Following is the list of all time best novels written in English.
1. The Pilgrim’s
Progress by John Bunyan (1678)
A story of a man in search of truth told with the simple clarity
and beauty of Bunyan’s prose make this the ultimate English classic.
2. Robinson Crusoe by
Daniel Defoe (1719)
By the end of the 19th century, no book in English literary
history had enjoyed more editions, spin-offs and translations. Crusoe’s
world-famous novel is a complex literary confection, and it’s irresistible.
3. Gulliver’s
Travels by Jonathan Swift (1726)
A satirical masterpiece that’s never been out of print, Jonathan
Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels comes third in our list of the best novels written
in English
4. Clarissa by
Samuel Richardson (1748)
Clarissa is a tragic heroine, pressured by her unscrupulous
nouveau-riche family to marry a wealthy man she detests, in the book that
Samuel Johnson described as “the first book in the world for the knowledge it
displays of the human heart.”
5. Tom Jones by
Henry Fielding (1749)
Tom Jones is a classic English novel that captures the spirit of
its age and whose famous characters have come to represent Augustan society in
all its loquacious, turbulent, comic variety.
6. The Life and
Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne
(1759)
Laurence Sterne’s vivid novel caused delight and consternation
when it first appeared and has lost little of its original bite.
7. Emma by
Jane Austen (1816)
Jane Austen’s Emma is her masterpiece, mixing the sparkle of her
early books with a deep sensibility.
8. Frankenstein by
Mary Shelley (1818)
Mary Shelley’s first novel has been hailed as a masterpiece of
horror and the macabre.
9. Nightmare Abbey by
Thomas Love Peacock (1818)
The great pleasure of Nightmare Abbey, which was inspired
by Thomas Love Peacock’s
friendship with Shelley, lies
in the delight the author takes in poking fun at the romantic movement.
10. The Narrative of
Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket by Edgar Allan Poe (1838)
Edgar Allan Poe’s only novel – a classic adventure story with
supernatural elements – has fascinated and influenced generations of writers.
11. Sybil by
Benjamin Disraeli (1845)
The future prime minister displayed flashes of brilliance that
equalled the greatest Victorian novelists.
A whirlwind success … Jane Eyre.
12. Jane Eyre by
Charlotte Brontë (1847)
Charlotte Brontë’s erotic, gothic masterpiece became the
sensation of Victorian England. Its great breakthrough was its intimate dialogue
with the reader.
13. Wuthering
Heights by Emily Brontë (1847)
Emily Brontë’s windswept masterpiece is notable not just for its
wild beauty but for its daring reinvention of the novel form itself.
14. Vanity Fair by
William Thackeray (1848)
William Thackeray’s masterpiece, set in Regency England, is a
bravura performance by a writer at the top of his game.
15. David
Copperfield by Charles Dickens (1850)
David Copperfield marked the point at which Dickens became the
great entertainer and also laid the foundations for his later, darker
masterpieces.
16. The Scarlet
Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1850)
Nathaniel Hawthorne’s astounding book is full of intense
symbolism and as haunting as anything by Edgar Allan Poe.
17. Moby-Dick by
Herman Melville (1851)
Wise, funny and gripping, Melville’s epic work continues to cast
a long shadow over American literature.
18. Alice’s
Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (1865)
Lewis Carroll’s brilliant nonsense tale is one of the most
influential and best loved in the English canon.
19. The Moonstone by
Wilkie Collins (1868)
Wilkie Collins’s masterpiece, hailed by many as the greatest
English detective novel, is a brilliant marriage of the sensational and the
realistic.
20. Little Women by
Louisa May Alcott (1868-9)
Louisa May Alcott’s highly original tale aimed at a young female
market has iconic status in America and never been out of print.
21. Middlemarch by
George Eliot (1871-2)
This cathedral of words stands today as perhaps the greatest of
the great Victorian fictions.
22. The Way We Live
Now by Anthony Trollope (1875)
Inspired by the author’s fury at the corrupt state of England,
and dismissed by critics at the time, The Way We Live Now is recognised as
Trollope’s masterpiece.
23. The Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain (1884/5)
Mark Twain’s tale of a rebel boy and a runaway slave seeking
liberation upon the waters of the Mississippi remains a defining classic of
American literature.
24. Kidnapped by
Robert Louis Stevenson (1886)
A thrilling adventure story, gripping history and fascinating
study of the Scottish character, Kidnapped has lost none of its power.
25. Three Men in a
Boat by Jerome K Jerome (1889)
Jerome K Jerome’s accidental classic about messing about on the
Thames remains a comic gem.
