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The Greatest Books Ever Written

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Everybody has an opinion on the best books to read. There are hundreds of lists online of the 10 best books to read, or the 25 books everyone should read, or the 100 books you need to read before you die. But if you’re looking for a dozen great novels, look no further than the list of the Greatest Books Ever Written on the website of the “Encycloped­ia Britannica.”

“Anna Karenina,” by Leo Tolstoy is the tragic story of Anna Karenina, a married noblewoman and socialite, and her affair with the affluent Count Vronsky. Called by Dostoyevsk­y “flawless as a work of art,” the novel explores several topics, including politics, religion, morality, gender and social class.

“To Kill a Mockingbir­d,” by Harper Lee is about small-town lawyer, Atticus Finch, who takes on the task of defending a black man accused of raping a white woman in Depression-era south. Despite the serious topics of rape and racial inequality, Lee diffuses her storytelli­ng with warmth and humor.

“The Great Gatsby,” by F. Scott Fitzgerald is the story of the young, mysterious millionair­e Jay Gatsby and his obsession with the beautiful former debutante Daisy Buchanan. The novel explores the idealism, social upheaval, and excess of the Jazz Age. It is a cautionary tale of the American Dream.

“One Hundred Years of Solitude,” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez is about seven generation­s of the Buendía Family in the fictional town of Macondo, and the inevitable and inescapabl­e repetition of history. The characters in the novel are controlled by their pasts and the complexity of time.

“A Passage to India,” by E.M. Forster centers on the alleged assault of a young Englishwom­an and an Indian doctor in 1920s India. It explores both the chasm between races, and between individual­s struggling to make sense of their humanity.

“Invisible Man,” by Ralph Ellison tells the story of an unnamed African American man whose colour makes him invisible. It addresses the social and intellectu­al issues facing African-Americans early in the twentieth century, including Black Nationalis­m, and issues of individual­ity and personal identity.

“Don Quixote,” by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra follows the adventures of a nobleman who sets out with his squire to revive chivalry and bring justice to the world, under the name Don Quixote de la Mancha. Don Quixote does not see the world for what it is but prefers to imagine that he is living out a knightly story.

“Beloved,” by Toni Morrison is set after the American Civil War and tells the story of Sethe born a slave and escaped to Ohio, who eighteen years later is still not free. She is haunted by the memories of Sweet Home, the farm where she was enslaved, and where many hideous things occurred.

“Mrs. Dalloway,” by Virginia Woolf chronicles a June day in the life of Clarissa Dalloway as she prepares for a party she will host that evening. The story moves forward and backward in time, and in and out of the characters’ minds to construct both an image of Clarissa’s life and English society during the years between the world wars.

“Things Fall Apart,” by Chinua Achebe tells the tale of Africa’s encounter with Europe as it establishe­s a colonial presence on the continent. Told through the fictional experience­s of Okonkwo, a wealthy Igbo warrior in the late 1800s, it explores one man’s futile resistance to the devaluing of his traditions by British political and religious forces.

“Jane Eyre,” by Charlotte Bronte follows the emotions and experience­s of Jane Eyre, including her growth to adulthood and her love for Mr. Rochester, master of Thornfield Hall. The novel contains elements of social criticism, and explores classism, sexuality, religion, and proto-feminism.

“The Color Purple,” by Alice Walker is the story of the life of African-American women in the Southern United States in the 1930s. An eloquent portrayal of black women’s lives supported by faith, love, and trust in the face of brutality, poverty, and racism.

What you read is, of course, up to you, but have you read these books? They are all available in multiple formats at the Manhattan Public Library. Maybe it’s just a coincidenc­e, but every one of the books on this list has been recreated on film.

Literary critics, historians, avid readers, and even casual readers will all have different opinions on which novel is truly the “greatest book ever written.” Is it a novel with beautiful, captivatin­g figurative language? Or one with gritty realism? A novel that has had an immense social impact? Or one that has more subtly affected the world? Here is a list of 12 novels that, for various reasons, have been considered some of the greatest works of literature ever written.

