The first full day of classes is just around the corner. Here are twenty novels about all things academic that should help ease the transition back into educational endeavors. Click on titles to view and reserve books in the Library's catalog.
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Originally published in 1954, this comic novel follows Jim Dixon, a history professor at a British university who hates his job, among other things, but is terrified of losing it. This book, and two others on this list, were candidates for the funniest novel ever according to the New York Times Paper Cuts blog.
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The Rule of Four
by Ian Caldwell & Dustin Thomason
In this thriller from 2004, two Princeton students find the key to deciphering a Renaissance text but their work is interrupted when a fellow student of the work is murdered.
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Pulitzer Prize winner Chabon’s poignant, comic novel about philandering English professor struggling to finish his second novel, a brilliant but disturbed student, and the host of characters surrounding them.
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English professor Kate Fansler solves crimes with a literary flair. In this award-winning mystery she investigates the harassment and eventual murder of the first woman professor in Harvard University’s English department.
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A rookie high school teacher is forced to fight against teen-age gangsters. Originally published in 1953, Hunter’s novel dramatizes the perceived rise in juvenile delinquency. Made into a movie in 1955.
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Kidd, a renowned graphic designer, made his debut as a novelist with this fast-paced satire of art school in the 1950s.
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Published in 1984, this satiric novel by the British professor Lodge details the professional and romantic competition of a group of English scholars.
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Professor of philology Dr. Moritz-Maria von Igelfeld, who is also the hero of The Finer Points of Sausage Dogs and Portuguese Irregular Verbs jumps from one intrigue to another in his comedic quest for respect.
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When published in 1971, this novel was praised as the first book to accurately depict the rigors of life in law school. Made into an award winning film in 1973.
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Sex scandals, smear campaigns, and behind-the-scenes deals are all part of the election for student body president at Winwood High in this darkly comic novel. Made into a movie in 1999.
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A married writing professor's captivation with a talented student leads to his ruin in the bitingly funny novel.
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Forced to retire because of alleged racism, classics professor Coleman Silk harbors a secret that would shock even his most ardent accuser. Roth's novel won the PEN/Faulkner Award in 2001.
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Over the course of one weekend, English professor William Henry Devereaux manages to have his nose slashed, find that his secretary writes better fiction than he does, confront his father in an abandoned amusement park, and threaten to execute a goose. He does not execute the goose.
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Oxford University is the setting for Sayers’ classic academic mystery featuring Lord Peter Wimsey. Originally published in 1935.
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Lee Fiora is a scholarship student from Indiana at a prestigious New England prep school in Sittenfeld’s perceptive debut novel about adolescence, high school, and heart break.
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English Professor Beth Austin solves mysteries by mining classic literature for clues. In this novel, the key to solving a mystery from her mother’s past may lie in the works of Charles Dickens.
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Moo
by Jane Smiley
A Midwestern university nicknamed Moo U for its devotion to agriculture is the setting for Pulitzer Prize winner Smiley’s darkly comic send-up of the modern university.
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Originally published in 1962, this acclaimed novel tells the story of a young, unorthodox teacher and her special relationship with six students.
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A group of Greek scholars at a New England university share a deadly secret in Tartt’s suspenseful, disturbing debut novel.
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Wolfe drew on extensive observations at Stanford and Michigan to create this tale of a wide-eyed freshman's experience at a sex and athletics-obsessed contemporary university.
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