26. The Sign of Four by
Arthur Conan Doyle (1890)
Sherlock Holmes’s second outing sees Conan Doyle’s brilliant
sleuth – and his bluff sidekick Watson – come into their own.
Helmut Berger and Richard Todd in the 1970 adaptation of The
Picture of Dorian Gray.
27. The Picture of
Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (1891)
Wilde’s brilliantly allusive moral tale of youth, beauty and
corruption was greeted with howls of protest on publication.
28. New Grub Street by
George Gissing (1891)
George Gissing’s portrayal of the hard facts of a literary life
remains as relevant today as it was in the late 19th century.
29. Jude the Obscure by
Thomas Hardy (1895)
Hardy exposed his deepest feelings in this bleak, angry novel
and, stung by the hostile response, he never wrote another.
30. The Red Badge of
Courage by Stephen Crane (1895)
Stephen Crane’s account of a young man’s passage to manhood
through soldiery is a blueprint for the great American war novel.
31. Dracula by
Bram Stoker (1897)
Bram Stoker’s classic vampire story was very much of its time
but still resonates more than a century later.
32. Heart of
Darkness by Joseph Conrad (1899)
Joseph Conrad’s masterpiece about a life-changing journey in
search of Mr Kurtz has the simplicity of great myth.
33. Sister Carrie by
Theodore Dreiser (1900)
Theodore Dreiser was no stylist, but there’s a terrific momentum
to his unflinching novel about a country girl’s American dream.
34. Kim by
Rudyard Kipling (1901)
In Kipling’s classic boy’s own spy story, an orphan in British
India must make a choice between east and west.
35. The Call of the
Wild by Jack London (1903)
Jack London’s vivid adventures of a pet dog that goes back to
nature reveal an extraordinary style and consummate storytelling.
36. The Golden Bowl by
Henry James (1904)
American literature contains nothing else quite like Henry
James’s amazing, labyrinthine and claustrophobic novel.
37. Hadrian the
Seventh by Frederick Rolfe (1904)
This entertaining if contrived story of a hack writer and priest
who becomes pope sheds vivid light on its eccentric author – described by DH
Lawrence as a “man-demon”.
38. The Wind in the
Willows by Kenneth Grahame (1908)
The evergreen tale from the riverbank and a powerful
contribution to the mythology of Edwardian England.
39. The History of
Mr Polly by HG Wells (1910)
The choice is great, but Wells’s ironic portrait of a man very
like himself is the novel that stands out.
40. Zuleika Dobson by
Max Beerbohm (1911)
The passage of time has conferred a dark power upon Beerbohm’s
ostensibly light and witty Edwardian satire.
41. The Good Soldier by
Ford Madox Ford (1915)
Ford’s masterpiece is a searing study of moral dissolution
behind the facade of an English gentleman – and its stylistic influence lingers
to this day.
42. The Thirty-Nine
Steps by John Buchan (1915)
John Buchan’s espionage thriller, with its sparse, contemporary
prose, is hard to put down.
43. The Rainbow by
DH Lawrence (1915)
The Rainbow is perhaps DH Lawrence’s finest work, showing him
for the radical, protean, thoroughly modern writer he was.
44. Of Human Bondage by
W Somerset Maugham (1915)
Somerset Maugham’s semi-autobiographical novel shows the
author’s savage honesty and gift for storytelling at their best.
45. The Age of
Innocence by Edith Wharton (1920)
The story of a blighted New York marriage stands as a fierce
indictment of a society estranged from culture.
46. Ulysses by
James Joyce (1922)
This portrait of a day in the lives of three Dubliners remains a
towering work, in its word play surpassing even Shakespeare.
47. Babbitt by
Sinclair Lewis (1922)
What it lacks in structure and guile, this enthralling take on
20s America makes up for in vivid satire and characterisation.
48. A Passage to
India by EM Forster (1924)
EM Forster’s most successful work is eerily prescient on the
subject of empire.
49. Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes by Anita Loos (1925)
A guilty pleasure it may be, but it is impossible to overlook
the enduring influence of a tale that helped to define the jazz age.
50. Mrs Dalloway by
Virginia Woolf (1925)
Woolf’s great novel makes a day of party preparations the canvas
for themes of lost love, life choices and mental illness.
Carey Mulligan and Leonardo DiCaprio in The Great Gatsby’s film
adaptation by Baz Luhrmann.
51. The Great Gatsby by
F Scott Fitzgerald (1925)
Fitzgerald’s jazz age masterpiece has become a tantalising
metaphor for the eternal mystery of art.
52. Lolly Willowes by
Sylvia Townsend Warner (1926)
A young woman escapes convention by becoming a witch in this original
satire about England after the first world war.
53. The Sun Also
Rises by Ernest Hemingway (1926)
Hemingway’s first and best novel makes an escape to 1920s Spain
to explore courage, cowardice and manly authenticity.
54. The Maltese
Falcon by Dashiell Hammett (1929)
Dashiell Hammett’s crime thriller and its hard-boiled hero Sam
Spade influenced everyone from Chandler to Le Carré.
55. As I Lay Dying by
William Faulkner (1930)
The influence of William Faulkner’s immersive tale of raw
Mississippi rural life can be felt to this day.
56. Brave New World by
Aldous Huxley (1932)
Aldous Huxley’s vision of a future human race controlled by
global capitalism is every bit as prescient as Orwell’s more famous dystopia.
57. Cold Comfort
Farm by Stella Gibbons (1932)
The book for which Gibbons is best remembered was a satire of
late-Victorian pastoral fiction but went on to influence many subsequent
generations.
58. Nineteen
Nineteen by John Dos Passos (1932)
The middle volume of John Dos Passos’s USA trilogy is
revolutionary in its intent, techniques and lasting impact.
59. Tropic of Cancer by
Henry Miller (1934)
The US novelist’s debut revelled in a Paris underworld of seedy
sex and changed the course of the novel – though not without a fight with the
censors.
60. Scoop by
Evelyn Waugh (1938)
Evelyn Waugh’s Fleet Street satire remains sharp, pertinent and
memorable.
61. Murphy by
Samuel Beckett (1938)
Samuel Beckett’s first published novel is an absurdist
masterpiece, a showcase for his uniquely comic voice.
Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall in The Big Sleep.
62. The Big Sleep by
Raymond Chandler (1939)
Raymond Chandler’s hardboiled debut brings to life the seedy LA
underworld – and Philip Marlowe, the archetypal fictional detective.
63. Party Going by
Henry Green (1939)
Set on the eve of war, this neglected modernist masterpiece
centres on a group of bright young revellers delayed by fog.
64. At
Swim-Two-Birds by Flann O’Brien (1939)
Labyrinthine and multilayered, Flann O’Brien’s humorous debut is
both a reflection on, and an exemplar of, the Irish novel.
65. The Grapes of
Wrath by John Steinbeck (1939)
One of the greatest of great American novels, this study of a
family torn apart by poverty and desperation in the Great Depression shocked US
society.
66. Joy in the
Morning by PG Wodehouse (1946)
PG Wodehouse’s elegiac Jeeves novel, written during his
disastrous years in wartime Germany, remains his masterpiece.
67. All the King’s
Men by Robert Penn Warren (1946)
A compelling story of personal and political corruption, set in
the 1930s in the American south.
68. Under the
Volcano by Malcolm Lowry (1947)
Malcolm Lowry’s masterpiece about the last hours of an alcoholic
ex-diplomat in Mexico is set to the drumbeat of coming conflict.
69. The Heat of the
Day by Elizabeth Bowen (1948)
Elizabeth Bowen’s 1948 novel perfectly captures the atmosphere
of London during the blitz while providing brilliant insights into the human
heart.
Richard Burton and John Hurt in Nineteen Eighty-four.
70. Nineteen
Eighty-Four by George Orwell (1949)
George Orwell’s dystopian classic cost its author dear but is
arguably the best-known novel in English of the 20th century.
71. The End of the
Affair by Graham Greene (1951)
Graham Greene’s moving tale of adultery and its aftermath ties
together several vital strands in his work.
72. The Catcher in
the Rye by JD Salinger (1951)
JD Salinger’s study of teenage rebellion remains one of the most
controversial and best-loved American novels of the 20th century.
73. The Adventures
of Augie March by Saul Bellow (1953)
In the long-running hunt to identify the great
American novel, Saul Bellow’s picaresque third book frequently hits the mark.
74. Lord of the
Flies by William Golding (1954)
Dismissed at first as “rubbish & dull”, Golding’s
brilliantly observed dystopian desert island tale has since become a classic.
75. Lolita by
Vladimir Nabokov (1955)
Nabokov’s tragicomic tour de force crosses the boundaries of
good taste with glee.
76. On the Road by
Jack Kerouac (1957)
The creative history of Kerouac’s beat-generation classic,
fuelled by pea soup and benzedrine, has become as famous as the novel itself.
77. Voss by
Patrick White (1957)
A love story set against the disappearance of an explorer in the
outback, Voss paved the way for a generation of Australian writers to shrug off
the colonial past.
