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Thread: Your 50 favourite books

  1. #1

    Default Your 50 favourite books

    Inspired by Eric's comment that lists that would be interesting would be subjective, personal ones, and for a bit of fun, what are your 50 favourite books?

    To get things going, mine are:

    The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende
    The Story of O by Dominique Aury
    Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
    The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Attwood
    Blind Assassin by Margaret Attwood
    According to Queeney by Beryl Bainbridge
    Consider Phlebas by Iain M Banks
    The Book of Evidence by John Banville
    The Plague by Albert Camus
    Oscar and Lucinda by Peter Carey
    Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy by John le Carr?
    Alice in Wonderland Lewis Carroll
    Nights at the Circus by Angela Carter
    The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler
    The Commitments by Roddy Doyle
    The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
    Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco
    Mary Barton by Elizabeth Gaskell
    Lord of the Flies by William Golding
    The Tin Drum by G?nter Grass
    Crabwalk by G?nter Grass
    The Call of the Toad by G?nter Grass
    The Little World of Don Camillo by Giovanni Guareschi
    Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy
    The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
    Fabien by Erich K?stner
    Death in Venice by Thomas Mann
    Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann
    Dr Faustus by Thomas Mann
    Chronicle of a Death Foretold by Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez
    Rumpole of the Bailey by John Mortimer
    The Year of the Hare Arto Paasilinna
    Felidae by Akif Pirin?ci
    Witches Abroad by Terry Pratchett
    Jingo by Terry Pratchett
    All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
    All Passion Spent by Vita Sackville West
    Justine by the Marquis de Sade
    Riotous Assembly by Tom Sharpe
    Blott on the Landscape by Tom Sharpe
    A Town Like Alice by Neville Shute
    My friend Maigret by Georges Simenon (as representative of all the Maigret stories I've read, since I haven't read a bad one yet)
    Roadside Picnic by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky
    Perfume by Patrick S?skind
    The Color Purple by Alice Walker
    The Island of Dr Moreau by HG Wells
    The War of the World by HG Wells
    The Picture of Dorien Gray by Oscar Wilde
    Life at Blandings by PG Wodehouse
    The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham
    The Kill by ?mile Zola

  2. #2
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Evil, evil. I can't resost making lists and this is such an impossible list. Can we at least make it a 50 best novels list or something?

  3. #3

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Whatever you want? I hadn't really thought of any 'rules'. But yes, I guess 50 pieces of fiction.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Ok, for starters a (very tentative) novel list. 20th century. 1 novel per author.

    Native Son / Richard Wright
    The Wings of the Dove / Henry James
    Ulysses / James Joyce
    My Holocaust / Tova Reich
    Surfacing / Margaret Atwood
    Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften / Robert Musil
    Recherche / Marcel Proust
    Herzog / Saul Bellow
    Der Process / Franz Kafka
    Journal du Voleur / Jean Genet
    Trobadora Beatriz / Irmtraud Morgner
    Shame / Salman Rushdie
    The Gulag Archipelago / Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
    Heart of Darkness / Joseph Conrad
    Zeno's Conscience / Italo Svevo
    Wide Sargasso Sea / Jean Rhys
    Golden Notebook / Doris Lessing
    The Recognitions / William Gaddis
    The Making of Americans / Gertrude Stein
    If This Is a Man / Primo Levi
    Lolita / Vladimir Nabokov
    Le Voyeur / Alain Robbe-Grillet
    Gravity's Rainbow / Thomas Pynchon
    Hunger / Knut Hamsun
    The Good Soldier / Ford Madox Ford
    The Name of the Rose / Umberto Eco
    Pedro Paramo / Juan Rulfo
    The waves / Virginia Woolf
    Kaff auch Mare Crisium / Arno Schmidt
    St. Petersburg / Andrei Bely
    Jugend ohne Gott / ?d?n von Horvath
    Brideshead Revisited / Evelyn Waugh
    Blechtrommel / G?nter Grass
    Nachdenken ?ber Christa T. / Christa Wolf
    Sound and Fury / William Faulkner
    Ausl?schung / Thomas Bernhard
    Molloy / Beckett
    White Noise / Don Delillo
    To Kill a Mockingbird / Harper Lee
    In Cold Blood / Truman Capote
    A House and its Head / Ivy Compton-Burnett
    The Book and the Brotherhood / Iris Murdoch
    The Sun also rises / Ernest Hemingway
    Age of Innocence / Edith Wharton
    Berlin Alexanderplatz / Alfred D?blin
    Master and Margarita / Michail Bulgakow
    Catch-22 / Joseph Heller
    Flu? ohne Ufer / Hans Henny Jahnn
    Voyage au bout de la nuit / Louis-Ferdinand C?line
    Spring Snow / Yukio Mishima
    Under the Volcano / Malcolm Lowry
    Last edited by Mirabell; 18-Jul-2008 at 12:33.

