1 00:00:02,920 --> 00:00:05,360 Speaker 1: Hi, and welcome back to the Carol mark Wood Show 2 00:00:05,400 --> 00:00:10,039 Speaker 1: on iHeartRadio. My guest today is Christopher's Kalia. Christopher is 3 00:00:10,080 --> 00:00:13,200 Speaker 1: a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, where he 4 00:00:13,240 --> 00:00:16,599 Speaker 1: writes about arts, culture, and higher education, and he's the 5 00:00:16,640 --> 00:00:19,880 Speaker 1: author of the new book Thirteen Novels Conservatives will Love 6 00:00:20,000 --> 00:00:21,360 Speaker 1: but probably haven't read. 7 00:00:21,680 --> 00:00:23,439 Speaker 2: Hi, Christopher, so nice to have you on. 8 00:00:23,920 --> 00:00:25,799 Speaker 3: Hi, Carol, thank you for having me. It's great to 9 00:00:25,800 --> 00:00:26,200 Speaker 3: talk to you. 10 00:00:26,480 --> 00:00:26,600 Speaker 4: So. 11 00:00:26,640 --> 00:00:29,159 Speaker 1: I'm extremely excited about your new book, which I have 12 00:00:29,320 --> 00:00:33,320 Speaker 1: right here. And I have to say that I immediately thought, oh, 13 00:00:33,440 --> 00:00:36,640 Speaker 1: I will have read these thirteen books. I am really 14 00:00:36,720 --> 00:00:39,560 Speaker 1: smart and I'm a conservative, so. 15 00:00:39,720 --> 00:00:41,960 Speaker 2: I am sure I've read these books. 16 00:00:42,200 --> 00:00:44,479 Speaker 1: And as my daughter pointed out to me, when I 17 00:00:44,520 --> 00:00:48,120 Speaker 1: told her I hadn't read any of the books, none 18 00:00:48,159 --> 00:00:51,520 Speaker 1: of them, she said, well, that's why he wrote the book. Actually, 19 00:00:51,520 --> 00:00:54,520 Speaker 1: that is what she's like, if you'd read them, then 20 00:00:54,640 --> 00:00:57,280 Speaker 1: he wouldn't need the book, which is a solid point. 21 00:00:57,400 --> 00:01:01,760 Speaker 1: I thought, she's fifteen and she knows everything. For what 22 00:01:01,880 --> 00:01:05,160 Speaker 1: made you write this book? Is it that people like 23 00:01:05,240 --> 00:01:06,600 Speaker 1: me actually haven't read them? 24 00:01:07,640 --> 00:01:10,880 Speaker 5: Well, people like you, I think conservatives in general who 25 00:01:11,040 --> 00:01:14,679 Speaker 5: like fiction tend to have a pretty limited range. 26 00:01:14,720 --> 00:01:16,360 Speaker 3: I don't mean that as an insult, but that's. 27 00:01:16,240 --> 00:01:17,039 Speaker 2: Just feel insulted. 28 00:01:17,120 --> 00:01:19,240 Speaker 3: But okay, let. 29 00:01:19,080 --> 00:01:22,440 Speaker 5: Me put it this way. People conservatives who love fiction 30 00:01:22,560 --> 00:01:25,679 Speaker 5: talk about great fiction. They talk about the same handful 31 00:01:25,720 --> 00:01:27,840 Speaker 5: of novels, and most of those books are great. I 32 00:01:27,880 --> 00:01:31,680 Speaker 5: think of like nineteen eighty four Bravey World. Everybody loves 33 00:01:31,680 --> 00:01:35,000 Speaker 5: those novels. Yeah, or if you want to get a 34 00:01:35,120 --> 00:01:42,440 Speaker 5: Catholic about it, Brideshead revisited something by Iron Randy Tom 35 00:01:42,440 --> 00:01:45,399 Speaker 5: Wolfe of course, and these are great novels for the 36 00:01:45,440 --> 00:01:50,160 Speaker 5: most part. But I think we limit ourselves. And by 37 00:01:50,160 --> 00:01:52,200 Speaker 5: the way, those are just the English language original ones. 38 00:01:52,240 --> 00:01:54,480 Speaker 5: I didn't even mention the Russians. But we tend to 39 00:01:54,520 --> 00:01:59,040 Speaker 5: limit ourselves when we talk about that handful of novels. 40 00:01:59,280 --> 00:02:03,160 Speaker 5: Because it's great as they are, they're really just a fraction, 41 00:02:03,400 --> 00:02:06,960 Speaker 5: just the tip of the iceberg of great literature that 42 00:02:07,040 --> 00:02:11,840 Speaker 5: touches on conservative ideas and principles. So this book was 43 00:02:11,880 --> 00:02:15,440 Speaker 5: an attempt to expand, you could say, expand the conservative 44 00:02:15,480 --> 00:02:19,360 Speaker 5: canon a little bit. These are all great novels. I 45 00:02:19,400 --> 00:02:22,200 Speaker 5: think you don't have to be conservative to recognize these 46 00:02:22,200 --> 00:02:28,480 Speaker 5: are great novels. But conservatives will recognize the value of 47 00:02:28,520 --> 00:02:33,359 Speaker 5: the principles and ideals expressed in these works, maybe more 48 00:02:33,360 --> 00:02:36,280 Speaker 5: than they would in other works. So while you didn't 49 00:02:36,880 --> 00:02:39,880 Speaker 5: recognize any of the novels I put in there, hopefully 50 00:02:39,919 --> 00:02:42,200 Speaker 5: you would have recognized at least many of the authors 51 00:02:42,200 --> 00:02:44,880 Speaker 5: and say, oh, yeah, yeah, I know Nathaniel Hawthorne, but 52 00:02:44,919 --> 00:02:47,840 Speaker 5: I've never heard of that novel. Or I love Evelinois, 53 00:02:48,080 --> 00:02:50,200 Speaker 5: but I've never read Scoop exactly. 