78. To Kill a
Mockingbird by Harper Lee (1960)
Her second novel finally arrived this summer,
but Harper Lee’s first did enough alone to secure her lasting fame, and remains
a truly popular classic.
79. The Prime of
Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark (1960)
Short and bittersweet, Muriel Spark’s tale of the downfall of a
Scottish schoolmistress is a masterpiece of narrative fiction.
80. Catch-22 by
Joseph Heller (1961)
This acerbic anti-war novel was slow to fire the public
imagination, but is rightly regarded as a groundbreaking critique of military
madness.
81. The Golden
Notebook by Doris Lessing (1962)
Hailed as one of the key texts of the women’s movement of the 1960s, this study of a divorced single mother’s search for personal and political identity remains a defiant, ambitious tour de force.
Malcolm Macdowell in Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange film.
82. A Clockwork
Orange by Anthony Burgess (1962)
Anthony Burgess’s dystopian classic still continues to startle
and provoke, refusing to be outshone by Stanley Kubrick’s brilliant film
adaptation.
83. A Single Man by
Christopher Isherwood (1964)
Christopher Isherwood’s story of a gay Englishman struggling
with bereavement in LA is a work of compressed brilliance.
84. In Cold Blood by
Truman Capote (1966)
Truman Capote’s non-fiction novel, a true story of bloody murder
in rural Kansas, opens a window on the dark underbelly of postwar America.
85. The Bell Jar by
Sylvia Plath (1966)
Sylvia Plath’s painfully graphic roman à clef, in which a woman
struggles with her identity in the face of social pressure, is a key text of
Anglo-American feminism.
86. Portnoy’s
Complaint by Philip Roth (1969)
This wickedly funny novel about a young Jewish American’s
obsession with masturbation caused outrage on publication, but remains his most
dazzling work.
87. Mrs Palfrey at
the Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor (1971)
Elizabeth Taylor’s exquisitely drawn character study of
eccentricity in old age is a sharp and witty portrait of genteel postwar
English life facing the changes taking shape in the 60s.
88. Rabbit Redux by
John Updike (1971)
Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom, Updike’s lovably mediocre alter ego, is
one of America’s great literary protoganists, up there with Huck Finn and Jay
Gatsby.
89. Song of Solomon by
Toni Morrison (1977)
The novel with which the Nobel prize-winning author established
her name is a kaleidoscopic evocation of the African-American experience in the
20th century.
90. A Bend in the
River by VS Naipaul (1979)
VS Naipaul’s hellish vision of an African nation’s path to
independence saw him accused of racism, but remains his masterpiece.
91. Midnight’s
Children by Salman Rushdie (1981)
The personal and the historical merge in Salman Rushdie’s
dazzling, game-changing Indian English novel of a young man born at the very
moment of Indian independence.
92. Housekeeping by
Marilynne Robinson (1981)
Marilynne Robinson’s tale of orphaned sisters and their oddball
aunt in a remote Idaho town is admired by everyone from Barack Obama to Bret
Easton Ellis.
Nick Frost as John Self Martin Amis’s Money.
93. Money: A Suicide
Note by Martin Amis (1984)
Martin Amis’s era-defining ode to excess unleashed one of
literature’s greatest modern monsters in self-destructive antihero John Self.
94. An Artist of the
Floating World by Kazuo Ishiguro (1986)
Kazuo Ishiguro’s novel about a retired artist in postwar Japan,
reflecting on his career during the country’s dark years, is a tour de force of
unreliable narration.
95. The Beginning of
Spring by Penelope Fitzgerald (1988)
Fitzgerald’s story, set in Russia just before the Bolshevik
revolution, is her masterpiece: a brilliant miniature whose peculiar magic
almost defies analysis.
96. Breathing
Lessons by Anne Tyler (1988)
Anne Tyler’s portrayal of a middle-aged, mid-American marriage
displays her narrative clarity, comic timing and ear for American speech to
perfection.
97. Amongst Women by
John McGahern (1990)
This modern Irish masterpiece is both a study of the faultlines
of Irish patriarchy and an elegy for a lost world.
98. Underworld by
Don DeLillo (1997)
A writer of “frightening perception”, Don DeLillo guides the
reader in an epic journey through America’s history and popular culture.
99. Disgrace by
JM Coetzee (1999)
In his Booker-winning masterpiece, Coetzee’s intensely human
vision infuses a fictional world that both invites and confounds political
interpretation.
100. True History of
the Kelly Gang by Peter Carey (2000)
Peter Carey rounds off our list of literary milestones with a
Booker prize-winning tour-de-force examining the life and times of Australia’s
infamous antihero, Ned Kelly.
No comments:
Post a Comment