The 100 Best Novels Written in English - Reaction

📚 Read the Great Books with Hardcore Literature: / hardcoreliterature
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Hardcore Literature Lecture Series
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📔Contents Page: cutt.ly/CmNhRY3
🎖️ War and Peace: cutt.ly/U3nzGma
🎭 Shakespeare Project: cutt.ly/B3nxHH7
🐳 Moby Dick: cutt.ly/K3nzVKf
☄️ Blood Meridian: cutt.ly/P3nz6Qp
🍂 Wuthering Heights: cutt.ly/N3nxxYt
🇮🇪 Ulysses: cutt.ly/x3nxQmN
🚂 Anna Karenina: cutt.ly/vmNhAWv
💀 Crime and Punishment: cutt.ly/rmNhFt5
⚓ Persuasion: cutt.ly/amNhX7b
☕ In Search of Lost Time: cutt.ly/5mNh8oD
⚔️ The Hero’s Journey: cutt.ly/UmNjrE3
🌸 Siddharta: cutt.ly/YmNjuzi
🎠 Don Quixote: cutt.ly/cmNjoK4
❤️Shakespeare’s Sonnets: cutt.ly/nmNlW7V
🇫🇷 Les Misérables: cutt.ly/J3YixoA
🕯️ The Turn of the Screw: cutt.ly/nToAQQ3
🖋️ Dickens Seasonal Read: cutt.ly/9ToAybt
📖 Middlemarch Serial Reading: tinyurl.com/45rv965c
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0:00 the top 100 novels list
0:30 how do we decide what makes the list?
1:30 objective vs subjective canon
3:00 the value of book lists
4:00 books 100-90
11:48 books 89-80
19:54 books 79-70
29:30 books 69-60
35:55 books 59-50
41:42 books 49-40
45:15 books 39-30
49:26 books 29-20
53:00 books 19-10
57:45 the top 10
01:04:20 wrap-up thoughts

Пікірлер: 664

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy
    @BenjaminMcEvoy2 жыл бұрын

    Update - Hey guys, the list is arranged chronologically, not ranked by which books are the best. This makes some of my outrage at the placement of certain books comically misplaced 😂 But it was still a fun thought-experiment nonetheless. Perhaps one could dispute a few books being there, but overall the list had a ton of great books that are definitely worth reading! Let us know which ones you agree with, and which books you think should have made the list. Happy reading!

  • @Gmackematix

    @Gmackematix

    2 жыл бұрын

    At least this way, all the books higher up in the list were classics and have in some way stood the test of time. I am imagining how annoyed you would have been if they had put the newer books in the top ten and Ulysses was down at number 55. 😉

  • @hamoudalnasser

    @hamoudalnasser

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is better, there are still too many "pulp" works on this list, and they made some weird choices by author. I read another list, ranked by current acclaimed writers that put Middlemarch first on the list of novels. Some would contest whether Ulysses and Finnegan's Wake are even novels, perhaps Joyce himself. Copperfield is one of my favourite Dickens, but I would definitely put Bleak House and Our Mutual Friend ahead of it. I'm not sure about Great Expectations, it's a fascinating, cleverly structured book, the least fat in any Dickens, but the characters are a little strange; almost like it's a kind of Baroque experiment in exaggerated representation. I like Copperfield because its a Bildungsroman that follows the character into adulthood, Goethe would have approved. I also might put a second Elliot on the list before I'd include Thackeray or Poe or maybe even the Brontes. I quite like Daniel Deronda, though it is an awkward read by modern sensibilities, others like Adam Bede or Mill on the Floss. Tender is the Night is my favourite Fitzgerald, I agree with you about Hemingway. Faulkner definitely deserves another spot, The Sound and the Fury is maybe his quintessential work, Ulysses level difficult, Absalom Absalom! is my favourite Faulkner. Who are your favourite contemporary prose authors? Do any do interesting things with the form or the characters. I really like Franzen, Ferrante, Adichie, but I'm not sure any of their work will last. they might just capture the moment, which still makes them worth reading.

  • @markjacobs509

    @markjacobs509

    2 жыл бұрын

    I admire someone who can laugh at himself. It’s an admirable trait.

  • @dylanmcdermott1110

    @dylanmcdermott1110

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm glad to hear that. Any list that places The Scarlet Letter above Middlemarch is disgusting.

  • @hendrixman121

    @hendrixman121

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow this makes so much more sense. But still- no Vonnegut? No Gravity's Rainbow or Infinite Jest? If anyone got the short end of the stick here it's the American post-modernists.

  • @raphaelnk5492
    @raphaelnk54922 жыл бұрын

    Compile your own list of the 100 best novels you've read. Would love to watch that

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    I can certainly do that :)

  • @shsulab

    @shsulab

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was just going to suggest this! Ben, I can already guess some of your fav novels. The ones we've read so far in the book club are probably all within top 20!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@shsulab the book club books would definitely make the list :) they’re very hard to beat!

  • @Fern635

    @Fern635

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'd watch that!

  • @doctor1alex

    @doctor1alex

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes please! And/or perhaps your own personal favourites.

  • @Fern635
    @Fern6352 жыл бұрын

    'Disgrace' was recommended to me by an English professor I had a terrible crush on. It's about an English professor who ruins his life by having an affair with a student. Point taken, professor 🤣.

  • @graybow2255

    @graybow2255

    2 жыл бұрын

    What happened to the professor?

  • @aliyahfarooqi4119

    @aliyahfarooqi4119

    2 жыл бұрын

    I'm kinda more interested in your story than the 100 best novels lol 😂🤣

  • @aliyahfarooqi4119

    @aliyahfarooqi4119

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@graybow2255 I'm Pakistani why?

  • @garfieldbraithwaite8590

    @garfieldbraithwaite8590

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s a story that you should write

  • @feanorian21maglor38

    @feanorian21maglor38

    Жыл бұрын

    It's also a masterpiece, like many of Coetzee's works.

  • @jojodogface898
    @jojodogface8982 жыл бұрын

    It looks like the ordering of the list was chronological. Until I realized that I was equally as bewildered and semi-outraged. Still, what they did more closely resembles a 100 best novelists of the English language, than a best 100 novels compilation, as many books were left out in order to wedge Poe and others in there

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, this makes the ordering much less bewildering and outrageous. I think some authors/works should have made the list (e.g. Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian) and one could dispute works selected from single authors (e.g. perhaps a different Austen or Dickens) - but luckily they actually weren't attempting to put Poe above Joyce and Melville lol - I agree it reads much more like a 100 best novelists list than novels!

  • @wonderwoman5528
    @wonderwoman55284 ай бұрын

    Could listen to you talk about books all day. Your passion and knowledge is a joy to watch :) you’ve motivated me to read some books I might have overlooked

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    4 ай бұрын

    Aw, that is so kind of you. Thank you so much. You have made my day :)

  • @MKTElM

    @MKTElM

    2 ай бұрын

    McEvoy's passion for books is contagious, like a good teacher, one is motivated to read those books one has known but not got round to read to date because of the compelling way he describes them!

