Sonntag, 9. September 2007
The Crimson Permanent Assurance Strikes!
This is what happens when you bring up a list of books to read with an English professor...I'm forwarding a list from the Associated Press. This is what they think are the 100 best novels of this century! Some of them are arguable, I think, and of course it's subjective and limited to the 20th century....and limited to those written in English, too. See what you think. I'd add James Joyce's Ulysses to your list, for sure. And maybe JJ's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. I would also *definitely* add Laurence Sterne's Tristram Shandy. It is a hoot...and pushes the limits of 18th C. typography. If i used it for 206, though, I think students would kill me. Ulysses is number one on this AP list, coincidentally. In fact, I ought to re-read it; it's been a long time. I would also add George Eliot's Middlemarch to the list. It can be slow at first, and then you get caught up with the characters. For poetry I love Browning's monologues....Fra Lippo Lippi, etc.Portrait of a Young Artist? *sigh*... I read it up to like page 40, the text went through my mind like bird through air. Unless you count in "The moocow was up the road" or something like that, then that stuck. But, I've heard Ulysses was much better, though. As for Tristram Shandy, I really wanted to read it, but like everything else it gradually fell out of the back of my mind, and splattered on the intelligence floor, to be whisked away. Guess that one's going on my list, too. She also included the list of 100 best novels, but I think, and she does too, that it's really biased, as it largely focuses on only 20th century novels, is subjective, rather limited in its scope, and to me, more of a British/American, caucasian male list. There isn't anything by Sartre on it, nor Camus or Toni Morrison. Hm. There's probably a disenfranchised, mixed-minority list floating out there somewhere for me *grins*The 100 Best Novels This Century .c The Associated Press By The Associated Press The 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century, as drawn up by the editorial board of the Modern Library: 1. ``Ulysses,'' James Joyce 2. ``The Great Gatsby,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald 3. ``A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man,'' James Joyce 4. ``Lolita,'' Vladimir Nabokov 5. ``Brave New World,'' Aldous Huxley 6. ``The Sound and the Fury,'' William Faulkner 7. ``Catch-22,'' Joseph Heller 8. ``Darkness at Noon,'' Arthur Koestler 9. ``Sons and Lovers,'' D.H. Lawrence 10. ``The Grapes of Wrath,'' John Steinbeck 11. ``Under the Volcano,'' Malcolm Lowry 12. ``The Way of All Flesh,'' Samuel Butler 13. ``1984,'' George Orwell 14. ``I, Claudius,'' Robert Graves 15. ``To the Lighthouse,'' Virginia Woolf 16. ``An American Tragedy,'' Theodore Dreiser 17. ``The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter,'' Carson McCullers 18. ``Slaughterhouse Five,'' Kurt Vonnegut 19. ``Invisible Man,'' Ralph Ellison 20. ``Native Son,'' Richard Wright 21. ``Henderson the Rain King,'' Saul Bellow 22. ``Appointment in Samarra,'' John O'Hara 23. ``U.S.A.'' (trilogy), John Dos Passos 24. ``Winesburg, Ohio,'' Sherwood Anderson 25. ``A Passage to India,'' E.M. Forster 26. ``The Wings of the Dove,'' Henry James 27. ``The Ambassadors,'' Henry James 28. ``Tender Is the Night,'' F. Scott Fitzgerald 29. ``The Studs Lonigan Trilogy,'' James T. Farrell 30. ``The Good Soldier,'' Ford Maddox Ford 31. ``Animal Farm,'' George Orwell 32. ``The Golden Bowl,'' Henry James 33. ``Sister Carrie,'' Theodore Dreiser 34. ``A Handful of Dust,'' Evelyn Waugh 35. ``As I Lay Dying,'' William Faulkner 36. ``All the King's Men,'' Robert Penn Warren 37. ``The Bridge of San Luis Rey,'' Thornton Wilder 