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100 book meme

An interesting meme is going around which presents a list of 100 books.  If you have read one then you show the title in bold, if you have started but not finished then in italics. There is also an obligation to explain the unbelievable and make the odd comment.  I made a decision with these memes some time ago to ignore most, and refuse to pass them on in all cases.  This one was too tempting to ignore and if anyone else wants to take up the meme you can find the html for the table here.  The meme seems to have lost the origin of its list.  There is some overlap with the list from Time (of which I have read less)

TitleAuthorComments
1 Pride and PrejudiceJane Austen About the only Austin I enjoyed reading
2The Lord of the Rings JRR Tolkien At least once a year until I left University in order to win silly competitions (can you remember the name of the first Elf Frodo met and where?
3Jane EyreCharlotte BronteAn obligation rather than a pleasure, but then I went back to it after reading Jasper Fforde with new eyes
4Harry Potter series JK Rowling Of course, why would anyone who grew up on Jennings and Derbyshire ignore the sequel?
5To Kill a MockingbirdHarper LeeThe archetypal Bildungsroman and still not beaten
6The Bible(disputed)My mother was an agnostic but read us the whole of The Bible designed to be read as Literature so that we would understand European Literature. I also read the whole of the King James version cover to cover as a naive & ostentatious convert at the age of 17 and while embarrassed by that period I don’t regret it.
7Wuthering Heights Emily BronteStill the best of the Bronte girls, although all readers of Cold Comfort Farm will know that it was really written by Bramwell
8Nineteen Eighty Four George Orwell Not the best of the utopian novels either. I put Darkness at Noon and Brave New World ahead of this
9His Dark Materials Philip Pullman Wonderful, wonderful series that took me back to Milton (how can he not be on the list). I just hope the deadwood of American conservative evangelism does not prevent the remaining episodes of the film being produced. A contrast with the saccharine and platitudes and downright cruelty of the Narnia sequence
10Great Expectations Charles DickensI really hate Dickens (with the exception of A Tale of Two Cities and possibly Bleak House) but I did the obligation-reads when young
11Little Women Louisa M Alcott Aloud in class in the fifth form against my better judgement as narrator and surprised myself by rather liking it
12Tess of the D'Urbervilles Thomas Hardy That final scene as the execution takes place is incredibly moving
13Catch 22Joseph HellerHow could anyone called Snowden avoid it! A classic, but a one book author, the remainder was tedious
14Complete Works Shakespeare That mother again, but it was worth it, I just wish I had a better memory
15Rebecca Daphne Du Maurier Tedious, oh how tedious
16The Hobbit JRR Tolkien Many times and really looking forward to the film
17BirdsongSebastian Faulks I suppose I should, but it never appealed
18Catcher in the Rye JD Salinger Of course, but you have to read this during the trauma of puberty to understand it
19The Time Traveller's Wife Audrey Niffenegger Never heard of it, is it worth it
20Middlemarch George EliotRealism personified, Eliot is so much better than her contemporaries
21Gone With The Wind Margaret Mitchell No, despite my confederate sympathies and every attempt I have made to watch the film as resulted in sleep
22The Great Gatsby F Scott FitzgeraldNever rally liked the period and the film didn’t encourage me
23 Bleak House Charles Dickens Dickens as Kafka but without the bite, the BBC series was good, removed the dross
24War and Peace Leo Tolstoy Several times and I love Russian Novels, rather like Trollope (the only English equivalent) they unfold in multiple waves of meaning, rather like Wagner if you want an operatic equivalent
25The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy Douglas Adams Best as a radio series (its original milieu) as a novel Dirk Gently is better
26Brideshead Revisited Evelyn Waugh I am not sure how this novel will survive a generation removed from war time experience (mine had it through our parents). A Dance to the Music of Time by Anthony Powell is much better of its type, but without the religious theme which is understated but constantly present. From what I hear the film is not a patch on the BBC serialisation
27 Crime and Punishment Fyodor Dostoyevsky My first entry into Dostoyevsky and a basic teaching text on any decent ethics course. I am surprised not to see his greatest novel The Brothers Karamazov in the list
28Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck Should be compulsory reading for any politician and how the Steinbeck museum in Monterey can sanitise out his socialism I do not understand
29Alice in Wonderland Lewis Carroll to be honest I enjoyed this much more as an adult
30The Wind in the Willows Kenneth Grahame Probably one of the best books for a child ever written, and not bad for an adult. I have an early childhood memory of being hysterical with laughter as my mother read the door scraperscene from the Wild Wood. Too many adaptations miss out Pan’s Island as well which is a pity as it is central to the book
31Anna Karenina Leo Tolstoy Of course, its russian and its a damn good read
32David Copperfield Charles Dickens (sigh)
33Chronicles of Narnia CS Lewis Yes and then kept it away from my own children, this stuff is evil Manichean rubbish
34Emma Jane AustenWhy so much Jane Austin in this list?
35Persuasion Jane AustenThe best of Austin and the only one worth of a list
36The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe CS Lewis see above
37The Kite Runner Khaled Hosseini Hopefully will be seen as a classic, and the film was authentic
38Captain Corelli's MandolinLouis De Bernieres I keep meaning to, its in the pile
39Memoirs of a GeishaArthur Golden Its in the pile, awaiting time
40Winnie the Pooh AA Milne Ruined by Disney, still wonderful in the original. My younger sister used to be able to recite from memory and I still remember her If this continues we will be entirely surrounded by water from her push chair when I was being picked up from primary school in a thunderstorm
40Animal Farm George Orwell Bedtime reading at the age of 5 ….
41The Da Vinci CodeDan Brown Whiled away a couple of hours with this, and anything that is against Opus Dei must have something going for it