  • @2talldwarfs
    @2talldwarfs2 жыл бұрын

    Ulysses, Clarissa are definitely added to the tbr .... It was fun watching this 1 hour long video !! Would love to see more content like this

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Perfect :) I would love to hear what you think of them, Ellan! I'll have another video like this for the world's best novels soon. Thank you for watching!

  • @IvanPavlov
    @IvanPavlov Жыл бұрын

    English isn’t my native language and I usually have a tough time understanding people speaking with a british accent. Thank you Benjamin for speaking so clearly and properly enunciate your words. Makes it a lot easy for people like me.

  • @lbt1h95
    @lbt1h952 жыл бұрын

    I'm not a native english speaker, but Samuel Beckett really ignited my passion for literature, as before him I didn't know this kind of book was possible. Read him as 20-21 year old, his trilogy of Molloy, Malone Dies and Unnamable and still consider him my favorite author. When you speak about consciousness in the 20th century, in my opinion he belongs alongside Joyce, Proust and Woolf. It's nice that you are yet to discover him, looking forward to hearing your thoughts if it's going to happen soon enough.

  • @pattyz7938
    @pattyz7938 Жыл бұрын

    Benjamin you are a living encyclopedia, a perfect example for our current generation. Thank you for your videos.

  • @notremembering

    @notremembering

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you and I agree with Patty’s….your are a living encyclopedia!!!

  • @MKTElM

    @MKTElM

    2 ай бұрын

    Do I think our current generation has time to read 19th Century novelists ?

  • @sophiefollowerofjesus
    @sophiefollowerofjesus2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Ben for this really interesting and entertaining video! I love how you can so aptly talk about these different books, being as well read as you are! I have been inspired by your videos, and am reading Anna Karenina (about halfway through now). I have especially enjoyed other Russian classics like Crime and Punishment and Brothers Karamazov, too. The thing I want to thank you for, is in a video about Anna Karenina, I believe you talked about taking it slow, and that such a book is to be lived with, not read through quickly! I am not very fast at reading, and never have been. But when you said that I felt the pressure was taken away from being like 'I need to get through this succinctly and quickly! And preferably get through a huge stack of 50-100 books in a year'! So, thanks again for these really intelligent and insightful, yet entertaining videos!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Sophie :) I really appreciate this - you've made my day! I'm so happy to hear that I inspired you to read Anna Karenina. I'd love to know your thoughts when you finish the novel. The Russians are terrific, aren't they? If you want to add another great Russian writer to your reading programme, I would recommend my favourite writer of short stories/sketches - Turgenev. It's also great to hear that you feel the pressure taken off. I had a similar feeling a few years back when I told myself that reading didn't need to be a competition. I was struggling to enjoy books, only wishing to finish them and get onto the next. My reading speed is naturally slow too, so consciously deciding to live with these great books was quite life-changing. I would much rather read 5-10 books per year slowly, deeply, than hundreds that I'll just forget. Thanks again for the great comment, and keep up the great reading!

  • @sophiefollowerofjesus

    @sophiefollowerofjesus

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@BenjaminMcEvoy thanks for your reply! So glad i made your day, always a nice thing to hear from someone! Thank you for the recommendation of Turgenev. I have tried a few of Chekhov's short stories- i would read them with my mum slowly then we would discuss. Another useful tip you gave in a video was on having several read throughs of short stories, not expecting to get everything from one reading. Like poetry, of course! So, I'd like to check out Turgenev too. Also, i will let you know my thoughts on Anna Karenina on finishing it! 😊

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sophiefollowerofjesus That’s lovely - you have a wonderful mum! And oh yes - multiple readings is so key. The last poem I read required me reading it 10+ times before I started to understand it!

  • @axlramirez14
    @axlramirez142 жыл бұрын

    Yesterday was my birthday and literally this video was like a present to me. Great job, it’s good to know many new recommendations and authors to add to my TBR list. By the way, as I enjoy reading English novels, especially Victorian books, your opinion of each book here was so compelling. 😄 Greetings from Mexico, my friend! 👋

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Happy birthday for yesterday, Axl :) I hope you had a lovely day and managed to get some good reading time in! Have a wonderful day, mi amigo!

  • @jamesmikkelson7636
    @jamesmikkelson76362 жыл бұрын

    I just discovered your channel and I really like what you are saying about the relatively recent novels on this list of 100 best of all time. I am sure you have noted how there does seem to be this "recentism" problem where those novels that are somehow present in the minds of the reading public shine a little brighter than maybe their aesthetic and cognitive brilliance actually reveals. I'm looking forward to listening to the rest of the list, and thank you for your taking the time and energy to talk to us about this.

  • @fredsharp7419

    @fredsharp7419

    Жыл бұрын

    Do we take into account - or can we avoid the pressures from the media. Best sellers - etc. Popularity does not equate to greatness.

  • @markrickert6592
    @markrickert65922 жыл бұрын

    Benjamin I must say you've got me fired up about these Classics. I stopped reading Classics after I earned my Master's in English. But recently I picked up Dracula and I couldn't believe how fresh and exciting it is. Then I started watching your Channel. Now I spend at the classics section at the bookstore and I'm almost shaking with excitement. Like a kid in the candy store. Last night I picked up Moby Dick As I Lay Dying Don Quixote. I just can't wait to devour these things. But I've been listening to your Channel obsessively. Your Enthusiasm is infectious. I truly wish you the best and great success. I'm a big fan!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Mark! I really appreciate your kind words :) It sounds like we're in sync - I picked up Dracula myself just the other day (already preparing for some Halloween lectures), and it really is still incredibly fresh. I relate to your shaking with excitement at the bookstore classics section. Kid in the candy store - perfect description! Let me know what you think of those three books (or, indeed, any book) - you've listed three of my favourites :)

  • @alidabaxter5849

    @alidabaxter5849

    Жыл бұрын

    I have reread Dracula so often - indeed fresh and exciting but also so sexy (for its time). I'm always surprised that Frankenstein is rated higher.

  • @duckydave3481
    @duckydave3481 Жыл бұрын

    Benjamin, I just stumbled upon one of your KZread videos yesterday. I was NOT deliberately searching KZread for literature videos or anything like that. But I must say that it was a good discovery for me. After watching that first one, I have watched a few more of your videos. Some are a bit lengthy, but I may be making time to watch those also. There was a time in my life (years ago) when I loved to read books. Admittedly, none of the books that I read were classic novels. One exception would be “The Catcher in the Rye” - which I did not really get into at the time. …I may not have finished that book. I’m not entirely sure what changes as a person ages, but I believe that I appreciate/understand things more now than I did when I was younger. Maybe re-reading “The Catcher in the Rye” is worth a try for me. For someone who wants to get back into reading (me), I would not be mad if you recommended a few classic books that you think might be good starter books. But here’s the deal… I would like to start with books that are relatively easy reads. …And “easy” might not be the correct term. I would appreciate your recommended books to be such that I would not have to re-read numerous pages over and over to understand or uncover the hidden meaning, etc… My end of the deal is that I promise to watch more of your KZread videos!! I am hooked! 😀

  • @alzmcfluffy
    @alzmcfluffy Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for what you do. Your videos are encouraging me to read more. And I agree that you should make your own top 100 list!

