and efficient leadership in the library context.[2]
Library of Congress Announces Their Books That Changed America







-----Books That Changed America 改變美國的書  ,彭哥譯,台北:純文學,1971:MAHAN   The Maltese Falcon、"Leaves of Grass"..."The Jungle" (1906)
這是一篇重量級美國戰略學者的紐約時報oped投書。
主題:美國海軍靜悄悄的衰減,因為大眾注意力集中在陸地上戰爭。
可說美國海軍“優雅的衰退”(elegant decline)才是美國全球國力無法挽回下降最核心的因素。
內文充滿重要歷史的資料和宏觀的感嘆。
請看美國不同年代軍艦總數:
800 -- 二次大戰開始
7,000 -- 二次大戰結束
290 -- 目前
400 -- 中國目前軍艦總數
林中斌試簡介
敬請賜正
2026.5.8


https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/01/opinion/iran-hormuz-navy-south-china-sea-naval-power.html?smid=nytcore-android-

美國海軍的悲劇性衰落

2026年5月1日

空曠海面上的暴風雲。

圖片來源:Moises Saman/Magnum Photos

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作者:羅伯特·D·卡普蘭

卡普蘭先生是一位作家,也是美國軍事和外交事務的分析家。

19世紀海軍軍官、傑出的軍事戰略家阿爾弗雷德·塞耶·馬漢堅信,他年輕的國家注定會因其海軍而偉大。在服役後期,時任美國海軍上校的馬漢撰寫了一本關於帆船時代的里程碑著作。這本書深受國王、首相和總統的喜愛,其中包括西奧多·羅斯福、德皇威廉二世和年輕的溫斯頓·邱吉爾。書中提出了以美國海上力量為核心的自由世界理念。

馬漢認為,美國需要大量船隻來打贏決定性戰役,保持海上航線暢通,確保國際貿易的正常進行。這項既出於人道主義又出於自身利益的設想很快就成為現實,首先體現在1898年的美西戰爭中,而馬漢本人也積極支持這場戰爭。二戰後,美國海軍擁有約7,000艘艦船,並在接下來的半個世紀裡主宰了海洋。美國憑藉其得天獨厚的地理位置——瀕臨兩大洋——開啟了其帝國主義的旅程,並擁有強大的海軍力量來支撐其價值觀。
Guāndiǎn

Guest Essay

The Tragic Decline of the American Navy

A view of storm clouds over an empty sea.
Credit...Moises Saman/Magnum Photos

Alfred Thayer Mahan, a 19th-century naval officer and pre-eminent military strategist, believed his young country was destined to be great because of its Navy. Toward the end of his service, Mahan, then a U.S. Navy captain, wrote a landmark book about the age of sailing ships. Read avidly by kings, prime ministers and presidents — including Theodore Roosevelt, Kaiser Wilhelm II and the young Winston Churchill — the book posited the idea of a free world anchored by American sea power.





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AI Overview

Alfred Thayer Mahan’s The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783 (1890) changed America by providing the intellectual justification for the U.S. to become a global imperial power. It argued that national greatness was inextricably linked to naval strength, controlling sea lanes, and securing international markets, transforming U.S. foreign policy toward expansionism. [1, 2, 3]
Key Impacts and Themes:
  • Naval Buildup: Mahan’s work prompted a massive naval expansion, directly influencing Theodore Roosevelt and the USN's focus on a "battle line" prior to World War I.
  • Shift in Strategy: The book argued that controlling seaborne commerce is critical for victory, leading to the "new navalism" which prioritized protecting trade routes and securing overseas bases.
  • Geopolitical Influence: Mahan argued that the nation with the most power on the oceans held the most power overall.
  • International Reach: It was read widely by world leaders, shaping British and German naval policy in the lead-up to World War I, in addition to influencing U.S. foreign policy during the Spanish-American War.
  • Key Factors for Power: Mahan identified key factors for a nation’s maritime success: geographic position, physical conformation, extent of territory, population, national character, and government policy. [1, 2, 3]
The Influence of Sea Power upon History is considered a definitive text in American military and diplomatic history, establishing the strategic doctrine for the U.S. Navy for decades. [1, 2, 3]
人工智慧概述

阿爾弗雷德·塞耶·馬漢的《海權對歷史的影響,1660-1783》(1890)一書改變了美國,它為美國成為全球帝國主義強國提供了理論基礎。書認為,國家強盛與海軍實力、海上航線控制以及國際市場安全密不可分,因而將美國的對外政策轉向擴張主義。 [1, 2, 3]

主要影響和主題:

海軍建設:馬漢的著作促使美國海軍大規模擴張,直接影響了西奧多·羅斯福和美國海軍在第一次世界大戰前對「戰線」的重視。

戰略轉變:該書認為,控制海上貿易對取得勝利至關重要,由此催生了“新海軍主義”,其優先考慮保護貿易航線和確保海外基地安全。

地緣政治影響:馬漢認為,在海洋上擁有最強實力的國家,其整體實力也最為強大。

國際影響:本書被世界各國領導人廣泛閱讀,不僅影響了第一次世界大戰前英國和德國的海軍政策,也影響了美西戰爭期間美國的對外政策。

海權的關鍵因素:馬漢指出,一個國家在海上取得勝利的關鍵因素包括:地理位置、地形地形、領土範圍、人口、民族特性和政府政策。 [1, 2, 3]

《海權對歷史的影響》被認為是美國軍事和外交史上的權威著作,它奠定了美國海軍數十年的戰略理論。 [1, 2, 3]

Books That Changed America Paperback – January 1, 1971





Benjamin Franklin, "Experiments and Observations on Electricity" (1751)
In 1751, Peter Collinson, president of the Royal Society, arranged for the publication of a series of letters from Benjamin Franklin, written between 1747 and 1750, describing his experiments with electricity. Through the publication of these experiments, Franklin became the first American to gain an international reputation for his scientific work. In 1753 he received the Copley Medal of the Royal Society for his contributions.

