Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
What NOT To Read: 20th Century’s Worst Books
What NOT To Read: 20th Century’s Worst Books
Dec 12, 2025 12:32 PM

It’s August. Still plenty of time to tackle that summer reading list. The good folks at Intercollegiate Review want to make sure that you don’t waste any time on junk – after all, life is too short for bad wine or bad books. Of course, you are free to debate any of their choices but in most cases, wretched is wretched.

Here are a few of their “bad” picks and the thinking behind their choice.

Alfred Kinsey, et al.,Sexual Behavior in the Human Male(1948)

So mesmerized were Americans by the authority of Science, with a capital S, that it took forty years for anyone to wonder how data is gathered on the sexual responses of children as young as five. A pervert’s attempt to demonstrate that perversion is “statistically” normal.Boston Women’s Health Book Collective,Our Bodies, Our Selves(1976)

Or,Our Bodies, Our Liberal Selves. A textbook example of the modern impulse to elevate the body and its urges, libidinal and otherwise, above soul and spirit.

Lillian Hellman,Scoundrel Time(1976)

The self-absorbed, unrepentant, and generously fabricated memoir of an American Stalinist.Timothy Leary,The Politics of Ecstasy (1968)

Leary always said it was a mistake to take things too seriously. This book proves he was right at least once in his life.John Reed,Ten Days That Shook the World(1919)

And after that, Reed went home and the Bolsheviks struck the set.Carl Rogers,On ing a Person(1961)

Rogers disconnected human feelings from nature, disconnected the human and the spiritual from both real religion and the rigor of science, and ruined countless Roman Catholic religious orders in the process. Made B. F. Skinner look good.Jerry Rubin,Do It!(1970)

The Bible of the lazy and the crazy.Margaret Sanger,Woman and the New Race(1920)

This founder of Planned Parenthood published Adolf Hitler’s eugenics guru in her magazine in the early 1930s. ThatWomen and the New Racesprang from Sanger is no surprise.Susan Sontag,Against Interpretation(1966)

Don’t think. Just feel.

Read “The 50 Worst Books of the 20th Century” at Intercollegiate Review.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The moral weight of taxation
Whether or not we view taxation as having moral downsides and bearing a moral weight has significant implications for the proper size of government and can make a world of difference in public policy decisions. Read More… As Congress works on a $6 trillion spending bill that would be funded by higher taxes and increasing the national debt, Americans should be asking themselves: When is taxation morally permissible? Taxation is justified only when the moral benefits of the programs these...
Life after the lockdowns: Re-embracing our social nature
Governments should have taken a laissez-faire approach to managing the pandemic, respecting the social nature of individuals while munities to innovate their own responses. Read More… During the COVID-19 pandemic, pressure was put on the federal government to override the rights of the states and impose sweeping lockdown policies. This was only partially the case, since most states underwent lockdown and quarantine measures of their own. Such policies soon went under the microscope of public opinion to determine their validity,...
Train a child, secure the future: Educating our kids about the free market
Train up a child in the way he should go; even when he is old he will not depart from it. – Proverbs 22:6 Read More… Like most children, I had training wheels when I first learned to ride my bike. Before riding without them, I needed to learn a few key fundamentals – how to peddle, how to steer, how to coordinate my hands and feet. Once I mastered the basics, I was ready to go. In many ways,...
How fatherhood leads to flourishing
Changing the conversation about the value of settling down and pursuing a meaningful family can illuminate hard questions. Sacrificing one’s personal desires for a wife and children is a crucial step on the path to human flourishing. Read More… America reigns supreme in the number of single parent households. Every June, we gather with our friends and family to celebrate Father’s Day, yet one in four of children do not have a father. It’s a sobering statistic that deserves attention....
From the Cold War to China, human flourishing is what really matters
To achieve flourishing, we must have economic and religious freedom and a culture which grasps the unique value of the human person. Communism cannot be outproduced. It must be refuted in the realm of ideas by presenting a pelling alternative. Read More… A second Cold War has been brewing between global superpowers. The recent G-7 summit was merely the latest incident in the struggle for global hegemony between China and the U.S. The seven western powers who met for the...
Communist China forces shutdown of Apple Daily, stifling truth in pursuit of control
By shutting down Apple Daily, the one-party Communist dictatorship has silenced another voice of truth, furthering the state’s goal of absolute control over its citizens. Read More… Apple Daily, the last prominent, pro-democracy newspaper in Hong Kong, will shut down after midnight on June 23 and publish its final edition on June 24 after 26 years in operation. Hong Kong police raided the newspaper’s headquarters on June 17 and arrested five of its senior executives and journalists, including Chief Editor...
What you should know about China’s population control measures
The ratio between working aged adults and retired individuals in China was 6 to 1 in 2007. That ratio is expected to reduce to 2 to 1 by 2040. Chinese society is now aging faster than it can churn out new workers. Read More… Last month, China announced that it would allow couples to have up to three children, an increase from the two children allowed per couple previously. Prior to 2016, China had a one-child policy, which was instituted...
Society must balance the paradox of human nature
Ignoring either the inherent goodness or the fallenness of man leads us to either utopia or authoritarianism. If man is endowed with human dignity and also perfect, there is no need for laws. If man is corrupted and is not inherently valuable, then even the harshest laws have no downside. Read More… A debate is brewing over the thousands of inmates who were allowed to return home due to the health risks of the COVID-19 pandemic. They could soon be...
Lao Tzu: The first libertarian intellectual
Instead of ruling by force, decree, and regulation to achieve societal order, Lao Tzu believed that individuals were self-regulating (or led by an ‘Invisible Hand’), when left alone by the state. Read More… Besides the Bible, no other work has as many translations as the Daodejing—the founding scriptural text of Daoism. Lao Tzu (“the old master”) is the attributed author of the Daodejing and the founder of Daosim. Living in China during late 6th Century B.C., Lao Tzu witnessed never...
Some very good reasons you should attend Acton University Online
Acton University Online is a unique, two-day, live and interactive experience exploring the intellectual foundations of a free society, streaming live on June 23-24. Scholarships are available for those in need. Read More… “Should I or shouldn’t I do AU?” That is the question I have heard hundreds of times regarding attending Acton UniversityOnline 2021. More than 2,400 people have already made up their own minds and have registered to participate in our annual summer gathering of minds ing June...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved