What are your all-time favorite novels??

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i wanted to like it, but it's no madame bovary. i guess i should just pick it up again.

harbl, Saturday, 5 June 2010 11:04 (fourteen years ago) link

list of old sentimental favorites and stuff im feeling at the moment

as for me and my house -- sinclair ross
heartbreaks along the road - roch carrier
the atlas -- william t vollmann
a jest of god -- margaret laurence
a dictionary of maqiao - han shaogong
outlaws of the marsh -- shi naian or whoever the fuck wrote it (i like the sidney shapiro translation)
dragons of autumn twilight - margaret weis and tracy hickman
the fermata -- nicholson baker
rabbit is rich -- john updike
abandoned capital -- jia pingwa (one of the greatest still-yet-untranslated-into-english novels of all time)
notes of a desolate man - zhu tianwen (trans howard goldblatt is the most prolific chinese-engl trans and i have my problems with him but this is an okay translation of a fucking great book)

dylannn, Saturday, 5 June 2010 11:45 (fourteen years ago) link

four years pass...

this is one of my favorite threads. people talking about stuff they love, and cankles.

computer champion (harbl), Sunday, 1 March 2015 00:27 (nine years ago) link

Is that an exclusive "and"?

I am not BLECCH (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 1 March 2015 00:38 (nine years ago) link

i didn't put enough effort into writing that

computer champion (harbl), Sunday, 1 March 2015 00:49 (nine years ago) link

my favourite novel is the complete works of william shakespeare

one negged single mother (wins), Sunday, 1 March 2015 00:50 (nine years ago) link

jk

one negged single mother (wins), Sunday, 1 March 2015 00:50 (nine years ago) link

Anyway, somehow never saw this thread before so thanks for the revive.

I am not BLECCH (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 1 March 2015 03:09 (nine years ago) link

I don't really have favorite novels in quite the way I did when I was younger. Too much water under the bridge by now. But I'm willing to name some that I wouldn't hesitate to reread or recommend.

The Third Policeman - Flann O'Brien
The Master & Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov
Hunger - Knut Hamsun
Egil's Saga - Anonymous, but possibly written by the great Snorri Sturluson
Tristam Shandy - Laurence Sterne
Three Men In a Boat, To Say Nothing of the Dog - Jerome K. Jerome
First Love - Ivan Turgenev
Psmith, Journalist - P.G. Wodehouse
Portrait of the Artist As a Young Man - James Joyce
Prater Violet - Christopher Isherwood
At least a few of the twenty Aubrey/Maturin novels of Patrick O'Brian

Aimless, Sunday, 1 March 2015 03:15 (nine years ago) link

love this thread but it nags

prob add crying of lot 49 and at swim-two-birds now but man I need to read more

local eire man (darraghmac), Sunday, 1 March 2015 03:51 (nine years ago) link

We
Roadside Picnic
The Obscene Bird of Night
Memoirs Found in A Bathtub
Galactic Pot-Healer
Fire On The Mountain
Satyricon
The Scholars

Dave fischer, Sunday, 1 March 2015 03:52 (nine years ago) link

Adam Thorpe - Ulverton
Jonathan Franzen - The Corrections
Jonathan Franzen - Freedom
Evelyn Waugh - Brideshead Revisited
Ian McEwan - The Child in Time
John Fowles - The Magus

anthony braxton diamond geezer (anagram), Sunday, 1 March 2015 06:58 (nine years ago) link

forgot Cormac McCarthy - The Road

anthony braxton diamond geezer (anagram), Sunday, 1 March 2015 09:17 (nine years ago) link

Looking back at my post I wouldn't get Broch anywhere near the top 10. Amazingly all of the rest of my 'what a list would look like, which is not something I could ever do' pretty much stays the same.

Five novels by writers that haven't been mentioned and could be in a list of this sort:

Peter Weiss - The Aesthetics of Resistance (based on the 1st vol., the rest hasn't been translated into English)
Cesare Pavese - The Moon and the Bonfires
Helen Dewitt - The Last Samurai
Rabelais - (but only the Thomas Urquhart translation)
Juan Rulfo - Pedro Paramo

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 1 March 2015 10:10 (nine years ago) link

I gave up on The Last Samurai halfway through. Something about the tone irked me

people who love it seem to really love it though

Number None, Sunday, 1 March 2015 11:37 (nine years ago) link

the rings of saturn, w.g. sebald
austerlitz, w.g. sebald
mason & dixon, thomas pynchon
death comes for the archbishop, willa cather
stoner, john williams
moby-dick, herman melville
água viva, clarice lispector
the recognitions, william gaddis
play it as it lays, joan didion
zazen, vanessa veselka

The Recognitions - William Gaddis
JR - William Gaddis
Against the Day - Thomas Pynchon
The Tin Drum - Gunter Grass
American Pastoral - Philip Roth
Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy
Lolita - Nabokov
Women in Love - DH Lawrence
Underworld - Don Delillo

Tomás Piñon (Ryan), Sunday, 1 March 2015 19:27 (nine years ago) link

Love Agua Viva, read a few books by Lispector this year, she's great.