54 00:02:50,360 --> 00:02:51,720 Speaker 2: That's what happened to me. 55 00:02:54,120 --> 00:02:56,919 Speaker 5: Yeah, And it's the idea was not to make people think, 56 00:02:57,000 --> 00:02:59,880 Speaker 5: oh gosh, I really haven't read anything, because I know 57 00:03:00,040 --> 00:03:05,160 Speaker 5: that's not a great feeling. Instead, it's the vibe, as 58 00:03:05,240 --> 00:03:08,040 Speaker 5: the kids say, I'm going for is oh good. There's 59 00:03:08,080 --> 00:03:11,800 Speaker 5: a lot more great books I can read than the 60 00:03:11,800 --> 00:03:13,000 Speaker 5: ones I already knew about. 61 00:03:13,720 --> 00:03:16,320 Speaker 2: What's the most important one on the list? 62 00:03:18,120 --> 00:03:21,480 Speaker 3: That that is a tough question, an unfair question, even, 63 00:03:21,880 --> 00:03:22,600 Speaker 3: I mean, you. 64 00:03:22,600 --> 00:03:26,120 Speaker 1: Made me feel bad for not reading this, get you know, Yeah, 65 00:03:26,919 --> 00:03:27,359 Speaker 1: I think. 66 00:03:27,240 --> 00:03:30,080 Speaker 5: The most important one is probably not going to be 67 00:03:30,120 --> 00:03:33,120 Speaker 5: everybody's favorite, but it is my favorite, and that's Waverley 68 00:03:33,200 --> 00:03:36,800 Speaker 5: by Walter Scott, published in eighteen fourteen. Walter Scott was 69 00:03:36,840 --> 00:03:40,760 Speaker 5: the pre eminent novelist of the Romantic period, one of 70 00:03:40,800 --> 00:03:46,200 Speaker 5: the most really the most popular novelist in Europe and 71 00:03:46,520 --> 00:03:50,440 Speaker 5: in the United States too for a very long time. 72 00:03:51,400 --> 00:03:53,760 Speaker 5: But he's just fallen out of fashion, in large part 73 00:03:53,800 --> 00:03:56,160 Speaker 5: because of what his novels were about. His novels were 74 00:03:56,200 --> 00:04:03,920 Speaker 5: about nobility and honor and the importance of tradition. The 75 00:04:04,160 --> 00:04:09,160 Speaker 5: conservative intellectual Russell Kirk said that what Scott did was 76 00:04:09,360 --> 00:04:13,120 Speaker 5: take Edmund Burke's ideas from the reflections of the revolution 77 00:04:13,240 --> 00:04:18,640 Speaker 5: in France and make them more accessible by telling stories 78 00:04:18,920 --> 00:04:23,400 Speaker 5: that illustrate those ideas. Walter Scott just had an enormous 79 00:04:23,440 --> 00:04:28,520 Speaker 5: influence on all of European and American culture and thought 80 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:32,200 Speaker 5: for a long time, and he's just kind of fallen 81 00:04:32,200 --> 00:04:35,120 Speaker 5: by the wayside for all sorts of reasons. I think 82 00:04:35,160 --> 00:04:40,080 Speaker 5: he's the person I think it's most important for conservatives 83 00:04:40,680 --> 00:04:43,760 Speaker 5: to return to because of I think the greatness of 84 00:04:43,800 --> 00:04:46,680 Speaker 5: his novels and the significance of his ideas. 85 00:04:46,960 --> 00:04:49,440 Speaker 1: Walter Scott writing it down, going to order all his 86 00:04:49,520 --> 00:04:50,680 Speaker 1: books right after. 87 00:04:50,440 --> 00:04:53,160 Speaker 3: This, Well, don't bother with all of them. They're a lot, 88 00:04:53,360 --> 00:04:55,440 Speaker 3: and they are of varying quality. 89 00:04:55,720 --> 00:04:58,839 Speaker 5: He wrote, I think twenty eight novels over the course 90 00:04:58,880 --> 00:05:00,560 Speaker 5: of sixteen years or so. 91 00:05:00,880 --> 00:05:05,520 Speaker 2: My book's on Evey secondhand, so yeah, like three dollars each. 92 00:05:05,880 --> 00:05:08,920 Speaker 5: Yeah, But Waverley I have here, and then Ivanhoe is 93 00:05:09,839 --> 00:05:12,440 Speaker 5: probably his best known novel that is certainly also worth reading. 94 00:05:13,200 --> 00:05:18,279 Speaker 1: I saw someone yelling at you on X about this book, 95 00:05:18,520 --> 00:05:23,360 Speaker 1: about this is something that's unnecessary right now, and it's 96 00:05:23,400 --> 00:05:26,119 Speaker 1: the last thing conservatives need is to be reading fiction. 97 00:05:26,320 --> 00:05:28,720 Speaker 2: How dare you? What do you say to that? 98 00:05:29,480 --> 00:05:31,839 Speaker 5: Well, I think people like that believe that the only 99 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:35,720 Speaker 5: real way of knowing anything is to read history or 100 00:05:36,920 --> 00:05:41,920 Speaker 5: political science, or biographies or self improvement books. And I 101 00:05:41,960 --> 00:05:45,240 Speaker 5: think that's a pretty commonly held belief on the left, 102 00:05:45,279 --> 00:05:48,760 Speaker 5: and I think probably especially on the right. And it's 103 00:05:48,839 --> 00:05:52,640 Speaker 5: unfortunate because the value of fiction and of literature in general, 104 00:05:52,680 --> 00:05:55,400 Speaker 5: I would certainly include poetry in this is that it 105 00:05:56,000 --> 00:06:00,200 Speaker 5: offers a different way of knowing. It offers wisdom in 106 00:06:00,240 --> 00:06:03,280 Speaker 5: a way that you can't get through history and nonfiction. 