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Your 7 favorite novels of all time (2 Viewers)

Okay, novels. I love political dystopias, for some reason. And masculinity and its powerlessness. These are the ones that come to mind.

1984 - Orwell

The Sun Also Rises - Hemingway

Infinite Jest - Wallace

Tender Is The Night - Fitzgerald

Light Years - James Salter

Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole

Notes From Underground - Dostoyevsky
Thanks for reminding me to read Confederacy. It's been on my list for awhile and I keep overlooking it.
Highly overrated, IMO. Is it just me, or is humor in novel form like the toughest art form to nail? I guess humor is just so highly subjective that one man's classic (or many men's) like Confederacy is another man's meh (Herb)Also, my list is embarrassing. I need to read some more classic fiction, I guess. It's just that so much of it seems so... daunting.

I keep coming back to Infinite Jest in the bookstore but it scares me away every time...
How does Confederacy compare to Catch 22? I agree humor in a novel is difficult, but I also think Catch 22 is the ultimate funny.,

 
pantagrapher said:
My hipstery list:

Pale Fire

Lolita

JR

Dead Souls

The Metamorphosis

Ulysses

Satantango
Ooh big fan of Pale Fire... This thread is making me think I should reread it.

I've only read a handful of novels more than once:

Sometimes a Great Notion

100 Years of Solitude (both of these are my favorite books)

The Hobbit (read it to my son)

Siddhartha (have read this every 10 years starting when I was 16, getting something new out of it each time. I'm due to read it again this year.

 
Not a rule, but went with similar criteria with the other two threads, so thought of books that I have read through multiple times throughout the years and have in the house still:

To Kill A Mockingbird

A Wrinkle in Time - was obsessed with this book as a kid

1984

The Road - read it shortly after my son was born and have gone back a couple times since

Ishmael - concept of the book is silly, but have revisited it a couple times

Jurassic Park

it is a bit of a cheat, but will throw out The Bachman Books by King. Read through 3 of those stories lots of times.

 
Not a rule, but went with similar criteria with the other two threads, so thought of books that I have read through multiple times throughout the years and have in the house still:

To Kill A Mockingbird

A Wrinkle in Time - was obsessed with this book as a kid

1984

The Road - read it shortly after my son was born and have gone back a couple times since

Ishmael - concept of the book is silly, but have revisited it a couple times

Jurassic Park

it is a bit of a cheat, but will throw out The Bachman Books by King. Read through 3 of those stories lots of times.
Which one not? I'm guessing Rage?

 
Shogun -- James Clavell

Shantaram -- Gregory David Roberts

Watership Down -- Richard Adams

Battle Cry of Freedom -- James McPhearson

That Noble Dream -- Peter Novick

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance -- Robert Pirsig

Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy -- Douglas Adams

Crime and Punishment -- Dostoevsky

Next, I'm reading How to Count to 7 and not go on to 8.

ETA: I thought we were doing books, not novels. Nix McPhearson and Novick as they are histories. Add Killer Anges by Shaara

 
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Dalva - Jim Harrison

Fat City - Leonard Gardner

The Tin Drum - Gunter Grass

Dog Soldiers - Robert Stone

The Public Burning - Robert Coover

Tender is the Night - F. Scott Fitzgerald

Smiley's People - John le Carre

 
Not a rule, but went with similar criteria with the other two threads, so thought of books that I have read through multiple times throughout the years and have in the house still:

To Kill A Mockingbird

A Wrinkle in Time - was obsessed with this book as a kid

1984

The Road - read it shortly after my son was born and have gone back a couple times since

Ishmael - concept of the book is silly, but have revisited it a couple times

Jurassic Park

it is a bit of a cheat, but will throw out The Bachman Books by King. Read through 3 of those stories lots of times.
Which one not? I'm guessing Rage?
Roadwork. Think I have only read that one the one time from the initial read through.

