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#100bestnovels — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #100bestnovels, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Those “100 Best Novels of All Time”

    As it does from time to time, The Grauniad has compiled a list of what it claims are the best somethings. This time it was novels. The full list with an explanation of how the list was compiled, clickable links to comments and pictures of the book covers can be found here, but I’ve reproduced a simplified version below:

    1. Middlemarch – George Eliot
    2. Beloved – Toni Morrison
    3. Ulysses – James Joyce
    4. To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf
    5. In Search of Lost Time – Marcel Proust
    6. Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy
    7. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
    8. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Brontë
    9. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
    10. Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert
    11. The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
    12. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    13. Emma – Jane Austen
    14. Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
    15. Moby-Dick – Herman Melville
    16. Nineteen Eighty-Four – George Orwell
    17. One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel García Márquez
    18. Persuasion – Jane Austen
    19. Tristram Shandy – Laurence Sterne
    20. Wuthering Heights – Emily Brontë
    21. The Portrait of a Lady – Henry James
    22. Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe
    23. Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
    24. The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro
    25. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    26. Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes
    27. The Trial – Franz Kafka
    28. The Brothers Karamazov – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    29. Pale Fire – Vladimir Nabokov
    30. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley
    31. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie – Muriel Spark
    32. The God of Small Things – Arundhati Roy
    33. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    34. Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel
    35. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
    36. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    37. Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison
    38. The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
    39. Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
    40. Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison
    41. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
    42. The Magic Mountain – Thomas Mann
    43. Housekeeping – Marilynne Robinson
    44. Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin
    45. The Golden Notebook – Doris Lessing
    46. The Leopard – Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
    47. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
    48. The Metamorphosis – Franz Kafka
    49. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
    50. Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys
    51. My Brilliant Friend – Elena Ferrante
    52. The Golden Bowl – Henry James
    53. The Transit of Venus – Shirley Hazzard
    54. Orlando – Virginia Woolf
    55. The Waves – Virginia Woolf
    56. Mansfield Park – Jane Austen
    57. The Sound and the Fury – William Faulkner
    58. Disgrace – J. M. Coetzee
    59. Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
    60. Howards End – E.M. Forster
    61. The Rings of Saturn – W.G. Sebald
    62. Half of a Yellow Sun – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    63. White Teeth – Zadie Smith
    64. The Good Soldier – Ford Madox Ford
    65. The Color Purple – Alice Walker
    66. The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov
    67. The Man Without Qualities – Rubert Musil
    68. Blood Meridian – Cormac McCarthy
    69. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoevsky
    70. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
    71. Kindred – Octavia E. Butler
    72. Our Mutual Friend – Charles Dickens
    73. Austerlitz – W.G. Sebald
    74. Nervous Conditions – Tsitsi Dangarembga
    75. The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison
    76. Dracula – Bram Stoker
    77. The Rainbow – DH Lawrence
    78. A House for Mr Biswas – V.S. Naipaul
    79. Go Tell It on the Mountain – James Baldwin
    80. Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier
    81. Buddenbrooks – Thomas Mann
    82. The End of the Affair – Graham Greene
    83. A Farewell to Arms – Ernest Hemingway
    84. The Talented Mr Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
    85. The Vegetarian – Han Kang
    86. The Turn of the Screw – Henry James
    87. The Line of Beauty – Alan Hollinghurst
    88. Ragtime – E.L. Doctorow
    89. The Left Hand of Darkness – Ursula K. Le Guin
    90. Jacob’s Room – Virginia Woolf
    91. Life and Fate – Vasily Grossman
    92. Sentimental Education – Gustave Flaubert
    93. Invisible Cities – Italo Calvino
    94. The Known World – Edward P. Jones
    95. The Return of the Native – Thomas Hardy
    96. Pedro Páramo – Juan Rulfo
    97. Catch-22 – Joseph Heller
    98. The Road – Cormac McCarthy
    99. The Go-Between – L.P. Hartley
    100. My Ántonia – Willa Cather

    Such lists are a bit silly, except for the fact that they might encourage people (including myself) to read more books, which is a good thing. I wouldn’t compile a ranking myself as I don’t think of books in terms of league tables. I don’t see how you can sensibly compare very different types of novel or novels from very different eras. Nevertheless, I couldn’t resist counting how many books on the list I have read. If you want to know the answer, it is 42. I’ll let you guess which ones.

    I have read the Number 1 novel, Middlemarch and, although I thought it was very good, it surprises me to find it at the top of the list, above Ulysses The highest-ranked book I haven’t read is No. 2, Beloved. There are several others on the list that I’ve never even heard of let alone read. The only book on the list that I did at school was No. 78. A House for Mr Biswas, which I didn’t think was all that great. I’ve been meaning to read Tristram Shandy (No. 19) but I think I’ll get that out of the library rather than buying it.

    To save you counting, here are the authors with multiple entries:

    5 – Virginia Woolf
    4 – Jane Austen
    4 – Charles Dickens
    3 – Henry James
    3 – Toni Morrison
    2 – James Baldwin
    2 – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2 – Gustave Flaubert
    2 – Thomas Hardy
    2 – Kazuo Ishiguro
    2 – Franz Kafka
    2 – Thomas Mann
    2 – Cormac McCarthy
    2 – Vladimir Nabokov
    2 – W.G. Sebald
    2 – Leo Tolstoy

    I haven’t read anything by either Sebald or McCarthy or Flaubert. Among the omissions that surprised me are The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway, The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I’m not saying that any or all of these would be on my list, just that I’m surprised they don’t appear on the Guardian‘s.

    If anyone would like to comment – especially with other notable omissions – please feel free to do so through the box below.

    #100BestNovels #Guardian #literature
  2. Those “100 Best Novels of All Time”

    As it does from time to time, The Grauniad has compiled a list of what it claims are the best somethings. This time it was novels. The full list with an explanation of how the list was compiled, clickable links to comments and pictures of the book covers can be found here, but I’ve reproduced a simplified version below:

    1. Middlemarch – George Eliot
    2. Beloved – Toni Morrison
    3. Ulysses – James Joyce
    4. To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf
    5. In Search of Lost Time – Marcel Proust
    6. Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy
    7. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
    8. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Brontë
    9. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
    10. Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert
    11. The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
    12. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    13. Emma – Jane Austen
    14. Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
    15. Moby-Dick – Herman Melville
    16. Nineteen Eighty-Four – George Orwell
    17. One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel García Márquez
    18. Persuasion – Jane Austen
    19. Tristram Shandy – Laurence Sterne
    20. Wuthering Heights – Emily Brontë
    21. The Portrait of a Lady – Henry James
    22. Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe
    23. Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
    24. The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro
    25. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    26. Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes
    27. The Trial – Franz Kafka
    28. The Brothers Karamazov – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    29. Pale Fire – Vladimir Nabokov
    30. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley
    31. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie – Muriel Spark
    32. The God of Small Things – Arundhati Roy
    33. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    34. Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel
    35. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
    36. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    37. Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison
    38. The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
    39. Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
    40. Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison
    41. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
    42. The Magic Mountain – Thomas Mann
    43. Housekeeping – Marilynne Robinson
    44. Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin
    45. The Golden Notebook – Doris Lessing
    46. The Leopard – Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
    47. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
    48. The Metamorphosis – Franz Kafka
    49. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
    50. Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys
    51. My Brilliant Friend – Elena Ferrante
    52. The Golden Bowl – Henry James
    53. The Transit of Venus – Shirley Hazzard
    54. Orlando – Virginia Woolf
    55. The Waves – Virginia Woolf
    56. Mansfield Park – Jane Austen
    57. The Sound and the Fury – William Faulkner
    58. Disgrace – J. M. Coetzee
    59. Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
    60. Howards End – E.M. Forster
    61. The Rings of Saturn – W.G. Sebald
    62. Half of a Yellow Sun – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    63. White Teeth – Zadie Smith
    64. The Good Soldier – Ford Madox Ford
    65. The Color Purple – Alice Walker
    66. The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov
    67. The Man Without Qualities – Rubert Musil
    68. Blood Meridian – Cormac McCarthy
    69. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoevsky
    70. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
    71. Kindred – Octavia E. Butler
    72. Our Mutual Friend – Charles Dickens
    73. Austerlitz – W.G. Sebald
    74. Nervous Conditions – Tsitsi Dangarembga
    75. The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison
    76. Dracula – Bram Stoker
    77. The Rainbow – DH Lawrence
    78. A House for Mr Biswas – V.S. Naipaul
    79. Go Tell It on the Mountain – James Baldwin
    80. Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier
    81. Buddenbrooks – Thomas Mann
    82. The End of the Affair – Graham Greene
    83. A Farewell to Arms – Ernest Hemingway
    84. The Talented Mr Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
    85. The Vegetarian – Han Kang
    86. The Turn of the Screw – Henry James
    87. The Line of Beauty – Alan Hollinghurst
    88. Ragtime – E.L. Doctorow
    89. The Left Hand of Darkness – Ursula K. Le Guin
    90. Jacob’s Room – Virginia Woolf
    91. Life and Fate – Vasily Grossman
    92. Sentimental Education – Gustave Flaubert
    93. Invisible Cities – Italo Calvino
    94. The Known World – Edward P. Jones
    95. The Return of the Native – Thomas Hardy
    96. Pedro Páramo – Juan Rulfo
    97. Catch-22 – Joseph Heller
    98. The Road – Cormac McCarthy
    99. The Go-Between – L.P. Hartley
    100. My Ántonia – Willa Cather