Benjamin Franklin, "Poor Richard Improved" (1758) and "The Way to Wealth"
As a writer, Benjamin Franklin was best known for the wit and wisdom he shared with the readers of his popular almanac, "Poor Richard," under the pseudonym "Richard Saunders." In 1758, Franklin created a clever preface that repeated a number of his maxims, framed as an event in which Father Abraham advises that those seeking prosperity and virtue should diligently practice frugality, honesty and industry. It was reprinted as "Father Abraham’s Speech" and "The Way to Wealth."

Thomas Paine, "Common Sense" (1776)
Published anonymously in Philadelphia in January 1776, "Common Sense" appeared at a time when both separation from Great Britain and reconciliation were being considered. Through simple rational arguments, Thomas Paine focused blame for Colonial America’s troubles on the British king and pointed out the advantages of independence. This popular pamphlet had more than a half-million copies in 25 editions appearing throughout the Colonies within its first year of printing.

Noah Webster, "A Grammatical Institute of the English Language" (1783)
Believing that a distinctive American language was essential to creating cultural independence for the new nation, Noah Webster sought to standardize rules for spelling and pronunciation. His "Grammatical Institute" became the popular "blue-backed speller" used to teach a century of American children how to spell and pronounce words. Its royalties provided Webster with the economic independence to develop his American dictionary.

"The Federalist" (1787)
Now considered to be the most significant American contribution to political thought, "The Federalist" essays supporting the ratification of the new Constitution first appeared in New York newspapers under the pseudonym "Publius." Although it was widely known that the 85 essays were the work of Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay, the initial curious speculation about authorship of specific essays gradually developed into heated controversy. Hamilton left an authorship list with his lawyer before his fatal duel. In his copy, Madison identified the author of each essay with their initials. Thomas Jefferson penned a similar authorship list in his copy. None of these attributions exactly match, and the authorship of several essays is still being debated by scholars.

"A Curious Hieroglyphick Bible" (1788)
Hieroglyphic Bibles were popular in the late 18th century as an effective and entertaining way to teach children biblical passages. Isaiah Thomas, the printer of this 1788 edition, is widely acclaimed as America’s first enlightened printer of children’s books and is often compared to John Newbery of London, with whom he shared the motto "Instruction with delight."

Christopher Colles, "A Survey of the Roads of the United States of America" (1789)
Irish-born engineer and surveyor Christopher Colles produced what is considered the first road map or guidebook of the United States. It uses a format familiar to modern travelers with each plate consisting of two to three strip maps arranged side by side, covering approximately 12 miles. Colles began this work in 1789 but ended the project in 1792 because few people purchased subscriptions. But he compiled an atlas covering approximately 1,000 miles from Albany, N.Y., to Williamsburg, Va.

Benjamin Franklin, "The Private Life of the Late Benjamin Franklin, LL.D." (1793)
Benjamin Franklin was 65 when he wrote the first part of his autobiography, which focused on his early life to 1730. During the 1780s he added three briefer parts that advanced his story to his 50th year (1756) and revised the first part. The first book-length edition was published in Paris in 1791. The first English edition, a retranslation of this French edition, was published in London in 1793. Franklin’s autobiography still is considered one of the most influential memoirs in American literature.

Amelia Simmons, "American Cookery" (1796)
This cornerstone in American cookery is the first cookbook of American authorship to be printed in the United States. Numerous recipes adapting traditional dishes by substituting native American ingredients, such as corn, squash and pumpkin, are printed here for the first time. Simmons’ "Pompkin Pudding," baked in a crust, is the basis for the classic American pumpkin pie. Recipes for cake-like gingerbread are the first known to recommend the use of pearl ash, the forerunner of baking powder.

"New England Primer" (1803)
Learning the alphabet went hand in hand with learning Calvinist principles in early America. The phrase "in Adam’s fall, we sinned all," taught children the first letter of the alphabet and the concept of original sin at the same time. More than 6 million copies in 450 editions of the "New England Primer" were printed between 1681 and 1830 and were a part of nearly every child’s life.

Meriwether Lewis, "History of the Expedition Under the Command of the Captains Lewis and Clark" (1814)
After Meriwether Lewis’s death in September 1809, William Clark engaged Nicholas Biddle to edit the expedition papers. Using the captains’ original journals and those of Sergeants Gass and Ordway, Biddle completed a narrative by July 1811. After delays with the publisher, a two-volume edition of the Corps of Discovery’s travels across the continent was finally available to the public in 1814. More than 20 editions appeared during the 19th century, including German, Dutch and several British editions.

Washington Irving, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (1820)
One of the first works of fiction by an American author to become popular outside the United States, Washington Irving’s "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" was first published as part of "The Sketchbook" in 1820. Irving’s vivid imagery involving the wild supernatural pursuit by the Headless Horseman has sustained interest in this popular folktale through many printed editions, as well as film, stage and musical adaptations.