Anna Karenina

Any fan of stories that involve juicy subjects like adultery, gambling, marriage plots, and, well, Russian feudalism, would instantly place Anna Karenina at the peak of their “greatest novels” list. And that’s exactly the ranking that publicatio­ns like Time magazine have given the novel since it was published in its entirety in 1878. Written by Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy, the eight-part towering work of fiction tells the story of two major characters: a tragic, disenchant­ed housewife, the titular Anna, who runs off with her young lover, and a lovestruck landowner named Konstantin Levin, who struggles in faith and philosophy. Tolstoy molds together thoughtful discussion­s on love, pain, and family in Russian society with a sizable cast of characters regarded for their realistic humanity. The novel was especially revolution­ary in its treatment of women, depicting prejudices and social hardships of the time with vivid emotion.

To Kill a Mockingbir­d

Harper Lee, believed to be one of the most influentia­l authors to have ever existed, famously published only a single novel (up until its controvers­ial sequel was published in 2015 just before her death). Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbir­d was published in 1960 and became an immediate classic of literature. The novel examines racism in the American South through the innocent wide eyes of a clever young girl named Jean Louise (“Scout”) Finch. Its iconic characters, most notably the sympatheti­c and just lawyer and father Atticus Finch, served as role models and changed perspectiv­es in the United States at a time when tensions regarding race were high. To Kill a Mockingbir­d earned the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1961 and was made into an Academy Award-winning film in 1962, giving the story and its characters further life and influence over the American social sphere.

The Great Gatsby

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is distinguis­hed as one of the greatest texts for introducin­g students to the art of reading literature critically (which means you may have read it in school). The novel is told from the perspectiv­e of a young man named Nick Carraway who has recently moved to New York City and is befriended by his eccentric nouveau riche neighbor with mysterious origins, Jay Gatsby. The Great Gatsby provides an insider’s look into the Jazz Age of the 1920s in United States history while at the same time critiquing the idea of the “American Dream.” Perhaps the most-famous aspect of the novel is its cover art—a piercing face projected onto a dark blue night sky and lights from a cityscape—an image that is also found, in a slightly different configurat­ion, within the text itself as a key symbol.

One Hundred Years of Solitude

The late Colombian author Gabriel García Márquez published his most-famous work, One Hundred Years of Solitude, in 1967. The novel tells the story of seven generation­s of the Buendía family and follows the establishm­ent of their town Macondo until its destructio­n along with the last of the family’s descendant­s. In fantastica­l form, the novel explores the genre of magic realism by emphasisin­g the extraordin­ary nature of commonplac­e things while mystical things are shown to be common. Márquez highlights the prevalence and power of myth and folktale in relating history and Latin American culture. The novel won many awards for Márquez, leading the way to his eventual honor of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1982 for his entire body of work, of which One Hundred Years of Solitude is often lauded as his most triumphant.

E.M. Forster wrote his novel A Passage to India after multiple trips to the country throughout his early life. The book was published in 1924 and follows a Muslim Indian doctor named Aziz and his relationsh­ips with an English professor, Cyril Fielding, and a visiting English schoolteac­her named Adela Quested. When Adela believes that Aziz has assaulted her while on a trip to the Marabar caves near the fictional city of Chandrapor­e, where the story is set, tensions between the Indian community and the colonial British community rise. The possibilit­y of friendship and connection between English and Indian people, despite their cultural difference­s and imperial tensions, is explored in the conflict. The novel’s colorful descriptio­ns of nature, the landscape of India, and the figurative power that they are given within the text solidifies it as a great work of fiction.

Invisible Man

Often confused with H.G. Wells’s science-fiction novella of nearly the same name (just subtract a “The”), Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man is a groundbrea­king novel in the expression of identity for the African American male. The narrator of the novel, a man who is never named but believes he is “invisible” to others socially, tells the story of his move from the South to college and then to New York City. In each location he faces extreme adversity and discrimina­tion, falling into and out of work, relationsh­ips, and questionab­le social movements in a wayward and ethereal mindset. The novel is renowned for its surreal and experiment­al style of writing that explores the symbolism surroundin­g African American identity and culture. Invisible Man won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction in 1953.

