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Tuesday, 19 May 2026

The Guardian’s new list of 100 greatest novels of all time

I’m currently taking a break from the hellsite still known as Twitter, though I’m aware people have been arguing about this list. I don’t care all that much, to be honest. The list is mainly useful for tracking what I have and haven’t read: here the strikethrough is for the books I have read; the tick is for when I have seen a screen adaptation. 


100 My Ántonia

99 The Go-Between

98 The Road 

97 Catch-22

96 Pedro Páramo

95 The Return of the Native

94 The Known World

93 Invisible Cities

92 Sentimental Education

91 Life and Fate

90 Jacob's Room

89 The Left Hand of Darkness

88 Ragtime

87 The Line of Beauty

86 The Turn of the Screw 

85 The Vegetarian

84 The Talented Mr Ripley

83 A Farewell to Arms

82 The End of the Affair ✔

81 Buddenbrooks

80 Rebecca 

79 Go Tell It on the Mountain

78 A House for Mr Biswas

77 The Rainbow

76 Dracula 

75 The Bluest Eye

74 Nervous Conditions

73 Austerlitz

72 Our Mutual Friend

71 Kindred

70 Jude the Obscure 

69 Crime and Punishment

68 Blood Meridian

67 The Man Without Qualities

66 The Master and Margarita

65 The Color Purple 

64 The Good Soldier

63 White Teeth

62 Half of a Yellow Sun

61 The Rings of Saturn

60 Howards End 

59 Never Let Me Go 

58 Disgrace

57 The Sound and the Fury

56 Mansfield Park 

55 The Waves

54 Orlando 

53 The Transit of Venus

52 The Golden Bowl

51 My Brilliant Friend

50 Wide Sargasso Sea

49 A Fine Balance

48 The Metamorphosis

47 Vanity Fair

46 The Leopard

45 The Golden Notebook

44 Giovanni's Room

43 Housekeeping

42 The Magic Mountain

41 Heart of Darkness

40 Song of Solomon

39 Their Eyes Were Watching God

38 The Age of Innocence 

37 Invisible Man

36 The Handmaid's Tale

35 Great Expectations 

34 Wolf Hall

33 David Copperfield 

32 The God of Small Things

31 The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie 

30 Frankenstein 

29 Pale Fire

28 The Brothers Karamazov 

27 The Trial 

26 Don Quixote

25 Lolita 

24 The Remains of the Day

23 Midnight's Children

22 Things Fall Apart

21 The Portrait of a Lady 

20 Wuthering Heights 

19 The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman

18 Persuasion 

17 One Hundred Years of Solitude

16 Nineteen Eighty-Four

15 Moby-Dick 

14 Mrs Dalloway

13 Emma 

12 Bleak House 

11 The Great Gatsby 

10 Madame Bovary 

9 Pride and Prejudice 

8 Jane Eyre 

7 War and Peace 

6 Anna Karenina 

5 In Search of Lost Time

4 To the Lighthouse

3 Ulysses

2 Beloved 

1 Middlemarch 


You know how I feel about Middlemarch. It is undoubtedly a masterpiece, but in the English language alone, there are 3 novels I’m placing above it: Moby-Dick, Bleak House, Wuthering Heights. In terms of greatness, I mean. On a personal level, I also have more love for Mansfield Park, David Copperfield, Tom Jones, the Alice books, and a few others. Beyond the English language, we also have Anna Karenina, War and Peace, Don Quixote

My list—if I’m ever shameless enough to make such a list—would be very different. But who cares. This is a reminder that there are lots of novels out there I need to read (once I’m done exploring the ancient Greece and ancient Rome).  

4 comments:

  1. Don't forget to check No. 26. I'm pretty sure you read it.
    Since a very famous writer commented "No Faulkner?" I note that The Sound and the Fury is on the list. But that choice and not "Absalom, Absalom!" makes me wonder if the list has more to do with popularity than value. I need to find the Guardian piece and see what they said about their criteria.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The tick (checkmark in American English) is about screen adaptations.
      On some other lists, like the British novels list, there are quite a few cases where I haven't read the book but have seen an adaptation, so I know the story.
      The Guardian list is done by votes. Middlemarch is No.1 because most people voted for it.
      I didn't look at every single person's list, but I thought Roxane Gay's list looked quite bad haha.

      Delete
    2. Ooops - I didn't read your intro carefully enough.

      Delete
    3. Actually it's my fault. I wrote strikethrough and then put things in bold lol.

      Delete

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