  • @a.g.2790
    @a.g.2790 Жыл бұрын

    Just absolutely LOVE your videos. Wish I had found it long before. Learning a lot from your insight, criticisms & recommendations, etc. Good day!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Aw, thank you so much :) I really appreciate you watching! Happy reading :)

  • @saugatochanda5240
    @saugatochanda52402 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Ben for keeping up this great work. Your work has genuinely brought me closer towards books where I find my serenity. I am currently reading "The Rainbow" by DH Lawrence (40 pages a day).

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, my friend! I really appreciate such kind words. I love that phrasing - “find my serenity”. We’re reading The Rainbow at the same time :) I’m loving it so far!

  • @briancox9357

    @briancox9357

    7 ай бұрын

    Lawrence is one of the greatest novelists in the English language. I recommend 'Women in Love' and 'Lady Chatterley' s Lover'.

  • @ellenpaasch4743
    @ellenpaasch47432 жыл бұрын

    Enjoyed listening to the list. I’ve read 52 novels on the list. Some of the others listed I had never heard of and others have me looking to read. Thanks for reading then list. I,like you have Irish from Dublin and Cork, though I’m a Scot living in California.

  • @claduke
    @claduke2 жыл бұрын

    I’d be curious to hear some recommendations from you for some great horror novels (be it classic literature or just stuff you like). Reason for the season, and all. I think you’ve talked a bit about the classic gothic novels, but would be curious to hear other recommendations.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s a great idea - I’d be very happy to do that. Horror, and the gothic, has been on my mind a lot recently due to the season. It would be good fun to talk about it!

  • @theimpossiblesomething6773
    @theimpossiblesomething6773 Жыл бұрын

    7:55 “I think the novel of our century is currently being written” …don’t know why but that gave me chills.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    It gives me chills to think about that too!

  • @santiqwerty

    @santiqwerty

    Жыл бұрын

    Obviously he is talking about "the winds of winter"

  • @theimpossiblesomething6773

    @theimpossiblesomething6773

    Жыл бұрын

    @@santiqwerty 🤣🤣🤣

  • @Cooper_246

    @Cooper_246

    Жыл бұрын

    @@santiqwerty Haha, I don't think it'll be finished in time.

  • @QuaqQuao

    @QuaqQuao

    Жыл бұрын

    It would be quite early to put a book on the throne already and the way things are progressing, it is perhaps a bit above us to foresee what it will even look like. My bones are on an ai enhanced dolphin writer finally writing that goodbye and thanking us all for the fish. Then my own life shall be complete.

  • @helpyourcattodrive
    @helpyourcattodrive Жыл бұрын

    I just found you. I’m so happy. I listened to your lecture on shakespeare’s sonnets. It’s such a new topic for me. I’m going to get the book you recommended w one sonnet and then notes, page by page …

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much :) I'm so happy to hear you're diving into Shakespeare's sonnets! A sonnet a day makes for a wonderful reading routine. I'm going through them all over again myself at the moment!

  • @viciousdope66
    @viciousdope662 жыл бұрын

    Great review of this list! I’ve subscribed. Thanks!!!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for watching :)

  • @janettewilson1070
    @janettewilson1070 Жыл бұрын

    What a wonderful find you are have watched 5 videos straight off, was also surprised at how many of the "50" I had readwill undertake one of the lecture series also Thankyou so much

  • @chickenpoxita
    @chickenpoxita Жыл бұрын

    Benjamin, I was enjoying the hell out of your comments on the novels after Ulysses, but then Middlemarch! LOL on Louisa May, etc. -- I couldn't agree more. ❤

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much 🥰

  • @philihareg
    @philihareg2 жыл бұрын

    Sir Ben! :-) Just stumbled upon this video. Glad I did! Thanks for the 'reaction' and for some of the title suggestions beyond this list. It would also be great to see your 'Top 10s' across genres (including short stories). Liked and subscribed. Look forward to checking out your other videos! :-)

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sir Phili! Thank you for watching :) so glad you enjoyed the video! This one proved quite fun so I’ll definitely do a few more - top 10s across genre is a great idea. Happy reading!

  • @corryjookit7818
    @corryjookit78187 ай бұрын

    I am thoroughly enjoying listening to you. It's always nice to know, to recall how many books I have read this far in my life. I must have been quite a voracious reader when I wasvmuch younger. Such pleasure in being helped to recall this time. Thank you so much.

  • @sawyerwright7910
    @sawyerwright79102 жыл бұрын

    Benjamin! Excellent video as always. Wanted to tell you that your videos rekindled my love of reading. Currently reading Don Quixote on your recommendation. You’re genuinely the literary mentor I’ve always wanted. Keep up the great work! :)

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Sawyer! I really appreciate that :) and I’m so thrilled to hear you’re reading Don Quixote! Terrific book. Happy reading, my friend!

  • @vanessamay3689

    @vanessamay3689

    Жыл бұрын

    So agree with you. Also going to partake of Don Quixote audiobook

  • @adrianodonnell9903
    @adrianodonnell9903 Жыл бұрын

    That was hilarious watching your reactions. Fortunately, I spotted the chronology after about the first 7 or 8. The title "100 Best Novels in English" is also misleading as obviously they have declined to consider more than one work per author. Good fun, though, and I appreciate your personal insights. Definitely several entries that I will investigate further.

  • @mcxiii
    @mcxiii Жыл бұрын

    Great channel! So happy to have found it.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you :) I'm so happy you're here!

  • @walteryako2883
    @walteryako288339 минут бұрын

    I love this video, and your comments about each of the books in the list. Thank you, Ben! Not sure, but it seems they didn't include Honoré de Balzac. From my perspective, another noticeable absence is Flannery O’Connor with her short story masterpieces - I’ve just read “A good man is hard to find” for the third time! As for literature written in Spanish, I think "Pedro Páramo" by Juan Rulfo would deserve a place in the list - a significantly influential novel in Latin American literature during the XXth century.

  • @marijoe19
    @marijoe19 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Ben! I’d love to see an episode on your thoughts and recommendations of American literature in the future, please! 😊

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    That is such a great suggestion! Thank you so much :) American Literature has gifted me most of my favourite works of all time, so this is definitely something I would be passionate to speak about!

  • @richardavalon3653
    @richardavalon3653 Жыл бұрын

    I suggest everyone - especially writers - read the Anais Nin preface to Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer. It is short but packed with brilliant insight into literature, Miller's in particular, and the overall state of culture at the time - which hasn't improved imho. The book is currently $1.99 for the kindle version (having lost track of my hard copy who knows when, I bought the kindle version and read the preface as if I'd never read it before).