 
The Hunt for Red October - probably read this 20+ times

Red Storm Rising - 10+ times

Watership Down

Catcher in the Rye

Slaughterhouse Five

Runaway Jury (Grisham)

Term Limits (Vince Flynn)

 
Ilov80s said:
FUBAR said:
Black dot

I mostly read non fiction but will add many of these to my "want to read" list
What are you into non-fic wise? I was the same way as you but I loved history and got into fiction through some classic war novels.
Pretty wide range, from science, some history though I should read more, biographies, pretty much anything that looks interesting. Currently listening to killer angels (read a long time ago) and reading live from Saturday night. Recently finished Chrissie Wellington's bio. Also halfway through the third divergent book as my wife wanted to read them with me.

 
Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy

Angelas ashes

Catcher in the rye

It

The hobbit

Watchmen (this counts as literature)

Anything by crichton

 
Ilov80s said:
FUBAR said:
Black dot

I mostly read non fiction but will add many of these to my "want to read" list
What are you into non-fic wise? I was the same way as you but I loved history and got into fiction through some classic war novels.
Pretty wide range, from science, some history though I should read more, biographies, pretty much anything that looks interesting. Currently listening to killer angels (read a long time ago) and reading live from Saturday night. Recently finished Chrissie Wellington's bio. Also halfway through the third divergent book as my wife wanted to read them with me.
I feel you man. I liked novels as a kid but once I started reading non fiction I just lost interest in stories people imagined, with some exceptions

 
pantagrapher said:
My hipstery list:

Pale Fire

Lolita

JR

Dead Souls

The Metamorphosis

Ulysses

Satantango
Ooh big fan of Pale Fire... This thread is making me think I should reread it.

I've only read a handful of novels more than once:

Sometimes a Great Notion

100 Years of Solitude (both of these are my favorite books)

The Hobbit (read it to my son)

Siddhartha (have read this every 10 years starting when I was 16, getting something new out of it each time. I'm due to read it again this year.
Sometimes a Great Notion is a great great novel. Loved it.

 
Dalva - Jim Harrison

Fat City - Leonard Gardner

The Tin Drum - Gunter Grass

Dog Soldiers - Robert Stone

The Public Burning - Robert Coover

Tender is the Night - F. Scott Fitzgerald

Smiley's People - John le Carre
Dalva is a great book and Jim Harrison is an American treasure.

 
Ilov80s said:
mon said:
Siddhartha - Hermann Hesse

Slapstick - Kurt Vonnegut

The World According to Garp - John Irving

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues - Tom Robbins

Life After God - Douglas Coupland

The Winter of Our Discontent - John Steinbeck

Dandelion Wine - Ray Bradbury
That's one Steinbeck novel I haven't read. I need to. Have you read most of his work? Why is it better? I always like Steinbeck, but am not usually in love with it.
It's not much different from the rest of his novels. I just seemed to connect with it better.And I'll add my opinion of Confederacy of Dunces. The main character was like Cartman from South Park who grew up, but never changed. Cartman's funny as a kid, but as an adult it's just painful to watch. Extremely well-written novel, but didn't like it. It had no heart or hope. I can enjoy a novel that has either heart or hope, but not one that has neither.

 
Ilov80s said:
mon said:
Siddhartha - Hermann Hesse

Slapstick - Kurt Vonnegut

The World According to Garp - John Irving

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues - Tom Robbins

Life After God - Douglas Coupland

The Winter of Our Discontent - John Steinbeck

Dandelion Wine - Ray Bradbury
That's one Steinbeck novel I haven't read. I need to. Have you read most of his work? Why is it better? I always like Steinbeck, but am not usually in love with it.
It's not much different from the rest of his novels. I just seemed to connect with it better.And I'll add my opinion of Confederacy of Dunces. The main character was like Cartman from South Park who grew up, but never changed. Cartman's funny as a kid, but as an adult it's just painful to watch. Extremely well-written novel, but didn't like it. It had no heart or hope. I can enjoy a novel that has either heart or hope, but not one that has neither.
I didn't even find it exceptionally well-written. Maybe the first 100 pages or so. Confederacy of Dunces was a fun humor novel with an interesting back story. It somehow got venerated all out of proportion.