  5. #5
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Ok, I'll play too; my favorite 50 books this week:

    Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
    Blindness, Jos? Saramago
    Seeing, Jos? Saramago
    Death at Intervals, Jos? Saramago
    The Book of Disquiet, Fernando Pessoa
    Pedro Paramo, Juan Rulfo
    A Plan for Escape, Adolfo Bioy Casares
    The Invention of Morel, Adolfo Bioy Casares
    The Metamorphosis, Franz Kafka
    The Trial, Franz Kafka
    Penguin Island, Anatole France
    Arabian Nights and Days, Naguib Mahfouz
    Orlando, Virginia Woolf
    I Married a Communist, Philip Roth
    Operation Shylock, Philip Roth
    Sabbath's Theater, Philip Roth
    1984, George Orwell
    Wuthering Heights, Emily Bront?
    The Seven Madmen, Roberto Artl
    The Magic Mountain, Thomas Mann
    Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift
    The Woman in White, Wilkie Collins
    The Moonstone, Wilkie Collins
    Dracula, Bram Stoker
    The Europeans, Henry James
    The Nothing Man, Jill Thompson
    Sophie's Choice, William Styron
    L?cio's Confession, M?rio de S?-Carneiro
    The Haunting of Toby Jugg, Dennis Wheatley
    Three Men on the Bummel, Jerome K. Jerome
    The Jungle Books, Rudyard Kipling
    The Relic, E?a de Queiroz
    Of Human Bondage, William Sommerset Maughan
    One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez
    Love in the Time of Cholera, Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez
    The Book of Laughter and Forgetting, Milan Kundera
    Cat and Mouse, G?nter Grass
    Misty Morning, Verg?lio Ferreira
    Crime and Punishment, Fyodor Dostoevksy
    The Black Dahlia, James Ellroy
    Moon Palace, Paul Auster
    The Book of Illusions, Paul Auster
    Shalimar the Clown, Salman Rushdie
    The Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, James Joyce
    Bless me, Ultima, Rudolfo Anaya
    Song of Solomon, Toni Morrison
    The Lost Honor of Katharina Blum, Heinrich B?ll
    The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde
    The Island of Dr. Moreau, H.G. Wells,
    The War of the Worlds, H.G. Wells

  6. #6

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    This is great reading people's lists.

    Cheers people.

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    One per author (needless to say, a few books on here are not as good as a few second, third and fourth book of some of the listed authors), totally inaccurate and made on the fly:

    Antonio Tabucchi - Pereira declares
    Arno Schmidt - Leviathan
    Bret Easton Ellis - The Rules of attraction
    Cormac McCarthy - Blood Meridian
    Danilo Kis - A tomb for Boris Davidovich
    Dashiell Hammett - Red Harvest
    Denis Johnson - Already Dead
    Don Delillo - White Noise
    Donald Barthelme - The King
    Enrique Vila-Matas - El viaje vertical
    Gabriel Garcia Marquez - Chronicle of a death foretold
    George Orwell - 1984
    Gustave Flaubert - L'?ducation sentimentale
    Hubert Selby Jr. - The Demon
    James Flint - Habitus
    John Barth - Chimera
    John Dos Passos - U.S.A.
    Julio Cort?zar - Los premios
    Laurence Sterne - Tristram Shandy
    Lawrence Norfolk - Lempriere's Dictionary
    Lewis Carroll - Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
    Louis-Ferdinand C?line - Voyage au bout de la nuit
    Mario Vargas Llosa - La fiesta del chivo
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    Mark Z. Danielewski - House of leaves
    Martin Amis - London Fields
    Miguel de Cervant?s Saavedra - Don Quijote de la Mancha
    Norman Mailer - The deer park
    Raymond Chandler - The Big Sleep
    Reinhard Jirgl - Les Inachev?s
    Richard Brautigan - Dreamin of babylon
    Richard Powers - The Echo Maker
    Robert Coover - Public Burning
    Roberto Bola?o - 2666
    Ry? Murakami - Coin locker babies
    Salman Rushdie - Midnight's children
    Saneh Sangsuk - Une histoire vieille comme la pluie
    Saul Bellow - The adventures of Augie March
    Steve Erickson - Zeroville
    Thomas Bernhard - Frost
    Thomas Pynchon - V.
    Viktor Pelevin - The clay machine-gun
    Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita
    W.G. Sebald - The Rings of Saturn
    William Faulkner - The sound and the fury
    William Gaddis - The Recognitions
    William H. Gass - The Tunnel
    William T. Vollmann - Europe Central
    Yukio Mishima - The sailor who fell from grace with the sea
    Last edited by fausto; 18-Jul-2008 at 15:55.

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    I took some liberties. I threw in some poetry, some plays, some diaries. I also left five empty spaces at the bottom because this was off the cuff and I know by tomorrow I'll be thinking "How could you forget XXX you idiot!" So this gives my aging brain a chance to work.

    Ulysses by James Joyce
    Tropic of Cancer by Henry Miller
    Gravity’s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
    The Portable Dorothy Parker by Dorothy Parker
    Absalom, Absalom by William Faulkner
    Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
    Sons and Lovers by DH Lawrence
    As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
    Henry and June by Anais Nin
    The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
    Brideshead Revisited by Evelyn Waugh
    Carry On, Jeeves by PG Wodehouse
    Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog by Dylan Thomas
    An Awfully Big Adventure by Beryl Bainbridge
    Hamlet by William Shakespeare
    Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead by Tom Stoppard
    Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino
    Locos by Felipe Alfau
    Pale Fire by Vladamir Nabokov
    Brokeback Mountain by Anne Proulx
    On the Road by Jack Kerouac
    The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler
    Sometimes You Get So Alone That It Just Makes Sense by Charles Bukowski
    V. by Thomas Pynchon
    Tropic of Capricorn by Henry Miller
    The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
    Cannery Row by John Steinbeck
    Spy in the House of Love by Anais Nin
    Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut
    20 Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda
    The Rainbow by DH Lawrence
    A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
    Under Milkwood by Dylan Thomas
    A Quiet Life by Beryl Bainbridge
    The History of Mr. Polly by HG Wells
    Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
    The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hamett
    To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
    Fire by Anais Nin
    The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
    If on a Winter’s Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino
    The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
    The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexander Dumas
    The Secret Agent by Joseph Conrad
    The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon

    A thought that came to mind compiling this list -- do we have a Beryl Bainbridge thread yet? We should.

    Update: I decided to give four slots to short fiction:

    Haircut by Ring Lardner
    The Rocking Horse Winner by DH Lawrence
    A Christmas Memory by Truman Capote
    The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe

    That gives me one slot left for that obvious blunder.
    Last edited by Irene Wilde; 18-Jul-2008 at 17:45.

