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Monday, 14 October 2024

The Guardian’s 100 greatest novels of all time

The 1899 list yesterday made me want to look again at a more modern list of greatest novels of all time. So below is the list from The Guardian, published in 2003.

I use a strikethrough for the books I have read.

1. Don Quixote Miguel De Cervantes

2. Pilgrim's Progress John Bunyan

3. Robinson Crusoe Daniel Defoe

4. Gulliver's Travels Jonathan Swift

5. Tom Jones Henry Fielding

6. Clarissa Samuel Richardson

7. Tristram Shandy Laurence Sterne

8. Dangerous Liaisons Pierre Choderlos De Laclos

9. Emma Jane Austen

10. Frankenstein Mary Shelley

11. Nightmare Abbey Thomas Love Peacock

12. The Black Sheep Honoré De Balzac

13. The Charterhouse of Parma Stendhal

14. The Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas

15. Sybil Benjamin Disraeli

16. David Copperfield Charles Dickens

17. Wuthering Heights Emily Brontë

18. Jane Eyre Charlotte Brontë

19. Vanity Fair William Makepeace Thackeray

20. The Scarlet Letter Nathaniel Hawthorne

21. Moby-Dick Herman Melville

22. Madame Bovary Gustave Flaubert

23. The Woman in White Wilkie Collins

24. Alice's Adventures In Wonderland Lewis Carroll

25. Little Women Louisa M. Alcott

26. The Way We Live Now Anthony Trollope

27. Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy

28. Daniel Deronda George Eliot

29. The Brothers Karamazov Fyodor Dostoevsky

30. The Portrait of a Lady Henry James

31. Huckleberry Finn Mark Twain

32. The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Robert Louis Stevenson

33. Three Men in a Boat Jerome K. Jerome

34. The Picture of Dorian Gray Oscar Wilde

35. The Diary of a Nobody George Grossmith

36. Jude the Obscure Thomas Hardy

37. The Riddle of the Sands Erskine Childers

38. The Call of the Wild Jack London

39. Nostromo Joseph Conrad

40. The Wind in the Willows Kenneth Grahame

41. In Search of Lost Time Marcel Proust

42. The Rainbow D. H. Lawrence

43. The Good Soldier Ford Madox Ford

44. The Thirty-Nine Steps John Buchan

45. Ulysses James Joyce

46. Mrs Dalloway Virginia Woolf

47. A Passage to India EM Forster

48. The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald

49. The Trial Franz Kafka

50. Men Without Women Ernest Hemingway

51. Journey to the End of the Night Louis-Ferdinand Celine

52. As I Lay Dying William Faulkner

53. Brave New World Aldous Huxley

54. Scoop Evelyn Waugh

55. USA John Dos Passos

56. The Big Sleep Raymond Chandler

57. The Pursuit Of Love Nancy Mitford

58. The Plague Albert Camus

59. Nineteen Eighty-Four George Orwell

60. Malone Dies Samuel Beckett

61. Catcher in the Rye J.D. Salinger

62. Wise Blood Flannery O'Connor

63. Charlotte's Web EB White

64. The Lord Of The Rings J. R. R. Tolkien

65. Lucky Jim Kingsley Amis

66. Lord of the Flies William Golding

67. The Quiet American Graham Greene

68 On the Road Jack Kerouac

69. Lolita Vladimir Nabokov

70. The Tin Drum Günter Grass

71. Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebe

72. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Muriel Spark

73. To Kill A Mockingbird Harper Lee

74. Catch-22 Joseph Heller

75. Herzog Saul Bellow

76. One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel García Márquez

77. Mrs Palfrey at the Claremont Elizabeth Taylor

78. Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy John Le Carré

79. Song of Solomon Toni Morrison

80. The Bottle Factory Outing Beryl Bainbridge

81. The Executioner's Song Norman Mailer

82. If on a Winter's Night a Traveller Italo Calvino

83. A Bend in the River VS Naipaul

84. Waiting for the Barbarians JM Coetzee

85. Housekeeping Marilynne Robinson

86. Lanark Alasdair Gray

87. The New York Trilogy Paul Auster

88. The BFG Roald Dahl

89. The Periodic Table Primo Levi

90. Money Martin Amis

91. An Artist of the Floating World Kazuo Ishiguro

92. Oscar And Lucinda Peter Carey

93. The Book of Laughter and Forgetting Milan Kundera

94. Haroun and the Sea of Stories Salman Rushdie

95. LA Confidential James Ellroy

96. Wise Children Angela Carter

97. Atonement Ian McEwan

98. Northern Lights Philip Pullman

99. American Pastoral Philip Roth

100. Austerlitz W. G. Sebald


The main thing I’ve learnt is that I’ve read very little. But there are some odd choices. Omission of War and Peace? Daniel Deronda instead of Middlemarch? David Copperfield instead of Bleak House? The Woman in White instead of The Moonstone? Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, rightly, but not Through the Looking-GlassAs I Lay Dying instead of The Sound and the Fury

If I were to make a list of 100 greatest novels of all time, I would also name Hadji Murad by Lev Tolstoy, Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol, Mansfield Park by Jane Austen, The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers, maybe Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman… 

I would also include a few non-Western titles such as The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu, Hong lou meng/ Dream of the Red Chamber/ The Story of the Stone by Cao Xueqin, Kokoro by Natsume Soseki, etc. 

What do you think, folks? 

16 comments:

  1. As ever, non-western writers are only included if the authors had the good sense to write in a proper European language instead of one of those silly little languages of theirs that Guardianista literati don't really care about.

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  2. He did set himself a rule of one book per author, which is especially ridiculous in the case of Tolstoy, and is violated anyway in the case of Dos Passos.

    All lists are ridiculous--though fun enough--but this one was odd anyway for our time. You'd think we'd be beginning to get over the Western bias of these lists. And any list that has Anna Karenina and then also Lucky Jim or Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is just weird...

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    1. I didn't realise he set himself that rule. But that is ridiculous!
      I never make a list with that rule as I do not want to pick between Anna Karenina and War and Peace.

      Delete
  3. Every entry should include a paragraph on how the book is better than The Tale of Genji.

    This is just McCrum, right? So no methodology or voting or anything like that? Even on his own terms, he does not even try to make the case that Sybil is one of the 100 greatest novels of "all time", or of any time, just that it is good, better than you might think.

    Although my favorite novel on the list is Men without Women, since it is in no way a novel. Odd odd odd.

    Thirty-some books off the list is a lot more reading than "very little"!

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    1. Haha, considering that you're not particularly impressed with Hong lou meng, I do wonder what you'd think about The Tale of Genji. You should like it more, I think.
      When I googled Men without Women, it's the Murakami book that popped up. Then I went back to the list and realised they meant the Hemingway.
      Have you read all these books on the list?

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    2. I have read so much about Genji. Not as much as I have read about, oh, Proust, but a lot.

      So I have read 47 of the first 50, 20 of the next 25, and 6 of the last 25, which is the way these lists usually go for me now. I have not read Sybil myself.

      I read 10 of them by the time I was 10 or let's be safe and say 12 years old.

      I am completely with Reese. Putting The Riddle of the Sands, for example, a good book that accidentally invented the spy novel, make me doubt McCrum's sense. It belongs on a list of greatest spy novels, and greatest sailing novels.

      Delete
    3. That's a lot!
      But yes, it is in some ways a strange list. But now that I have seen the 1899 list...
      Let's see which writer I have read the most about. Must be Shakespeare.

      Delete
  4. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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  5. I suppose people put A Passage to India on these sorts of lists because it’s a book about Issues, an Important book. I didn’t care for it. Howards End and A Room with a View are among my favourites, with some beautifully drawn characters. A Passage’s characters seemed to be cardboard cutouts.

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    1. A Room with a View didn't leave a strong impression on me. But I want to read Maurice at some point, as I enjoyed the film.

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  6. Took me a while to realise these were in chronological order.

    Not a terrible list. Would be a good list if it were just somebody's favourites. But as a purportedly objective list, it suffers not only from Euro-centrism (& within that, Anglo-centrism) as others have observed, but also from massive neophilia or recency bias, as these lists so often do. The idea there are only 9 novels from before the 19th Century that stack up is preposterous. We are already in the 20th Century by No. 39. Why is I dunno The Executioner's Song better than Rasselas or Oblomov or Notre-Dame de Paris? I mean, it just bloody isn't. Wouldn't any serious list include at least one or two of the ancient novels - if only The Golden Ass & Satyricon - the 4 great Chinese novels, something by Goethe, maybe a Zola? It doesn't help that the compiler restricts himself to 1 book per author, and even within that, he makes bizarre choices at times. The Black Sheep for Balzac? Daniel frigging Deronda for George Eliot? What the feck? Scoop for Evelyn Waugh? You what?

    On the other hand, I'm open to the idea of including more "genre" & children's fiction in such lists. Even if it's a bit of a problem when you end up including The 39 Steps at the same time as excluding War & Peace.

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    1. Chill, Hadrian.
      Children's fiction like The Little Prince or Narnia or Harry Potter?
      I was going to make a list of 100 books that meant the most to me, but then people would see and comment on all the holes in my reading, so I stopped myself.

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  7. There are so many here I haven’t read; I’ve only read 29.

    No fair sticking three Dos Passos novels under one heading. By the way, these novels are good, but I wouldn’t say they really belong on this list. Mostly, they’re an interesting portrait of an era, but none of the characters stayed with me.

    Proust, on the other hand, has to be grouped together, because those seven books really do form one novel.

    I love John Le Carre, but come on he doesn’t belong on a list with Tolstoy and Dickens. Also, I’d pick Smiley’s People as his greatest — though don’t try to read it first; it’ll spoil Tinker Taylor (in case you ever decide to pick up 1970s spy novels, which you won’t).

    Speaking of Dickens, I think you’d love David Copperfield; I forgot you haven’t gotten there yet.

    The Way We Live Now would not be my choice for greatest Trollope; that would be Framley Parsonage, A Small House at Allington, Phineas Finn, or Orley Farm. Possibly another, he wrote too much.

    As others have commented, Men Without Women is a book of short stories, not a novel. I’d pick For Whom The Bell Tolls for greatest Hemingway, and I’d agree it belongs on this list.

    Some of these are obviously on the list at least in part because they were recent films in 2003. Lord of the Rings, LA Confidential, etc.

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    1. I'm pretty sure I have read some version of David Copperfield as a kid. I just don't know if it's the whole book or some abridged version.
      Some of the choices are certainly odd.

      Delete

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