Book Review: Beowulf on the Beach by Jack Murnighan

beowulfbeach

Published May 2009 by Three Rivers Press (a division of RandomHouse)

I’ve always considered myself to be pretty well read, but in the years since I graduated from college, I’ve begun to realize exactly how many of the classics I missed out on, and I’ve been looking for a way to incorporate more of them into my reading. I want to re-read some of the ones that I didn’t quite “get” as a teenager, revisit the ones that left indelible impressions, and fill in the gaps by (finally) picking up the ones I’ve always been ashamed to admit I haven’t read.

Maybe you’re like me, or maybe you don’t exactly want to read the classics, but you want to want to.  Whatever the case, look no further. Jack Murnighan’s Beowulf on the Beach is the perfect motivator and companion for your journey. The subtitle—What to Love and What to Skip in Literature’s 50 Greatest Hits—says it all. Murnighan, a writer and literature professor with a Ph.D. in medieval and renaissance works, tells it like it is. He loves the books he’s selected, and he wants to spread the love and help readers understand and appreciate why the classics are so important.

These books are dazzling, but that’s not how they’re normally taught or perceived. And if you don’t go back to the classics as an adult, you might never know how much better they are when they’re read for pleasure, not for a test. As long as the so-called great books stay locked up in the ivory tower, people don’t see how gripping and meaningful they can be, and their kaleidoscopic glories get squandered.

Murnighan breaks his discussion of each book into six sections: The Buzz, What People Don’t Know (But Should), Best Line, What’s Sexy, Quirky Fact, and What to Skip. This organization gives the book a nice structure, and I found myself looking forward to discovering what he’d have to say about each book. Although I was initially skeptical about the What to Skip section—I’m a ‘read every word’ reader and don’t believe in skimming—I quickly came to appreciate the value in Murnighan’s honest approach and his great sense of humor.

I mean, really. How can you not like someone who is willing to describe Odysseus’s wife Penelope as someone who has a “myriad of suitors trying to get some of dat,” or who tells you up front that “what the Old Testament lacks in conventional reader-friendliness it more than makes up for in diversity and sheer, fascinating, almost incalculable weirdness”? And that’s just in the first twenty pages!

Throughout Beowulf on the Beach, Murnighan is funny, irreverent (he refers to Jesus as “His Shagginess” at one point), and passionately committed to the cause of converting readers to the classics. He reminds us of the importance of reading slowly, digesting each work line by line, and re-reading when it’s necessary. His love for these great books is palpable and impossible to ignore, and he wants us to learn how to read them in a way that will make us love them just as much as he does.

I set out to read Beowulf on the Beach as a companion to Jane Eyre, which I’ve chosen for the BoB-themed summer reading challenge hosted by Ann and Michael of Books on the Nightstand. I figured I’d enjoy the book, knock a previously unread classic off my list, and move right along. Instead, I’m walking away with a lengthy list of books that, for one reason or another, I’ve never read and now feel prepared to tackle and a renewed desire to re-read some of the ones I’ve loved.

Murnighan says that “if there is a single classic that deserves a second chance now that you’re an adult, it’s Great Expectations,” and I’m willing to take him at his word. I’ll be happy to spend some time with Pip and Miss Havisham again in the near future. I might even embark on chunkster like Moby Dick, which gets Murnighan’s vote for “single greatest novel ever” or Ulysses, which he says we should read for three reasons: “We can’t be as smart as Joyce, we can’t notice as much as Joyce, and we can’t be as funny as Joyce.”

And you can bet your bottom dollar that I won’t pass up an opportunity to return to One Hundred Years of Solitude, which Murnighan calls “the novel that arches above and beyond all others, covering them in its eclipse like a sequoia does a sapling” because of “the humanity it incarnates, the wisdom, love, humor, imagination, joy, and sex that it contains, its ability to strum you like a zither and make your heart sing out beautiful.”

Murnighan has a lot to say about One Hundred Years of Solitude, but if this doesn’t make you want to run out and buy the first copy you can find, I don’t know what will.

I’m convinced there’s no book that can teach us more. It doesn’t merely tell, nor at times even show, it embodies, instantiating not only all the glory that’s in there, but making us realize the staggering fact hat a human being could write such a work, could make something with that much feeling, something so full of everything that makes our lives fuller. To know that such a man was out there and that he could give us such a work restores hope to even the most jaded among us.

Wow oh wow oh wow.  If it’s possible to have a literary crush on someone, I have one on Jack Murnighan, and I’m ready to make this the bookish summer of love. Seriously.

You know there’s at least one classic you want to read and have been making excuses about. Go buy it. And Beowulf on the Beach. And read them together. Why?  Because Jack Murnighan makes the classics seem not just accessible but inviting, exciting, and unmissable.

Go on. You know you wanna.

While you’re at it, you may as well sign up for Ann and Michael’s summer reading challenge, visit the Books on the Nightstand YouTube channel to view videos of Jack reading from Beowulf on the Beach, and follow Jack on Twitter.

20 Responses

  1. [...] Book Review: Beowulf on the Beach by Jack Murnighan [...]

  2. Ooh I wanna! This book sounds wonderful. I love the classics, love Great Expectations and One Hundred Years. I want to read Moby Dick and Ulysses, too! Just waiting for the right time..

  3. Does he talk about Pride and Prejudice? Because I need something to motivate me to read that one…so I can also then read P&P&Zombies.

    • He does talk about P & P, which I never really loved, and he makes some interesting points about it that made me want to revisit it. Definitely pick this one up. I swear, you’ll end up wanting to read all 50 of the books he talks about, then you’ll be wishing he’d just hurry up and write a sequel already so you could read 50 more.

  4. I loved BEOWULF ON THE BEACH, too! I staff recc’d it, haha.

    I hope you’re liking Jane Eyre. It’s one of my favorites :)

  5. There are at least 47 classics that I want to read and have been making excuses about – but now I want to read this first.

  6. I, too, have really enjoyed picking away at this book. His descriptions make me laugh, but at the same time you can feel his highest respect for the books he discusses.

    Lezlie

  7. Jack sounds like a person i would like to meet and now I feel the need to read his book!!!

  8. What a clever concept for a book, and one sure to bring renewed interest in some classic works of literature.

    But I don’t know if I could ever make it through Moby Dick again!

  9. This is a book I’ve been wondering about. Thanks for reviewing it.

  10. Hm. I haven’t read Beowulf. I wonder if Murnighan even mentions that classic in this coincidentally titled book…?

    Anyways, I’d like to read this. I’m sure many of Murnighan’s claims border on sacrilege and I’m sure there are cases where he claims a book is way better than it is, but if he so convincingly recommends the excellent “One Hundred Years of Solitude”, there’s little I can do to resist.

  11. [...] Book Review: Beowulf on the Beach by Jack Murnighan [...]

  12. I’ll definitely be adding this one to my list…and I agree whole-heartedly about GREAT EXPECTATIONS. In spite of not being able to get past the opening chapter as a teenager, I loved it after picking it back up last year.

  13. I had never even heard of this book before you mentioned it to me on Twitter yesterday. This really sounds great!

  14. [...] pulled into the story rather than tangled up in phrasing. Jack Murnighan also points this out in Beowulf on the Beach by saying “it takes a masterful hand to write prose that feels so uncrafted,” and I [...]

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  16. [...] several shelves full of unread books, I’ve been trying to limit my purchases of new ones, but a great review of Jack Murnighan’s Beowulf on the Beach: What to Love and What to Skip in Literature’s [...]

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