    Such lists are a bit silly, except for the fact that they might encourage people (including myself) to read more books, which is a good thing. I wouldn’t compile a ranking myself as I don’t think of books in terms of league tables. “Best” according to what criterion? I don’t see how you can sensibly compare very different types of novel or novels from very different eras. Nevertheless, I couldn’t resist counting how many books on the list I have read. If you want to know the answer, it is 42. I’ll let you guess which ones.

    I have read the Number 1 novel, Middlemarch and, although I thought it was very good, it surprises me to find it at the top of the list, above Ulysses The highest-ranked book I haven’t read is No. 2, Beloved. There are several others on the list that I’ve never even heard of let alone read. The only book on the list that I did at school was No. 78. A House for Mr Biswas, which I didn’t think was all that great. I’ve been meaning to read Tristram Shandy (No. 19) but I think I’ll get that out of the library rather than buying it.

    To save you counting, here are the authors with multiple entries:

    5 – Virginia Woolf
    4 – Jane Austen
    4 – Charles Dickens
    3 – Henry James
    3 – Toni Morrison
    2 – James Baldwin
    2 – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2 – Gustave Flaubert
    2 – Thomas Hardy
    2 – Kazuo Ishiguro
    2 – Franz Kafka
    2 – Thomas Mann
    2 – Cormac McCarthy
    2 – Vladimir Nabokov
    2 – W.G. Sebald
    2 – Leo Tolstoy

    I haven’t read anything by either Sebald or McCarthy or Flaubert. Among the omissions that surprised me are The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway, The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I’m not saying that any or all of these would be on my list, just that I’m surprised they don’t appear on the Guardian‘s.

    If anyone would like to comment – perhaps with other notable omissions or novels that are on the list but you feel shouldn’t be – please feel free to do so through the box below.

    #100BestNovels #Guardian #literature
  3. Those “100 Best Novels of All Time”

    As it does from time to time, The Grauniad has compiled a list of what it claims are the best somethings. This time it was novels. The full list with an explanation of how the list was compiled, clickable links to comments and pictures of the book covers can be found here, but I’ve reproduced a simplified version below:

    1. Middlemarch – George Eliot
    2. Beloved – Toni Morrison
    3. Ulysses – James Joyce
    4. To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf
    5. In Search of Lost Time – Marcel Proust
    6. Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy
    7. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
    8. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Brontë
    9. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
    10. Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert
    11. The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
    12. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    13. Emma – Jane Austen
    14. Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
    15. Moby-Dick – Herman Melville
    16. Nineteen Eighty-Four – George Orwell
    17. One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel García Márquez
    18. Persuasion – Jane Austen
    19. Tristram Shandy – Laurence Sterne
    20. Wuthering Heights – Emily Brontë
    21. The Portrait of a Lady – Henry James
    22. Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe
    23. Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
    24. The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro
    25. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    26. Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes
    27. The Trial – Franz Kafka
    28. The Brothers Karamazov – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    29. Pale Fire – Vladimir Nabokov
    30. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley
    31. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie – Muriel Spark
    32. The God of Small Things – Arundhati Roy
    33. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    34. Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel
    35. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
    36. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    37. Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison
    38. The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
    39. Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
    40. Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison
    41. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
    42. The Magic Mountain – Thomas Mann
    43. Housekeeping – Marilynne Robinson
    44. Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin
    45. The Golden Notebook – Doris Lessing
    46. The Leopard – Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
    47. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
    48. The Metamorphosis – Franz Kafka
    49. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
    50. Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys
    51. My Brilliant Friend – Elena Ferrante
    52. The Golden Bowl – Henry James
    53. The Transit of Venus – Shirley Hazzard
    54. Orlando – Virginia Woolf
    55. The Waves – Virginia Woolf
    56. Mansfield Park – Jane Austen
    57. The Sound and the Fury – William Faulkner
    58. Disgrace – J. M. Coetzee
    59. Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
    60. Howards End – E.M. Forster
    61. The Rings of Saturn – W.G. Sebald
    62. Half of a Yellow Sun – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    63. White Teeth – Zadie Smith
    64. The Good Soldier – Ford Madox Ford
    65. The Color Purple – Alice Walker
    66. The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov
    67. The Man Without Qualities – Rubert Musil
    68. Blood Meridian – Cormac McCarthy
    69. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoevsky
    70. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
    71. Kindred – Octavia E. Butler
    72. Our Mutual Friend – Charles Dickens
    73. Austerlitz – W.G. Sebald
    74. Nervous Conditions – Tsitsi Dangarembga
    75. The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison
    76. Dracula – Bram Stoker
    77. The Rainbow – DH Lawrence
    78. A House for Mr Biswas – V.S. Naipaul
    79. Go Tell It on the Mountain – James Baldwin
    80. Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier
    81. Buddenbrooks – Thomas Mann
    82. The End of the Affair – Graham Greene
    83. A Farewell to Arms – Ernest Hemingway
    84. The Talented Mr Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
    85. The Vegetarian – Han Kang
    86. The Turn of the Screw – Henry James
    87. The Line of Beauty – Alan Hollinghurst
    88. Ragtime – E.L. Doctorow
    89. The Left Hand of Darkness – Ursula K. Le Guin
    90. Jacob’s Room – Virginia Woolf
    91. Life and Fate – Vasily Grossman
    92. Sentimental Education – Gustave Flaubert
    93. Invisible Cities – Italo Calvino
    94. The Known World – Edward P. Jones
    95. The Return of the Native – Thomas Hardy
    96. Pedro Páramo – Juan Rulfo
    97. Catch-22 – Joseph Heller
    98. The Road – Cormac McCarthy
    99. The Go-Between – L.P. Hartley
    100. My Ántonia – Willa Cather

    Such lists are a bit silly, except for the fact that they might encourage people (including myself) to read more books, which is a good thing. I wouldn’t compile a ranking myself as I don’t think of books in terms of league tables. I don’t see how you can sensibly compare very different types of novel or novels from very different eras. Nevertheless, I couldn’t resist counting how many books on the list I have read. If you want to know the answer, it is 42. I’ll let you guess which ones.

    I have read the Number 1 novel, Middlemarch and, although I thought it was very good, it surprises me to find it at the top of the list, above Ulysses The highest-ranked book I haven’t read is No. 2, Beloved. There are several others on the list that I’ve never even heard of let alone read. The only book on the list that I did at school was No. 78. A House for Mr Biswas, which I didn’t think was all that great. I’ve been meaning to read Tristram Shandy (No. 19) but I think I’ll get that out of the library rather than buying it.

    To save you counting, here are the authors with multiple entries:

    5 – Virginia Woolf
    4 – Jane Austen
    4 – Charles Dickens
    3 – Henry James
    3 – Toni Morrison
    2 – James Baldwin
    2 – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2 – Gustave Flaubert
    2 – Thomas Hardy
    2 – Kazuo Ishiguro
    2 – Franz Kafka
    2 – Thomas Mann
    2 – Cormac McCarthy
    2 – Vladimir Nabokov
    2 – W.G. Sebald
    2 – Leo Tolstoy

    I haven’t read anything by either Sebald or McCarthy or Flaubert. Among the omissions that surprised me are The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway, The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I’m not saying that any or all of these would be on my list, just that I’m surprised they don’t appear on the Guardian‘s.