William Holmes McGuffey, "McGuffey’s Newly Revised Eclectic Primer" (1836)
William Holmes McGuffey was hired in the 1830s by Truman and Smith, a Cincinnati publishing firm, to write schoolbooks appropriate for children in the expanding nation. His eclectic readers were graded, meaning a student started with the primer and, as his reading abilities improved, moved from the first through the sixth reader. Religious instruction is not included, but a strong moral code is encouraged with stories in which hard work and virtue are rewarded and misdeeds and sloth are punished.

Samuel Goodrich, "Peter Parley’s Universal History" (1837)
Samuel Goodrich, using the pseudonym Peter Parley, wrote children’s books with an informal and friendly style as he introduced his young readers to faraway people and places. Goodrich believed that fairy tales and fantasy were not useful and possibly dangerous to children. He entertained them instead with engaging tales from history and geography. His low regard for fiction is ironic in that his accounts of other places and cultures were often misleading and stereotypical, if not completely incorrect.

Frederick Douglass, "The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass" (1845)
Frederick Douglass’s first autobiography is one of the best-written and most widely read slave narratives. It was boldly published less than seven years after Douglass had escaped and before his freedom was purchased. Prefaced by statements of support from his abolitionist friends, William Garrison and Wendell Phillips, Douglass’s book relates his experiences growing up a slave in Maryland and describes the strategies he used to learn to read and write. More than just a personal story of courage, Douglass’s account became a strong testament for the need to abolish slavery.

Nathaniel Hawthorne, "The Scarlet Letter" (1850)
"The Scarlet Letter" was the first important novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, one of the leading authors of 19th-century romanticism in American literature. Like many of his works, the novel is set in Puritan New England and examines guilt, sin and evil as inherent human traits. The main character, Hester Prynne, is condemned to wear a scarlet "A" (for adultery) on her chest because of an affair that resulted in an illegitimate child. Meanwhile, her child’s father, a Puritan pastor who has kept their affair secret, holds a high place in the community.

Herman Melville, "Moby-Dick"; or, "The Whale" (1851)
Herman Melville’s tale of the Great White Whale and the crazed Captain Ahab who declares he will chase him "round perdition’s flames before I give him up" has become an American myth. Even people who have never read Moby-Dick know the basic plot, and references to it are common in other works of American literature and in popular culture, such as the Star Trek film "The Wrath of Khan" (1982).

Harriet Beecher Stowe, "Uncle Tom’s Cabin" (1852)
With the intention of awakening sympathy for oppressed slaves and encouraging Northerners to disobey the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Harriet Beecher Stowe began writing her vivid sketches of slave sufferings and family separations. The first version of "Uncle Tom’s Cabin" appeared serially between June 1851 and April 1852 in the National Era, an antislavery paper published in Washington, D.C. The first book edition appeared in March 1852 and sold more than 300,000 copies in the first year. This novel was extremely influential in fueling antislavery sentiment during the decade preceding the Civil War.

Henry David Thoreau, "Walden;" or, "Life in the Woods" (1854)
While living in solitude in a cabin on Walden Pond in Concord, Mass., Henry David Thoreau wrote his most famous work, "Walden," a paean to the idea that it is foolish to spend a lifetime seeking material wealth. In his words, "I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." Thoreau’s love of nature and his advocacy of a simple life have had a large influence on modern conservation and environmentalist movements.



Happy Birthday to American poet Walt Whitman, born on this day in 1819.
Featured Artwork of the Day: John White Alexander (1856–1915) | Walt Whitman | 1889 http://met.org/1Fd3Yte



Walt Whitman, "Leaves of Grass" (1855)
The publication of the first slim edition of Walt Whitman’s "Leaves of Grass" in 1855 was the debut of a masterpiece that shifted the course of American literary history. Refreshing and bold in both theme and style, the book underwent many revisions during Whitman’s lifetime. Over almost 40 years Whitman produced multiple editions of "Leaves of Grass," shaping the book into an ever-transforming kaleidoscope of poems. By his death in 1892, "Leaves" was a thick compendium that represented Whitman’s vision of America over nearly the entire last half of the 19th century. Among the collection’s best-known poems are "I Sing the Body Electric," "Song of Myself," and "O Captain! My Captain!," a metaphorical tribute to the slain Abraham Lincoln.


On this day in 1855 Walt Whitman registered the title Leaves of Grass with the clerk of the United States District Court, New York; the first edition was published seven weeks later. Over the next thirty-six years Whitman would add many more poems and publish seven more editions, all in an effort to "Unscrew the locks from the doors! / Unscrew the doors themselves from their jambs!"





Louisa May Alcott, "Little Women," or, "Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy" (1868)
This first edition of Louisa May Alcott’s "Little Women" was published in 1868 when Louisa was 35 years old. Based on her own experiences growing up as a young woman with three sisters, and illustrated by her youngest sister, May, the novel was an instant success, selling more than 2,000 copies immediately. Several sequels were published, including "Little Men" (1871) and "Jo’s Boys" (1886). Although "Little Women" is set in a very particular place and time in American history, the characters and their relationships have touched generations of readers and still are beloved.

Horatio Alger Jr., "Mark, the Match Boy" (1869)
The formulaic juvenile novels of Horatio Alger Jr., are best remembered for the "rags-to-riches" theme they championed. In these stories, poor city boys rose in social status by working hard and being honest. Alger preached respectability and integrity, while disdaining the idle rich and the growing chasm between the poor and the affluent. In fact, the villains in Alger’s stories were almost always rich bankers, lawyers or country squires.

Catharine E. Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe, "The American Woman’s Home" (1869)
This classic domestic guide by sisters Catharine E. Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe is dedicated to "the women of America, in whose hands rest the real destinies of the Republic." It includes chapters on healthful cookery, home decoration, exercise, cleanliness, good air ventilation and heat, etiquette, sewing, gardening and care of children, the sick, the aged and domestic animals. Intended to elevate the "woman’s sphere" of household management to a respectable profession based on scientific principles, it became the standard domestic handbook.

Mark Twain, "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" (1884)
Novelist Ernest Hemingway famously said, "All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called ‘Huckleberry Finn.’ ... All American writing comes from that. There was nothing before. There has been nothing as good since." During their trip down the Mississippi on a raft, Twain depicts in a satirical and humorous way Huck and Jim’s encounters with hypocrisy, racism, violence and other evils of American society. His use in serious literature of a lively, simple American language full of dialect and colloquial expressions paved the way for many later writers, including Hemingway and William Faulkner.

Emily Dickinson, "Poems" (1890)
Very few of the nearly 1,800 poems that Emily Dickinson wrote were published during her lifetime and, even then, they were heavily edited to conform to the poetic conventions of their time. A complete edition of her unedited work was not published until 1955. Her idiosyncratic structure and rhyming schemes have inspired later poets.

Jacob Riis, "How the Other Half Lives" (1890)
An early example of photojournalism as vehicle for social change, Riis’s book demonstrated to the middle and upper classes of New York City the slum-like conditions of the tenements of the Lower East Side. Following the book’s publication (and the resulting public uproar), proper sewers, plumbing and trash collection eventually came to the Lower East Side.

Stephen Crane, "The Red Badge of Courage" (1895)
One of the most influential works in American literature, Stephen Crane’s "The Red Badge of Courage" has been called the greatest novel about the American Civil War. The tale of a young recruit in the Civil War who learns the cruelty of war made Crane an international success. The work is notable for its vivid depiction of the internal conflict of its main character – most war novels until that time focused more on the battles than on their characters.

L. Frank Baum, "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" (1900)
"The Wonderful Wizard of Oz," published in 1900, is the first fantasy written by an American to enjoy an immediate success upon publication. So powerful was its effect on the American imagination, so evocative its use of the forces of nature in its plots, so charming its invitation to children of all ages to look for the element of wonder in the world around them that author L. Frank Baum was forced by demand to create book after book about Dorothy and her friends – including the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman, the Cowardly Lion and Glinda the Good Witch.

Sarah H. Bradford, "Harriet, the Moses of Her People" (1901)
Harriet Tubman is celebrated for her courage and skill in guiding many escaping slave parties northward along the Underground Railroad to freedom. She also served as a scout and a nurse during the Civil War. In order to raise funds for Tubman’s support in 1869 and again in 1886, Sarah Hopkins Bradford published accounts of Tubman’s experiences as a young slave and her daring efforts to rescue family and friends from slavery.

Jack London, "The Call of the Wild" (1903)
Jack London’s experiences during the Klondike gold rush in the Yukon were the inspiration for "The Call of the Wild." He saw the way dogsled teams behaved and how their owners treated (and mistreated) them. In the book, the dog Buck’s comfortable life is upended when gold is discovered in the Klondike. From then on, survival of the fittest becomes Buck’s mantra as he learns to confront and survive the harsh realities of his new life as a sled dog.

W.E.B. Du Bois, "The Souls of Black Folk" (1903)
"Few books make history and fewer still become foundational texts for the movements and struggles of an entire people. The ‘Souls of Black Folk’ occupies this rare position," said Du Bois biographer Manning Marable. Du Bois’s work was so influential that it is impossible to consider the civil rights movement’s roots without first looking to this groundbreaking work.

Ida Tarbell, "The History of Standard Oil" (1904)
Journalist Ida Tarbell wrote her exposé of the monopolistic practices of John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company as a serialized work in McClure’s Magazine. The breakup of Standard Oil in 1911 into 34 "baby Standards" can be attributed in large part to Tarbell’s masterly muckraking.

Upton Sinclair, "The Jungle" (1906)
An early example of investigative journalism, this graphic exposé of the Chicago meat-packing industry presented as a novel was one of the first works of fiction to lead directly to national legislation. The federal meat-inspection law and the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 established the agency that eventually became the Food and Drug Administration in 1930.


Quote of the day:
"When the masters of industry pay such sums for a newspaper, they buy not merely the building and the presses and the name; they buy what they call the 'good-will' - that is, they buy you. And they proceed to change your whole psychology - everything that you believe about life. You might object to it, if you knew; but they do their work so subtly that you never guess what is happening to you!"
-- Upton Sinclair (1908)




Henry Adams, "The Education of Henry Adams" (1907)
The dawn of the 20th century and the changes it brought are the subjects of Henry Adams’ "education." Adams lived through the Civil War and died just before World War I. During that time, he witnessed cataclysmic transformations in technology, society and politics. Adams believed that his traditional education left him ill-prepared for these changes and that his life experiences provided a better education. One survey called it the greatest nonfiction English-language book of the last century.

William James, "Pragmatism" (1907)
"Pragmatism" was America’s first major contribution to philosophy, and it is an ideal rooted in the American ethos of no-nonsense solutions to real problems. Although James did not originate the idea, he popularized the philosophy through his voluminous writings.

Zane Grey, "Riders of the Purple Sage" (1912)
"Riders of the Purple Sage," Zane Grey’s best-known novel, was originally published in 1912. The Western genre had just evolved from the popular dime novels and penny dreadfuls of the late 19th century. This story of a gun-slinging avenger who saves a young and beautiful woman from marrying against her will played a significant role in shaping the formula of the popular Western genre begun by Owen Wister in "The Virginian" (1904).