  9. #9

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Impressive!!!!!! all of you
    It's been a while i was wandering if the old Demon of selby would reapaer,i loved it.
    Gustave Flaubert -L'?ducation sentimentale much better than bovary

  10. #10

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    It's fascinating seeing which authors crop up most regularly in people's lists.

    I thought about including Lolita ? it's the only Nabokov I've read thus far ? but although I loved the prose, I felt deeply uncomfortable with the story itself and just felt that (illogically, I'm sure) I couldn't include it for that reason.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Same here Sybarite ,i never was easy with it.Still i though about it would add it.There good this when one come after is that he can inspire himself with the other list.

    In a cold blood-Truman Capote
    The demon-Hubert Selby
    Leo the african-Amin Maalouf
    Requiem for the east-Andrei Makine
    Embers-Sandor Marai
    They where counted-Miklos Bamffy
    The leopard-Lampedusa
    Voyage au bout de la nuit-Celine
    Remets to slip, gondolier-san antonio
    The battle-Patrick Rambaud
    100 years of solitude-Garcia Marquez
    War and peace-Leo tolstoy
    Lotita-Nabokov
    The damned-Fyodor Dostoevksy
    Sinoue l'egiptien-Waltari
    l'education sentimentale-Flaubert
    l'immoraliste-andr? Gide
    My dog stupid-john Fante
    Too loud a solitude-Hrabal
    Orlando-virginia Woolf
    South american trilogie-louis de Berni?res
    Don quichote-Cervantes
    The naked and the dead -Norman Mailer
    The ax-Donald Westlake
    Roots of heaven-Romain Gary
    The 1000 night
    I spit on your graves-Boris Vian
    Water music-TC Boyles
    Mr vertigo-Paul Auster
    Stranger on a train-Highsmith
    The first circle-Solzhenitsy
    La recherche-Proust
    Black star safari-Paul Theroux
    The lion of al Rassan-Guy gavriel Kay
    The golden ass-Apuleus
    The blue wolf-Inou?
    le maitre et margeritte-Bulgakow
    Une vie-Maupassant
    A room with a view-Forster
    Kim -Kipling
    The prude and the prodijial-Barbara Cartland
    The Road- Cormac McCarthy
    Labyrinths -Jorge Luis Borges
    Quiet days in clichy-Miller
    In patagonia-Bruce Chatwin
    Memoire d'hadrien-Yourcenar(currently reading..but already captured)

    I spared you most of the shiite i love.One can't be completly naked before bare acquaintance's
    Last edited by saliotthomas; 18-Jul-2008 at 19:02.

  12. #12

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Quote Originally Posted by saliotthomas View Post
    ... I spared you most of the shiite i love.One can't be completly naked before bare acquaintance's
    ~~LOL~~

    A taste of junk culture is as acceptable a part of a cultural diet, Thomas, as a Pot Noodle is an occasional part of one's food diet. (That's a real confession for you )

  13. #13

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    I'll have to interpret the task my own way, and go with the thick and/or dense (like me!) that well reward the time spent reading or rereading them (novels, no more than one per author, not necessarily their 'best' ):