 
Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy
Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov
Libra - Don DeLillo
The Master and Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov
American Tabloid - James Ellroy
The USA Trilogy - John Dos Passos

The Zero – Jess Walter

I'm not sure if The Zero is truly one of my favorite novels of all time or not, but it is excellent and I want to hype Jess Walter a little. I think he's a great contemporary American novelist, kind of an American Nick Hornby, but maybe a little weightier (in a good way). The Zero is a 9/11 noir, and still one of the few works of art that I feel like has really engaged with what happened that day and afterward.

His other books include "Financial Lives of the Poets" and "Beautiful Ruins," both of which would be excellent summertime reads.

 
The Brothers Karamzov - Dostoevsky

Immortality - Milan Kundera

If On A Winter's Night A Traveller... - Italo Calvino

Possession - A.S. Byatt

The Alchemist - Paolo Coelho

Lamb - Christopher Moore

Tuesdays With Morrie - Mitch Albom

 
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Ilov80s said:
mon said:
Siddhartha - Hermann Hesse

Slapstick - Kurt Vonnegut

The World According to Garp - John Irving

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues - Tom Robbins

Life After God - Douglas Coupland

The Winter of Our Discontent - John Steinbeck

Dandelion Wine - Ray Bradbury
That's one Steinbeck novel I haven't read. I need to. Have you read most of his work? Why is it better? I always like Steinbeck, but am not usually in love with it.
It's not much different from the rest of his novels. I just seemed to connect with it better.And I'll add my opinion of Confederacy of Dunces. The main character was like Cartman from South Park who grew up, but never changed. Cartman's funny as a kid, but as an adult it's just painful to watch. Extremely well-written novel, but didn't like it. It had no heart or hope. I can enjoy a novel that has either heart or hope, but not one that has neither.
I didn't even find it exceptionally well-written. Maybe the first 100 pages or so. Confederacy of Dunces was a fun humor novel with an interesting back story. It somehow got venerated all out of proportion.
I tried, but I couldn't even finish it. Just didn't care.

 
Okay, novels. I love political dystopias, for some reason. And masculinity and its powerlessness. These are the ones that come to mind.

1984 - Orwell

The Sun Also Rises - Hemingway

Infinite Jest - Wallace

Tender Is The Night - Fitzgerald

Light Years - James Salter

Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole

Notes From Underground - Dostoyevsky
Thanks for reminding me to read Confederacy. It's been on my list for awhile and I keep overlooking it.
Highly overrated, IMO. Is it just me, or is humor in novel form like the toughest art form to nail? I guess humor is just so highly subjective that one man's classic (or many men's) like Confederacy is another man's meh (Herb)

Also, my list is embarrassing. I need to read some more classic fiction, I guess. It's just that so much of it seems so... daunting.

I keep coming back to Infinite Jest in the bookstore but it scares me away every time...
I didn't like Confederacy either; it could have used an editor. Humor is pretty tough, but there are some that I like. Christopher Moore's Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal is one that I considered including in my list.

I tried Infinite Jest and could not finish it. It's not that I found it daunting or too complex (I liked Ulysses, for example). I thought it was similar to Confederacy where I just found it boring.

 
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Ilov80s said:
mon said:
Siddhartha - Hermann Hesse

Slapstick - Kurt Vonnegut

The World According to Garp - John Irving

Even Cowgirls Get the Blues - Tom Robbins

Life After God - Douglas Coupland

The Winter of Our Discontent - John Steinbeck

Dandelion Wine - Ray Bradbury
That's one Steinbeck novel I haven't read. I need to. Have you read most of his work? Why is it better? I always like Steinbeck, but am not usually in love with it.
It's not much different from the rest of his novels. I just seemed to connect with it better.And I'll add my opinion of Confederacy of Dunces. The main character was like Cartman from South Park who grew up, but never changed. Cartman's funny as a kid, but as an adult it's just painful to watch. Extremely well-written novel, but didn't like it. It had no heart or hope. I can enjoy a novel that has either heart or hope, but not one that has neither.
I didn't even find it exceptionally well-written. Maybe the first 100 pages or so. Confederacy of Dunces was a fun humor novel with an interesting back story. It somehow got venerated all out of proportion.
Guess it wasn't my kind of humor, either. Think I chuckled maybe twice.