  • @theshrubberer

    @theshrubberer

    Жыл бұрын

    the thing about Miller that i suppose you either love (my case) or hate is his voice. There are few writers that i "hear" so clearly in my mind as Henry. i know he is is reviled by many today but i consider him to be amongst the most honest and introspective authors of all time. And his voice is a great companion

  • @cuckootown9478
    @cuckootown9478 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for all the tips, I appreciate it🙏

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    My absolute pleasure :) Thank you so much for watching 🙏

  • @Jibbie49
    @Jibbie49 Жыл бұрын

    68. Under the Volcano (Malcolm Lowry - 1947), 69. The Heat of the Day (Elizabeth Bowen - 1948), 70. 1984 (Orwell - 1949), 71. The End of the Affair - Graham Greene - 1951) He recommends Brighton Rock - GG's 1938 novel. 72. Catcher in the Rye (JD Salinger - 1951), 73. The Adv. of Augie March (Saul Bellows - 1953), 74. Lord of the Flies (Wm Golding - 1954), 75. Lolita (V. Nabokov - 1955), 76.On the Road (Jack Kerouac - 1957), 77. Voss (P. White - 1957), 78. To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee - 1960), 79. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Muriel Spark - 1960), 80. Catch 22 (J. Heller - 1961), 81. The Golden Notebook (Doris Lessing - 1962), 82. Clockwork Orange (Anthony Burgess - 1962), 83. The Single Man (Christopher Isherwood - 1964), 84. In Cold Blood (T. Capote - 1966), 85. The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath - 1966), 86. Portnoy's Complaint - Philip Roth - 1969), 87. Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont (Elizabeth Taylor - 1971), 88. Rabbit Redux (John Updike - 1971), 89. Song of Solomon (T. Morrison - 1977), 90. A Bend in the River (VS Naipaul - 1979), 91. Midnight Children - Salman Rushdie - 1981), 92. Housekeeping - M. Robinson - 1981), 93. Money A Suicide Note (M. Amis - 1984), 94. An Artist of the Floating World (K. Ishiguro - 1988) He recommends Klara and the Sun by KI. 95. The Beginning of Spring (P. Fitzgerald - 1988), 96. Breathing Lessons (Anne Tyler - 1990), 97. Amongst Women (McGahern - 1990), 98. Underworld (Don DeLillo - 1997), 99. Disgrace (JM Coetzee - 1999), 100. The True History of the Kelly Gang (Petelr Carey - 2000)

  • @dr.reidsheftalltruthinscie2007
    @dr.reidsheftalltruthinscie2007 Жыл бұрын

    Ben! the order is "heavily influenced" by the year written. That explains the out of order, order. Love your channel. You have inspired me to start reading fine literature, I never read a single book until I finished college (other than physics and math textbooks). I've read 10 books now. I'm on my way to the bookstore today to start. A hurricane is coming in today. I'll buy "The Old Man and the Sea" and "Moby Dick" to read at my beach house in Florida as the storm blows through. Thanks.

  • @dr.reidsheftalltruthinscie2007

    @dr.reidsheftalltruthinscie2007

    Жыл бұрын

    @@etiennedevignolles7538 Yes it's great so far!. I'll finish it tonight. Then on to Moby Dick.

  • @karenbird6727
    @karenbird67272 жыл бұрын

    I think of some of these reading lists: The Great Books, 1001 Books you must read before you die, the Lifetime Reading Plan, and others are meant to give us a taste of the best/first of a genre, even if that best or first isn't "great literature". Raymond Chandler is a excellent example of this. Sometimes these tastes help us explore more. For example: I love American southern literature because of To Kill a Mockingbird and Robert Penn Warren's All the President's Men, they are so atmospheric.

  • @vstapleton1921

    @vstapleton1921

    Жыл бұрын

    YES! All the President's Men! an often forgotten masterpiece!

  • @laurahuddleston6285
    @laurahuddleston62852 жыл бұрын

    I just discovered your videos yesterday, and I am now subscribing. I read Ulysses in my teens and I definitely want to reread after listening to you. I rarely reread anything because there are so many books and so little time, but your video made me realize I probably didn't read it well, as it was for a class and I had to rush to get through by the deadlines.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Laura :) I'm so happy to have you here. Ulysses is tremendous. I would love to know what you make of it after your reread!

  • @jeff8835
    @jeff8835 Жыл бұрын

    This video was a special treat, to know you, my favorite booktuber better, for your opinions, and reactions. Would Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales constitute as a novel, if so it should have been above Bunyan.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, my friend :) I personally wouldn't consider Chaucer's Canterbury Tales to be a novel, but it undoubtedly inspired many of the greatest novelists in the language! I'm currently reading through the tales of an evening and it's a wonderful experience.

  • @heartofcinema3454
    @heartofcinema3454 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for putting your time into this. I pretty much lost confidence when they placed Kazuo ishiguro so low and picked "an artist of the floating world" over his masterpiece for me "the remains of the day." Btw you definitely ought to make time to finish Klara and the sun, the latter part is very illuminating.

  • @dv3034
    @dv30342 жыл бұрын

    Just made coffee and saw this good video in recommendations.Thanks, My man.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nice one :) I hope you enjoy your coffee and the video!

  • @walkerrowe9534
    @walkerrowe9534 Жыл бұрын

    Benjamin I don't know how you can talk at length in such an interesting way about all of this, but I admire that. I watch your videos all the time. If you asked most people their opinion of XXX most would say "It's good" and stop there, me included. But you carry on like a critic should. As for the list, I would add "The Magic Mountain" by Thomas Mann. As for your appreciation of Harold Bloom, I can't understand a word of what he writes. Almost as bewildering at Auden's lectures on Shakespeare.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much, Walker. I really appreciate that! Harold Bloom is definitely very dense, and he is a great master of ellipsis. One of the difficulties of reading him is due to just how much he chooses to leave out. Auden's an interesting one because those lectures were put together from the notes of a student in the audience. I would have loved to have heard his lectures first hand :)

  • @jennilecompte900
    @jennilecompte9002 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing. I love your videos.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Jenni :) I really appreciate that!

  • @jamessgian7691
    @jamessgian7691 Жыл бұрын

    My list. 1. Moby Dick 2. As I Lay Dying 3. Middlemarch 4. Bleak House 5. Pride and Prejudice 6. The Old Man and the Sea 7. The Scarlet Letter 8. Great Expectations 9. Huckleberry Finn 10. The Grapes of Wrath 11. The Sound and the Fury 12. Frankenstein 13. The Picture of Dorian Grey 14. Ulysses 15. Mrs. Dalloway 16. Gulliver’s Travels 17. Robinson Crusoe 18. The Return of the Native 19. Hound of the Baskervilles 20. 1984 21. A Christmas Carol 22. A Tale of Two Cities 23. Absolom! Absolom! 24. For Whom the Bell Tolls 25. To Kill a Mockingbird 26. Song of Solomon 26. The Wind in the Willows 27. Heart of Darkness 28. Alice in Wonderland 29. Godric 30. The Power and the Glory 31. Jane Eyre 32. Emma 33. Clarissa 34. Finnegan’s Wake 35. Wise Blood 36. Mayor of Casterbridge 37. Hard Times 38. East of Eden 39. Romola 40. The Awakening 41. House of Mirth 42. David Copperfield 43. Beloved 44. Persuasion 45. Brideshead Revisited 44. Vanity Fair 45. The Last of the Mohicans 46. The Red Badge of Courage 47. Catch-22 48. Tom Sawyer 49. Orlando 50. The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh 51. Gone With the Wind 52. The Jungle Book 53. King Solomon’s Mines 54. Son of Laughter 55. A Prayer for Owen Meany 56. One Flew Over the Cukoo’s Nest 55. Flowers for Algernon 56. The Godfather 57. The Violent Bear it Away 58. North and South 59. The Sun Also Rises 60. Little Women 61. Little House in the Big Woods 62. Dracula 63. Lolita 64. The Natural 65. The Adventures of Augie March 66. The Golden Bowl 67. Ivanhoe 68. The Man Who Was Thursday 69. To the Lighthouse 70. Father Elijah 71. The End of the Affair 72. The Ball and the Cross 73. Oliver Twist 74. Right Ho, Jeeves 75. Our Mutual Friend 76. Nicholas Nickleby 77. The Moonstone 78. The Poet and the Lunatics 79. The House of Seven Gables 89. The Confidence Man 90. Housekeeping 91. Adam Bede 92. Tess of the D’… 93. The Monk 94. Death Comes for the Archbishop 95. The Centaur 96. The Living 97. The Return of Ansel Gibbs 98. The Age of Innocence 99. Little Dorrit 100. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (Now, Ulysses should be top three, but frustrating book in many ways, so too bad Joyce😂) (And Dickens’ novels get smattered throughout, but really he would have ten in the top 50. I’m trying to throw in some variety.) (Kept wanting to put in novels by non-English, plays by O’Neill, Miller, and others. ) (Left fantasy and sci-fi out, other than Frankenstein)