    classix
    Miguel Cervantes, Don Quixote
    Laurence Sterne, Tristram Shandy
    Nikolay Gogol, Dead Souls
    Herman Melville, The Confidence-Man
    Stendhal, The Charterhouse of Parma
    George Eliot, Middlemarch
    Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina
    Gustave Flaubert, Bouvard & Pecuchet
    Joseph Conrad, Nostromo
    moderns
    Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire
    Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow
    Hermann Broch, The Death of Virgil
    Harry Mulisch, The Discovery of Heaven
    Georges Perec, Life: A User's Manual
    Raymond Queneau, The Blue Flowers
    Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet
    Cynthia Ozick, The Puttermesser Papers
    Julio Cortazar, Hopscotch
    Mesa Selimovic, Death and the Dervish
    Umberto Eco, Foucault's Pendulum
    Ken Kesey, Sometimes a Great Notion
    James Joyce, Ulysses
    William Gaddis, The Recognitions
    Gilbert Sorrentino, Mulligan Stew
    Flann O'Brien, At-Swim-Two-Birds
    Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master & Margarita
    Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, The Leopard
    Anthony Burgess, Nothing Like the Sun
    Yury Dombrovsky, The Faculty of Worthless Knowledge
    Malcolm Lowry, Under the Volcano
    Saul Bellow, Humboldt's Gift
    Robert Musil, The Man without Qualities
    Italo Svevo, Zeno's Conscience
    John Barth, The Sot-Weed Factor
    Gabriel Garcia Marquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude
    Italo Calvino, if on a winter's night a traveller
    Jose Saramago, The History of the Siege of Lisbon
    Halldor Laxness, Independent People
    Ernesto Sabato, On Heroes and Tombs
    Guillermo Cabrera Infante, Three Trapped Tigers
    Augusto Roa Bastos, I the Supreme
    Malcolm Bradbury, To the Hermitage
    Patrick White, Voss
    Olga Grushin, The Dream Life of Sukhanov
    Alejo Carpentier, The Lost Steps
    Aleksander Hemon, The Lazarus Project
    Roberto Bolano, The Savage Detectives (at least til 2666 is Englished)
    Penelope Fitzgerald, The Blue Flower
    Hermann Hesse, Magister Ludi/The Glass Bead Game
    Joseph Roth, The Radetsky March

    cf a list of lists

  14. #14
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Well, this is an enjoyable parlour game, so I can't help joining in. Here's my list (all fiction apart from two works of autiobgraphy), with the proviso that some of the books I read an enormously long time ago and should re-read to see if they are still worthy of inclusion:

    (alphabetical order)
    The Girl in a Swing, Richard Adams
    The Sheltering Sky, Paul Bowles
    Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte
    The Master and Margarita, Mikhail Bulgakov
    The Outsider, Albert Camus
    The Little Sister, Raymond Chandler
    The Long Goodbye, Raymond Chandler
    Short Stories (any decent anthology), Anton Chekhov
    Nostromo, Joseph Conrad
    The Secret Agent, Joseph Conrad
    Great Expectations, Charles Dickens
    The Possessed, Fyodor Dostoevsky
    The Count of Monte Cristo, Alexandre Dumas
    Absalom Absalom, William Faulkner
    Madame Bovary, Gustave Flaubert
    The Magus, John Fowles
    The End of the Affair, Graham Greene
    The Power and the Glory, Graham Greene
    The Slaves of Solitude, Patrick Hamilton
    Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy
    A Farewell to Arms, Ernest Hemingway
    The First Forty-Nine Stories, Ernest Hemingway
    A Movable Feast, Ernest Hemingway
    This Sweet Sickness, Patricia Highsmith
    The Turn of the Screw, Henry James
    The Beast in the Jungle, Henry James
    The Rainbow, D.H. Lawrence
    Doctor Faustus, Thomas Mann
    So Long, See You Tomorrow, William Maxwell
    South of the Border, West of the Sun, Haruki Murakami
    All the Pretty Horses, Cormac McCarthy
    No Country for Old Men, Cormac McCarthy
    No Other Life, Brian Moore
    Tales of Mystery and Imagination, Edgar Allan Poe
    ? la Recherche du Temps Perdu, Marcel Proust
    A Judgment in Stone, Ruth Rendell
    Flicker, Theodor Roszak
    A Sport and a Pastime, James Salter
    Light Years, James Salter
    Burning the Days, James Salter
    Games with Love and Death (a long out-of-print collection of stories), Arthur
    Schnitzler
    Les Volets Verts, Georges Simenon
    Lettre ? mon Juge, Georges Simenon
    Le Temps d’Ana?s, Georges Simenon
    The Secret History, Donna Tartt
    Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy
    The Age of Innocence, Edith Wharton
    Revolutionary Road, Richard Yates
    The Easter Parade, Richard Yates
    Germinal, ?mile Zola

  15. #15
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    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Right, here's an attempt at 50 books I love - alphabetical order, one book per author, and obviously very subjective and bound to change the second I hit "Post Quick Reply."