 
Okay, novels. I love political dystopias, for some reason. And masculinity and its powerlessness. These are the ones that come to mind.

1984 - Orwell

The Sun Also Rises - Hemingway

Infinite Jest - Wallace

Tender Is The Night - Fitzgerald

Light Years - James Salter

Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole

Notes From Underground - Dostoyevsky
Thanks for reminding me to read Confederacy. It's been on my list for awhile and I keep overlooking it.
Highly overrated, IMO. Is it just me, or is humor in novel form like the toughest art form to nail? I guess humor is just so highly subjective that one man's classic (or many men's) like Confederacy is another man's meh (Herb)Also, my list is embarrassing. I need to read some more classic fiction, I guess. It's just that so much of it seems so... daunting.

I keep coming back to Infinite Jest in the bookstore but it scares me away every time...
How does Confederacy compare to Catch 22? I agree humor in a novel is difficult, but I also think Catch 22 is the ultimate funny.,
Catch 22 was the longest slog of a novel I've ever been through. I had 2 close friends recommend it to me, one of whom considers it her favorite novel ever. I laughed a couple of times, but mostly hated it. I liked Confederacy WAY more than Catch 22.

I love stand-up, funny movies and shows and can frequently find humor in those formats that others don't.

My novel funny-bone is just broken. Fear and Loathing in LV and I Love You Beth Cooper are about the only books I've read in my adulthood that actually made me laugh out loud. And Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson, which I just finished. That dude is funny, although his novels certainly aren't comedy.

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:

 
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The Brothers Karamzov - Dostoevsky

Immortality - Milan Kundera

If On A Winter's Night A Traveller... - Italo Calvino

Possession - A.S. Byatt

The Alchemist - Paolo Coelho

Lamb - Christopher Moore

Tuesdays With Morrie - Mitch Albom
It's criminal that I didn't include this on my own list. I just don't know who to bump. Pynchon maybe. But I love V. so damn much.

ETA: If this were "What are the seven best novels of all time" instead of "my favorite" then Fyodor would be rocking the list for sure. As it is, he falls just short. Which is a damn shame, really.

 
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Okay, novels. I love political dystopias, for some reason. And masculinity and its powerlessness. These are the ones that come to mind.

1984 - Orwell

The Sun Also Rises - Hemingway

Infinite Jest - Wallace

Tender Is The Night - Fitzgerald

Light Years - James Salter

Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole

Notes From Underground - Dostoyevsky
Thanks for reminding me to read Confederacy. It's been on my list for awhile and I keep overlooking it.
Highly overrated, IMO. Is it just me, or is humor in novel form like the toughest art form to nail? I guess humor is just so highly subjective that one man's classic (or many men's) like Confederacy is another man's meh (Herb)Also, my list is embarrassing. I need to read some more classic fiction, I guess. It's just that so much of it seems so... daunting.

I keep coming back to Infinite Jest in the bookstore but it scares me away every time...
How does Confederacy compare to Catch 22? I agree humor in a novel is difficult, but I also think Catch 22 is the ultimate funny.,
Catch 22 was the longest slog of a novel I've ever been through. I had 2 close friends recommend it to me, one of whom considers it her favorite novel ever. I laughed a couple of times, but mostly hated it. I liked Confederacy WAY more than Catch 22.

I love stand-up, funny movies and shows and can frequently find humor in those formats that others don't.

My novel funny-bone is just broken. Fear and Loathing in LV and I Love You Beth Cooper are about the only books I've read in my adulthood that actually made me laugh out loud. And Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson, which I just finished. That dude is funny, although his novels certainly aren't comedy.
Catch-22's comedy was based upon almost exactly two or three pretty elementary language "tricks." Mostly having to do with simple juxtaposition of opposites. If they didn't tickle your funny bone on the first page, there wasn't going to be a lot of comedy in store for you there. The language hijinx have always made the philosophy underpinning the whole look a little comedic at first blush, but its absurdism is really pretty dire if you don't get on board with the funny.