107 00:06:04,040 --> 00:06:08,000 Speaker 5: Most most importantly, or most obviously, it does it with 108 00:06:08,080 --> 00:06:12,160 Speaker 5: beautiful language in a way that most nonfiction writers don't 109 00:06:12,200 --> 00:06:19,440 Speaker 5: really aspire to. And you know, the conservatives especially should 110 00:06:19,520 --> 00:06:23,080 Speaker 5: value the novel because it's not really an old form. 111 00:06:23,120 --> 00:06:26,960 Speaker 5: It's it's only only a few centuries old. But some 112 00:06:27,000 --> 00:06:32,320 Speaker 5: of the greatest creative minds in Western history have expressed 113 00:06:32,320 --> 00:06:37,760 Speaker 5: their ideas and their craft through the novel. So I 114 00:06:37,760 --> 00:06:41,000 Speaker 5: think I think those are important reasons conservatives should should 115 00:06:41,000 --> 00:06:43,640 Speaker 5: read fiction. And certainly I'm not saying you should read 116 00:06:43,720 --> 00:06:46,600 Speaker 5: only fiction, but we need to do a better job 117 00:06:46,640 --> 00:06:51,200 Speaker 5: of recognizing the importance of storytelling. Rodreer a few years 118 00:06:51,200 --> 00:06:54,640 Speaker 5: ago and The American Conservative wrote that, you know, and 119 00:06:54,960 --> 00:06:58,000 Speaker 5: this is a common complaint, conservatives are just bad at storytelling, 120 00:06:58,040 --> 00:07:01,159 Speaker 5: or we don't understand the significant of storytelling. But the 121 00:07:01,200 --> 00:07:04,840 Speaker 5: fact is that myth and stories are how most people 122 00:07:05,320 --> 00:07:10,920 Speaker 5: come to believe things and to cherish ideas. Argument and 123 00:07:11,040 --> 00:07:14,640 Speaker 5: reason and data. Those are obviously important things, but those 124 00:07:14,640 --> 00:07:16,360 Speaker 5: aren't the only way we know things. 125 00:07:16,760 --> 00:07:17,920 Speaker 2: Do you have a favorite book? 126 00:07:18,160 --> 00:07:20,000 Speaker 3: All around you are just. 127 00:07:21,440 --> 00:07:22,560 Speaker 2: I ask her questions. 128 00:07:23,000 --> 00:07:26,880 Speaker 1: That's right, I'm preparing you for your eventual MSNBC with 129 00:07:27,080 --> 00:07:27,960 Speaker 1: John Mica. 130 00:07:28,240 --> 00:07:31,680 Speaker 5: So well, No, my new favorite book is thirteen Novels 131 00:07:31,720 --> 00:07:34,480 Speaker 5: Conservatives will love, But I have it. 132 00:07:34,640 --> 00:07:35,320 Speaker 2: I haven't read. 133 00:07:36,760 --> 00:07:39,920 Speaker 5: My favorite book that I write about, my favorite favorite 134 00:07:39,960 --> 00:07:43,760 Speaker 5: novel I write about, And there is probably my Antonia 135 00:07:43,880 --> 00:07:47,920 Speaker 5: by Willa Cather, and it is just a It is 136 00:07:48,040 --> 00:07:51,800 Speaker 5: a beautiful novel about I guess you could say the 137 00:07:51,840 --> 00:07:56,280 Speaker 5: immigrant experience and more more broadly, the American dream. The 138 00:07:56,320 --> 00:07:59,800 Speaker 5: title character, Antonia, comes from Europe. She and her family 139 00:08:00,120 --> 00:08:05,480 Speaker 5: from Europe in the late nineteenth century and encounter many struggles. 140 00:08:05,880 --> 00:08:11,720 Speaker 5: She eventually finds her footing, raises a huge and happy family, 141 00:08:12,120 --> 00:08:15,280 Speaker 5: and the person telling us all about her, the narrator, 142 00:08:15,920 --> 00:08:21,000 Speaker 5: is not an immigrant, but he is orphaned at a 143 00:08:21,040 --> 00:08:25,000 Speaker 5: young age, moves from Virginia to Nebraska, and grows up 144 00:08:25,000 --> 00:08:29,400 Speaker 5: with Antonia. Is just in love with her and her 145 00:08:29,520 --> 00:08:32,880 Speaker 5: immigrant peers. But he also is a great emblem of 146 00:08:32,920 --> 00:08:35,800 Speaker 5: the American dream because he goes on from these kind 147 00:08:35,840 --> 00:08:40,880 Speaker 5: of unpromising origins to become a very successful businessman, a 148 00:08:40,960 --> 00:08:45,080 Speaker 5: lawyer for a railway, and he helps really shape the 149 00:08:45,160 --> 00:08:48,240 Speaker 5: United States as we know it out of his love 150 00:08:48,280 --> 00:08:52,120 Speaker 5: for the country that has become. I think my favorite 151 00:08:52,679 --> 00:08:54,480 Speaker 5: novel certainly that I wrote about here. 152 00:08:55,360 --> 00:08:57,360 Speaker 1: So you touched on this a little bit, but it 153 00:08:57,440 --> 00:09:00,240 Speaker 1: is sort of the era of learn as much as 154 00:09:00,240 --> 00:09:02,079 Speaker 1: you can, you know, when you're at the gym, listen 155 00:09:02,160 --> 00:09:06,319 Speaker 1: to a podcast, and always be kind of processing information, 156 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:10,600 Speaker 1: and there is a sense of like it's wasting time 157 00:09:10,720 --> 00:09:15,640 Speaker 1: to read nonfiction. I'm sorry to read fiction, and actually 158 00:09:15,679 --> 00:09:17,840 Speaker 1: the show has I've touched on it a lot on 159 00:09:17,920 --> 00:09:20,920 Speaker 1: this show because it was my New Year's resolution last 160 00:09:20,960 --> 00:09:22,640 Speaker 1: year to read more fiction. I don't get to do 161 00:09:22,720 --> 00:09:27,920 Speaker 1: it enough. What's important about reading fiction? Why does anyone 162 00:09:27,960 --> 00:09:28,719 Speaker 1: really need it? 163 00:09:31,000 --> 00:09:33,360 Speaker 5: First of all, a really funny thing happened to me 164 00:09:33,360 --> 00:09:36,160 Speaker 5: a couple of weeks ago. I was up at one 165 00:09:36,200 --> 00:09:40,160 Speaker 5: of my kids Saturday sporting events and a friend. 