    Douglas Adams - The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy
    Carl Jonas Love Almqvist - The Queen's Diadem
    Karen Armstrong - The Battle for God
    Paul Auster - The New York Trilogy
    Majgull Axelsson - Den jag aldrig var
    Wolfgang Borchert - Draussen vor der T?r
    Ray Bradbury - Fahrenheit 451
    Michail Bulgakov - The Master and Margarita
    Italo Calvino - Cosmicomics
    Tage Danielsson - Grallimatik
    Don DeLillo - Underworld
    Joan Didion - Play It As It Lays
    Fyodor Dostoevsky - Crime and Punishment
    Umberto Eco - Foucault's Pendulum
    Bret Easton Ellis - American Psycho
    F Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby
    Gabriel Garc?a M?rquez - One Hundred Years of Solitude
    William Gibson - Pattern Recognition
    Kenneth Grahame - The Wind in the Willows
    Erik Fosnes Hansen - Tales of Protection vol 1
    Hermann Hesse - The Glass Bead Game
    Bohumil Hrabal - Too Loud A Solitude
    Siri Hustvedt - What I Loved
    Eyvind Johnson - Return to Ithaca
    Franz Kafka - Metamorphosis
    Stephen King - The Stand
    Jonathan Lethem - Fortress of Solitude
    Torgny Lindgren - Hash
    Clarice Lispector - The Stream of Life
    Richard Matheson - I Am Legend
    Cormac McCarthy - The Road
    Ian McEwan - Atonement
    Herman Melville - Moby-Dick
    Robert Musil - The Man Without Qualities
    Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita
    Peter Nilson - Stj?rnv?gar/Rymdljus/Solvindar
    Joyce Carol Oates - Blonde
    George Orwell - Animal Farm
    Georges Perec - A Void
    Thomas Pynchon - Mason & Dixon
    Philip Roth - American Pastoral
    Salman Rushdie - The Satanic Verses
    William Shakespeare - Hamlet
    Mary Shelley - Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus
    Sara Stridsberg - Dr?mfakulteten
    Hjalmar S?derberg - Doctor Glas
    Donna Tartt - The Secret History
    Leonid Tsypkin - Summer in Baden-Baden
    Kurt Vonnegut - Cat's Cradle
    Virginia Woolf - Orlando
    Perhaps the mission of those who love mankind is to make people laugh at the truth, to make truth laugh, because the only truth lies in learning to free ourselves from insane passion for the truth.
    - Umberto Eco
    Reading list

  16. Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Here's my 50 favourites, which just demonstrates as always how little I've actually read. I've tried to stick with my original experience of reading them (some, if I read them now, I feel I'd like a lot less). One per author of course, otherwise it'd be dominated by Zola:

    Ivo Andric, The Bridge on the Drina
    John Barth, Chimera
    Samuel Beckett, More Pricks Than Kicks
    Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights
    Mikhail Bulgakov, The Master and Marguerita
    Anthony Burgess, Earthly Powers
    Italo Calvino, Marcovaldo
    Elias Canetti, The Play of the Eyes
    Karel Capek, War with the Newts
    Alejo Carpentier, Explosion in a Cathedral
    A book by Colette (it doesn't really matter which)
    Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White
    Miguel Delibes, The Prince Dethroned
    Charles Dickens, The Pickwick Papers
    Fyodor Dostoevsky, The Double
    George Eliot, Siles Marner
    William Faulker, The Mansion
    F Scott Fitzgerald, Tender is the Night
    Max Frisch, I'm Not Stiller
    Alasdair Gray, 1982 Janine
    Henry Green, Party-Going
    Knut Hamsun, Mysteries
    Thomas Hardy, Tess of the d'Urbervilles
    Jaroslav Hasek, The Good Soldier Svejk
    Hermann Hesse, Peter Camenzind
    Henry James, The Ambassadors
    James Joyce, Ulysses
    Halldor Laxness, The Fish Can Sing
    Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird
    Doris Lessing, Under My Skin
    Wyndham Lewis, Tarr
    Andrei Makine, Le Testament Francais
    Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Love in the Time of Cholera
    Guy de Maupassant, A Woman's Life
    Herman Melville, Pierre
    Eduardo Mendoza, The Truth about the Savolta Case
    Yukio Mishima, Spring Snow
    George Moore, Confessions of a Young Man
    Vladimir Nabokov, The Gift
    Georges Perec, Things
    Abbe Prevost, Manon Lescaut
    Eca de Queiroz, Cousin Basilio
    Gregor von Rezzori, Memoirs of an Anti-Semite
    Budd Schulberg, What Makes Sammy Run?
    John Steinbeck, Tortilla Flat
    Laurence Sterne, A Sentimental Journey
    Tarjei Vesaas, The Boat in the Evening
    Edith Warton, The House of Mirth
    Virginia Woolf, Orlando
    Emile Zola, Germinal

