If youâve been wondering what Art Garfunkel has been up to lately, the answer is that it seems that heâs been reading. A lot.
The lanky, curly-haired number two guy for the seminal folk-rock band Simon & Garfunkel has been keeping track of every single thing he has read from June 1968 until October 2013 and heâs posted all of them  – 1,195 texts — on his website. The first item on his list is Jean-Jacques Rousseauâs Confessions and the last is Witold Gombrowiczâs Cosmos. In between, Garfunkel has knocked through some seriously daunting tomes âWar and Peace, Ulysses, Middlemarch, Remembrance of Things Past and Immanuel Kantâs Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals. He even reportedly read the entire Random House Dictionary. His tastes generally run towards the greats of the Western Canon with some more pulpy works thrown in along the way. J.K. Rowling, Anne Rice and Dan Brown make appearances, as does E. L. Jamesâs Fifty Shades of Grey. For those who find it daunting to look at a list of 1,1195 books, Garfunkel also provides a list of his 157 favorites, which includes many great public domain works found in our Free eBooks and Free Audio Books collections. You can 15 of Art’s favorites here:
- Austen, Jane - Pride & Prejudice
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Bronte, Charlotte - Jane Eyre
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle from Amazon – Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Bronte, Emily - Wuthering Heights
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Cervantes - Don Quixote
- iPad/iPhone (Vol 1 – Vol 2) – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Dickens, Charles - Bleak House
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Kindle from Amazon – Read Online Now
- Dostoevsky, Fyodor - The Idiot
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Doyle, Arthur Conan - The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Joyce, James - A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Joyce, James - Ulysses
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Hypertext – Read Online Now
- Proust, Marcel - Swann’s Way
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle (mobi) – ePub – Read Online Now
- Rousseau, Jean-Jacques -Â The Confessions
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats
- Tolstoy, Leo - Anna Karenina
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Tolstoy, Leo - War and Peace
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Wells, H.G. – A Short History of the World
- iPad/iPhone – Kindle + Other Formats – Read Online Now
- Woolf, Virginia - A Room of One’s Own
- Read Online Now
âI read for the reading pleasure, not for the gold star,â Garfunkel told Nick Paumgarten of the New Yorker in an interview a few years back. âReading is a way to take downtime and make it stimulating. If youâre in the waiting room of a dentistâs office and donât want to twiddle your thumbs, you turn to Tolstoy.â
Garfunkelâs list, or “library” as his website calls it, creates an expectantly intimate portrait of the artist. In the winter 1970, when Simon & Garfunkel released their biggest selling album, Like a Bridge Over Troubled Water, just as the duo was breaking up, Garfunkel blew through Moby Dick and Goetheâs The Sorrows of Young Werther before moving on to Jean-Paul Sartreâs Nausea and then later Bertrand Russellâs The Conquest of Happiness. When the duo reunited to play their famous concert in Central Park in 1981, Garfunkel polished off Dickens’Â Nicholas Nickleby. And when Simon & Garfunkel was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in January 1990, he was reading Anthony Trollopeâs An Autobiography.
The one type of book he doesnât read is postmodern literature. His list of some 1195 books contains no mention of the likes of Don DeLillo, Donald Barthelme or Thomas Pynchon. âI tried Gravityâs Rainbow, and I thought it was fraudulent,â Garfunkel said.
Image above taken by Eddie Mallin.
via @pickover
Related Content:Â
Steven Soderbergh Posts a List of Everything He Watched and Read in 2009
Joseph Brodskyâs Reading List For Having an Intelligent Conversation
Carl Saganâs Undergrad Reading List: 40 Essential Texts for a Well-Rounded Thinker
David Bowieâs Top 100 Books
Jonathan Crow is a Los Angeles-based writer and filmmaker whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The Hollywood Reporter, and other publications. You can follow him at @jonccrow. And check out his blog Veeptopus, featuring one new drawing of a vice president with an octopus on his head daily.  The Veeptopus store is here.
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Art Garfunkel Lists 1195 Books He Read Over 45 Years, Plus His 157 Favorites (Many Free)
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