    If anyone would like to comment – especially with other notable omissions – please feel free to do so through the box below.

    #100BestNovels #Guardian #literature
  4. Those “100 Best Novels of All Time”

    As it does from time to time, The Grauniad has compiled a list of what it claims are the best somethings. This time it was novels. The full list with an explanation of how the list was compiled, clickable links to comments and pictures of the book covers can be found here, but I’ve reproduced a simplified version below:

    1. Middlemarch – George Eliot
    2. Beloved – Toni Morrison
    3. Ulysses – James Joyce
    4. To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf
    5. In Search of Lost Time – Marcel Proust
    6. Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy
    7. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
    8. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Brontë
    9. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
    10. Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert
    11. The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
    12. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    13. Emma – Jane Austen
    14. Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
    15. Moby-Dick – Herman Melville
    16. Nineteen Eighty-Four – George Orwell
    17. One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel García Márquez
    18. Persuasion – Jane Austen
    19. Tristram Shandy – Laurence Sterne
    20. Wuthering Heights – Emily Brontë
    21. The Portrait of a Lady – Henry James
    22. Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe
    23. Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
    24. The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro
    25. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    26. Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes
    27. The Trial – Franz Kafka
    28. The Brothers Karamazov – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    29. Pale Fire – Vladimir Nabokov
    30. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley
    31. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie – Muriel Spark
    32. The God of Small Things – Arundhati Roy
    33. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    34. Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel
    35. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
    36. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    37. Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison
    38. The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
    39. Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
    40. Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison
    41. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
    42. The Magic Mountain – Thomas Mann
    43. Housekeeping – Marilynne Robinson
    44. Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin
    45. The Golden Notebook – Doris Lessing
    46. The Leopard – Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
    47. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
    48. The Metamorphosis – Franz Kafka
    49. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
    50. Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys
    51. My Brilliant Friend – Elena Ferrante
    52. The Golden Bowl – Henry James
    53. The Transit of Venus – Shirley Hazzard
    54. Orlando – Virginia Woolf
    55. The Waves – Virginia Woolf
    56. Mansfield Park – Jane Austen
    57. The Sound and the Fury – William Faulkner
    58. Disgrace – J. M. Coetzee
    59. Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
    60. Howards End – E.M. Forster
    61. The Rings of Saturn – W.G. Sebald
    62. Half of a Yellow Sun – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    63. White Teeth – Zadie Smith
    64. The Good Soldier – Ford Madox Ford
    65. The Color Purple – Alice Walker
    66. The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov
    67. The Man Without Qualities – Rubert Musil
    68. Blood Meridian – Cormac McCarthy
    69. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoevsky
    70. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
    71. Kindred – Octavia E. Butler
    72. Our Mutual Friend – Charles Dickens
    73. Austerlitz – W.G. Sebald
    74. Nervous Conditions – Tsitsi Dangarembga
    75. The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison
    76. Dracula – Bram Stoker
    77. The Rainbow – DH Lawrence
    78. A House for Mr Biswas – V.S. Naipaul
    79. Go Tell It on the Mountain – James Baldwin
    80. Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier
    81. Buddenbrooks – Thomas Mann
    82. The End of the Affair – Graham Greene
    83. A Farewell to Arms – Ernest Hemingway
    84. The Talented Mr Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
    85. The Vegetarian – Han Kang
    86. The Turn of the Screw – Henry James
    87. The Line of Beauty – Alan Hollinghurst
    88. Ragtime – E.L. Doctorow
    89. The Left Hand of Darkness – Ursula K. Le Guin
    90. Jacob’s Room – Virginia Woolf
    91. Life and Fate – Vasily Grossman
    92. Sentimental Education – Gustave Flaubert
    93. Invisible Cities – Italo Calvino
    94. The Known World – Edward P. Jones
    95. The Return of the Native – Thomas Hardy
    96. Pedro Páramo – Juan Rulfo
    97. Catch-22 – Joseph Heller
    98. The Road – Cormac McCarthy
    99. The Go-Between – L.P. Hartley
    100. My Ántonia – Willa Cather

    Such lists are a bit silly, except for the fact that they might encourage people (including myself) to read more books, which is a good thing. I wouldn’t compile a ranking myself as I don’t think of books in terms of league tables. “Best” according to what criterion? I don’t see how you can sensibly compare very different types of novel or novels from very different eras. Nevertheless, I couldn’t resist counting how many books on the list I have read. If you want to know the answer, it is 42. I’ll let you guess which ones.