Edgar Rice Burroughs, "Tarzan of the Apes" (1914)
"Tarzan of the Apes" is the first in a series of books about the popular man who was raised by and lived among the apes. With its universal themes of honesty, heroism and bravery, the series has never lost popularity. Countless Tarzan adaptations have been filmed for television and the silver screen, including an animated version currently in production.

Margaret Sanger, "Family Limitation" (1914)
While working as a nurse in the New York slums, Margaret Sanger witnessed the plight of poor women suffering from frequent pregnancies and self-induced abortion. Believing that these women had the right to control their reproductive health, Sanger published this pamphlet that simply explained how to prevent pregnancy. Distribution through the mails was blocked by enforcement of the Comstock Law, which banned mailing of materials judged to be obscene. However, several hundred thousand copies were distributed through the first family-planning and birth control clinic Sanger established in Brooklyn in 1916 and by networks of active women at rallies and political meetings.

William Carlos Williams, "Spring and All" (1923)
A practicing physician for more than 40 years, William Carlos Williams became an experimenter, innovator and revolutionary figure in American poetry. In reaction against the rigid, rhyming format of 19th-century poets, Williams, his friend Ezra Pound and other early-20th-century poets formed the core of what became known as the "Imagist" movement. Their poetry focused on verbal pictures and moments of revealed truth, rather than a structure of consecutive events or thoughts and was expressed in free verse rather than rhyme.

Robert Frost, "New Hampshire" (1923)
Frost received his first of four Pulitzer Prizes for this anthology, which contains some of his most famous poems, including "Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening" and "Fire and Ice." One of the best-known American poets of his time, Frost became principally associated with the life and landscape of New England. Although he employed traditional verse forms and metrics and remained aloof from the poetic movements and fashions of his day, poems featured language as it is actually spoken as well as psychological complexity and layers of ambiguity and irony.

F. Scott Fitzgerald, "The Great Gatsby" (1925)
F. Scott Fitzgerald, one of the major American writers of the 20th century, is a figure whose life and works embody powerful myths about the American Dream of success. "The Great Gatsby," considered by many to be Fitzgerald’s finest work and the book for which he is best known, is a portrait of the Jazz Age (1920s) in all its decadence and excess. Exploring the themes of class, wealth and social status, Fitzgerald takes a cynical look at the pursuit of wealth among a group of people for whom pleasure is the chief goal. "The Great Gatsby" captured the spirit of the author’s generation and earned a permanent place in American mythology.

Langston Hughes, "The Weary Blues" (1925)
Langston Hughes was one of the greatest poets of the Harlem Renaissance, a literary and intellectual flowering that fostered a new black cultural identity in the 1920s and 1930s. His poem "The Weary Blues," also the title of this poetry collection, won first prize in a contest held by Opportunity magazine. After the awards ceremony, the writer and photographer Carl Van Vechten approached Hughes about putting together a book of verse and got him a contract with his own publisher, Alfred A. Knopf. Van Vechten contributed an essay, "Introducing Langston Hughes," to the volume. The book laid the foundation for Hughes’s literary career, and several poems remain popular with his admirers.

William Faulkner, "The Sound and the Fury" (1929)
"The Sound and the Fury," William Faulkner’s fourth novel, was his own favorite, and many critics believe it is his masterpiece. Set in the fictional county of Yoknapatawpha, Miss., as are most of Faulkner’s novels, "The Sound and the Fury" uses the American South as a metaphor for a civilization in decline. Depicting the post-Civil War decline of the once-aristocratic Compson family, the novel is divided into four parts, each told by a different narrator. Much of the novel is told in a stream-of-consciousness style, in which a character’s thoughts are conveyed in a manner roughly equivalent to the way human minds actually work. Faulkner was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1950 and France’s Legion of Honor in 1951.

Dashiell Hammett, "Red Harvest" (1929)
Dashiell Hammett’s first novel introduced a wide audience to the so-called "hard-boiled" detective thriller with its depiction of crime and violence without any hint of sentimentality. The creator of classics such as "The Maltese Falcon" and "The Thin Man," shocked readers with such dialogue as "We bumped over dead Hank O’Meara’s legs and headed for home."

Irma Rombauer, "Joy of Cooking" (1931)
Until Irma Rombauer published "Joy of Cooking," most American cookbooks were little more than a series of paragraphs that incorporated ingredient amounts (if they were provided at all) with some vague advice about how to put them all together to achieve the desired results. Rombauer changed all that by beginning her recipes with ingredient lists and offering precise directions along with her own personal and friendly anecdotes. A modest success initially, the book went on to sell nearly 18 million copies in its various editions.

Margaret Mitchell, "Gone With the Wind" (1936)
The most popular romance novel of all time was the basis for the most popular movie of all time (in today’s dollars). Margaret Mitchell’s book, set in the South during the Civil War, won both the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award, and it remains popular, despite charges that its author had a blind eye regarding the horrors of slavery.

Dale Carnegie, "How to Win Friends and Influence People" (1936)
The progenitor of all self-help books, Dale Carnegie’s volume has sold 15 million copies and been translated into more than 30 languages. "How to Win Friends and Influence People" has also spawned hundreds of other books, many of them imitators, written to advise on everything from improving one’s relationships to beefing up one’s bank account. Carnegie acknowledged that he was inspired by Benjamin Franklin, a young man who proclaimed that "God helps them that helped themselves" as a way to get ahead in life.

