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Saturday 1 June 2024

My 10 favourite novels

Is this hasty? I don’t think so, though it may appear to be. Here’s the new update: 

Anna Karenina by Lev Tolstoy

War and Peace by Lev Tolstoy

Moby Dick by Herman Melville

Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes 

Hong lou meng by Cao Xueqin 

Mansfield Park by Jane Austen

The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu 

Bleak House by Charles Dickens 

Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov

Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte



The list might be slightly different on a different day. I might swap something out for Madame Bovary, or The Age of Innocence. I might remove something to make space for The Brothers Karamazov

But Anna Karenina and War and Peace are the two novels dearest to my heart, with moments imprinted on my mind, like Vronsky meeting Anna, Kitty at the ball, the horse race, Levin’s proposal scene, Levin in the fields, Anna’s death, Natasha at the ball, Andrei at Borodino, Lise’s death, Nikolai in battle, Petya’s death, and so on. These novels shaped my taste, and in some way, shaped me as a person.

Don Quixote might even fight Moby Dick for the third spot—we’ll see. Don Quixote is perhaps one of those novels that resonate more when one is a bit older. 

So what can one learn from my list? 6 of these novels are over 700 pages. 6 are from the 19th century, 1 from the 11th, 1 from the 17th, 1 from the 18th, and 1 from the 20th. 6 are arguably about everything, 5 depict an obsession, with overlaps (Mansfield Park is the outlier, about neither). 8 are Western, 2 are Eastern; 5 are originally written in English, 2 in Russian, 1 in Spanish, 1 in Japanese, 1 in Chinese; 9 I read in the original English or in an English translation, 1 I read in a Vietnamese translation. 

Not sure what all that says about me.


I’m currently reading Fighting Windmills: Encounters with Don Quixote by Manuel Durán and Fay R. Rogg. 

36 comments:

  1. Here is a list of ten of my favorite novels, in no particular order:
    David Copperfield
    Bleak House
    The Brothers Karamazov
    The Master and Margarita
    Middlemarch
    Moby Dick
    Les Miserables
    Cancer Ward
    Gilead
    Anna Karenina

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's a good list. 2 by Dickens, I noticed.

      Delete
  2. I meant to also include War and Peace (of course!). And that means half of my favorites are in Russian. Regrettably, I don't know a word of Russian, so must rely on translations. Thanks for your engaging posts. Tim Guirl

    ReplyDelete
  3. Mine would be (in no order - it's hard enough narrowing the list to ten, mush less ranking them within it!):

    David Copperfield
    Middlemarch
    Anna Karenina
    Blood Meridian
    From Here to Eternity (maybe out of place among these others, but this ex-soldier cannot exclude the greatest portrait of military life ever)
    Barchester Towers
    White Noise
    Call It Sleep
    A Handful of Dust
    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ah, a Trollope. A friend of mine is going to be very happy.
      You have more 20th century titles than me.

      Delete
    2. Just one friend? Surely you have more than one friend who loves Trollope. Lol.

      Delete
    3. I have several, but only one (I'm not naming names) who haunts me about Trollope.

      Delete
  4. So far each list has exactly two books I have not read, which makes me feel both well read and eager to read more novels. A nice feeling!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tom,
      From Tim's list, I'm guessing Gilead and Cancer Ward.
      Which two of Thomas's list have you not read? Can't guess there.
      And I think you're the most well-read among people I know. I mean well-read and able to talk about the books.

      Delete
    2. Blood Meridian and From Here to Eternity, the latter just the kind of book I enjoy seeing on "favorite" lists.

      Hope to get to Genji this year.

      Delete
  5. I should put mine up. Many are form chilhood, old friends, special cases, others from early university days. All read by the time I was 20.

    Don Quixote
    Robinson Crusoe
    Gulliver's Travels
    Dead Souls
    Moby-Dick
    Bleak House
    Madame Bovary
    Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
    Huckleberry Finn
    Anna Karenina

    ReplyDelete
  6. Tom,
    Shocking!
    I'm obviously not changing my list just to avoid it, but I do sometimes wonder if my list is a bit too conventional.
    What do you like about Robinson Crusoe and Gulliver's Travels?

    ReplyDelete
  7. Those two books are deeply imprinted, although I now know I read them, again and again, in abridged editions, my Robinson Crusoe, for example, beginning with the shipwreck.

    Both are peak adventure novels in their way, the epitome of the "man alone" story in one case and a picaresque of great inventiveness and depth in the other.

    A lot of my favorites, which would likely continue if the list were longer, are journeys, a series of adventures.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Interesting. So what does that say about you, if we're talking "autobiography"?
      I always had a vague feeling of reading Don Quixote as a kid, it was probably an abridgement or adaptation.

      Delete
    2. It says I was materially deprived and never got to go anywhere.

      Except none of that is true.

