For most of my life, I had generally avoided novels written before I was born. They were stodgy. The language was outdated. They were boring. Even if they were significant in the historical sense, I saw them as the literary equivalent of reading the King James Version of the Bible.
I was wrong, of course, but I didn’t realize that until the last decade or so. I first started reading English translations of some Russian classics. I came to love Leo Tolstoy’s “Anna Karenina” and Fyodor Dostoevsky’s “The Brothers Karamazov,” among others.
Then a friend introduced me to German novelist Hermann Hesse. To one extent or another, I found that I loved “Steppenwolf,” “Siddhartha,” “Narcissus and Goldmund” and “The Glass Bead Game.” I’ve read “Narcissus and Goldmund” four times so far — and I keep finding new things to appreciate about it.
But I was slow to appreciate the English writer Charles Dickens — and I’ve come to understand that this has meant depriving myself of a kind of literary joy that I haven’t experienced for a long time. I just finished the Dickens novel, “David Copperfield,” a few hours ago — and I’d like to suggest that this book is better than almost any fiction that’s been written since I was born.
I’m left feeling serious regret that I’ve had such a huge hole in my education about literature and human existence.

Listen to Samuel’s ancient warning to Israel about anointing a ruler: ‘…you shall be his slaves’
We sometimes need help to finish a long race we’ve decided to run
By end of Pooh movie, I wanted to stay in the Hundred-Acre Wood
To become extraordinary people, we can’t behave in ordinary ways
Steve Jobs goes out as iconoclastic visionary many of us long to be
Bureaucrats will find a way to punish you, so don’t make ’em mad
Head and heart don’t agree about love, including Valentine’s Day
Loving a depressed person means holding tightly on trips through hell
In the middle of world’s madness, happiness makes me think of her