The Champ!
Nathan Bransford posted a list of his 100 favorite novels and extended an invitation for other bloggers to do the same. Intrigued by the idea (and eager to waste some time), I decided to take him up on the challenge.
It was a fun, if exasperating, exercise. What I found most difficult was evaluating books I hadn't read in ages, but remembered having strong feelings about. It's difficult to rank the things you love, anyway, but how to rank books you last read in high school against the ones you read last year? I'm a different person now. The older books' nuances (and sometimes, entire plots) might have escaped me in the intervening years. In the end, though, I figured if the book was powerful enough to have left an emotional fingerprint, then it deserved to make the cut (though it likely ended up in the bottom part of this list).
I did not include collections of unrelated short stories, shorter novellas or memoirs.
So, without further ado, here's my list of the top 100 novels:
- Jane Eyre
- Anna Karenina
- A Room with a View
- Persuasion
- Women In Love
- Gilead
- The English Patient
- The Razor's Edge
- Emily of New Moon
- On Chesil Beach
- A Passage to India
- Charlotte's Web
- Bel Canto
- Madame Bovary
- Olive Kitteridge
- Pride and Prejudice
- The Age of Innocence
- Anne of Green Gables
- The Corrections
- Breathing Lessons
- Silk
- Home
- Crime and Punishment
- The Anthologist
- Middlesex
- The Book of Ruth
- The Burgess Boys
- The Remains of the Day
- Middlemarch
- Villette
- The BFG
- The God of Small Things
- Freedom
- Lila
- My Ántonia
- The Sorrows of Young Werther
- A Thousand Splendid Suns
- Mrs. Dalloway
- Atonement
- The Road
- The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
- Jude the Obscure
- Les Misérables
- The Lowland
- Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
- Sense and Sensibility
- The Portrait of a Lady
- Great Expectations
- Mudbound
- The Grapes of Wrath
- Winesburg, Ohio
- Of Love and Other Demons
- The Art of Fielding
- The Sense of an Ending
- The House of Mirth
- Little Women
- To Kill a Mockingbird
- Mrs. Dalloway
- Life After Life
- One Hundred Years of Solitude
- Siddhartha
- The Namesake
- An Artist of the Floating World
- A Map of the World
- Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
- The Ten-Year Nap
- And the Mountains Echoed
- Elegies for the Brokenhearted
- Little Children
- And Then There Were None
- Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret
- The Hunchback of Notre Dame
- Emma
- Digging to America
- The Vagabond
- To the Lighthouse
- Animal Farm
- White Teeth
- Amy and Isabelle
- A Farewell to Arms
- Things Fall Apart
- The Scarlet Letter
- The Song is You
- Elective Affinities
- Talking It Over
- The Great Gatsby
- The Red and the Black
- The Westing Game
- Station Eleven
- Howard's End
- Life of Pi
- The Wings of the Dove
- Lady Chatterley's Lover
- Wonder Boys
- Tess of the d'Urbervilles
- My Name is Lucy Barton
- Searching for Caleb
- Norwegian Wood
- All Quiet on the Western Front
- Brooklyn
If we were keeping tabs on frequency of mentions, Anne Tyler, Jane Austen, Elizabeth Strout, E.M. Forster and Marilynne Robinson would take the prize.
One final note: Jane Eyre may or may not be the best novel of all time, but I've come to believe that the novels we read at a formative age (I was 13) are the ones that stick to our souls and won't let go. I've read that book a couple times since in the intervening years, and it's always held up. I love Jane. I love Mr. Rochester. I even love poor Bertha, raving away in that attic of hers.
They're why I fell in love with literature. And they're at least partly responsible for why I write today.
Thanks for the fun challenge, Nathan! I hope others take it up. If you do, be sure to share your list in the comments section of Nathan's original post, and he'll link his post to your blog.
12 comments:
Great list. I may try to do this too. My list will have very few classics on it, though. At least in the lower numbers. Much more pulp fiction
Nice job with the list. I wish I had the patience to do such a thing.
I'm glad to see The Westing Game on your list. I received that as a RIF book in 5th or 6th grade. I spent YEARS chasing for books like it. In the years before the Internet I sorely lacked access to book recommendations.
Charles, I'd like to see a list from you. Not that you have anything better to do with your time, I'm sure. ;)
Paul, I loved that book! It really made an impression. I got it for our daughter to read and was so happy she loved it, too. I totally agree about wanting other books like it when I was a kid.
The list did take some time, but I thought it was a good chance to do a mental inventory of my reading history, and remember books/authors I might want to check out again.
Thanks for stopping by! :)
Nifty list, Sarah_!
___ Seeing Animal Farm there... I'd add too, 1984; then, from another's pen, The Forty Days Of Musa Dagh.
estate sale
in this dusty library
trophies
_m
Hi Magyar, thanks for dropping by and checking out my list.
I like your haiku, too. :)
I love that you took this up! And you're right about how childhood readings stick to you the most. Gonna be picking up some of your recommendations soon :)
Thank you for the lovely comment, Soundarya! And for stopping by. :)
I am in awe. At least I spotted some Atwood and Hesse which are some of my favorites.
Dropped over the from walking fellow to say hello.
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