  • @MikeFuller-ok6ok

    @MikeFuller-ok6ok

    Ай бұрын

    WOW!! That's quite a list! My favourite novel is 'Black Beauty' by Anna Sewell.

  • @richardrose2606

    @richardrose2606

    Ай бұрын

    I believe that 1984 and Brave New World are usually considered science fiction. Dracula is horror/fantasy.

  • @scandalfrb4154
    @scandalfrb4154 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for standing up for Bleak House. I have never been able to convince anyone to read Bleak House.

  • @marymcdermott9581

    @marymcdermott9581

    Жыл бұрын

    The case of Jarndyce and Jarndyce fabulous ........the bbc version was also great

  • @briancox9357

    @briancox9357

    7 ай бұрын

    Bleak House and Little Dorritt are my favourite Dickens novels.

  • @susanherbert3014
    @susanherbert3014 Жыл бұрын

    Funny, my husband thought I was watching a sporting match by my reactions to this video! LOL I have read many of the books on the list and made a list of those I would like to read. I absolutely agree with you about the Jane Austen pick. Persuasion is my favorite and then Pride and Prejudice. And I will definitely be reading Middlemarch due to your high praise.

  • @barrymoore4470
    @barrymoore4470 Жыл бұрын

    A personal favorite of mine, 'A Clockwork Orange' by Anthony Burgess, was included in the list, but it can be debated if it is actually composed in English! The futuristic argot Burgess devised for his narrator, a dense medley of Russian vocabulary along with a smattering of rhyming puns and old Cockney expressions, is so alien from standard English that it could be argued to be sui generis linguistically. I've known people who found Burgess' language here too impenetrable to reward the effort, abandoning what is to my mind one of the key dystopian fictions of the twentieth century. Similarly, James Joyce's swansong 'Finnegans Wake' (not on the list), one of the most innovative creative works of the last century, is composed in a bewildering idiom utterly unique to itself, incredibly dense and infinitely allusive, pressing at the very frontiers of comprehensibility of the English language to which scholars and critics ascribe the text by default. A truly avant-garde work even some eighty years since its publication, this "queer as a clockwork orange" novel by Joyce will forever elude a popular readership. Back to the list itself, it would have been fun to have seen some more idiosyncratically experimental or left-field authors cited, such as the Jane Bowles of 'Two Serious Ladies' (another of my personal favorites) or her husband Paul Bowles' 'The Sheltering Sky', or, going back a generation or so, the Djuna Barnes of 'Nightwood'. For that matter, the Nathanael West of 'Miss Lonelyhearts' and 'The Day of the Locust' presents another unique American voice missing from this imperfect list. I am perhaps most surprised, though, by the omission of Willa Cather, a key American author of the twentieth century, a popular writer in her day who remains highly esteemed by critics and scholars, whose novels limn important experiences of transition and loss, American in their particulars but universal in their implications. Finally, D H. Lawrence's 'Women in Love' would have made a fine pendant with 'The Rainbow', it after all being a sequel to Lawrence's shamefully suppressed earlier classic, and equal in eminence in the eyes of many critics.

  • @annepeasley5472
    @annepeasley54722 жыл бұрын

    Kerouac was my dad’s college roommate at Columbia. My dad became a NYC reporter with Mike Wallace. Dad said what a lot of people didn’t know about Kerouac was that he loved to play football (gridiron). He was quite an athlete.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow. Seriously? That is so cool! It sounds like your dad has lived a very eventful life! Reading some of Kerouac's early stuff, his love of football shines through - what a shame that things went the way they did.

  • @smakadace
    @smakadace Жыл бұрын

    Did your best to stay with the fun of the list, but after ulysses it was done. Thanks for sharing the list& your reactions. Also, I Really Like your book club. Yes

  • @chickencharlie1992
    @chickencharlie19922 жыл бұрын

    This is the channel that keeps on giving.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you :)

  • @Stanvansandt
    @Stanvansandt Жыл бұрын

    It was entertaining to watch you struggle with the rationale when it was, well, right under your nose the whole time. Your commentary was still illuminating and stimulating, and I'm glad you didn't scrap it because of an error on your part. I picked up many ideas for future reading, though I think I'll start with the highly recommended (by you) that I haven't read before. I started Pride And Prejudice a day or two ago after having studiously avoiding Jane Austen for all my life. I'm finding it hilarious and absorbing.

  • @CommonSwense
    @CommonSwense Жыл бұрын

    Great to hear a shout out to Stanley Kubrick’s film: ‘Barry Lyndon’ a very cool movie where every shot was intended to look like a dramatic scene in an oil painting.

  • @wingedstatue

    @wingedstatue

    Жыл бұрын

    An unbelievably beautiful film, true piece of art

  • @cindyurban150

    @cindyurban150

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wingedstatue My son always lists this as his favorite movie.

  • @PhilipFClark
    @PhilipFClark Жыл бұрын

    Intriguing, if fractal, list. But was introduced to some writers and books I never knew. I'm astounded (perhaps shouldn't be), that Iris Murdoch didn't make the list -- not even 'The Sea, The Sea', her Booker winner. But then, Murdoch is one of my favorite writers, and is not everyone's taste. I wonder what your thoughts are about her work Benjamin, in the Irish literature? Also, I'd love to see you do a list of '50 Great Short Novels'! Conrad, Kafka, Melville, Flaubert, etc? Many moderns as well as core literature in that genre. And while Song of Solomon made the list, I'm surprised that NO Baldwin made the list for its period of time.

  • @michaelpvascellaro5319
    @michaelpvascellaro5319 Жыл бұрын

    Ben, I wonder if you have done anything on Thomas Wolfe? I started reading Of Time and the River and I am enjoying his rejection of Hemingway’s brevity. It seems like Hemingway takes a black and white photo to get the message out but Wolfe paints with a full palette to squeeze every nuance out of every circumstance - and then does it again from a different perspective … thoughts?

