Wednesday, February 24, 2010

One Hundred Novels

A good book can change your whole world -- at least for awhile. A great book can change your world forever.

Having experienced a drought of great books recently, I looked online for a list of great novels. I found this. It's Random House's list of the 100 greatest novels ever written. Maybe they're right, maybe these novels are great, but I've gotta say I started getting depressed just reading the list of titles. The Grapes of Wrath, 1984, Animal Farm, Main Street, The House of Mirth...what is it about bleakness that critics find so laudable?

Disappointed, but undaunted I checked out the corresponding Reader's List. The Readers seem to be overwhelmingly made up of scientologists and extreme capitalists as there are SEVEN novels by Ayn Rand and L. Ron Hubbard in the top 10!!!

I took a different tack and searched for favorite novels instead. I found the list that I've pasted in below. It is called The 100 Favorite Novels of Librarians

This list...RULES.

First of all, it contains almost every single one of my favorite novels of all time (Gone With the Wind, Lord of the Rings, Mists of Avalon, Catch-22, To Kill a Mockingbird, Jane Eyre, etc.) Second of all, it is filled with books that are just fun to read. Some of them are "great" and some of them probably aren't by critic's standards -- but readers love them anyway.

Being a freak, I knew I had to obsess about this list! And obsess...I have.

Some statistics:

  • I have read 37 of the novels on the list already
  • Of those 37, I have read 8 of them more than once
  • There are only two novels that I hated (A Handmaid's Tale, The Old Man and the Sea) and another four that I didn't really like (One Hundred Years of Solitude, Snow Falling on Cedars, The World According to Garp, Beloved and The Great Gatsby)
  • There are 7 novels that I haven't read, but that I own (A Christmas Carol, Alice in Wonderland, Atlas Shrugged, the Count of Monte Cristo, The Color Purple, The Stand, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy)
  • There are at least two misspellings in the list, which I find odd (Can you spot them?)
  • I will not rest easily until I have read them all!!!

1. Pride and Prejudice Austen
2. To Kill a Mockingbird Lee
3. Jane Eyre Bronte
4. Gone with the Wind Mitchell
5. Lord of the Rings Tolkien
6. The Catcher in the Rye Salinger
7. Little Women Alcott
8. A Prayer of Owen Meany Irving
9. The Stand King
10. The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald
11. Mists of Avalon Bradley
12. David Copperfield Dickens
13. Kristen Lavransdotter Undset
14. Beloved Morrison
15. Age of Innocence Wharton
16. The Shell Seekers Pilcher
17. Tess of the D'Urbervilles Hardy
18. The World According to Garp Irving
19. Catch 22 Heller
20. The Clan of the Cave Bear Auel
21. The Horse Whisperer Evans
22. Pillars of the Earth Follett
23. Prince of Tides Conroy
24. Possession Byatt
25. Rebecca DuMaurier
26. Follow the River Thom
27. My Antonia Cather
28. The Old Man and the Sea Hemingway
29. The Scarlet Letter Hawthorne
30. Sophies Choice Styron
31. Snow Falling on Cedars Guterson
32. One Hundred Years of Solitude Marquez
33. Name of the Rose Eco
34. The Giver Lowry
35. Cold Mountain Frazier
36. Cold Sassy Tree Burns
37. Atlas Shrugged Rand
38. Bridge to Terebithia Paterson
39. Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant Tyler
40. The Hobbit Tolkien
41. Les Miserables Hugo
42. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe Lewis
43. Wuthering Heights Bronte
44. A Tale of Two Cities Dickens
45. Huckelberry Finn Twain
46. Alice in Wonderland Carroll
47. The Wind in the Willows Grahame
48. The Bean Trees Kingsolving
49. Ben Hur Wallace
50. And Then There Were None Christie
51. The Secret Garden Burnett
52. Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Taylor
53. Busman's Honeymoon Sayers
54. Schindler's List Keneally
55. Emma Austen
56. The Color Purple Walker
57. The Count of Monte Cristo Dumas
58. Charlotte's Web White
59. Anne of Green Gables Montgomery
60. The Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood Wells
61. Lady Chatterly's Lover Lawrence
62. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn Smith
63. East of Eden Steinbeck
64. The Once and Future King White
65. Enders Game Card
66. The Fountainhead Rand
67. A Patchwork Planet Tyler
68. Gaudy Night Sayers
69. Shogun Clavell
70. Grapes of Wrath Steinbeck
71. Handmaid's Tale Atwood
72. Lonesome Dove McMurtry
73. Outlander Gabaldon
74. Pigs in Heaven Kingsolver
75. Slaughterhouse Five Vonnegut
76. Jude the Obscure Hardy
77. Time and Again Finney
78. Misery King
79. A Christmas Carol Dickens
80. The Accidental Tourist Tyler
81. Giants of the Earth Rolvaag
82. Persuasion Austen
83. Fried Green Tomatoes Flagg
84. Tisha Specht
85. The Thornbirds McCullough
86. Christy Marshall
87. Lost Horizon Hilton
88. The Little Prince St. Exupery
89. Fahrenheight 451 Bradbury
90. For Whom the Bell Tolls Hemingway
91. Frankenstein Shelley
92. Bleak House Dickens
93. Boy's Life McCammon
94. Chesapeake Michener
95. The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Adams
96. How Green Was My Valley Llewellyn
97. Howard's End Forster
98. I, Robot Asimov
99. Of Mice and Men Steinbeck
100. A Passage to India Forster

1 comment:

  1. What a cool project. How very Julie from Julie and Julia of you! I will have to go through and see how many I have read! I love to read your writing and I hope that you start a new blog about your LIFE in Seattle when you finish your project. I love the Giver. Such a good book!

    ReplyDelete