Read The Modern Library Online
Authors: Colm Tóibín,Carmen Callil
This idea of a national inheritance is complicated by the great migrations of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Was Brian Moore Irish or Canadian? Is Amy Tan American or Chinese? Is V. S. Naipaul Trinidadian or English? Is Oscar Hijuelos Cuban or American? The answer is all are both.
While we differ in our response to literary theory – one of us is hostile to it, the other cannot have enough of it – we were as one in our determination to ignore the distinction between so-called popular fiction and literary fiction (also so-called). This false distinction which is prevalent in literary prizes, in academia and in our educational mores, has been responsible for the treacherous suggestion that reading is a chore, and that the best writing is always difficult and obscure.
For us, the debate as to whether
Interview with the Vampire
is of greater intrinsic merit than
Oscar and Lucinda
is irrelevant, because any decision on the subject – and a decision can be made – alters not at all the fact that both are splendid feats of the human imagination, explains nothing of the pleasure experienced as the novelists’ words lock into the reader’s imagination, but simply reveals a great deal about those arguing. The critical dividing line between popular and literary also ignores the reader and the writer, who rarely contemplate the novel in this way.
There are novelists, of course, who are not interested in the reaction of their readers, who would write for a seagull if that bird praised such a novelist’s self-absorptions. We have, generally, avoided them effortlessly. Not altogether, of course, because some, albeit few, are great writers who have created complex and difficult novels, which require concentration but are worth it.
We chose these books together on the basis that the idea of two people disputing – hotly at times, not at all on other occasions – is always preferable to one person laying down the law. We come from different places. Both of us come from the Free World, i.e. neither of us is English or American, and we have not the slightest interest in political correctness. We have different prejudices and preferences. Any list such as this is entirely personal, but in every choice we’ve looked for the same quality – a certain (or sometimes even an uncertain) genius in the work, a certain (always certain) excitement in the reading, and a feeling that you would love to hand this book to someone else to read. Most of us, these days, are almost imprisoned by choice, as anyone examining the fiction shelves of a large bookshop will notice. We have used our prejudices and preferences to cut a path through this rich jungle, using as our final point of judgement that touch of genius and sense of excitement which connect Patrick White with Ruth Rendell, Georgette Heyer with Don DeLillo, Daphne du Maurier with Katherine Anne Porter, J. D. Salinger with Irvine Welsh.
A large part of the list is common to both of us; some choices, while admired by both, more passionately belong to one or the other. In only two cases we could not agree: V. S. Naipaul and Saul Bellow have two entries, not because we consider them greater than any of the other novelists we have chosen, but because one of us considered
A Bend in the River
and
Herzog
to be the masterworks of Naipaul and Bellow, while the other disliked
Herzog
but argued passionately for Bellow’s
The Adventures of
Augie March
and could not feel
A Bend in the River
to be the equal of
A House for Mr Biswas
. For the rest, and for arguably greater writers, only one entry was necessary. It was often difficult to decide which work by a single writer to include: in the case of Nabokov, for example, between
Ada, Pnin
,
Pale Fire
or
Lolita
; in the case of Nadine Gordimer between
The Conservationist
,
July’s
People
and
Burgher’s Daughter
. We also chose to ignore the ghetto into which short stories are often placed.
Only books published in 1950 or afterwards and only books written in English qualified. We have included some collections of stories but mainly novels. We have included trilogies and single books from trilogies. There are no translations except those done by the author. We did not consider novels which were written in the earlier half of the century, but not published, for various reasons, until the second half. (These include E. M. Forster’s
Maurice
, Hemingway’s
The Garden of Eden
and Flann O’Brien’s
The Third Policeman
.) Many of the novelists we have chosen flourished also in the earlier half of the century – Faulkner, Waugh, Lehmann, du Maurier, Welty, Hemingway, Agatha Christie, P. G. Wodehouse, Patrick Hamilton, Graham Greene, Elizabeth Bowen: we hope to send readers back to earlier years and so trace an enduring tradition.
Why 194 choices, and not 200 as in the title of the book? As we chose and wrote, and agreed and disagreed, we came across novels, often famous novels, which we did not appreciate: Tolkien’s
Lord of the Rings
for instance, science fiction and fantasy novels, and most historical novels. We read and rejected them knowing that even two omnivorous readers cannot represent every taste. Indignation, as well as pleasure, will, we hope, be among the first reactions to this book. We are well aware of our omissions, and want the reader to spot them. This is a book which requires action on the part of the reader, and so six novels have been chosen by the book-reading public and added to this book for all future editions.