It also makes Heller pretty easy to rip off. See, more recently, And Then We Came to the End. Josh Ferris ought to be paying royalties to the Heller estate.

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
my guess is I could maybe make it through 50 pages of one of those books. my mind just cant handle it.

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
my guess is I could maybe make it through 50 pages of one of those books. my mind just cant handle it.
They're crack to my mind. I actually read passages of The Sound and the Fury on my ipod's Kindle ap between sets at the gym. This is book nerd level 11, for sure. :nerd:

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
my guess is I could maybe make it through 50 pages of one of those books. my mind just cant handle it.
They're crack to my mind. I actually read passages of The Sound and the Fury on my ipod's Kindle ap between sets at the gym. This is book nerd level 11, for sure. :nerd:
not sure what it says about me if Benji's chapters are some of my favorites of all time
 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
my guess is I could maybe make it through 50 pages of one of those books. my mind just cant handle it.
They're crack to my mind. I actually read passages of The Sound and the Fury on my ipod's Kindle ap between sets at the gym. This is book nerd level 11, for sure. :nerd:
I sort of wish I was more into great literature. I push myself with movies and try to read a bit of non fiction, so when I get around to a novel I go a little more for entertainment.

 
The Day of the Jackal - Frederick Forsythe

Without Remorse - Tom Clancy

Flight of the Intruder - Stephen Coonts

Flight of the Old Dog - Dale Brown

The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown

The Hunt For Red October - Tom Clancy

Look Away - Harold Coyle

 
Okay, novels. I love political dystopias, for some reason. And masculinity and its powerlessness. These are the ones that come to mind.

1984 - Orwell

The Sun Also Rises - Hemingway

Infinite Jest - Wallace

Tender Is The Night - Fitzgerald

Light Years - James Salter

Confederacy of Dunces - John Kennedy Toole

Notes From Underground - Dostoyevsky
Thanks for reminding me to read Confederacy. It's been on my list for awhile and I keep overlooking it.
Highly overrated, IMO. Is it just me, or is humor in novel form like the toughest art form to nail? I guess humor is just so highly subjective that one man's classic (or many men's) like Confederacy is another man's meh (Herb)Also, my list is embarrassing. I need to read some more classic fiction, I guess. It's just that so much of it seems so... daunting.

I keep coming back to Infinite Jest in the bookstore but it scares me away every time...
How does Confederacy compare to Catch 22? I agree humor in a novel is difficult, but I also think Catch 22 is the ultimate funny.,
Catch 22 was the longest slog of a novel I've ever been through. I had 2 close friends recommend it to me, one of whom considers it her favorite novel ever. I laughed a couple of times, but mostly hated it. I liked Confederacy WAY more than Catch 22.I love stand-up, funny movies and shows and can frequently find humor in those formats that others don't.

My novel funny-bone is just broken. Fear and Loathing in LV and I Love You Beth Cooper are about the only books I've read in my adulthood that actually made me laugh out loud. And Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson, which I just finished. That dude is funny, although his novels certainly aren't comedy.
Catch-22's comedy was based upon almost exactly two or three pretty elementary language "tricks." Mostly having to do with simple juxtaposition of opposites. If they didn't tickle your funny bone on the first page, there wasn't going to be a lot of comedy in store for you there. The language hijinx have always made the philosophy underpinning the whole look a little comedic at first blush, but its absurdism is really pretty dire if you don't get on board with the funny.It also makes Heller pretty easy to rip off. See, more recently, And Then We Came to the End. Josh Ferris ought to be paying royalties to the Heller estate.
I liked Catch-22 enough to pick up Heller's second novel Something Happened. He waited thirteen years to write his followup. I remember it as being a dreadful slog, with little of the wit of Catch-22.

I was a young man when I read both books. Even though Heller was almost 40 when Catch-22 was published, it was a reminiscence of his youth. Something Happened was the book by and about a much older man. Heller had turned 50 before finishing it. I wonder if I'd relate more to it today than I did then.