166 00:09:39,880 --> 00:09:43,120 Speaker 3: A fellow parent, arrived. She had a book. I said, 167 00:09:43,480 --> 00:09:45,920 Speaker 3: what are you reading? And she said, oh, it's just 168 00:09:46,000 --> 00:09:46,480 Speaker 3: a novel. 169 00:09:47,000 --> 00:09:49,520 Speaker 5: And it's almost kind of like this sense that novels 170 00:09:49,520 --> 00:09:53,120 Speaker 5: can only be guilty pleasures. But you know, it was 171 00:09:53,280 --> 00:09:56,120 Speaker 5: not a trashy novel. It was a pretty serious work 172 00:09:56,240 --> 00:10:01,040 Speaker 5: of literary fiction. I mean, nothing obnoxious, pretentious, but it 173 00:10:01,160 --> 00:10:06,000 Speaker 5: you know, it wasn't fluff. And and I've talked I 174 00:10:06,080 --> 00:10:08,240 Speaker 5: in the ensuing conversation, I learned that this woman knows 175 00:10:08,280 --> 00:10:11,480 Speaker 5: a lot about fiction, a lot about the novel, and 176 00:10:11,480 --> 00:10:14,440 Speaker 5: it was We had a great conversation. But I asked 177 00:10:14,440 --> 00:10:16,080 Speaker 5: her about it later. I said, why did you say 178 00:10:16,720 --> 00:10:19,880 Speaker 5: only a novel, right, And she said because that she 179 00:10:19,920 --> 00:10:21,760 Speaker 5: assumes that's what how most people are going to react. 180 00:10:21,800 --> 00:10:24,839 Speaker 5: I think she's exactly right. As you're explaining, you were 181 00:10:24,880 --> 00:10:28,880 Speaker 5: just explaining something inferior about fiction. And that's not a 182 00:10:28,920 --> 00:10:30,720 Speaker 5: new idea. I mean, it goes back to the very 183 00:10:30,720 --> 00:10:33,400 Speaker 5: origins of the novel in Britain, because there, I mean, 184 00:10:33,800 --> 00:10:35,840 Speaker 5: there are a lot of trashy novels, not not every 185 00:10:35,840 --> 00:10:39,000 Speaker 5: work of fiction is is you know, gonna going to 186 00:10:39,040 --> 00:10:39,640 Speaker 5: offer a ton. 187 00:10:39,559 --> 00:10:42,800 Speaker 1: Of money nonfiction trashy books as well. 188 00:10:43,240 --> 00:10:44,640 Speaker 3: That's exactly right too. 189 00:10:45,360 --> 00:10:48,960 Speaker 5: But I think, as I was suggesting earlier, I just 190 00:10:49,000 --> 00:10:52,439 Speaker 5: think immersing yourself in the language as it is used 191 00:10:52,480 --> 00:10:57,120 Speaker 5: by masters, and encountering beauty, those are important things. We 192 00:10:57,240 --> 00:10:59,959 Speaker 5: I think we understate the significance of beauty in particular, 193 00:11:00,120 --> 00:11:03,720 Speaker 5: or in beauty as can be expressed in language. It 194 00:11:03,840 --> 00:11:05,839 Speaker 5: is okay, I mean that that's the point of art, 195 00:11:05,960 --> 00:11:10,000 Speaker 5: is to be in awe of something beautiful and to 196 00:11:10,120 --> 00:11:15,840 Speaker 5: experience wonder that. You know, sensations and experiences like that 197 00:11:15,880 --> 00:11:19,680 Speaker 5: are certainly worthwhile. And I think you know what you 198 00:11:19,720 --> 00:11:23,960 Speaker 5: were describing that the impulse to always learn more, learn more, 199 00:11:24,040 --> 00:11:26,800 Speaker 5: learn more. I think you obviously you get you learn 200 00:11:26,840 --> 00:11:30,520 Speaker 5: about human nature in novels that in a way that 201 00:11:30,600 --> 00:11:34,560 Speaker 5: you can't through other forms of writing. You develop a 202 00:11:34,559 --> 00:11:38,040 Speaker 5: lot of studies show that you develop sympathetic powers, the 203 00:11:38,080 --> 00:11:41,360 Speaker 5: ability to understand other people, to sympathize with other people. 204 00:11:41,720 --> 00:11:46,880 Speaker 5: That doesn't necessarily necessarily make everybody who reads novels good people, 205 00:11:47,240 --> 00:11:50,839 Speaker 5: but it does help us understand each other, and that 206 00:11:51,080 --> 00:11:53,600 Speaker 5: that can be especially important. I think in a democracy, 207 00:11:53,640 --> 00:11:57,080 Speaker 5: when we need we have to engage with other people 208 00:11:57,880 --> 00:12:00,360 Speaker 5: on their level and to sympathize with them than when 209 00:12:00,360 --> 00:12:02,680 Speaker 5: we don't agree with him, I have to we have 210 00:12:02,720 --> 00:12:07,040 Speaker 5: to have good conversations with them. But it's hard to 211 00:12:07,080 --> 00:12:09,160 Speaker 5: read novels. This is really hard to read anything now 212 00:12:09,800 --> 00:12:12,000 Speaker 5: because of all the distractions out there and all of 213 00:12:12,040 --> 00:12:16,840 Speaker 5: the you know you mentioned X earlier or Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, 214 00:12:16,880 --> 00:12:21,440 Speaker 5: you know, you know, the litany and reading or doing it, praying, 215 00:12:21,600 --> 00:12:27,640 Speaker 5: doing anything that it's that takes intense concentration can