42One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel Garcia Marquez I keep picking it up, then finding something else to do ...
43A Prayer for Owen MeanyJohn IrvingIs it special?
45The Woman in White Wilkie Collins After this all other mystery stories fade
46Anne of Green Gables LM Montgomery We had to in school, dire, tedious, truly truly terrible
47Far From The Madding Crowd Thomas Hardy I fell in love with Bathsheba as a teenager
48The Handmaid's Tale Margaret Atwood A classic and getting closer to reality each day that passes
49Lord of the Flies William GoldingMy O level text book and I loved it, the 1963 film versio by Peter Brook has the most incredible opening sequence for anyone whose childhood was over shadowed by the Cuban Missile Crisis
50Atonement Ian McEwan One of his best and the film (surprisingly) was authentic
51Life of Pi Yann Martel Enjoyable but I was surprised at its popularity
52Dune Frank Herbert One of the classics of science fiction fell off a bit on the third sequel but recovered with chapter House Dune. Film terrible, although Sting was good, Television adaption much better
53Cold Comfort Farm Stella Gibbons An exemplar of English comic writing. The use of stars to alert the reader to especially well written text is a delight and then that wonderful, wonderful line and did the goat die?
54Sense and Sensibility Jane Austen What is this? A Jane Austen appreciation society?
55A Suitable Boy Vikram Seth Greatest of the Anglo-Indian novels and his greatest work. Up there with Trollope in my cannon or writers
56The Shadow of the WindCarlos Ruiz Zafon Never heard of it
57A Tale Of Two Cities Charles Dickensand the only book by Dickens that I ever read more than once
58Brave New World Aldous Huxley One of the all time classics, and one that is more apposite today than it was at the time of writing
59The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime Mark Haddon One of the best ever first novels, really puts you in the mind of the hero
60Love In The Time Of Cholera Gabriel Garcia Marquez I keep meaning to ...
61Of Mice and Men John SteinbeckIf you don’t cry you are not human
62LolitaVladimir Nabokov Never had the inclination
63 The Secret History Donna Tartt Never heard of it
64The Lovely Bones Alice Sebold No, but I like the author so should look this up
65Count of Monte Cristo Alexandre Dumas A classic adventure story, not sure I would want to read it again however
66On The Road Jack Kerouac Not my period, culture or geography
67Jude the Obscure Thomas Hardy Moving, way ahead of its time (you can see why the good Bishop burnt it) and the reception resulted in Hardy only writing poetry thereafter. But what a last novel
68Bridget Jones's Diary Helen Fielding I read it in the Independent as it came out, great newspaper column, poor book
69Midnight's Children Salman Rushdie Confession time - its the only think I had read by Rushdie and I don’t see what all the fuss is about, source of many an argument with my mother when she was alive
70Moby Dick Herman MelvilleOne of those novels that everyone should read, the language alone makes it worth while
71Oliver Twist Charles DickensThe book for which the word schmaltz was invented and an apologia for capitalism
72DraculaBram Stoker I could never get into horror other than in the form of films
73The Secret Garden Frances Hodgson Burnett Not until I read it my daughter and I must admit I rather fell for it
74Notes From A Small IslandBill Bryson I have never understood his appeal
75Ulysses James Joyce Oh yes, and done the ~Bloom’s Day walk.
76The Bell JarSylvia Plath To my shame no, as I lover her poetry but I have just ordered it
77Swallows and Amazons Arthur Ransome An essential part of my childhood and my sister and I mapped Bala Lake in our kayak Tarka in imitation. I bought a full replica of the first edition and read them again over a couple of weeks and they are still as good at 54 as they were at a much earlier age
78Germinal Emile Zola I know I should
79Vanity Fair William Makepeace Thackeray Becky Sharp is a delight in this wonderful antidote to A Pilgrim’s Progress
80Possession AS Byatt I should have, have ordered the film from Amazon this morning
81A Christmas Carol Charles Dickens Please, please take this away, burn it or at least ban all reference at Christmas. Tiny Tim should be sent to the workhouse
82Cloud AtlasDavid Mitchell It just got to the top of the pile and it will occupy me this week. Looking forward to it
83The Color PurpleAlice Walker Loved the film, keep meaning to read the book
85The Remains of the DayKazuo Ishiguro This is one of the greatest novels by one of the greatest living authors. Pity about the film
85Madame BovaryGustave FlaubertYes, but did not enjoy, many of the books it influenced are better it is a classic
86A Fine Balance Rohinton Mistry I loved this, but there again the whole of the Anglo-Indian cannon of work is a playground of delights, but this is one of the best
87Charlotte's WebEB White No intention
88The Five People You Meet In HeavenMitch Albom Not even thought of it. Should I?
89Adventures of Sherlock Holmes Sir Arthur Conan Doyle All of them as a teenager, and they are still fun. First read Hound of the Baskerville’s in a tent on holiday when very young and did not sleep
90The Faraway Tree CollectionEnid BlytonThe only suitable use of anything by this author is satire
91Heart of Darkness Joseph ConradOne of those books, painful as it is, that any intelligent person has to read
92The Little Prince Antoine De Saint-Exupery I did but I never rally saw the attraction, other than the pictures
93The Wasp Factory Iain Banks Another great first novel although its not an easy read, it is a great book
94Watership Down Richard Adams Fun, but the author lost it completely in the truly dire Plague Dogs
95A Confederacy of DuncesJohn Kennedy Toole Its in the pile awaiting reading
96A Town Like Alice Nevil Shute Surprising given the subject area, this is a gentle book which occupies but does not challenge the mind
97The Three Musketeers Alexandre Dumas Loads of fun, but most of the film versions are better
98Hamlet William ShakespeareI always wished we had done this for O Level rather than Macbeth
99Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Roald DahlI think he is one of the worst of children’s authors, no challenge, dumbing down
100Les Miserables Victor Hugo I keep meaning to, and plan one of these days to get to the musical