Zora Neale Hurston, "Their Eyes Were Watching God" (1937)
Although it was published in 1937, it was not until the 1970s that "Their Eyes Were Watching God" became regarded as a masterwork. It had initially been rejected by African American critics as facile and simplistic, in part because its characters spoke in dialect. Alice Walker’s 1975 Ms. magazine essay, "Looking for Zora," led to a critical reevaluation of the book, which is now considered to have paved the way for younger black writers such as Alice Walker and Toni Morrison.

Federal Writers’ Project, "Idaho: A Guide in Word and Pictures" (1937)
"Idaho" was the first in the popular American Guide Series of the Federal Writers’ Project, which ended in 1943. The project employed more than 6,000 writers and was one of the many programs of the Works Progress Administration, a Depression-era federal government employment program. These travel guides cover the lower 48 states plus the Alaska Territory, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia. Each volume details a state’s history, geography and culture and includes photographs, maps and drawings.

Thornton Wilder, "Our Town: A Play" (1938)
Winner of the 1938 Pulitzer Prize, "Our Town" is among the most-performed plays of the 20th century. Those who see it relate immediately to its universal themes of the importance of everyday occurrences, relationships among friends and family and an appreciation of the brevity of life.

"Alcoholics Anonymous" (1939)
The famous 12-step program for stopping an addiction has sold more than 30 million copies. Millions of men and women worldwide have turned to the program co-founded by Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith to recover from alcoholism. The "Big Book," as it is known, spawned similar programs for other forms of addiction.

John Steinbeck, "The Grapes of Wrath" (1939)
Few novels can claim that their message led to actual legislation, but "The Grapes of Wrath" did just that. Its story of the travails of Oklahoma migrants during the Great Depression ignited a movement in Congress to pass laws benefiting farmworkers. When Steinbeck won the Nobel Prize in 1962, the committee specifically cited this novel as one of the main reasons for the award.

Ernest Hemingway, "For Whom the Bell Tolls" (1940)
Ernest Hemingway’s novel about the horrors of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) depicts war not as glorious but disillusioning. Hemingway used his experiences as a reporter during the war as the background for his best-selling novel, which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and became a literary triumph. Based on his achievement in this and other noted works, he received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1954.

Richard Wright, "Native Son" (1940)
Among the first widely successful novels by an African American, "Native Son" boldly described a racist society that was unfamiliar to most Americans. As literary critic Irving Howe said in his 1963 essay "Black Boys and Native Sons," "The day ‘Native Son’ appeared, American culture was changed forever. No matter how much qualifying the book might later need, it made impossible a repetition of the old lies."

Betty Smith, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" (1943)
"A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" is the account of a girl growing up in the tenements of turn-of-the-20th-century Brooklyn. An early socially conscious novel, the book examines poverty, alcoholism, gender roles, loss of innocence and the struggle to live the American Dream in an inner city neighborhood of Irish American immigrants. The book was enormously popular and became a film directed by Elia Kazan.

Benjamin A. Botkin, "A Treasury of American Folklore" (1944)
Benjamin Botkin headed the Library of Congress’s Archive of American Folksong (now the American Folklife Center) between 1943 and 1945 and previously served as national folklore editor of the Federal Writers’ Project (1938–39), a program of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal during the Depression. Botkin was one of the New Deal folklorists who persuasively argued that folklore was relevant in the present and that it was not something that should be studied merely for its historical value. This book features illustrations by Andrew Wyeth, one of America’s foremost realist painters.

Gwendolyn Brooks, "A Street in Bronzeville" (1945)
"A Street in Bronzeville" was Brooks’s first book of poetry. It details, in stark terms, the oppression of blacks in a Chicago neighborhood. Critics hailed the book, and in 1950 Brooks became the first African American to win the Pulitzer Prize for poetry. She was also appointed as U.S. Poet Laureate by the Librarian of Congress in 1985.

Benjamin Spock, "The Common Sense Book of Baby and Child Care" (1946)
Dr. Spock’s guidebook turned common wisdom about child-rearing on its head. Spock argued that babies did not have to be on a rigid schedule, that children should be treated with a great deal of affection, and that parents should use their own common sense when making child-rearing decisions. Millions of parents worldwide have followed his advice.

Eugene O’Neill, "The Iceman Cometh" (1946)
Nobel Prize winner Eugene O’Neill’s play about anarchism, socialism and pipe dreams is one of his most-admired but least-performed works, probably because of its more than four-and-a-half-hour running time. Set in 1912 in the seedy Last Chance Saloon in New York City, the play depicts the bar’s drunk and delusional patrons bickering while awaiting the arrival of Hickey, a traveling salesman whose visits are the highlight of their hopeless lives. However, Hickey’s arrival throws them into turmoil when he arrives sober, wanting them to face their delusions.

Margaret Wise Brown, "Goodnight Moon" (1947)
This bedtime story has been a favorite of young people for generations, beloved as much for its rhyming story as for its carefully detailed illustrations by Clement Hurd. Millions have read it (and had it read to them). "Goodnight Moon" has been referred to as the perfect bedtime book.

Tennessee Williams, "A Streetcar Named Desire" (1947)
A landmark work, which won the 1948 Pulitzer Prize for Drama, "A Streetcar Named Desire" thrilled and shocked audiences with its melodramatic look at a clash of cultures. These cultures are embodied in the two main characters – Blanche DuBois, a fading Southern belle whose genteel pretensions thinly mask alcoholism and delusions of grandeur, and Stanley Kowalski, a representative of the industrial, urban working class. Marlon Brando’s portrayal of the brutish and sensual Stanley in both the original stage production and the film adaptation has become an icon of American culture.

