Some great American books by Dallas Lore Sharp

(12 User reviews)   1960
By Nicholas Williams Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Collected
Sharp, Dallas Lore, 1870-1929 Sharp, Dallas Lore, 1870-1929
English
Ever wonder what classic American literature actually felt like to the people who first read it? Sharp doesn't just tell you about Moby-Dick or Walden—he *shares* the jolt, the wonder, the sheer thrill of meeting these books for the first time. He writes as though he's sitting next to you, pointing out all the hidden gems in stories you thought you knew. If you've ever struggled to see why old books still matter, Sharp hands you the key. It’s like having a smart, excitable friend whose excitement for these books becomes absolutely contagious.
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So I picked up this book by Dallas Lore Sharp—a guy from way back when people wore hats and wrote letters—thinking it'd be a dusty old list of 'must reads.' Instead, I got a front-row seat to someone who reads books like they’re alive. Sharp takes you by the elbow and says, 'Look here, *this* is the part that made me sit up straight.' And you do.

The Story

There’s not a single plot, but more a string of passionate conversations about American books Sharp loves: Hawthorne’s weirdness, Thoreau’s radical simplicity, then lesser-known voices that feel like old friends. He talks about growing pains in American writing, our distinct national swagger, and those moments when a book becomes myth. Shapiro doesn’t bash textbooks; he just shows remarkable warmth for stories that make him laugh or feel small. There’s a chapter about Melville that had me flipping back through Moby-Dick. The sense is one of rediscovery.

Why You Should Read It

Because Sharp makes classics feel like mysteries again. I loved his pure enjoyment—I noticed he’s never afraid to flat-out say a sentence hit him. Modern critics do that stick-up voice; Sharp cheerleads. He gave me the vocabulary for what I felt reading these books: recognition that they’re fiercely weird documents made by lonely outsiders guessing at meaning. My favorite passages tackle Hawthorne’s guilt. Another notes how Franklin’s autobiography misses all the interesting things he did: Sharp revels in contradictions. Reading this feels spiritually refreshing compared to posts that just vibe-off facts. Also you finish feeling smarter.

Final Verdict

If you already skip intros and keep Great American Novels stack—or you want to but worry they’re snooty—this is for you. Also great for people who just need a new book to gush about. Think of it not as homework but banter. Pick it up between, say, Saramago and Septimus Heap. Those who want validation that Herman Melville and Henry David Thoreau belong together (they do) and deserve complex dorks who love tough stories will re-read clipped passages. Get comfy and high-five Sharp’s quiet love affair lines. Afterwards you’ll want the real thing just to be cross-checked by wise company.



⚖️ License Information

This masterpiece is free from copyright limitations. You are welcome to share this with anyone.

Paul Brown
8 months ago

Looking at the bibliography alone, the cross-referencing of different chapters makes it a great study tool. The price-to-value ratio here is simply unbeatable.

Paul Garcia
2 months ago

It effectively synthesizes complex ideas into a coherent whole.

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4.5 out of 5 (12 User reviews )

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