What’s a classic book that you think is overrated?
Dust on the Pedestal: Are Some Classic Books Overrated?

There is an old saying: “Time is the greatest critic.” Yet time, much like society itself, can sometimes become a stubborn curator of reputations. Certain books survive not merely because they are magnificent, but because generations are taught that they must be magnificent. To question them is often treated almost like literary blasphemy. However, must every “classic” automatically deserve reverence? Or have some books become monuments that people admire from a distance while secretly struggling to enjoy them?
The debate about overrated classics is as old as literature itself. Every age redraws the map of greatness. What enthralled Victorian readers may leave modern readers yawning into their coffee mugs. What once felt revolutionary may now appear ponderous, elitist, or emotionally distant.
Literature, after all, is not embalmed in a museum jar; it breathes through the changing conscience of humanity.
To call a classic “overrated” does not necessarily mean it is bad. It simply means that the reputation surrounding it may have outgrown the actual reading experience for many people. Sometimes the emperor’s robes are indeed magnificent; at other times, the emperor may be standing in intellectual fog while readers nod politely to avoid appearing uncultured.
Take, for instance, Moby-Dick by Herman Melville. Revered as a masterpiece of symbolism and existential struggle, it is also infamous for pages upon pages describing whale anatomy and maritime procedures. Many readers begin the voyage enthusiastically only to feel stranded in an ocean of technical details. The philosophical depth is undeniable, yet one may legitimately wonder whether every chapter truly deserves its legendary status.
Similarly, Ulysses by James Joyce is often praised as the Everest of modern literature. Scholars worship its linguistic innovation and psychological complexity. Yet countless ordinary readers confess, often in hushed tones, that reading it feels like attempting to solve a crossword puzzle during an earthquake. One cannot help but ask: if a book requires encyclopaedic guidance merely to understand a paragraph, has art become inaccessible to the very people it seeks to illuminate?
Then there is The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger. For one generation, Holden Caulfield embodied youthful alienation and rebellion. For another, he appears petulant, repetitive, and emotionally exhausting. The world has changed dramatically since the 1950s. Modern youth grapple with digital anxieties, climate fears, and fractured identities on social media. Holden’s complaints may now sound less like profound rebellion and more like privileged grumbling.
Even giants such as War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy often intimidate readers more than they inspire them. It is undoubtedly monumental in scope and psychological insight, but one cannot ignore how many readers treat finishing it as an Olympic achievement rather than a literary joy. Sometimes a book becomes a badge of endurance rather than a companion of delight.
The same criticism extends to certain philosophical classics.
Thus Spoke Zarathustra by Friedrich Nietzsche dazzles with poetic brilliance yet frequently vanishes into clouds of abstraction. Many quote Nietzsche without truly reading him, and many read him without truly understanding him. It becomes a case of “all hat and no cattle,” as the old idiom goes.
However, before we throw these classics into the bonfire of modern impatience, caution is necessary. The problem may not always lie in the books themselves but in the culture surrounding them. Schools often force-feed classics to students long before emotional maturity allows appreciation. Reading becomes an examination exercise instead of an intimate conversation with humanity. A teenager compelled to dissect Paradise Lost may naturally feel as though he has been asked to chew granite.
Moreover, classics are products of their times. They reflect older social structures, slower rhythms of life, and different standards of storytelling. Contemporary readers, accustomed to cinematic pacing and digital brevity, often struggle with descriptive richness. We now live in an age where attention spans flutter like restless butterflies. Patience has become a rare virtue.
Therefore, perhaps the real question is not whether classics are overrated, but whether modern society has become underprepared for deep reading.
Still, literary worship can sometimes resemble organised intimidation. Many pretend admiration out of fear of appearing intellectually inferior. It is akin to applauding a symphony one barely understands because everyone else is clapping.
Honest reading demands honesty of response. A reader should never feel guilty for disliking a celebrated work. Literature is not a dictatorship; it is a dialogue.
The Indian philosophical tradition beautifully reminds us of this freedom. In the Upanishadic spirit of inquiry, even revered ideas were questioned. The Bhagavad Gita itself unfolds through Arjuna’s doubts and Krishna’s responses. Questioning is not disrespect; it is the beginning of wisdom. Blind admiration turns culture stagnant, whereas thoughtful criticism keeps it alive.
History also teaches us that reputations fluctuate dramatically. William Shakespeare himself was not universally worshipped in every era. Some Victorian critics considered parts of his work vulgar and excessive. Yet today he towers over English literature like a Himalayan peak. On the other hand, authors once wildly celebrated have now faded into obscurity like footprints washed away by rain.
The truth, perhaps, lies somewhere in the middle. Some classics genuinely deserve their immortality because they reveal profound truths about love, suffering, ambition, loneliness, morality, and human frailty. Others survive partly because academia, publishing industries, and cultural prestige keep polishing their statues. As the idiom goes, “One man’s meat is another man’s poison.”
Personally, I believe a book should not be judged merely by how often it is quoted in universities, but by whether it still touches the human soul. Does it awaken empathy? Does it provoke reflection? Does it leave a lingering fragrance in memory? If not, then no amount of scholarly applause can rescue it from emotional irrelevance.
A truly great book is not one that sits proudly on a shelf gathering dust like a royal heirloom. It is one that walks beside the reader through life’s storms and silences. It consoles, disturbs, questions, and transforms. Classics must earn their crowns repeatedly with every new generation.
In the end, perhaps the healthiest attitude towards literature is humility mixed with courage: humility to recognise the historical significance of classics, and courage to admit when a revered masterpiece simply does not resonate with us. After all, reading is deeply personal. The heart has its own library, and not every celebrated volume finds a home there.
For literature, like life itself, is not merely about what survives the centuries — it is about what survives within us.





