I wrote for my Substack (regular free newsletter, see top right of this page to sign up) about choosing the best books: and felt I should share it here too. I made my own list (not the full 100 you'll be glad to hear), and the picture above is a giveaway for what's at the top of it. This is my piece:
The Guardian newspaper published a list last week
as chosen by polling authors, academics and others. If you read the Guardian or are on social media you couldn’t have missed this, as – and presumably this is the whole point – it has to be argued over at enormous length, with people getting very irate. How could you miss out MY favourites? Since it was done on votes the answer to that one is clear: No-one else likes them that much.
I would file it away as ‘enjoyable distraction that means nothing’. I live my cultural life by the George Orwell remark: ‘you cannot prove to me that a work of art is good’. Or bad for that matter.
But obviously, I also counted up how many of the books I had read. I don’t think I’m going to share that number: it is very high, and that makes people get very cross for some reason. I will say that it was (surprisingly) more than Andy Miller, revered master of the Backlisted podcast,
had read from the list.
The other figure I don’t ever like to reveal is how many books I read in a month or a year, because again people find it annoying. Yes, it is a lot. In the days when I gave an answer people would say ‘but you don’t read them properly do you?’ and ‘well you can’t count short books’ and so on, which I found quite rude (who made the rules?), so now I don’t say. My only important tip is that all my life I have made time for reading by doing minimal housework, and not worrying about it.
I have done posts on more than 2500 different books here on the blog.
Aaanyway, I did make a list of my favourite novels, which might be different another week or month or year. But right now, these ones. Wolf Hall is top choice (and that probably isn't going to change anytime soon), but after that they are not in order, just random.
Hilary Mantel Wolf Hall (see particularly Hilary Mantel and the Ghost of Thomas Cromwell)
Alastair Mcleod No Great Mischief
Ford Madox Ford Parade’s End
Sybille Bedford A Legacy
Dodie Smith I Capture the Castle
Marilynn Robinson Housekeeping
Mrs Gaskell Wives and Daughters
Nancy Mitford Pursuit of Love/Love in a cold climate
Robert Irwin Wonders Will Never Cease
George Eliot Middlemarch
LP Hartley The Go-Between
Agatha Christie Five Little Pigs
Dorothy L Sayers The Nine Tailors
Katherine Heiny Standard Deviation
James Joyce Ulysses
F Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby
WG Sebald Rings of Saturn/The Emigrants
Henry James Wings of the Dove
Evelyn Waugh Brideshead Revisited
Giorgio Bassani Garden of the Finzi-Continis
Stella Gibbons Cold Comfort Farm
Edith Wharton The House of Mirth
Malcolm Lowry Under the Volcano
Marcel Proust A la Recherche de Temps Perdu
Vikram Seth A Suitable Boy
JL Carr A Month in the Country
Charles Dickens Great Expectations
Mrs Oliphant Miss Marjoribanks
Sebastian Japrisot A very long engagement
Jane Austen Emma
There are entries on most of them (not Vikram Seth, and not, weirdly, that particular Dickens), you can easily find them with the search box (top right)
You know how it works: plenty of room for others' choices below...

I have a section of my bookshelves just for my absolute favorites and about half of them are also on your list, Moira.
ReplyDeleteHere are a few more that I think you might enjoy - Josephine Tey - The Daughter of Time; Margaret Attwood - The Penelopiad; Margaret Craven - I Heard the Owl Call My Name; T H White - The Sword in the Stone; Robbie Arnott -The Rain Heron; Seamus Deane - Reading in the Dark.
I'm starting a list of all the ones you - and others - list that I haven't met yet. If there's anything that rivals thinking about a good book I've read, it's making a list of books I'm going to find and read
Thank you, what a lovely comment! Ive read some of these, but not heard odfArnott or Deane - I will look them up and add them to my list! I love getting book recommendations.
DeleteFunny how people react to someone who reads a lot, and some of those comments are hilarious--"you only read short books" like Middlemarch! I used to get comments about always "having my nose in a book" which I personally considered a good thing--there would be less trouble in the world if more people read a lot, IMO! I've slacked off since then or maybe I've just become "narrower" in my reading....Loved your philosophy about reading v housework, I always choose reading but may take it a bit far.
ReplyDelete