38. ``Howards End,'' E.M. Forster 39. ``Go Tell It on the Mountain,'' James Baldwin 40. ``The Heart of the Matter,'' Graham Greene 41. ``Lord of the Flies,'' William Golding 42. ``Deliverance,'' James Dickey 43. ``A Dance to the Music of Time'' (series), Anthony Powell 44. ``Point Counter Point,'' Aldous Huxley 45. ``The Sun Also Rises,'' Ernest Hemingway 46. ``The Secret Agent,'' Joseph Conrad 47. ``Nostromo,'' Joseph Conrad 48. ``The Rainbow,'' D.H. Lawrence 49. ``Women in Love,'' D.H. Lawrence 50. ``Tropic of Cancer,'' Henry Miller 51. ``The Naked and the Dead,'' Norman Mailer 52. ``Portnoy's Complaint,'' Philip Roth 53. ``Pale Fire,'' Vladimir Nabokov 54. ``Light in August,'' William Faulkner 55. ``On the Road,'' Jack Kerouac 56. ``The Maltese Falcon,'' Dashiell Hammett 57. ``Parade's End,'' Ford Maddox Ford 58. ``The Age of Innocence,'' Edith Wharton 59. ``Zuleika Dobson,'' Max Beerbohm 60. ``The Moviegoer,'' Walker Percy 61. ``Death Comes to the Archbishop,'' Willa Cather 62. ``From Here to Eternity,'' James Jones 63. ``The Wapshot Chronicles,'' John Cheever 64. ``The Catcher in the Rye,'' J.D. Salinger 65. ``A Clockwork Orange,'' Anthony Burgess 66. ``Of Human Bondage,'' W. Somerset Maugham 67. ``Heart of Darkness,'' Joseph Conrad 68. ``Main Street,'' Sinclair Lewis 69. ``The House of Mirth,'' Edith Wharton 70. ``The Alexandria Quartet,'' Lawrence Durrell 71. ``A High Wind in Jamaica,'' Richard Hughes 72. ``A House for Ms. Biswas,'' V.S. Naipaul 73. ``The Day of the Locust,'' Nathaniel West 74. ``A Farewell to Arms,'' Ernest Hemingway 75. ``Scoop,'' Evelyn Waugh 76. ``The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,'' Muriel Spark 77. ``Finnegans Wake,'' James Joyce 78. ``Kim,'' Rudyard Kipling 79. ``A Room With a View,'' E.M. Forster 80. ``Brideshead Revisited,'' Evelyn Waugh 81. ``The Adventures of Augie March,'' Saul Bellow 82. ``Angle of Repose,'' Wallace Stegner 83. ``A Bend in the River,'' V.S. Naipaul 84. ``The Death of the Heart,'' Elizabeth Bowen 85. ``Lord Jim,'' Joseph Conrad 86. ``Ragtime,'' E.L. Doctorow 87. ``The Old Wives' Tale,'' Arnold Bennett 88. ``The Call of the Wild,'' Jack London 89. ``Loving,'' Henry Green 90. ``Midnight's Children,'' Salman Rushdie 91. ``Tobacco Road,'' Erskine Caldwell 92. ``Ironweed,'' William Kennedy 93. ``The Magus,'' John Fowles 94. ``Wide Sargasso Sea,'' Jean Rhys 95. ``Under the Net,'' Iris Murdoch 96. ``Sophie's Choice,'' William Styron 97. ``The Sheltering Sky,'' Paul Bowles 98. ``The Postman Always Rings Twice,'' James M. Cain 99. ``The Ginger Man,'' J.P. Donleavy 100. ``The Magnificent Ambersons,'' Booth Tarkington Literary Capitalism - too many choices, not enough time. *Chuckles* :)
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4 Kommentare:
Buncha dead, white man. I'm sorry (lucky?) to say that I've read almost all the books in the top ten. Plough through Portriat of an Artist as a Young Man . I loved it in high school.It's a complicated book. Many layers. Basic premise is that Dublin is a labyrith and the main character is trying to escape it through various means.
Don't apologize, amigo. I've read Grapes of Wrath, and while I can understand the significance of the period, the novel itself doesn't really entice or move me. However, The Great Gatsby sounds appealling. My mom told me that my life would be like that of the characters in the novel. I somehow think she meant it...
Your life is going to be like rich white folks from Lake Forest Il?(Quick fact: Max is from Lake Forest)
More like I'd marry a raving lunatic and die in a chair from an exploding liver. Judging from my history, I'm making some really good headway. Care for a tot of the finest? Does Lake Forest fall on our list of places to pave over?
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