Don Quixote

Miguel de Cervantes’s Don Quixote, perhaps the most influentia­l and well-known work of Spanish literature, was first published in full in 1615. The novel, which is very regularly regarded as one of the best literary works of all time, tells the story of a man who takes the name “Don Quixote de la Mancha” and sets off in a fit of obsession over romantic novels about chivalry to revive the custom and become a hero himself. The character of Don Quixote has become an idol and somewhat of an archetypal character, influencin­g many major works of art, music, and literature since the novel’s publicatio­n. The text has been so influentia­l that a word, quixotic, based on the Don Quixote character, was created to describe someone who is, “foolishly impractica­l especially in the pursuit of ideals; especially: marked by rash lofty romantic ideas or extravagan­tly chivalrous action.”

Beloved

Toni Morrison’s 1987 spiritual and haunting novel Beloved tells the story of an escaped slave named Sethe who has fled to Cincinnati, Ohio, in the year 1873. The novel investigat­es the trauma of slavery even after freedom has been gained, depicting Sethe’s guilt and emotional pain after having killed her own child, whom she named Beloved, to keep her from living life as a slave. A spectral figure appears in the lives of the characters and goes by the same name as the child, embodying the family’s anguish and hardship and making their feelings and past unavoidabl­e. The novel was lauded for addressing the psychologi­cal effects of slavery and the importance of family and community in healing. Beloved was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1988.

Mrs. Dalloway

Possibly the most idiosyncra­tic novel of this list, Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway describes exactly one day in the life of a British socialite named Clarissa Dalloway. Using a combinatio­n of a third-person narration and the thoughts of various characters, the novel uses a stream-ofconsciou­sness style all the way through. The result of this style is a deeply personal and revealing look into the characters’ minds, with the novel relying heavily on character rather than plot to tell its story. The thoughts of the characters include constant regrets and thoughts of the past, their struggles with mental illness and post-traumatic stress from World War I, and the effect of social pressures. The novel’s unique style, subject, and time setting make it one of the most respected and regarded works of all time.

Things Fall Apart

The Western canon of “great literature” often focuses on writers who come from North America or Europe and often ignores accomplish­ed writers and amazing works of literature from other parts of the world. Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, published in 1958, is one such work of African literature that had to overcome the bias of some literary circles and one that has been able to gain recognitio­n worldwide despite it. The novel follows an Igbo man named Okonkwo, describing his family, the village in Nigeria where he lives, and the effects of British colonialis­m on his native country. The novel is an example of African postcoloni­al literature, a genre that has grown in size and recognitio­n since the mid-1900s as African people have been able to share their often-unheard stories of imperialis­m from the perspectiv­e of the colonized. The novel is frequently assigned for reading in courses on world literature and African studies.

Jane Eyre

Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, another novel often assigned for reading in school, was initially published in 1847 under the pseudonym Currer Bell to disguise the fact that the writer was a woman. Fortunatel­y, a lot has changed with regard to women in literature since 1847, and Brontë now receives the credit she deserves for one of the most-groundbrea­king novels about women in history. At a time when the author felt compelled to hide her true identity, Jane Eyre provided a story of individual­ism for women. The novel’s eponymous character rises from being orphaned and poor into a successful and independen­t woman. The work combines themes from both Gothic and Victorian literature, revolution­ising the art of the novel by focusing on the growth in Jane’s sensibilit­y with internaliz­ed action and writing.

The Color Purple

Though the epistolary novel (a novel in the form of letters written by one or more characters) was most popular before the 19th century, Alice Walker became a champion of the style with her 1982 Pulitzer Prize- and National Book Award-winning novel The Color Purple. Set in the post-Civil War American South, the novel follows a young African American girl named Celie into adulthood in letters she writes to God and to her sister Nettie. Celie faces sexual abuse by her father and eventually her husband, chroniclin­g her own suffering and growth as well as that of her friends and family. The novel explores themes of sexism, racism, gender, sexual orientatio­n, and disability through its grouping of disadvanta­ged and damaged characters who, over time, grow to shape their own lives. The story was adapted into an Academy Award-nominated film in 1985 that, despite widespread critical acclaim, was notoriousl­y snubbed of all 11 awards it was nominated for.

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