      Delete
  8. Tom,
    I'm surprised there's no Nabokov on your list.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Pale Fire could go on there, some others, too. Tough competition though and only 10 spots.

    ReplyDelete
  10. A list of favorite English-language novels, in chronological order.

    Tom Jones
    Rasselas
    Pride and Prejudice
    Moby-Dick
    Kidnapped
    The Wind in the Willows
    The Code of the Woosters
    Uncle Fred in the Springtime
    Offshore
    A Month in the Country

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice. Now give me a list of favourite novels not in English. Haha.

      Delete
  11. Really lame of me, but I'm cheating and doing a Top 25, in very rough order, with year of composition from memory, which in most cases will be embarrassingly out.

    Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (1782).
    Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte (1848).
    Crime & Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1866).
    Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy (1874).
    Ulysses - James Joyce (1922).
    Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert (1857).
    The Brothers Karamazov - Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1880).
    Emma - Jane Austen (1816).
    Middlemarch - George Eliot (1872).
    Oblomov - Ivan Goncharov (1859).
    Gulliver's Travels - Jonathan Swift (1726).
    The Confidence-Man - Herman Melville (1859).
    The Bostonians - Henry James (1885).
    Bleak House - Charles Dickens (1852).
    The Master & Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov (1940).
    La Cousine Bette - Honore De Balzac (1846).
    The Private Memoirs & Confessions of a Justified Sinner - James Hogg (1824).
    Decline & Fall - Evelyn Waugh (1924).
    Notes from Underground - Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1864).
    L'Education Sentimentale - Gustave Flaubert (1869).
    Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov (1961).
    Fathers & Sons - Ivan Turgenev (1862).
    Le Rouge et le Noir - Stendhal (1830).
    Hangover Square - Patrick Hamilton (1941).
    Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia - Samuel Johnson (1759).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's cheating, Mr Wicked, I mean Wise.
      Narrow it down to 10.

      Delete
    2. Oh all right then.

      Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Pierre Choderlos de Laclos (1782).
      Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte (1848).
      Crime & Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1866).
      Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy (1874).
      Ulysses - James Joyce (1922).
      Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert (1857).
      The Brothers Karamazov - Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1880).
      Emma - Jane Austen (1816).
      Middlemarch - George Eliot (1872).
      The History of Tom Jones - Henry Fielding (1749).

      I missed Tom Jones off my original list of 25, but they had a Melvyn Bragg "In Our Time" about it recently and I was reminded of how enjoyable I found it. Blifil in particular is a superb portrait of wheedling insidious evil masquerading as good, rivalling Iago and that horrible bloke in Confessions of a Justified Sinner. And while a lot of people are rather sniffy about the digressive general remarks that begin every chapter, I really like them.

      Delete
    3. Good, that's a good list.
      Now how do I force you to read Hong lou meng and The Tale of Genji...

      Delete
  12. With no more than one per writer, mine would be something like this:

    Don Quixote
    Confessions of a Justified Sinner
    Wuthering Heights
    Bleak House
    The Idiot
    Bouvard et Pécuchet
    Anna Karenina
    The Ambassadors
    Ulysses
    Pather Panchali

    I wanted to include one from where I was born (Bengal), and from where I grew up (Scotland), but no special pleading is required for either, as they’re both exceptional novels.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nice.
      I just can't do the "no more than one per writer" thing, but obvious reasons.

      Delete
    2. Now I’m thinking I should have included some lighter works as well - The Hound of the Baskervilles, say, or Summer Lightning.

      Delete
    3. Nothing light on my list though.

      Delete
  13. Here’s my list:

    Anna Karenina
    Brothers Karamazov
    War and Peace
    The Idiot
    Bleak House
    Phineas Finn
    The Small House at Allington
    In Search of Lost Time
    David Copperfield
    Aubrey/Maturin series (Patrick O’Brian)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Michael,
      That's a great list. 4 Russian books!
      I did consider adding The Brothers Karamazov to mine, but couldn't remove anything from my list to make space for it.

      Delete
    2. Haha. I almost included “For Whom the Bell Tolls”, but couldn’t find room. Admittedly the Aubrey Maturin series isn’t really one novel (but twenty connected novels) and isn’t perhaps “great” literature on the level of the others on the list, but it is very, very good and I love it with all my heart and have re-read it many times. (Of course Proust is seven novels, but truly it really is just one.)

      Also jostling to be on my list:

      Little Dorrit
      The Last Chronicle of Barset
      Phineas Redux
      The Remains of the Day
      Pride and Prejudice
      All Quiet on the Western Front
      Night Soldiers

      Delete
  14. …sorry, that was me who replied. Also forgot to add Moby Dick to the runners up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Michael,
      You have to reread Mansfield Park. That's the best Austen.

      Delete
    2. Yes! I do need to do that.

      Delete

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