    I have read the Number 1 novel, Middlemarch and, although I thought it was very good, it surprises me to find it at the top of the list, above Ulysses The highest-ranked book I haven’t read is No. 2, Beloved. There are several others on the list that I’ve never even heard of let alone read. The only book on the list that I did at school was No. 78. A House for Mr Biswas, which I didn’t think was all that great. I’ve been meaning to read Tristram Shandy (No. 19) but I think I’ll get that out of the library rather than buying it.

    To save you counting, here are the authors with multiple entries:

    5 – Virginia Woolf
    4 – Jane Austen
    4 – Charles Dickens
    3 – Henry James
    3 – Toni Morrison
    2 – James Baldwin
    2 – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2 – Gustave Flaubert
    2 – Thomas Hardy
    2 – Kazuo Ishiguro
    2 – Franz Kafka
    2 – Thomas Mann
    2 – Cormac McCarthy
    2 – Vladimir Nabokov
    2 – W.G. Sebald
    2 – Leo Tolstoy

    I haven’t read anything by either Sebald or McCarthy or Flaubert. Among the omissions that surprised me are The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway, The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I’m not saying that any or all of these would be on my list, just that I’m surprised they don’t appear on the Guardian‘s.

    If anyone would like to comment – perhaps with other notable omissions or novels that are on the list but you feel shouldn’t be – please feel free to do so through the box below.

    #100BestNovels #Guardian #literature
  5. Those “100 Best Novels of All Time”

    As it does from time to time, The Grauniad has compiled a list of what it claims are the best somethings. This time it was novels. The full list with an explanation of how the list was compiled, clickable links to comments and pictures of the book covers can be found here, but I’ve reproduced a simplified version below:

    1. Middlemarch – George Eliot
    2. Beloved – Toni Morrison
    3. Ulysses – James Joyce
    4. To the Lighthouse – Virginia Woolf
    5. In Search of Lost Time – Marcel Proust
    6. Anna Karenina – Leo Tolstoy
    7. War and Peace – Leo Tolstoy
    8. Jane Eyre – Charlotte Brontë
    9. Pride and Prejudice – Jane Austen
    10. Madame Bovary – Gustave Flaubert
    11. The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
    12. Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    13. Emma – Jane Austen
    14. Mrs Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
    15. Moby-Dick – Herman Melville
    16. Nineteen Eighty-Four – George Orwell
    17. One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel García Márquez
    18. Persuasion – Jane Austen
    19. Tristram Shandy – Laurence Sterne
    20. Wuthering Heights – Emily Brontë
    21. The Portrait of a Lady – Henry James
    22. Things Fall Apart – Chinua Achebe
    23. Midnight’s Children – Salman Rushdie
    24. The Remains of the Day – Kazuo Ishiguro
    25. Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov
    26. Don Quixote – Miguel de Cervantes
    27. The Trial – Franz Kafka
    28. The Brothers Karamazov – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    29. Pale Fire – Vladimir Nabokov
    30. Frankenstein – Mary Shelley
    31. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie – Muriel Spark
    32. The God of Small Things – Arundhati Roy
    33. David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    34. Wolf Hall – Hilary Mantel
    35. Great Expectations – Charles Dickens
    36. The Handmaid’s Tale – Margaret Atwood
    37. Invisible Man – Ralph Ellison
    38. The Age of Innocence – Edith Wharton
    39. Their Eyes Were Watching God – Zora Neale Hurston
    40. Song of Solomon – Toni Morrison
    41. Heart of Darkness – Joseph Conrad
    42. The Magic Mountain – Thomas Mann
    43. Housekeeping – Marilynne Robinson
    44. Giovanni’s Room – James Baldwin
    45. The Golden Notebook – Doris Lessing
    46. The Leopard – Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
    47. Vanity Fair – William Makepeace Thackeray
    48. The Metamorphosis – Franz Kafka
    49. A Fine Balance – Rohinton Mistry
    50. Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys
    51. My Brilliant Friend – Elena Ferrante
    52. The Golden Bowl – Henry James
    53. The Transit of Venus – Shirley Hazzard
    54. Orlando – Virginia Woolf
    55. The Waves – Virginia Woolf
    56. Mansfield Park – Jane Austen
    57. The Sound and the Fury – William Faulkner
    58. Disgrace – J. M. Coetzee
    59. Never Let Me Go – Kazuo Ishiguro
    60. Howards End – E.M. Forster
    61. The Rings of Saturn – W.G. Sebald
    62. Half of a Yellow Sun – Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
    63. White Teeth – Zadie Smith
    64. The Good Soldier – Ford Madox Ford
    65. The Color Purple – Alice Walker
    66. The Master and Margarita – Mikhail Bulgakov
    67. The Man Without Qualities – Rubert Musil
    68. Blood Meridian – Cormac McCarthy
    69. Crime and Punishment – Fyodor Dostoevsky
    70. Jude the Obscure – Thomas Hardy
    71. Kindred – Octavia E. Butler
    72. Our Mutual Friend – Charles Dickens
    73. Austerlitz – W.G. Sebald
    74. Nervous Conditions – Tsitsi Dangarembga
    75. The Bluest Eye – Toni Morrison
    76. Dracula – Bram Stoker
    77. The Rainbow – DH Lawrence
    78. A House for Mr Biswas – V.S. Naipaul
    79. Go Tell It on the Mountain – James Baldwin
    80. Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier
    81. Buddenbrooks – Thomas Mann
    82. The End of the Affair – Graham Greene
    83. A Farewell to Arms – Ernest Hemingway
    84. The Talented Mr Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
    85. The Vegetarian – Han Kang
    86. The Turn of the Screw – Henry James
    87. The Line of Beauty – Alan Hollinghurst
    88. Ragtime – E.L. Doctorow
    89. The Left Hand of Darkness – Ursula K. Le Guin
    90. Jacob’s Room – Virginia Woolf
    91. Life and Fate – Vasily Grossman
    92. Sentimental Education – Gustave Flaubert
    93. Invisible Cities – Italo Calvino
    94. The Known World – Edward P. Jones
    95. The Return of the Native – Thomas Hardy
    96. Pedro Páramo – Juan Rulfo
    97. Catch-22 – Joseph Heller
    98. The Road – Cormac McCarthy
    99. The Go-Between – L.P. Hartley
    100. My Ántonia – Willa Cather

    Such lists are a bit silly, except for the fact that they might encourage people (including myself) to read more books, which is a good thing. I wouldn’t compile a ranking myself as I don’t think of books in terms of league tables. I don’t see how you can sensibly compare very different types of novel or novels from very different eras. Nevertheless, I couldn’t resist counting how many books on the list I have read. If you want to know the answer, it is 42. I’ll let you guess which ones.

    I have read the Number 1 novel, Middlemarch and, although I thought it was very good, it surprises me to find it at the top of the list, above Ulysses The highest-ranked book I haven’t read is No. 2, Beloved. There are several others on the list that I’ve never even heard of let alone read. The only book on the list that I did at school was No. 78. A House for Mr Biswas, which I didn’t think was all that great. I’ve been meaning to read Tristram Shandy (No. 19) but I think I’ll get that out of the library rather than buying it.

    To save you counting, here are the authors with multiple entries:

    5 – Virginia Woolf
    4 – Jane Austen
    4 – Charles Dickens
    3 – Henry James
    3 – Toni Morrison
    2 – James Baldwin
    2 – Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    2 – Gustave Flaubert
    2 – Thomas Hardy
    2 – Kazuo Ishiguro
    2 – Franz Kafka
    2 – Thomas Mann
    2 – Cormac McCarthy
    2 – Vladimir Nabokov
    2 – W.G. Sebald
    2 – Leo Tolstoy

    I haven’t read anything by either Sebald or McCarthy or Flaubert. Among the omissions that surprised me are The Old Man and The Sea by Ernest Hemingway, The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan, Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift, The Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I’m not saying that any or all of these would be on my list, just that I’m surprised they don’t appear on the Guardian‘s.

    If anyone would like to comment – especially with other notable omissions – please feel free to do so through the box below.

    #100BestNovels #Guardian #literature