I gave up on The Last Samurai halfway through. Something about the tone irked me

people who love it seem to really love it though

― Number None, Sunday, March 1, 2015 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

She has a voice. Very few people have that.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 1 March 2015 19:44 (nine years ago) link

I am not really good at making these kinds of lists, but I appreciate it when others do. I really like at least three on Aimless's list and have been meaning to read a few others that I own.

I am not BLECCH (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 1 March 2015 19:59 (nine years ago) link

Based on number of rereadings,

The Ambassadors - Henry James
Nostromo - Joseph Conrad
The Man Without Qualities - Robert Musil
The Sun Also Rises - Ernest Hemingway
Ulysses - James Joyce
Tender is the Night - F. Scott Fitzgerald
Absalom, Absalom! - William Faulkner
Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon
Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World - Haruki Murakami

and a whole lot of genre novels: Hammett, Chandler, Cain, le Carré, Furst, Dick, Ballard, King, etc.

Brad C., Sunday, 1 March 2015 20:13 (nine years ago) link

here they are today:

Emily Bronte – Wuthering Heights
Henry James – The Portrait of a Lady
Alan Hollinghurst – The Line of Beauty
Henry Green – Concluding
Dawn Powell – A Time to Be Born
Kingsley Amis – Lucky Jim
Virginia Woolf – To the Lighthouse
William Maxwell – The Folded Leaf
Gustave Flaubert – Madame Bovary
Joseph Roth – The Radetzky March
J.M. Coetzee – Disgrace
Andre Breton – Nadja
Muriel Spark – The Driver’s Seat
D.H. Lawrence – Women in Love
Evelyn Waugh – The Loved Ones
Thomas Hardy – Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Christopher Isherwood – A Single Man
F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby
George Eliot – Middlemarch
Philip Roth – Sabbath’s Theater
Alejo Carpentier – The Kingdom of the World
Peter Handke – Short Letter, Long Farewell
Gore Vidal – Lincoln
James Joyce – Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Anthony Trollope – The Way We Live Now

Inspired by this thread, I wrote about my favorite novel.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 1 March 2015 20:20 (nine years ago) link

Love Agua Viva, read a few books by Lispector this year, she's great.

it was hard to pick one so i picked the first i read

member of the wedding - carson mccullers
therese raquin - zola
foundation trilogy - asimov
the europeans - henry james
a summer bird-cage - margaret drabble
claudine at school - colette
madame bovary - flaubert
remains of the day - kazuo ishiguro
gatsby - fitzgerald
pale fire - nabokov
sputnik sweetheart - murakami
no longer human - osamu dazai
miss lonelyhearts/day of the locust - west
bonjour tristesse - francoise sagan
the wind in the willows - kenneth grahame

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Sunday, 1 March 2015 22:14 (nine years ago) link

xpost Thanks, Alfred! I see that my library also has Nobody's Family Is Going To Change---how's that one?

dow, Sunday, 1 March 2015 22:42 (nine years ago) link

I haven't read it.

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 1 March 2015 23:00 (nine years ago) link

This was going to be a top 10, but I couldn't cut any more. At the moment:

The Brothers Karamazov
The Savage Detectives
The Plague
Pride and Prejudice
Infinite Jest
The Book of Laughter and Forgetting
Mason & Dixon
Chronic City
A Wild Sheep Chase
Cat's Eye
Jitterbug Perfume
Brighton Rock

Cherish, Sunday, 1 March 2015 23:12 (nine years ago) link

Love Agua Viva, read a few books by Lispector this year, she's great.

it was hard to pick one so i picked the first i read

― insufficiently familiar with xgau's work to comment intelligently (BradNelson), Sunday, 1 March 2015 Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I actually think she has never written any better than this - also its hard to reconcile as a novel.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 2 March 2015 09:41 (nine years ago) link

Off the top of my head...

Douglas Adams - The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Alasdair Gray - Lanark
Michael Chabon - The Amazing Adventures Of Kavalier & Clay
David Foster Wallace - The Pale King
Wilkie Collins - The Woman in White
Kurt Vonnegut - Slaughterhouse Five
Margaret Atwood - Oryx & Crake
Alasdair Gray - 1982 Janine
R.L. Stevenson - Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

er.... That's only nine... uh... I must have read more than 9 novels...

Unheimlich Manouevre (dog latin), Monday, 2 March 2015 16:04 (nine years ago) link

I want to say that Ulysses is my favourite, but I've only read it once and I don't feel that I know it well. "Favourite" seems to me to suggest that you've made the book your own, which I definitely can't say for Ulysses. But it looms in my mind as the most interesting novel I've read.

jmm, Monday, 2 March 2015 18:28 (nine years ago) link

don't think i've ever answered this before

1. Robertson Davies - Deptford Trilogy
2. Nikolai Gogol - Dead Souls
3. Isaac Asimov - Foundation Trilogy
4. Philip Roth - American Pastoral
5. Thomas Pynchon - V.

i kinda miss reading novels. it has been a while.

