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Summer reading for freshmen
Is the Bible your idea of summer reading? How about taking "The
Communist Manifesto" to the beach? Or cozying up in a hammock to "The
Origin of Species?"
While not everyone's idea of vacation books, these works were on UC Berkeley's
10th annual summer reading list for incoming freshmen. This summer, for
the first time, the books were chosen not by faculty or academic staff members,
but by freshmen and sophomores. Their choices:
- The Origin of Species by Charles Darwin
- The Postman by David Brin
- White Noise by Don DeLillo
- Red Sky at Morning by Richard Bradford
- A Brief History of Time: From the Big Bang to Black Holes by
Stephen Hawking
- In Mad Love and War by Joy Harjo
- Bastard Out of Carolina by Dorothy Allison
- The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx
- The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
- The Old Testament
- The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
- Sometimes a Great Notion by Ken Kesey
- In the Skin of a Lion by Michael Ondaatje
- Even Cowgirls Get the Blues by Tom Robbins
- America Is in the Heart: A Personal History by Carlos Bulosan
- To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
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