be difficult. Podcasts, 216 00:12:27,640 --> 00:12:30,520 Speaker 5: for example, are great, great things to listen to when 217 00:12:30,559 --> 00:12:32,400 Speaker 5: you don't really need to concentrate and you want to 218 00:12:32,480 --> 00:12:34,720 Speaker 5: zone out and you know, as you wash the dishes 219 00:12:34,800 --> 00:12:38,280 Speaker 5: or work out, but when you're reading that that really 220 00:12:38,320 --> 00:12:41,160 Speaker 5: needs to be your focus, and we're bad at that. Now. 221 00:12:41,920 --> 00:12:44,600 Speaker 1: It's funny, it's I totally agree with you. When we're 222 00:12:44,640 --> 00:12:46,800 Speaker 1: looking at a piece of art, nobody's like, oh, this 223 00:12:46,840 --> 00:12:47,760 Speaker 1: is a waste of my time. 224 00:12:47,800 --> 00:12:51,000 Speaker 5: I could be learning something, right, Nobody goes to the 225 00:12:51,080 --> 00:12:54,800 Speaker 5: National Gallery of Art and thinks, oh boy, why do we. 226 00:12:54,760 --> 00:12:57,040 Speaker 2: Even do this anymore? When I could be learning stuff 227 00:12:57,040 --> 00:12:58,000 Speaker 2: on the podcasts? 228 00:12:58,320 --> 00:12:58,440 Speaker 3: Right? 229 00:12:58,520 --> 00:13:01,319 Speaker 2: You know what you worry about. 230 00:13:02,480 --> 00:13:05,880 Speaker 5: Well, I worry about I guess along the lines of 231 00:13:05,880 --> 00:13:08,080 Speaker 5: what I was just saying, that we're becoming something approaching 232 00:13:08,160 --> 00:13:11,360 Speaker 5: a postliterate culture. And that doesn't mean we're becoming illiterate, 233 00:13:11,440 --> 00:13:16,160 Speaker 5: but we value we value writing much less. I suspect 234 00:13:16,320 --> 00:13:19,959 Speaker 5: AI is going to present a new kind of threat 235 00:13:20,000 --> 00:13:23,000 Speaker 5: along these lines. I don't think AI is entirely bad, 236 00:13:23,880 --> 00:13:27,200 Speaker 5: but it makes it easier to not write for yourself 237 00:13:27,320 --> 00:13:31,400 Speaker 5: and not really think for yourself. And I worry about that. 238 00:13:31,480 --> 00:13:34,640 Speaker 5: As I was suggesting earlier, if we don't read great 239 00:13:34,640 --> 00:13:37,559 Speaker 5: things from the past, we are cutting ourselves off from 240 00:13:38,440 --> 00:13:43,120 Speaker 5: just an abundance of wisdom and ignorance that is important 241 00:13:43,120 --> 00:13:49,320 Speaker 5: to know too. And the less we read, the poorer 242 00:13:49,360 --> 00:13:51,360 Speaker 5: we will be at reading, and the harder it will 243 00:13:51,360 --> 00:13:53,920 Speaker 5: be for us to be good at it again. And 244 00:13:54,240 --> 00:13:56,280 Speaker 5: it doesn't necessarily keep me up at night. But as 245 00:13:56,280 --> 00:13:59,040 Speaker 5: somebody who really loves reading, I don't want to be 246 00:13:59,240 --> 00:14:01,760 Speaker 5: like then and shaking his fist at the clouds. But 247 00:14:02,679 --> 00:14:05,360 Speaker 5: a lot of the technologies we are gaining are great, 248 00:14:05,679 --> 00:14:08,240 Speaker 5: but we need to be aware of what we may 249 00:14:08,280 --> 00:14:12,520 Speaker 5: be losing if we forget about these older technologies, in 250 00:14:12,559 --> 00:14:16,040 Speaker 5: these older media and these other older forms of entertainment, 251 00:14:16,520 --> 00:14:17,640 Speaker 5: instruction and pleasure. 252 00:14:18,000 --> 00:14:19,920 Speaker 1: We're going to take a quick break and be right 253 00:14:19,960 --> 00:14:21,480 Speaker 1: back on the Carol Marcoit Show. 254 00:14:21,960 --> 00:14:26,200 Speaker 6: But first most of us go to bed, not thinking 255 00:14:26,240 --> 00:14:30,280 Speaker 6: about what goes bump in the night. We climb into bed, 256 00:14:30,760 --> 00:14:33,800 Speaker 6: turn off the lights and sleep in relative safety. 257 00:14:34,960 --> 00:14:36,520 Speaker 2: But the people of Israel. 258 00:14:36,320 --> 00:14:41,480 Speaker 6: Face NonStop threats on seven different fronts. They do have 259 00:14:41,520 --> 00:14:45,040 Speaker 6: a red alert system to warn of incoming attacks, and 260 00:14:45,200 --> 00:14:50,040 Speaker 6: last month red alerts blared nearly fifty times every single day. 261 00:14:50,840 --> 00:14:55,120 Speaker 6: Can't imagine it. The toll on families and first responders 262 00:14:55,240 --> 00:15:01,160 Speaker 6: is brutal. Right now, Israeli first responders face urgent need. 263 00:15:01,920 --> 00:15:06,160 Speaker 6: Life saving supplies are running low. That's why the work 264 00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:10,280 Speaker 6: of the international Fellowship of Christians and Jews is so critical. 265 00:15:11,120 --> 00:15:14,480 Speaker 6: Your gift of only one hundred and fifty dollars will 266 00:15:14,520 --> 00:15:20,400 Speaker 6: help provide first responders with helmets, black jackets, medical rescue bags, 267 00:15:20,440 --> 00:15:25,000 Speaker 6: and armored service vehicles to keep people alive. Your gift 268 00:15:25,080 --> 00:15:26,160 Speaker 6: is urgently needed. 269 00:15:26,720 --> 00:15:31,880 Speaker 4: Call eight eight eight for eight eight IFCJ that's eight 270 00:15:31,880 --> 00:15:36,160 Speaker 4: eight eight four eight eight four three two five, or 271 00:15:36,240 --> 00:15:42,320 Speaker 4: go online to give at IFCJ dot org. That's IFCJ 272 00:15:42,880 --> 00:15:43,560 Speaker 4: dot org. 273 00:15:47,160 --> 00:15:50,240 Speaker 1: There's always these stories now where kids get to college 274 00:15:50,480 --> 00:15:54,040 Speaker 1: and the professors are shocked at how they've never read 275 00:15:54,040 --> 00:15:56,840 Speaker 1: a book for pleasure, or they don't know how to 276 00:15:56,880 --> 00:15:58,480 Speaker 1: read a full book. They never had to do that, 277 00:15:58,600 --> 00:16:01,280 Speaker 1: never in high school anymore. How do we work around that? 278 00:16:01,440 --> 00:16:04,400 Speaker 1: How do we bring back reading as something people do? 279 00:16:04,560 --> 00:16:04,640 Speaker 3: Like? 280 00:16:04,680 --> 00:16:07,840 Speaker 1: I have three kids, two of them natural readers, carry 281 00:16:07,840 --> 00:16:11,080 Speaker 1: books around with them. The third one super into sports, 282 00:16:11,120 --> 00:16:13,280 Speaker 1: not really that as interested in reading. How do you 283 00:16:14,000 --> 00:16:16,000 Speaker 1: kind of move that kid towards reading. 284 00:16:16,800 --> 00:16:17,400 Speaker 3: I'm strung me. 285 00:16:17,520 --> 00:16:18,120 Speaker 2: I need to know. 286 00:16:18,360 --> 00:16:19,200 Speaker 3: I need to know too. 287 00:16:19,200 --> 00:16:22,520 Speaker 2: If you figured out parenting advice, I think. 288 00:16:22,320 --> 00:16:28,480 Speaker 5: For parents, it's important to remember that children appreciate reading 289 00:16:28,480 --> 00:16:31,600 Speaker 5: at different ages. I read quite a bit but I 290 00:16:31,600 --> 00:16:35,280 Speaker 5: didn't really love reading until probably when I got to college. 291 00:16:36,000 --> 00:16:38,360 Speaker 5: I read when I was growing up. I read Encyclopedia 292 00:16:38,440 --> 00:16:41,400 Speaker 5: Brown and John Belair's stories, and I enjoyed it, but 293 00:16:41,880 --> 00:16:44,200 Speaker 5: it wasn't necessarily my favorite thing to do. And I 294 00:16:44,240 --> 00:16:46,800 Speaker 5: see the same thing with my kids. There's so many 295 00:16:46,840 --> 00:16:49,640 Speaker 5: other things for them to do. They like reading, but 296 00:16:49,680 --> 00:16:52,480 Speaker 5: it's not their it's not their fault mode. And I 297 00:16:52,480 --> 00:16:55,400 Speaker 5: think that parents just need to be patient and keep 298 00:16:55,480 --> 00:16:57,760 Speaker 5: kind of reminding them that that's an option. 299 00:16:58,320 --> 00:16:59,120 Speaker 3: Give them books. 300 00:16:59,360 --> 00:17:02,360 Speaker 5: Talk about one way I really got my daughter into 301 00:17:02,440 --> 00:17:05,520 Speaker 5: reading was by having her read to me, and her 302 00:17:05,560 --> 00:17:08,320 Speaker 5: reading got so much better over the course of a 303 00:17:08,359 --> 00:17:12,320 Speaker 5: few weeks. And my knowledge of Ramona Quimby really is 304 00:17:12,840 --> 00:17:19,040 Speaker 5: quite aggressive. For yeah, a man approaching fifty. I think teachers. 305 00:17:19,240 --> 00:17:21,560 Speaker 5: I talk to a lot of college professors who say 306 00:17:21,600 --> 00:17:24,040 Speaker 5: the same thing, and I don't blame them for scaling 307 00:17:24,080 --> 00:17:24,879 Speaker 5: back on the reading. 308 00:17:25,760 --> 00:17:26,680 Speaker 2: I kind of blame them. 309 00:17:26,680 --> 00:17:28,399 Speaker 3: I don't know, I blame them a little. 310 00:17:28,720 --> 00:17:31,880 Speaker 5: It is I guess the path of less resistance anyway, 311 00:17:33,359 --> 00:17:36,720 Speaker 5: but especially for lower level classes, I get it. For 312 00:17:36,840 --> 00:17:39,320 Speaker 5: upper level classes, I have much less patience for it, 313 00:17:39,359 --> 00:17:41,719 Speaker 5: but I guess it would a lot of it just 314 00:17:41,760 --> 00:17:45,879 Speaker 5: begins with or maybe begins in high schools or junior highs, 315 00:17:46,560 --> 00:17:50,080 Speaker 5: and policies we're seeing going around the country about cracking 316 00:17:50,119 --> 00:17:54,119 Speaker 5: down on cell phones and schools. I think that that 317 00:17:54,160 --> 00:17:57,679 Speaker 5: would be a big help. But I do think, you know, 318 00:17:57,760 --> 00:18:01,200 Speaker 5: my hunches as a conservative, my my instinct is that 319 00:18:01,560 --> 00:18:04,960 Speaker 5: things like this begin with the family, and it is 320 00:18:05,040 --> 00:18:05,840 Speaker 5: a that's not. 321 00:18:05,800 --> 00:18:06,840 Speaker 2: The answer I was looking for. 322 00:18:07,000 --> 00:18:09,960 Speaker 3: Yeah, sorry, you know, but again, I'm struggling with the 323 00:18:10,000 --> 00:18:10,440 Speaker 3: same thing. 