This is kind of a problem with books. The OP said books you've read multiple times but for me there just aren't that many. I've read a few books twice but I can't think of any I've read three times. Other art forms like movies, music and paintings require a lot less personal investment to experience. My tastes in music have evolved over the years--there are albums I loved in the 80s that do nothing for me today. Movies are more static but I still view them differently than I did in my teens and twenties. But books for me are forever coupled with the time, place and person I was when I read them for the first and only time.

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
my guess is I could maybe make it through 50 pages of one of those books. my mind just cant handle it.
They're crack to my mind. I actually read passages of The Sound and the Fury on my ipod's Kindle ap between sets at the gym. This is book nerd level 11, for sure. :nerd:
not sure what it says about me if Benji's chapters are some of my favorites of all time
I'm not sure what it says about me that Quentin's are my favorite, so much so that I can recite the opening paragraph even when sh!#faced drunk. Victory is an illusion of philosophers and fools, indeed.

 
In later years, I've tended more toward non-fiction. However, for novels, in no particular order:

Cry, the Beloved Country

One Shot

Pride and Prejudice

Lord Jim

Heart of Darkness (long short story, but a masterpiece)

Huckleberry Finn

The Hunt for Red October

 
Warning - Skiffy Nerd :tinfoilhat: :

Dune - Frank Herbert

Inherit the Stars - James Hogan

The Shadow of the Lion - Mercedes Lackey et al.

Emergence - David Palmer

Ender's Game - Orson Card

Midnight at the Well of Souls - Jack Chalker

Anything by Heinlein

...and tons of other stuff, mostly series - 1632 series by Flint, MYTH books by Asprin, Dragonrider series by McCaffrey, Elenium series by Eddings, Conrad series by Frankowski, Kencyr series by Hodgell, Keeper series by Huff, Troy Rising series by Ringo, Callahan's books by Robinson, Boundry series by Spoor, stuff by Ing, Crichton, Clancy, Cussler - geez, I have and read too darn many books.

Val

 
The Count of Monte Christo

The Name of the Rose

Smileys People

In Cold Blood

Five Hundred Years After

To Kill a Mocking Bird

Angela's Ashes

 
Warning - Skiffy Nerd :tinfoilhat: :

Dune - Frank Herbert

Inherit the Stars - James Hogan

The Shadow of the Lion - Mercedes Lackey et al.

Emergence - David Palmer

Ender's Game - Orson Card

Midnight at the Well of Souls - Jack Chalker

Anything by Heinlein

...and tons of other stuff, mostly series - 1632 series by Flint, MYTH books by Asprin, Dragonrider series by McCaffrey, Elenium series by Eddings, Conrad series by Frankowski, Kencyr series by Hodgell, Keeper series by Huff, Troy Rising series by Ringo, Callahan's books by Robinson, Boundry series by Spoor, stuff by Ing, Crichton, Clancy, Cussler - geez, I have and read too darn many books.

Val
Love Ender's game but never considered it a novel.

 
Warning - Skiffy Nerd :tinfoilhat: :

Dune - Frank Herbert

Inherit the Stars - James Hogan

The Shadow of the Lion - Mercedes Lackey et al.

Emergence - David Palmer

Ender's Game - Orson Card

Midnight at the Well of Souls - Jack Chalker

Anything by Heinlein

...and tons of other stuff, mostly series - 1632 series by Flint, MYTH books by Asprin, Dragonrider series by McCaffrey, Elenium series by Eddings, Conrad series by Frankowski, Kencyr series by Hodgell, Keeper series by Huff, Troy Rising series by Ringo, Callahan's books by Robinson, Boundry series by Spoor, stuff by Ing, Crichton, Clancy, Cussler - geez, I have and read too darn many books.

Val
Love Ender's game but never considered it a novel.
Possibly because Card wrote it more than once - it was originally a short story (Analog, 1977) that was expanded to novel length which won the Hugo for best novel in 1986. He's since released updated versions to reflect things like the fall of the Soviet Union.

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
Americana is a great great book, but I think by the time he wrote Underworld, Delillo had become a master of his craft. Another one of those "my favorite" versus "best" problems.

