The Common Reader

Naomi Kanakia: How Great Are the Great Books?

15 snips
Mar 4, 2026
Naomi Kanakia, novelist, critic, and Substack writer behind Woman of Letters, discusses the online revival of classic-literature conversation. She talks about learning Middle English and Anglo-Saxon, the history and future of the Great Books movement, how rationalist communities engage with classics, debates over defining ‘‘great,‘‘ and reading habits and recommendations.
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ANECDOTE

Boswell Needs A Conversation-Focused Abridgment

  • Naomi wants a redacted Boswell that keeps Johnson's verbatim conversation and trims less gripping material.
  • She values Boswell's reported dialogues as the book's most riveting sections and thinks an edited version would reach readers.
ANECDOTE

Last Of The Mohicans Surprised With Nuance

  • Reading Last of the Mohicans surprised Naomi with nuanced Native American characters and respect often absent in later US literature.
  • She read all the Leatherstocking Tales and found evocative scenes like the aged chief Tammondzund's speech deeply affecting.
INSIGHT

Longevity And Cultural Height Define Greatness

  • Naomi leans toward longevity as a marker of greatness, echoing Horace and T.S. Eliot as complementary criteria.
  • She suggests works still read after a century and those reflecting a civilization's peak indicate greatness.
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