324 00:18:10,480 --> 00:18:12,720 Speaker 5: And that's why that's why I'm trying to stick to 325 00:18:12,760 --> 00:18:14,679 Speaker 5: it and trying not to get too frustrated, because you 326 00:18:14,720 --> 00:18:17,200 Speaker 5: never you never really know what's going to hit with 327 00:18:17,280 --> 00:18:19,560 Speaker 5: the with the child, when when they're reading, and what's 328 00:18:19,600 --> 00:18:22,879 Speaker 5: going to take And it is also possible that you know, 329 00:18:23,240 --> 00:18:25,640 Speaker 5: a kid just doesn't isn't going to like reading very much. 330 00:18:26,480 --> 00:18:29,240 Speaker 5: That that's unfortunate. I can deal with it. That's unfortunate, 331 00:18:29,280 --> 00:18:32,720 Speaker 5: But I hope, I hope the child is still possibly 332 00:18:32,720 --> 00:18:36,840 Speaker 5: capable capable of reading something complex, even if it's not, 333 00:18:37,920 --> 00:18:39,439 Speaker 5: but they enjoy what he or she wants to do. 334 00:18:39,480 --> 00:18:43,720 Speaker 1: For funnel right, what advice would you give your sixteen 335 00:18:43,760 --> 00:18:46,640 Speaker 1: year old self, what a sixteen year old Christopher. 336 00:18:46,200 --> 00:18:46,600 Speaker 2: Need to know. 337 00:18:46,960 --> 00:18:52,399 Speaker 5: Well, this advice might sound contradictory, but I think I 338 00:18:52,400 --> 00:18:55,440 Speaker 5: would give two related lessons. 339 00:18:55,760 --> 00:18:57,400 Speaker 3: One is that. 340 00:18:59,000 --> 00:19:02,240 Speaker 5: What sixteen year old Chris is doing as a sixteen 341 00:19:02,320 --> 00:19:07,080 Speaker 5: year old is a foundation for sixty year old Chris, 342 00:19:08,359 --> 00:19:10,680 Speaker 5: and that it's a good time to plant the seeds 343 00:19:10,880 --> 00:19:14,480 Speaker 5: for later in life. And that doesn't mean to take 344 00:19:14,520 --> 00:19:19,879 Speaker 5: everything completely seriously, but to understand the habits I'm developing 345 00:19:20,080 --> 00:19:23,320 Speaker 5: as a sixteen year old will pay dividends down the road, 346 00:19:24,320 --> 00:19:29,760 Speaker 5: and that things like self control, discipline, focus, things that 347 00:19:29,800 --> 00:19:32,720 Speaker 5: I do think I did work on as a sixteen 348 00:19:32,800 --> 00:19:36,040 Speaker 5: year old in school and athletics and things like that. 349 00:19:37,400 --> 00:19:40,399 Speaker 5: They they paid off, and if anything, I could have 350 00:19:40,400 --> 00:19:45,040 Speaker 5: done them a little bit more, but they were worthwhile. 351 00:19:45,400 --> 00:19:50,280 Speaker 5: And then conversely, to also remember that you're only sixteen 352 00:19:50,480 --> 00:19:53,800 Speaker 5: and you've got decades ahead of you, god willing, and 353 00:19:53,840 --> 00:19:56,840 Speaker 5: that the things that seem like really big deals are 354 00:19:56,840 --> 00:20:02,639 Speaker 5: not big deals. That's I think everybody, everybody who everybody 355 00:20:03,080 --> 00:20:05,200 Speaker 5: probably in their twenties realizes this. 356 00:20:05,600 --> 00:20:07,240 Speaker 3: But the things. 357 00:20:06,640 --> 00:20:10,560 Speaker 5: That seem like crises, the things, the huge embarrassments that 358 00:20:10,640 --> 00:20:14,800 Speaker 5: seem like things people will will remember forever, really aren't. 359 00:20:15,080 --> 00:20:19,200 Speaker 5: And you can overcome falling flat on your face and 360 00:20:20,359 --> 00:20:23,359 Speaker 5: having things that you thought would happen not happening. You 361 00:20:23,760 --> 00:20:27,879 Speaker 5: just have to learn how to adjust, pivot, you know, 362 00:20:27,920 --> 00:20:30,679 Speaker 5: whatever term you want to use, and look forward to 363 00:20:30,680 --> 00:20:32,480 Speaker 5: the next challenger or ambition. 364 00:20:33,440 --> 00:20:35,359 Speaker 2: I love that. I've loved this conversation. 365 00:20:35,560 --> 00:20:37,880 Speaker 1: It did make me feel bad that I don't read enough, 366 00:20:37,880 --> 00:20:40,080 Speaker 1: but I'm going to try to rectify it right away. 367 00:20:41,280 --> 00:20:43,800 Speaker 5: And here, Kerl, I don't think you should feel guilty, 368 00:20:43,840 --> 00:20:45,280 Speaker 5: by the way, because you do. I do feel guil 369 00:20:45,400 --> 00:20:47,200 Speaker 5: You have a lot of on your plate. I don't 370 00:20:47,240 --> 00:20:47,920 Speaker 5: feel guilty. 371 00:20:48,040 --> 00:20:50,080 Speaker 2: I you know, I swear. 372 00:20:50,119 --> 00:20:53,400 Speaker 1: It actually is a theme on here where I talk 373 00:20:53,440 --> 00:20:55,919 Speaker 1: a lot about how I don't read enough fiction and 374 00:20:55,960 --> 00:20:57,440 Speaker 1: how that makes me feel bad. 375 00:20:57,600 --> 00:20:59,320 Speaker 2: And I read a lot of nonfiction. I read a 376 00:20:59,359 --> 00:21:02,040 Speaker 2: lot of nonfiction, you know, just for our work. 377 00:21:02,119 --> 00:21:06,879 Speaker 1: And but fiction makes me feel good and it makes 378 00:21:06,880 --> 00:21:09,159 Speaker 1: me a better person, more interesting person. 379 00:21:09,359 --> 00:21:09,919 Speaker 2: I love it. 380 00:21:09,960 --> 00:21:13,200 Speaker 1: That's why I really I saw this book. I saw 381 00:21:13,240 --> 00:21:16,159 Speaker 1: that you wrote thirteen novels Conservatives of Love, and I 382 00:21:16,200 --> 00:21:19,760 Speaker 1: couldn't wait to read it because I absolutely relate to 383 00:21:19,840 --> 00:21:25,119 Speaker 1: the message that fiction improves so much about our experience 384 00:21:25,320 --> 00:21:25,919 Speaker 1: in this world. 385 00:21:26,040 --> 00:21:28,600 Speaker 2: And again that comparison to art. Was it for me? 386 00:21:28,720 --> 00:21:31,920 Speaker 1: You know, no one's mad at themselves for going to 387 00:21:31,960 --> 00:21:34,520 Speaker 1: the museum. We're mad at ourselves for reading a book 388 00:21:34,520 --> 00:21:35,399 Speaker 1: on a beach. You know. 389 00:21:36,680 --> 00:21:38,080 Speaker 3: Can I ask you a question? Can I se on 390 00:21:38,119 --> 00:21:42,360 Speaker 3: the table? What is your favorite novel? Man or one 391 00:21:42,359 --> 00:21:42,680 Speaker 3: of them? 392 00:21:42,920 --> 00:21:47,040 Speaker 1: Just so it's funny, you said nineteen eighty four and 393 00:21:47,119 --> 00:21:51,600 Speaker 1: you said Brave New World where the Russian third the 394 00:21:51,800 --> 00:21:56,240 Speaker 1: kind of what I consider the trio the zemyatins we 395 00:21:56,240 --> 00:22:03,160 Speaker 1: we in Russian, I think is like the undervalued triplet. 396 00:22:02,800 --> 00:22:06,200 Speaker 2: In that container. So I love that book. 397 00:22:07,480 --> 00:22:08,479 Speaker 3: I need to check that one out. 398 00:22:08,560 --> 00:22:12,320 Speaker 1: Yeah, definitely, I think it could have easily made your list. 399 00:22:12,440 --> 00:22:13,840 Speaker 3: I'll tell you that check. 400 00:22:14,960 --> 00:22:18,280 Speaker 5: They stay on the lookout for thirteen more novels conservatives 401 00:22:18,280 --> 00:22:18,600 Speaker 5: will love. 402 00:22:18,840 --> 00:22:21,440 Speaker 3: I love it well, if. 403 00:22:21,160 --> 00:22:24,240 Speaker 5: Any of your listeners or you really like dystopian fiction, 404 00:22:24,520 --> 00:22:26,600 Speaker 5: I include The Children of Men by P. D. 405 00:22:26,800 --> 00:22:27,080 Speaker 3: James. 406 00:22:27,200 --> 00:22:30,919 Speaker 5: This one novel from I think nineteen ninety two, just 407 00:22:30,960 --> 00:22:36,640 Speaker 5: a superb look at what happens when humans stop having 408 00:22:36,720 --> 00:22:42,000 Speaker 5: children and in a depopulating world. How that changes what 409 00:22:42,040 --> 00:22:45,199 Speaker 5: we want from government, how much control we're willing to 410 00:22:45,280 --> 00:22:49,240 Speaker 5: seed to the government in exchange for security and comfort 411 00:22:49,240 --> 00:22:51,680 Speaker 5: when there's no longer really any hope for a future, 412 00:22:52,200 --> 00:22:54,639 Speaker 5: any ambition beyond our own lives. 413 00:22:54,880 --> 00:22:57,560 Speaker 1: Yeah, I feel like we're heading into that direction. 414 00:22:58,080 --> 00:22:59,280 Speaker 3: Unfortunately, we'll try. 415 00:22:59,160 --> 00:23:02,880 Speaker 1: To be optimistic. Yeah, and does here with your best 416 00:23:02,960 --> 00:23:05,440 Speaker 1: tip for my listeners on how they can improve their 417 00:23:05,480 --> 00:23:07,240 Speaker 1: lives read. 418 00:23:07,920 --> 00:23:09,400 Speaker 3: I mean you saw this coming, right, Yeah? 419 00:23:09,400 --> 00:23:10,719 Speaker 4: I love it. 420 00:23:10,800 --> 00:23:11,199 Speaker 5: I love it. 421 00:23:11,240 --> 00:23:13,760 Speaker 2: I think that that is the great a great, great answer. 422 00:23:14,040 --> 00:23:19,200 Speaker 5: Don't don't feel guilty about reading great fictions. As you said, 423 00:23:19,320 --> 00:23:22,640 Speaker 5: it makes you feel good, and I suspect that the 424 00:23:22,680 --> 00:23:24,560 Speaker 5: one reason people distrust it. 425 00:23:24,600 --> 00:23:26,960 Speaker 1: But like, I don't want to feel good, I have 426 00:23:27,040 --> 00:23:29,480 Speaker 1: to exactly, No, it's got to be I need to eat, 427 00:23:30,080 --> 00:23:31,040 Speaker 1: be eating my broccoli. 428 00:23:31,520 --> 00:23:35,360 Speaker 5: Know that great fiction is a source of wisdom, classic 429 00:23:35,400 --> 00:23:39,359 Speaker 5: fiction novels that people have been talking about for centuries. 430 00:23:40,040 --> 00:23:42,399 Speaker 5: That's that's the case for a reason. That doesn't mean 431 00:23:42,440 --> 00:23:45,320 Speaker 5: you'll like every classic that's certainly not the case. But 432 00:23:45,320 --> 00:23:48,800 Speaker 5: but chances are you will find not just beautiful writing, 433 00:23:48,880 --> 00:23:53,000 Speaker 5: but real truths about the human can date, condition, and 434 00:23:53,080 --> 00:23:56,920 Speaker 5: human nature. And that is that is a kind of knowledge. 435 00:23:57,000 --> 00:23:59,840 Speaker 5: It's not a fact necessarily, but it is still a 436 00:23:59,880 --> 00:24:02,120 Speaker 5: type of knowing and wisdom. 437 00:24:02,480 --> 00:24:04,720 Speaker 2: I love it. Thank you so much, Christopher Scalia. 438 00:24:04,840 --> 00:24:08,000 Speaker 1: Check out his book Thirteen Novels Conservatives will love but 439 00:24:08,160 --> 00:24:09,359 Speaker 1: probably haven't read. 440 00:24:09,480 --> 00:24:11,080 Speaker 2: Thank you so much, Christy. 441 00:24:10,800 --> 00:24:12,199 Speaker 3: Thank you Carol. It's been a pleasure.