  17. #17

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Mikhail Bulgakov, Il maestro e Margherita
    Nikolaj Gogol, Le anime morte
    Arthur Koestler, Darkness at noon
    Chaim Potok, Davita's Harp
    Chaim Potok The chosen
    Chaim Potok, In the beginning
    Beppe Fenoglio, Il partigiano Johnny
    Luigi Meneghello, I piccoli maestri
    Luigi Meneghello, Libera nos a Malo
    Primo Levi,La tregua
    Primo Levi, Il sistema periodico
    Natalia Ginzburg Lessico familiare
    I.B. Singer The family Moskat
    Amos Oz, To know a woman
    Amos Oz, A tale of love and darkness
    Sholem Aleichem Tornando dal mercato
    John Irving, Setting free the bears
    Philip Roth, I married a communist
    Philip Roth, Portnoy's complaint
    Philip Roth, Shabbath's theatre
    Omero, Odissea
    Omero, Iliade
    Mordecai Richler Barney's Version
    Margaret Atwood The blind assassin
    Alba de Cespedes Quaderno proibito
    Henry Roth Call it sleep
    Meir Shalev The blue mountain
    Italo Calvino Ultimo viene il corvo
    Italo Calvino Marcovaldo ovvero le stagioni in citt?
    Italo Calvino La giornata di uno scrutatore
    Alberto Moravia Gli indifferenti
    Alberto Moravia Racconti romani
    Apuleio L'asino d'oro
    Heinrich Boll Diario d'Irlanda
    Jonathan Coe The house of sleep
    Jonathan Coe What a carve up!
    Doris Lessing The diary of a good neighbour
    Doris Lessing The habit of loving
    Doris Lessing African stories
    Doris Lessing To my mother
    Albert Cohen Belle du seigneur

    My God I'm too tired to go on...
    Last edited by PinaFreud; 01-Aug-2008 at 09:20.

  18. #18

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    Ok...here they are, in no particular order.

