Oh My Word with Katie
"Oh My Word with Katie" is the show where we chat with Christian writers, help you curate your TBR list, and marvel at all the ways God shows up in words and stories. Join our email list: https://mschristianliving.us4.list-manage.com/subscribe?u=339b6e33ab1f6a8ad0e44aa39&id=c6daf71a58
Oh My Word with Katie
Are You Reading Wrong? with Karen Swallow Prior
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The 'Reader’s Digest Condensed' show notes
Katie welcomes author and literature professor Karen Swallow Prior to discuss what it means to “read well,” why classic literature is worth the effort, and how great books shape our character.
Unabridged show notes
On this episode, Katie is joined by author, speaker, and literature professor Karen Swallow Prior, whose book On Reading Well: Finding the Good Life Through Great Books explores how classic literature can shape our character, habits, and spiritual lives.
Karen shares how her own love of reading began in childhood, how one influential professor shaped her academic path, and why reading great literature today requires intentionality in a distracted world.
Together, Katie and Karen explore the difference between reading for information and reading for formation; how to read classics without being overwhelmed; and why reading in community can deepen the experience.
They also dive into a lively discussion of Jane Eyre vs. Wuthering Heights, including whether Wuthering Heights is a love story — and why it continues to fascinate readers despite (or because of) its chaos.
In this episode
What it means to “read well”
- Reading for information vs. formation
- Why most of what we read today isn’t meant to be read deeply
- How great books shape character, mind, and soul
How to start reading the classics
- Why you shouldn’t start with what you feel like you “should” read
- Why reading is not a race
Why reading feels harder today
- The challenge of attention in a distracted, modern world
- How it becomes easier — and more enjoyable — the more you do it
Reading in community
- Why books are better when discussed with others
- Book clubs, classrooms, podcasts, and shared reading experiences
- “Read it so we can talk about it” as a way of life
Jane Eyre vs. Wuthering Heights
- Romantic (capital-R) vs. realistic storytelling
- Is Wuthering Heights a love story?
- Katie’s WH review: chaos, drama, and a glimpse of redemption
Books mentioned
- On Reading Well — Karen Swallow Prior
- Jane Eyre — Charlotte Brontë
- Wuthering Heights — Emily Brontë
- Frankenstein — Mary Shelley
- A Tale of Two Cities — Charles Dickens
- Gulliver’s Travels — Jonathan Swift
- Small Things Like These — Claire Keegan
- The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter — Carson McCullers
- How to Read Literature Like a Professor — Thomas C. Foster
Who this episode is for
- Readers who want to get more out of classic literature
- Anyone who feels intimidated by “the classics”
- Book lovers interested in faith, character, and formation
- Book clubs looking for deeper discussion
Connect with Karen Swallow Prior
Website: https://karenswallowprior.com/
Substack: https://substack.com/@karenswallowprior
Enjoying Oh My Word with Katie?
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A question to reflect on
Are you reading primari