  • @Anna-mc3ll
    @Anna-mc3ll Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for sharing this list and your thoughts on it! How many hours a day do you usually read? And if you read in a foreign language, do you look up every single word or expression you don’t know? I would honestly appreciate your answer! :) Best wishes, Anna

  • @michaellawler3016
    @michaellawler3016 Жыл бұрын

    Well done you have helped me to start reading again, Ulysses wish me luck 🍀

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm so happy to hear that! Good luck, Michael :) Please do let me know what you make of James Joyce's masterpiece!

  • @phillipanthony2402
    @phillipanthony24022 жыл бұрын

    Barry Lyndon is one of my favorite films ever as well -- I also love Paths of Glory, The Killing and Dr. Strangelove... Clockwork... yea, basically everything he did. In my opinion they're all endlessly rewatchable. but i do love those early films especially. his genius shown through almost fully formed very early on.

  • @tonybennett4159

    @tonybennett4159

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. I'm old enough to have had the privilege of seeing 2001 A Space Odyssey on the gigantic Cinerama screen with no foreknowledge about it or its influential use of music. What an experience it was, so much so that I promptly saw it again a week later.

  • @phillipanthony2402

    @phillipanthony2402

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tonybennett4159 lucky!!

  • @dennischiapello3879
    @dennischiapello3879 Жыл бұрын

    I was disappointed you hadn't read Marilyn Robinson's Housekeeping to give your thoughts on it, but I was glad you at least paused at its mention! I have read it several times, and I hope you will get around to it. For beauty of language married to stirring thought and a milieu unfamiliar to most people, it is quite an experience.

  • @donbarbaraphillipson6285
    @donbarbaraphillipson6285 Жыл бұрын

    I agree with’East of Eden’ Read it as a teen and nearly had breakdown emotionally over the existential hole I fell in. Then later as adult a whole new realization. A great ‘human’ novel.

  • @Wisdom1944
    @Wisdom194411 ай бұрын

    BEN!! I love Catch 22. I've taught it to college freshmen. I don’t doubt that it's a man's book, but it speaks to some women. Somehow, the scene when Snowden meets his end is grand expression! I'm female, 80 years old, now but have loved it for decades. Cheers!!

  • @patriciatolliver4057
    @patriciatolliver4057 Жыл бұрын

    Patty- Great Expectations is my favorite Dickens book. I love Hardy as well, Far From the Madding Crowd.

  • @Jibbie49
    @Jibbie49 Жыл бұрын

    31, Dracula (B. Stoker - 1897), 32. Heart of Darkness (J. Conrad - 1899), 33, Sister Carrie (Theodore Dreiser - 1900), 34. Kim (R. Kipling - 1901), 35. The Call of the Wild (J. London - 1903), 36. The Golden Bowl (H. James - 1904), 37. Hadrian the Seventh (Frederick Rolfe - 1904), 38. The Wind in the Willow (Kenneth Grahame - 1908), 39. The History of Mr. Polly (H. G. Wells - 1910), 40. Zuleika Dobson - (Max Beerbohm - 1911), 41. The Good Soldier -( Ford Madox Ford - 1915) 42. The 39 Steps - (John Buchan - 1915), 43, The Rainbow (DH Lawrence - 1915), 44. Of Human Bondage (Somerset Maugham - 1915), 45. The Age of Innocence (Edith Wharton - 1920), 46.EM Ulysses - (James Joyce - 1922), 47. Bobbitt - (Sinclair Lewis - 1922), 48. A Passage to India (EM Forster- 1924), 49. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (Anita Loos - 1925), 50. Mrs. Dalloway (Virginia Woolf - 1925), 51. The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald - 1925), 52, Lolly Willowes (Sylvia Townsend Warner - 1926), 53. The Sun Also Rises (Hemingway - 1926), 54. The Maltese Falcon (D. Hammett - 1929), 55. As I Lay Dying (Falkner - 1930), 56. Brave New World (Huxley -1932), 57. Cold Comfort Farm - (Stella Gibbons - 1932), 58. 1919 (John Dos Passos - 1932), 59. Tropic of Cancer (H. Miller - 1934), 60. Scoop (Evelyn Waugh - 1938), 61. Murphy (Samuel Beckett - 1938), 62. The Big Sleep (R. Chandler - 1939), 63. Party Going (Henry Green - 1939) 64. At Swim Two Birds (Flann O'Brien - 1939), 65. The Grapes of Wrath (Steinbeck - 1939), 66. Joy in the Morning (Wodehouse - 1946), 67. All the Kings Men (RP Warren - 1946),

  • @dmitrijssitkovskis4110
    @dmitrijssitkovskis4110Ай бұрын

    Great video as always! When I saw the photo of John Steinbeck I thought how similar he looks to Paul Walker. Have a great weekend. Cheers!

  • @Blondie101010100
    @Blondie1010101002 жыл бұрын

    I urge you to read John McGahern. He has some profound novels, some of which were banned in Ireland when they first came out. He is one of my top 5 authors. I recommend Amongst Women or The Dark. And I agree with with you about East of Eden over The Grapes of Wrath, however I'm guessing the latter had more social relativeness.

  • @andysacks4822
    @andysacks48224 ай бұрын

    Fascinating and instructive commentary. Absolutely clearsighted and clearheaded, in my opinion. I find myself in almost total agreement with this charming and erudite man.

  • @AnaWallaceJohnson
    @AnaWallaceJohnson2 жыл бұрын

    What a treat this was to watch!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you :) Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @jonathanmelia
    @jonathanmelia2 жыл бұрын

    For Beckett’s novels, would recommend MOLLOY. Can also tell you’re into film: fun fact that Orson Welles only made CITIZEN KANE (1941) because he couldn’t get the funding to make HEART OF DARKNESS. Of course, he’d cast himself as Kurtz...

  • @dianahope6886
    @dianahope6886 Жыл бұрын

    Benjamin - due to you...I started Middlemarch. Mary Ann Evans got me to complete it. She is amazingly insightful!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow! That's amazing :) I'm so happy to hear that, Diana. Such a masterpiece!

  • @einahsirro1488
    @einahsirro1488 Жыл бұрын

    My top ten reveals my entire psyche: 10. Little Women (now I find it maudlin, but when I was 10, it was formative.) 9. Walden (now I find it chaotic, but at 20, it was formative.) 8. The Fountainhead (for the sentiment, not for the story- or you'll hang yourself. And at 30, it was formative!) 7. Jane Eyre (my introduction into classic literature. Now I realize it's basically Pamela, but with bite.) 6. Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady (reads like a memoir but I'm counting it. If you want to understand American culture, Florence King will start your journey.) 5. Sense & Sensibility (Marianne's character arc... you just know she read Clarissa.) 4. Endless Love (If you've never read it, do not watch the movies. It's about mental illness, not love. And it's really hair-raising.) 3. House of Mirth (I have way too much in common with Lily: a useless person in some respects.) 2. Clarissa (My personal favorite. My brain walks around her boudoir every day.) 1. Middlemarch (It just blew my mind. Every page, I had to stop and smell my thoughts. I can't explain it.)

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Incredible list! Thank you so much for sharing. You have exquisite taste in literature, and you're right that you can tell a lot about you from this list. I've gotten so much out of each of these books, and many have personal meaning to me - the only one I haven't read is Confessions of a Failed Southern Lady. Seeing as all of your other choices are such winners, I've ordered myself a copy now and look forward to reading it :)

  • @einahsirro1488

    @einahsirro1488

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BenjaminMcEvoy Has it arrived yet? I hope you really do get a chance to read it. You'll particularly understand a lot of the cultural elements King's British father brought into her life. It's such a great book!