Comments (3)

Iwan Jenkins:

Dave,

Knowing your sensibilities and now reading of your interest in Russian novels, I would like to recommend Life and Fate by Vasily Grossman. Superb book at a variety of levels

Paul Tudor [TypeKey Profile Page]:

Mmmm... The preponderance of Austen is disturbing and some of the other choices are bizarre ("Germinal" but nothing by Flaubert??? - BTW, don't bother with Zola's fiction, I had to study it at varsity, which is a great way of getting into something so contrived) and how does the list compiler square "Hamlet" with "Shakespeare - The Complete Works".
I also want to know how far one can go with the italics - I ordered "Cloud Atlas" from the library the other day, with every good intention, but gave up after the first page!
Makes me want to do my own list, but when I have time later this week I will download this html and do this one (and, yes, you have read more than me...)

Paul

PS - "Cloud Atlas" made me wonder, with all the travelling you do, how do you ever order up books from the local public library)

Jel:

We have v similar taste (but yr better read). I was surprised Life of Pi got so popular too.

A Confederacy of Dunces is terrific. Put it on top of the pile. Belly laughs guaranteed. Author thought he had no talent & killed himself. One of the few books I've managed to reread.

Chuck Memoirs of geisha into a deeper, smellier pile and read "Geisha of Gion" by Mineko Iwasaki instead. Autobio by the geisha (who criticised Memoirs altho supposedly a primary subject for it)

Time Travellers Wife is a nice read. An easy read but poignant -> romantic difficulties for the characters (like being in a long-distance r'ship, only more unpredictable & disjointed). Moral implications to contemplate. One of those stories where the temporal order is chopped up, but there's a reason for it.

I had hoped Dark Materials would get more complex and dark than it did.

Have you read "Jonathon Strange & Mr Norrell"? Susanne Clarke. A bloody magic read!

The Master & Margerita belongs on the list.

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