The Vision As honors alumni you make up a special community, which is why we’re putting together a special way to keep in touch with you. Over the years, I have seen many of you ask your honors professors for reading lists, book suggestions, and updates on what they are reading. So we’re putting together a unique newsletter designed to help you retain that sense of community and curiosity. Honors faculty will be able to share their own words, about ideas that have come up in class, recent books or movies they would recommend, links to any articles they have written, little stories from life, and maybe even a jambalaya recipe. We hope this will help you sustain your habit of reading and a connection with the community. Please enjoy and, as always, we welcome your feedback, updates and suggestions. Feel free to reach out to me or your professors with reading suggestions of your own and responses to the readings we recommend.
From Dr. St. Antoine: Since all of you take such ownership in the reading list for capstone, I feel like I need your permission to make changes. Alas, I went rogue and changed things up a bit. I have added two new books to Christian Vocation and Worldview: James K.A. Smith’s On the Road with St. Augustine and Rod Dreher’s How Dante Can Save Your Life. I have packaged the two together into a theme I am calling “How to pack for the real world.” (Hint - bring your honors books.) Both authors write a memoir of sorts in which they use the great books, Augustine and Dante respectively, to navigate the triumph and suffering, love and loss, work, leisure, and fellowship that punctuate a life well lived. Reading with Dr. Beate Rodewald “Traveling without moving your feet” is how Jhumpa Lahiri described what reading can be. Since actual traveling is one of my favorite activities, I had to make major adjustments since March of last year. For the past 12 months, my ‘travels’ have been exclusively mental ones – through reading. I am happy to report, though, that this kind of travel can be rich and exciting, especially when shared with others. While nothing can replace the presence of real people sitting around a table, Zoom has made it possible for me to discuss books with people who I know to be just as obsessed with ‘cosmic’ questions as I am, or just as intrigued by weird and quirky works in the utopian tradition – even though some of these people are in different countries now. We spent several weeks reading Timothy Ferris’s Coming of Age in the Milky Way – a truly magnificent tour through the history of science that, though scrupulously researched, is accessible to any curious reader. In the fiction department, Eco’s Island of the Day Before and Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go made for great discussion [with lots of connections made to works from the Honors curriculum]. I was also happy for the opportunity to re-read some favorites from my high school days; my generous Zoom-Book-Club friends had heard of – and read some works by – Rainer Maria Rilke and Thomas Mann; but The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge [Rilke’s only novel] and Mann’s The Magic Mountain [about the same length as Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, which means - not frequently read in its entirety] were books they had not read. It has been a joy to be able to travel through fictional worlds or the history of ideas, and to have company along the way.