  • @mkteku

    @mkteku

    2 күн бұрын

    The Fountainhead (for the sentiment, not for the story- or you'll hang yourself. And at 30, it was formative!). How you you mean "sentiment"? :)

  • @einahsirro1488

    @einahsirro1488

    2 күн бұрын

    @@mkteku I mean the ideas she was trying to get across, such as the value of individual excellence, and the detrimental side effects of forced altruism.

  • @jackwalter5030
    @jackwalter50302 жыл бұрын

    It's funny you mention Hardy along with Lawrence. I have never been able to appreciate Hardy, but I love Lawrence!

  • @nikkivenable3700

    @nikkivenable3700

    Жыл бұрын

    What do you recommend from Lawrence? I’ve not read anything by him.

  • @origins8978
    @origins89785 ай бұрын

    Yes, Patrick White is wonderful. Voss, Tree of Man, The Solid Mandala, etc… Worthy. Keep up the great work

  • @marcevan1141
    @marcevan114110 ай бұрын

    Great podcast! I admire your intelligence, sensitivity, and enthusiasm. I completely agree with you on "Middlemarch" and "Persuasion." I do think, perhaps, you underrate "David Copperfield." I'm in love with that novel. Strange that the list doesn't include multiple books by certain authors. Several novels by Henry James should be there. ("Portrait of a Lady" and "Wings of the Dove" among them). I am currently reading my first Chandler novel ("The Little Sister") and I fully concur with your opinion. Pulpy is putting it mildly. A little of that hardboiled stuff goes a long way for me. It's entertaining and the voice of the first person narrator is well sustained. But great literature? That strikes me as absurd. Also, Nabokov notoriously hated almost everything including Dostoevsky and Thomas Mann.

  • @ianwild66
    @ianwild66 Жыл бұрын

    I love lists, I always find a book or two that peek my interest. Where or if a book appears on a list is down to the compiler and I don't hold it against them. I remember picking up Franny and Zooey form a charity store and really loved it. I hadn't read Catcher so went on to read it. Unfortunately, Holden Caulfield's character grated. I just kept thinking he has every advantage. I don't think I would have thought that way if I had read it when I was younger.

  • @briancox9357

    @briancox9357

    7 ай бұрын

    Franny and Zooey is terrific.

  • @WateryFire

    @WateryFire

    6 ай бұрын

    Sooo love Franny and Zooey!

  • @carokat1111
    @carokat111115 күн бұрын

    Well, two books in and I am thrilled! Great to see Aussie Thomas Kenneally in the list. Disgrace by Coetzee is an astounding work which stayed with me for quite a while after I finished it. Very excited to see what's going to unfold! I was amused to see your enthusiasm for Patrick White and 'Voss'. I had to read White's 'Tree of Man' for last year of high school and absolutely loathed it, but that was 40 years ago and I am sure I would view it quite differently today. White is Australia's only literature Nobel Prize winner so I should give him a second chance!

  • @carrollwilliams8861
    @carrollwilliams88612 жыл бұрын

    Whenever I think of books that you might enjoy, I have found on your site that you have read them already. As much as I have read during my life, I will never, ever approach your level of accomplishment. I feel that I am plodding along at a decent rate and you are a bookworm on steroids. Because of your channel I have become more selective in reading quality books. My literary vice is reading Sidney Sheldon. He was very successful in tv and movie writing. Great plots.

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy Жыл бұрын

    Dracula impressed me as a contrast between them and now. Instead of being about killing vampires, it was about salvation. A real good versus evil.

  • @jamcarnage
    @jamcarnage2 жыл бұрын

    Interestingly I'm British and to kill a mockingbird was a GCSE text for me. I remember buying the book and absolutely flying through it after our teacher announced we'd be watching the film in class, and I didn't want to experience that before having read it, given my existing interest.

  • @nouanni

    @nouanni

    Жыл бұрын

    Same thing happened to me (I'm from Germany) though I ended up not really liking the book as much as I had hoped. Maybe that was because I basically speed read it, will have to give it another go some time soon. Did you like it?

  • @jamcarnage

    @jamcarnage

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nouanni I really did and still do. I've read it several times and find myself continuing to enjoy it, despite knowing all the beats. I didn't like 'Go set a Watchman', the sequel that was released a few years ago however... If you are interested; I think a good accompanying novel is 'If Beale Street Could Talk' by James Baldwin which deals with similar themes to mockingbird, but from a black perspective.

  • @nouanni

    @nouanni

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamcarnage ooo yeah I might have to give James Baldwins book a read that sounds really good! Thank you :)

  • @OmbrellaMedia
    @OmbrellaMedia11 күн бұрын

    Yeah, that's what I was thinking as you were guiding us through the list, especially once we reached the "top ten." There were some real LOL moments. Thanks again Benjamin.

  • @NeonRadarMusic
    @NeonRadarMusic Жыл бұрын

    Your disappointment was so great that whenever you scolded the camera I felt guilty as if I'd compiled this (as it turned out) chronological list 😂

  • @joebeaulieu1511
    @joebeaulieu15112 жыл бұрын

    Two books/authors that should make the list: Invisible Man by Ellison. That’s a c’mon man. And Bonfire of the Vanities by Wolfe Maybe also Slaughterhouse-Five by Vonnegut.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great books, all three! Completely agree with you, Joe.

  • @wpunique
    @wpunique2 жыл бұрын

    It will never make THE top 100, but Nicholas Nickleby makes mine. It’s not only a wonderful story in its own right, but it opened the door for me to read the rest of Dickens.

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    I love those books that make it into our list but perhaps wouldn't be on mainstream lists - very special indeed! I was mesmerised by Nicholas Nickleby as a child. I really must return to this one. Thank you for sharing, Steven!

  • @nbyrd2579
    @nbyrd25792 жыл бұрын

    Yep, building up a stack of Golding's books with the Spire at the top really warms me up on the inside...

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol 🤣🤣

  • @christopherpaul7588
    @christopherpaul7588 Жыл бұрын

    I had a difficult time getting into contemporary English-language literature until I found Paul Auster. I really enjoy some of his books. But I agree, it's nothing like the classics.

  • @marjoriedybec3450
    @marjoriedybec34502 жыл бұрын

    I completely agree with you about Dharma Bums vs On the Road.

  • @kathy2539
    @kathy25392 жыл бұрын

    Ben, I should add that I think Anthony Trollope's Barchester series of novels should be in the canon, especially 'The Warden' & 'Barchester Towers', I have loved these books for so long and go back and re-read them. I find The Warden comforting actually, I can sit and read this on a rainy afternoon! I would also suggest that 'The Forsyte Saga' by John Galsworthy seems to me to be underrated & even ignored numerous times. Galsworthy wrote an amazing canon in the Forsyte Saga, on its' own. Perhaps the writing may not be up to scratch but the storyline and themes are so entertaining and the setting! If you would like to get into some Australian literature like 'Voss' might I also suggest you read 'The Timeless Land' (1941) by Eleanor Dark and 'The Getting of Wisdom' (1910) by Henry Handel Richardson, also the canon's of Banjo Patterson and Henry Lawson shouldn't be missed. 'My Brilliant Career', of course 'Picnic at Hanging Rock', 'An Australian Girl' by Catherine Martin. Anything Patrick White wrote is great, he certainly was an Australian literary powerhouse.