    Ulysses-- James Joyce
    The Portrait of The Artist as a Young Man-- James Joyce
    Daniel Deronda-- George Eliot
    Middlemarch-- George Eliot
    The Mill on the Floss-- George Eliot
    Silas Marner-- George Eliot
    Mrs. Dalloway-- Virginia Woolf
    To the Lighthouse-- Virginia Woolf
    Slaughterhouse-Five -- Kurt Vonnegut
    The House of the Spirits -- Isabel Allende
    The Tenant of Wildfell Hall-- Anne Bronte
    Pride and Prejudice-- Jane Austen
    Emma-- Jane Austen
    Persuasion-- Jane Austen
    Crime and Punishment-- F. M. Dostoyevsky
    The Idiot-- F. M. Dostoyevsky
    The Magic Skin-- Honore de Balzac
    Eugenie Grandet-- Honore de Balzac
    Madame Bovary-- Gustave Flaubert
    The Count of Monte Cristo-- Alexandre Dumas
    The Expedition of Humphrey Clinker-- Tobias Smollett
    News From Nowhere-- William Morris
    1984-- George Orwell
    Brave New World-- Aldous Huxley
    New Grub Street-- George Gissing
    The General in His Labyrinth-- Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    Heidi-- Johanna Spyri
    To Kill a Mockingbird-- Harper Lee
    Cry, the Beloved Country-- Alan Paton
    Vanity Fair-- W. M. Thackeray
    A Tale of Two Cities-- Chales Dickens
    The Spoils of Poynton-- Henry James
    The Europeans-- Henry James
    The Picture of Dorian Gray-- Oscar Wilde
    20,000 Leagues Under the Sea-- Jules Verne
    Lord of the Flies-- William Golding
    The Hours-- Michael Cunningham
    Medicine River-- Thomas King
    All the Pretty Horses-- Cormac McCarthy
    Native Son-- Richard Wright
    The Arch of Triumph-- Erich Maria Remarque
    The Feast of the Goat-- Mario Vargas Llosa
    The Outsider-- Albert Camus
    The Trial-- Franz Kafka
    The Master-- Colm Toibin
    The Commitments-- Roddy Doyle
    Murphy-- Samuel Beckett
    At Swim-Two-Birds-- Flann O'Brien
    S.: A Novel About the Balkans-- Slavenka Drakulic
    The President-- Miguel Angel Asturias
    I, the Supreme--Augusto Roa Bastos
    Last edited by rabbitfast; 16-Feb-2013 at 23:14.

  19. #19

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    After the Ford Madox Ford these in no particular order, i'll have forgotten so many books too, but

    Beckett's Trilogy
    Complete Short Prose
    How It Is
    Watt
    Murphy
    Krapp's Last Tape - so to my name
    Not I

    Tristram Shandy

    i'd love to choose all of Faulkner but will stick with
    Absalom, Absalom, the Wild Palms and Light in August

    Kleist's stories
    Kafka's short stories and diaries
    The brother's Karamazov
    Ford Madox Ford's The Good Soldier
    Chekhov's short stories
    Marguerite Yourcenar's "memoirs of Hadrian"
    Jean Rhys, the Wide Sargasso Sea
    Genet's the thief's journal
    Zeno's conscience, Italo Svevo
    Thomas Bernhard's memoir "Gathering Evidence" is my favourite of the several that i've read
    Iris Murdoch's The Sea The Sea..also The Philosopher's Pupil
    Melville's shorter works along with the whale book -i've still to read Poe
    William Gaddis, The Recognitions
    Goytisolo's Marks of Identity, also Forbidden Territories

    Virgil's georgics as well as the Aeneid, Dante's Purgatorio, so to a couple of favourite scholarly volumes, Erich Auerbach's "Mimesis" and John Frecerro's Dante: the poetics of conversion. I love too much philosophy to include much here, so i'll stick with the presocratics, Duns Scotus and Merleau-Ponty, John Caputo's book on Heidegger, Ray Monk's biography of Wittgenstein. A couple of good volumes on the presocratics by Gregory Vlastos, and more recently Jonathan Barnes

    Also Christopher Rick's "Beckett's Dying Words" and Adam Piette's book on acoustic memory in Joyce, Proust, Mallarme and Beckett "remembering and the sound of words" these together with Badiou's incredibly energetic commitment to Beckett have seen me through thick and thin Likewise David C Lindberg and Richard S Westphall for the history of science

    Celan, Hopkins, Clare, Eliot as i've already mentioned

    undisciplined but disciplined and probably many more than fifty, but that's a start anyway, i just want to be reading all the time

  20. #20

    Default Re: Your 50 favourite books

    And see i forgot Musil, (about whom i can never decide, so i i end up reading it over and over anyway) Celine, Chandler, Flaubert, Perec, Sebald. Still to most of Nabokov, all of Arno Schmidt

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