Alfred C. Kinsey, "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male" (1948)
Alfred Kinsey created a firestorm when he published this volume on men in 1948 and a companion on women five years later. No one had ever reported on such taboo subjects before and no one had used scientific data in such detail to challenge the prevailing notions of sexual behavior. Kinsey’s openness regarding human sexuality was a harbinger of the 1960s sexual revolution in America.

J.D. Salinger, "The Catcher in the Rye" (1951)
Since his debut in 1951 as the narrator of "The Catcher in the Rye," 16-year-old Holden Caulfield has been synonymous with adolescent alienation and angst. The influential story concerns three days after Holden has been expelled from prep school. Confused and disillusioned, he wanders New York City searching for truth and rails against the phoniness of the adult world. Holden is the first great American antihero, and his attitudes influenced the Beat generation of the 1950s as well as the hippies of the 1960s. "The Catcher in the Rye" is one of the most translated, taught and reprinted books and has sold some 65 million copies.

Ralph Ellison, "Invisible Man" (1952)
Ralph Ellison’s "Invisible Man" is told by an unnamed narrator who views himself as someone many in society do not see, much less pay attention to. Ellison addresses what it means to be an African-American in a world hostile to the rights of a minority, on the cusp of the emerging civil rights movement that was to change society irrevocably.

E.B. White, "Charlotte’s Web" (1952)
According to Publishers Weekly, "Charlotte’s Web" is the best-selling paperback for children of all time. One reason may be that, although it was written for children, reading it is just as enjoyable for adults. The book is especially notable for the way it treats death as a natural and inevitable part of life in a way that is palatable for young people.

Ray Bradbury, "Fahrenheit 451" (1953)
"Fahrenheit 451" is Ray Bradbury’s disturbing vision of a future United States in which books are outlawed and burned. Even though interpretations of the novel have primarily focused on the historical role of book-burning as a means of censorship, Bradbury has said that the novel is about how television reduces knowledge to factoids and destroys interest in reading. The book inspired a 1966 film by Francois Truffaut and a subsequent BBC symphony. Its name comes from the minimum temperature at which paper catches fire by spontaneous combustion.

Allen Ginsberg, "Howl" (1956)
Allen Ginsberg’s poem "Howl" (first published as the title poem of a collection) established him as an important poet and the voice of the Beat Generation of the 1950s. Because of the boldness of the poem’s language and subject matter, it became the subject of an obscenity trial in San Francisco in which it was exonerated after witnesses testified to its redeeming social value. Ginsberg’s work had great influence on later generations of poets and on the youth culture of the 1960s.

Ayn Rand, "Atlas Shrugged" (1957)
Although mainstream critics reacted poorly to "Atlas Shrugged," it was a popular success. Set in what novelist and philosopher Rand called "the day after tomorrow," the book depicts a United States caught up in a crisis caused by a corrupt establishment of government regulators and business interests. The book’s negative view of government and its support of unimpeded capitalism as the highest moral objective have influenced libertarians and those who advocate a smaller government.

Dr. Seuss, "The Cat in the Hat" (1957)
Theodore Seuss Geisel was removed as editor of the campus humor magazine while a student at Dartmouth College after too much reveling with fellow students. In spite of this Prohibition-era setback to his writing career, he continued to contribute to the magazine pseudonymously, signing his work "Seuss." This is the first known use of his pseudonym, which became famous in children’s literature when it evolved into "Dr. Seuss." "The Cat in the Hat" is considered the most important book of his career. More than 200 million Dr. Seuss books have been sold around the world.

Jack Kerouac, "On the Road" (1957)
The defining novel of the 1950s Beat Generation (which Kerouac named), "On the Road" is a semiautobiographical tale of a bohemian cross-country adventure, narrated by character Sal Paradise. Kerouac’s odyssey has influenced artists such as Bob Dylan, Tom Waits and Hunter S. Thompson and films such as "Easy Rider." "On the Road" has achieved a mythic status in part because it portrays the restless energy and desire for freedom that makes people take off to see the world.

Harper Lee, "To Kill a Mockingbird" (1960)
This 1960 Pulitzer Prize winner was an immediate critical and financial success for its author, with more than 30 million copies in print to date. Harper Lee created one of the most enduring and heroic characters in all of American literature in Atticus Finch, the small-town lawyer who defended a wrongly accused black man. The book’s importance was recognized by the 1961 Washington Post reviewer: "A hundred pounds of sermons on tolerance, or an equal measure of invective deploring the lack of it, will weigh far less in the scale of enlightenment than a mere 18 ounces of new fiction bearing the title ‘To Kill a Mockingbird.’"

Joseph Heller, "Catch-22" (1961)
Joseph’s Heller’s "Catch-22," an irreverent World War II novel and a satiric treatment of military bureaucracy, has had such a penetrating effect that its title has become synonymous with "no-win situation." Heller’s novel is a black comedy, filled with orders from above that make no sense and a main character, Yossarian, who just wants to stay alive. He pleads insanity but is caught in the famous catch: "Anyone who wants to get out of combat duty isn't really crazy." The novel became a cult classic for its biting indictment of war.

Robert E. Heinlein, "Stranger in a Strange Land" (1961)
The first science fiction novel to become a bestseller, "Stranger in a Strange Land" is the story of Valentine Michael Smith, a human raised on Mars by Martians (his parents were on the first expedition to Mars and he was orphaned when the crew perished) who returns to Earth about 20 years later. Smith has psychic powers but complete ignorance of human mores. The book is considered a classic in its genre.