 
Not a rule, but went with similar criteria with the other two threads, so thought of books that I have read through multiple times throughout the years and have in the house still:

To Kill A Mockingbird

A Wrinkle in Time - was obsessed with this book as a kid

1984

The Road - read it shortly after my son was born and have gone back a couple times since

Ishmael - concept of the book is silly, but have revisited it a couple times

Jurassic Park

it is a bit of a cheat, but will throw out The Bachman Books by King. Read through 3 of those stories lots of times.
You have to read Blood Meridian. Or, if it's too much, then read Outer Dark. McCarthy is the bomb.

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
Americana is a great great book, but I think by the time he wrote Underworld, Delillo had become a master of his craft. Another one of those "my favorite" versus "best" problems.
Americana is the most purely inspired of Delillo's novels and nothing touches its prose brilliance. It is, though, a highly unbalanced novel in that Delillo had no idea how to structure things. He just shifted into drive and hit the pedal to the floor. White Noise is his most masterful effort, followed closely by Underworld. But in White Noise he knew exactly what he was doing as a novelist - character, structure, prose - it's all there. It isn't as blindly fantastic on a sentence by sentence level, but it's the more mature novel for sure.

ETA: btw, if you haven't read everything between White Noise and Underworld, do so. This is Delillo's golden period. Mao II, Libra, White Noise, Underworld - they're all brilliant. Hell even The Body Artist has its own quiet charm. After that? Meh. I read half of Falling Man and felt too embarrassed for my hero to continue.

 
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I'll give it a try..something like this

East of Eden
L.A Confidential

Taipan

Breakfast of Champions

The Great Gatsby

World According to Garp

Blood Meridien

 
Not a rule, but went with similar criteria with the other two threads, so thought of books that I have read through multiple times throughout the years and have in the house still:

To Kill A Mockingbird

A Wrinkle in Time - was obsessed with this book as a kid

1984

The Road - read it shortly after my son was born and have gone back a couple times since

Ishmael - concept of the book is silly, but have revisited it a couple times

Jurassic Park

it is a bit of a cheat, but will throw out The Bachman Books by King. Read through 3 of those stories lots of times.
You have to read Blood Meridian. Or, if it's too much, then read Outer Dark. McCarthy is the bomb.
I have had blood meridian on my shelf for over 2 years now. :bag:

 
In no particular order (numbered so I stop at se7en) -

1. The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner

2. Light in August, Faulkner

3. Americana, Delillo

4. V., Pynchon

5. Madame Bovary, Flaubert

6. Lolita, Nabokov

7. Swann's Way, Proust (or if you want to be a stickler for the category, "novel," then the whole mofo Remembrance of Things Past)

I know Ulysses should be up there somewhere, but to my shame, I haven't read it yet. Every time I start it screws up my own writing. Within a page I suddenly realize I'm imitating Joyce and just can't stop. So I stop reading Joyce.

ETA: Just realized I've read each of these at least twice, and some several times (Americana, Sound & Fury, Light in August). The only one I read once is Bovary, and I'm teaching it this fall so that'll be remedied. Look at me. I read big books. :flex:
Americana is a great great book, but I think by the time he wrote Underworld, Delillo had become a master of his craft. Another one of those "my favorite" versus "best" problems.
Americana is the most purely inspired of Delillo's novels and nothing touches its prose brilliance. It is, though, a highly unbalanced novel in that Delillo had no idea how to structure things. He just shifted into drive and hit the pedal to the floor. White Noise is his most masterful effort, followed closely by Underworld. But in White Noise he knew exactly what he was doing as a novelist - character, structure, prose - it's all there. It isn't as blindly fantastic on a sentence by sentence level, but it's the more mature novel for sure.

ETA: btw, if you haven't read everything between White Noise and Underworld, do so. This is Delillo's golden period. Mao II, Libra, White Noise, Underworld - they're all brilliant. Hell even The Body Artist has its own quiet charm. After that? Meh. I read half of Falling Man and felt too embarrassed for my hero to continue.
Ive read all of them. One of the greatest living writers.

 

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