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 | |
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!
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