Ezra Jack Keats, "The Snowy Day" (1962)
Ezra Jack Keats’s "The Snowy Day" was the first full-color picture book with an African-American as the main character. The book changed the field of children’s literature forever, and Keats was recognized by winning the 1963 Caldecott Medal (the most prestigious American award for children’s books) for his landmark effort.

Maurice Sendak, "Where the Wild Things Are" (1963)
"It is my involvement with this inescapable fact of childhood – the awful vulnerability of children and their struggle to make themselves King of All Wild Things – that gives my work whatever truth and passion it may have," Maurice Sendak said in his Caldecott Medal acceptance speech on June 30, 1964. Sendak called Max, the hero of "Where the Wild Things Are," his "bravest and therefore my dearest creation." Max, who is sent to his room with nothing to eat, sails to where the wild things are and becomes their king.

James Baldwin, "The Fire Next Time" (1963)
One of the most important books ever published on race relations, Baldwin’s two-essay work comprises a letter written to his nephew on the role of race in United States history and a discussion of how religion and race influence each other. Baldwin’s angry prose is balanced by his overall belief that love and understanding can overcome strife.

Betty Friedan, "The Feminine Mystique" (1963)
By debunking the "feminine mystique" that middle-class women were happy and fulfilled as housewives and mothers, Betty Friedan inspired the second-wave feminist movement of the 1960s and 1970s. Friedan advocates that women need meaningful work and encourages them to avoid the trap of the "feminine mystique" by pursuing education and careers. By 2000 this touchstone of the women’s movement had sold 3 million copies and was translated into several languages.

Malcolm X and Alex Haley, "The Autobiography of Malcolm X" (1965)
When "The Autobiography of Malcolm X" (born Malcolm Little) was published, The New York Times called it a "brilliant, painful, important book," and it has become a classic American autobiography. Written in collaboration with Alex Haley (author of "Roots"), the book expressed for many African-Americans what the mainstream civil rights movement did not: their anger and frustration with the intractability of racial injustice.

Ralph Nader, "Unsafe at Any Speed" (1965)
Nader’s book was a landmark in the field of auto safety and made him a household name. It detailed how automakers resisted putting safety features, such as seat belts, in their cars and resulted in the federal government’s taking a lead role in the area of auto safety.

Rachel Carson, "Silent Spring" (1962)
A marine biologist and writer, Rachel Carson is considered a founder of the contemporary environmental protection movement. She drew attention to the adverse effects of pesticides, especially that of DDT on bird populations, in her book "Silent Spring," a 1963 National Book Association Nonfiction Finalist. At a time when technological solutions were the norm, she pointed out that man-made poisons introduced into natural systems can harm not only nature, but also humans. Her book met with great success and because of heightened public awareness, DDT was banned.

Truman Capote, "In Cold Blood" (1966)
A 300-word article in The New York Times about a murder led Truman Capote to travel with his childhood friend Harper Lee to Holcomb, Kan., to research his nonfiction novel, which is considered one of the greatest true-crime books ever written. Capote said the novel was an attempt to establish a serious new literary form, the "nonfiction novel," a narrative form that employed all the techniques of fictional art but was nevertheless entirely factual. The book was an instant success and was made into a film.

James D. Watson, "The Double Helix" (1968)
James D. Watson’s personal account of the discovery of DNA changed the way Americans regarded the genre of the scientific memoir and set a new standard for first-person accounts. Dealing with personalities, controversies and conflicts, the book also changed the way the public thought about how science and scientists work, showing that scientific enterprise can at times be a messy and cutthroat business.

Dee Brown, "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" (1970)
Until librarian Dee Brown wrote his history of Native Americans in the West, few Americans knew the details of the unjust treatment of Indians. Brown scoured both well-known and little-known sources for his documentary on the massacres, broken promises and other atrocities suffered by Indians. The book has never gone out of print and has sold more than 4 million copies.

Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, "Our Bodies, Ourselves" (1971)
In the early 1970s a dozen Boston feminists collaborated in this groundbreaking publication that presented accurate information on women’s health and sexuality based on their own experiences. Advocating improved doctor-patient communication and shared decision-making, "Our Bodies, Ourselves" explored ways for women to take charge of their own health issues and to work for political and cultural change that would ameliorate women’s lives.

Carl Sagan, "Cosmos" (1980)
Carl Sagan’s classic, bestselling science book accompanied his avidly followed television series, "Cosmos." In an accessible way, Sagan covered a broad range of scientific topics and made the history and excitement of science understandable and enjoyable for Americans and then for an international audience. The book offers a glimpse of Sagan’s personal vision of what it means to be human.

Toni Morrison, "Beloved" (1987)
Toni Morrison won the 1988 Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her post-Civil War novel based on the true story of an escaped slave and the tragic consequences when a posse comes to reclaim her. The author won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1993, and in 2006 The New York Times named "Beloved" "the best work of American fiction of the past 25 years."

Randy Shilts, "And the Band Played On" (1987)
"And the Band Played On" is the story of how the AIDS epidemic spread and how the government’s initial indifference to the disease allowed its spread and gave urgency to devoting government resources to fighting the virus. Shilts’s investigation has been compared to other works that led to increased efforts toward public safety, such as Upton Sinclair’s "The Jungle."

César Chávez, "The Words of César Chávez" (2002)
César Chávez, founder of the United Farm Workers, was as impassioned as he was undeterred in his quest for better working conditions for farm workers. He was a natural communicator whose speeches and writings led to many improvements in wages and working conditions.

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