Mordy, Monday, 2 March 2015 18:37 (nine years ago) link

five years pass...

wonder if my list would be really basic lol

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Thursday, 11 February 2021 03:04 (three years ago) link

dhalgren
the rings of saturn
the magic mountain
the dispossessed
moby-dick
o pioneers!
água viva
stoner
madame bovary
the last samurai

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Thursday, 11 February 2021 03:09 (three years ago) link

reread The Magic Mountain last April.

meticulously crafted, socially responsible, morally upsta (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 11 February 2021 03:10 (three years ago) link

oh i posted a list five years ago! but i have read several of my favorite books of all time since then thank goodness

mellon collie and the infinite bradness (BradNelson), Thursday, 11 February 2021 03:11 (three years ago) link

Moby Dick and The Last Samurai would be on my list, and I really liked The Dispossessed (and Zazen! I missed that she published another novel last year!). I have the feeling I wouldn’t be into Stoner but I should probably give it a shot sometime.

JoeStork, Thursday, 11 February 2021 04:48 (three years ago) link

I'm done with the idea of favorite novels, unless the concept is stretched so thin as to encompass many hundreds of novels I have derived a large measure of enjoyment from. Making a shorter list is just an exercise in forgetfulness and self-deception.

Compromise isn't a principle, it's a method (Aimless), Thursday, 11 February 2021 05:01 (three years ago) link

Kim - Kipling
The Plague - Camus
The Left Hand of Darkness - Ursula Le Guin
The Master and Margarita - Bulgakov
The Last Chronicle of Barset - Anthony Trollope
Three Novels - Karel Capek
The Last Samurai - Helen DeWitt
A Scanner Darkly - Philip K. Dick
Wives and Daughters - Elizabeth Gaskell
Riddley Walker - Russell Hoban
Villette - Charlotte Bronte
The Lantern Bearers - Rosemary Sutcliff

Lily Dale, Thursday, 11 February 2021 07:11 (three years ago) link

Addendum for favorite mystery novels:

Gaudy Night - Dorothy Sayers
The Fire Engine That Disappeared - Sjowall and Wahloo
Brat Farrar - Josephine Tey

Lily Dale, Thursday, 11 February 2021 07:14 (three years ago) link

i read moby dick a few years ago and as soon as i got into it was like 'oh obviously this is one of the greatest things ever made'

flopson, Thursday, 11 February 2021 07:17 (three years ago) link

yeah i’m more or less with aimless, except for moby-dick

difficult listening hour, Thursday, 11 February 2021 07:18 (three years ago) link

Villette, and then others

abcfsk, Thursday, 11 February 2021 07:54 (three years ago) link

Been a long time since I read Moby Dick. But have been making my way through the Moby Dick Energy podcast which is fun.

Really not sure I could do a top 5 of books or cds that was accurate beyond the moment.
I also don't seem to have been reading fiction much recently or at least not in that form. Seem to have been reading non whenever I have actually got around to reading anything.

Stevolende, Thursday, 11 February 2021 08:09 (three years ago) link

i read Hunger a few years ago and was horrified/compelled by it. great book

Zach_TBD (Karl Malone), Thursday, 11 February 2021 08:20 (three years ago) link

yeah finally got around to reading it a couple of years ago myself and have picked up a couple since.
I think it had turned up in something like 3 or 4 decades ago, is it mentioned in the Outsider by Colin Wilson or Biba Kopf's Hardcore essay from the NME in 1984? possibly both.
So it had been something i had wanted to read for ages.

Stevolende, Thursday, 11 February 2021 10:16 (three years ago) link

The Man Who Loved Children - Christina Stead
Coming Through Slaughter - Michael Ondaatje
Salem's Lot - Stephen King
The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
Another Country - James Baldwin
Disgrace - J.M. Coetzee
Austerlitz - W.G. Sebald
A View of the Harbour - Elizabeth Taylor
Invitation to the Waltz - Rosamund Lehmann
A Month in the Country - J.L. Carr

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Thursday, 11 February 2021 10:38 (three years ago) link

I can already see gaps. Impossible.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Thursday, 11 February 2021 10:39 (three years ago) link

Just because I've recently entered all my reading from 2008 on (and what I can remember before that) into goodreads:

Middlemarch - George Eliot
Pale Fire - Vladimir Nabokov
Tehanu - Ursula Le Guin
Gilead - Marilynne Robinson
Catch 22 - Joseph Heller
The Unconsoled - Kazuo Ishiguro
Our Mutual Friend - Charles Dickens
Outline - Rachel Cusk
Wittgenstein's Mistress - David Markson
The American - Henry James

ledge, Thursday, 11 February 2021 10:53 (three years ago) link

It's kinda sad that I can't imagine rereading enough to have an all-time faves list. Fave authors, sure.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 11 February 2021 11:27 (three years ago) link

Jane Eyre
Our Mutual Friend
The Catcher in the Rye
Crime and Punishment
The Brother's Karamazov
Ulysses
Infinite Jest
The Grapes of Wrath
Nineteen Eighty-Four
The Lord of the Rings

cajunsunday, Thursday, 11 February 2021 11:36 (three years ago) link


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