  • @marymcdermott9581

    @marymcdermott9581

    Жыл бұрын

    I love all of Trollope and Galsworthy Thackeray..Margret Attwood .........Wilkie Colling......above all Henry James

  • @tonirose6776

    @tonirose6776

    Жыл бұрын

    To add to this, the True History of the Kelly Gang, by Peter Carey is wonderful. It takes a few pages to get into the voice, but I was so happy to see it on this list. Not many people I know who do love to read, have read it. I always recommend it.

  • @cindyurban150

    @cindyurban150

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree, love The Forsyte Saga,such a great story.

  • @charleswoodard253
    @charleswoodard2532 жыл бұрын

    Hi Ben. Judging by your very interesting talk, I think we would agree in a ranking of best. I would definitely place Ulysses, Middlemarch and Moby Dick in the top ten. To be honest, I’ve read only parts of Ulysses like Molly’s soliloquy and a few other parts, but I have read the Dubliners which is wonderful. So, I definitely see his greatness. I’m American, so Nathaniel Hawthorne is definitely also top ten with me. I’ve never read such beautiful prose as Hawthorne. I know ranking is silly but it can be fun. Thanks. Charles

  • @marymcdermott9581

    @marymcdermott9581

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm Irish.... and I like Hawthorne... The scarlet letter is universally liked

  • @scottiverson7829
    @scottiverson7829 Жыл бұрын

    Yes, I would very much like to see your list!

  • @richardstevenjones
    @richardstevenjones2 жыл бұрын

    Do you have a list of you could do of the top 100 books you’ve read? Not just English language and not just novels. I’d be very interested in your thoughts.

  • @joyceruddy584
    @joyceruddy584 Жыл бұрын

    Three Men in A Boat is perhaps the funniest book I have ever read! I was surprised to see it listed, though.

  • @mikeramsay5964
    @mikeramsay59642 жыл бұрын

    Love all 4 Rabbit novels. Updike captures the feel of each decade.

  • @briancox9357

    @briancox9357

    7 ай бұрын

    Agreed, and his prose style has been emulated, but never matched.

  • @MissSeaShell
    @MissSeaShell Жыл бұрын

    What a snob your teacher was who said American literature is an oxymoron, lol. I love your channel! I watched your video on crime and punishment and decided to read it, and now I'm digging into all the great Russian lit which is so exciting! I was in a slump for a while so I really appreciate that 🙂

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    I know, right? And thank you so much for watching, and your kind words :) I really appreciate that. I'm thrilled to hear you're enjoying Russian Lit :)

  • @MissSeaShell

    @MissSeaShell

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BenjaminMcEvoy thank you! I used to be intimidated but it's not nearly as scary as I thought :) btw I'm not sure if you still use your hardcore literature yt channel but just in case you don't see the comment I made there, I was hoping to ask if you plan on doing more short story readings with commentary, like you did with Chekhov? My son had the idea for you to do the same with some Herman Melville short stories :) he's reading the piazza tales right now.

  • @barrymoore4470

    @barrymoore4470

    Жыл бұрын

    I prefer to think that all literature composed in the English language is English literature. I find it easier and more accurate to refer to literatures by their language of composition, not by the nationalities of the authors.

  • @marymcdermott9581

    @marymcdermott9581

    Жыл бұрын

    Henry James .....tops for me

  • @lennartforsberg1519
    @lennartforsberg1519 Жыл бұрын

    An interesting list. One of my teachers at my local univ. said that a book can reflect.ing the times and the atmosphere during that era. I guess you will never see Chaucer on some lists, and the same could be said about Sweden's most famous author August Strindberg. I'd take a degree in history of ideas and science, which including litterature, architecture arts, history, philosophy, and science.

  • @Jibbie49
    @Jibbie49 Жыл бұрын

    At 22 1/2 insert Black Beauty by Anne Sewell published in 1877 and a Classic having sold over 50 million copies. Reading Level 7.7 The story began the movement against animal cruelty.

  • @moiraclegg3380

    @moiraclegg3380

    Жыл бұрын

    Black Beauty so painful to read! Read it as a child, 85 yrs old now and haven't recovered yet!

  • @yvonnehayton6753

    @yvonnehayton6753

    Жыл бұрын

    Moira Clegg Totally agree!

  • @judebeee
    @judebeee11 ай бұрын

    Of Human Bondage - Somerset Maugham is one of my all time favorites

  • @SpudWil
    @SpudWil Жыл бұрын

    Very enjoyable discussion. Has someone already mentioned the pronunciation of Buchan? Well, it helps if you're Scottish.

  • @fardinrahmanshamil9267
    @fardinrahmanshamil9267 Жыл бұрын

    As a non English speaker,I use your videos as podcast.I love the accent that you speak.Your accent is clear and beautiful. Can you please tell me in which accent do you speak? 💜

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    That's so awesome :) I'm so glad I can help! My accent is quite a common accent found in London, with some light Essex influence here and there!

  • @ferulebezel
    @ferulebezel Жыл бұрын

    I saw a lot of older American editions, Modern Libraries from the fifties and sixties for example, of the titles talked about. Are you living here or did you use stock footage from here? Curiously I think I saw some LOA editions on the shelf in the background. Then again we are living in the days of everybody is Bertelsmann.

  • @melvynstevenson6487
    @melvynstevenson64872 жыл бұрын

    Hi. Benjamin. My favourite book is Adam Bead by George Eliot. Should it be in at least the top 20. What do you think.?.

  • @robertoshockley2733
    @robertoshockley2733 Жыл бұрын

    Probably won't make you rethink Updike, but his short story "A & P" provides a glimpse at why he is so favored. Thanks for your work from a recent graduate in English Lit/Creative Writing - Long Beach, California. As for The Shining, careful viewing reveals that the only supernatural is Danny's ESP, while the book is rife with the supernatural.

  • @lorannamoody7011

    @lorannamoody7011

    8 ай бұрын

    A & P is a great story. I remember very little of what I read and I remember it.

  • @londonzhou418
    @londonzhou418 Жыл бұрын

    just ordered Middlemarch last week from Target,waiting for it to arrived,now after watching this video,cant wait to read it!

  • @BenjaminMcEvoy

    @BenjaminMcEvoy

    Жыл бұрын

    That's amazing :) I'm so excited for you! Incredible novel :)

  • @Jibbie49

    @Jibbie49

    Жыл бұрын

    Our 9th grade English teacher in 1963 had us read SILAS MARNER and it has been my favorite by Eliot. I also read The Mill on the Floss and then Adam Bede.

  • @briancox9357

    @briancox9357

    7 ай бұрын

    You won't be disappointed (hopefully). I studied it at school and University and have read it four times.

  • @aribbonatatime
    @aribbonatatime Жыл бұрын

    Pilgrim's progress is my favorite novel. I'm glad someone else thinks so too.