We have chosen these novels for readers, readers of every age and taste, for those who have never read a novel before and for experts who want to quarrel with our choice; for school students and undergraduates, grandfathers, priests and nuns, Antarctic explorers. There are short novels and long novels, each kind providing a different kind of pleasure. A twelve-year-old could read Harper Lee’s
To Kill A Mockingbird
, a ninety-year-old Anne Tyler’s
Breathing Lessons
and be very happy; Thomas Flanagan’s historical masterpiece
The Year of the French
and Thomas Harris’s startling
Red Dragon
offer other pleasures, as indeed do Hubert Selby Jr’s
Last Exit to Brooklyn
and William Burroughs’
Naked Lunch.
For surrealists, there is Henry Green and Ivy Compton-Burnett, for romantics Rosamond Lehmann, Louis de Bernières and Sybille Bedford, for wits Muriel Spark, J. G. Farrell, for murder fiends Agatha Christie and Elmore Leonard, Carl Hiaasen and Donna Tartt, Roy Heath and P. D. James, not to speak of Bret Easton Ellis; for Cold War fanatics there is Graham Greene and Don DeLillo; for lovers of Dickens and Eliot there is Mistry, Byatt, Smiley, Storey. There are many crime novels and thrillers. Some of the greatest writers of the period are represented by their short stories – V. S. Prichett, Alice Munro, Mavis Gallant, Mary Lavin, Raymond Carver. Most exciting was the discovery that some novels loved first twenty or thirty years ago have improved with age. For instance, Olivia Manning’s Balkan trilogy, B. S. Johnson’s
The Unfortunates
, Evelyn Waugh’s Sword of Honour trilogy, John O’Hara’s
From the Terrace
feel ready for reassessment. However good we thought them before, they seem finer now.
There were no quotas for men, women or race in choosing these books. The only constraint on our choice was the lack of availability of books from certain countries. Otherwise, we began and ended with open minds, and the books we chose are here because we loved them.
We both have memories from childhood and adolescence of being wrapped up in books. Books were a way of escaping the world, and also of entering it in a way that was more intense; a way of discovering feeling; a working out of how to live. Both of us were constantly reminded, as we did our research, of moments from childhood and adolescence – finding a book we hadn’t read or had forgotten, and after a few pages, suddenly being enclosed, cocooned, absorbed and totally involved in its world; finding ourselves anxious and dispossessed until we took it up again.
Books were happiness. We were brought up in places where reading was a passion and a joy. It still is for us. And so here they are: books which we offer wholeheartedly to the reader as you would give to a friend going on a journey; 194 examples of the best novels and stories in English published during the last half of the twentieth century.
All entries are alphabetical under the name of the author. Sometimes we have chosen a novel within a sequence, sometimes the sequence itself: the full work is detailed in both cases.
Our readers, all over the world, sent us thousands of entries for the final six titles for this book. The four most popular are included here. In order of popularity they read as follows: Sebastian Faulks’
Birdsong
, Charles Frazier’s
Cold Mountain
, John Fowles’
The Magus
– which beat his
French Lieutenant’s Woman
by a whisker – and Vikram Seth’s
A Suitable Boy.
We used our rights as authors to choose the last two: William Maxwell’s
So Long
,
See You Tomorrow
because it was a grave omission and authorial mistake of ours in the hardback edition, and Helen Garner’s
The Children’s Bach
because she topped the poll outside the world of British and American writers, who seem to dominate our readers’ tastes.
1950 | A Murder is Announced Agatha Christie Nothing Henry Green Power Without Glory Frank Hardy The Grand Sophy Georgette Heyer |
1951 | December Bride Sam Hanna Bell My Cousin Rachel Daphne du Maurier The West Pier Patrick Hamilton The Ballad of the Sad Café Carson McCullers A Dance to theMusic of Time (1951–75 ) Anthony Powell The Catcher in the Rye J. D. Salinger |
1952 | Invisible Man Ralph Ellison The Old Man and the Sea Ernest Hemingway The Natural Bernard Malamud The Financial Expert R. K. Narayan Wise Blood Flannery O’Connor East of Eden John Steinbeck The Sword of Honour Trilogy (1952–61) Evelyn Waugh |
1953 | Private Life of an Indian Prince Mulk Raj Anand Go Tell it on the Mountain James Baldwin The Adventures of Augie March Saul Bellow The Long Good-Bye Raymond Chandler The Go-Between L. P. Hartley The Echoing Grove Rosamond Lehmann The Palm-Wine Drinkard Amos Tutuola |
1954 | Lucky Jim Kingsley Amis Lord of the Flies William Golding The Tortoise and the Hare Elizabeth Jenkins The Flint Anchor Sylvia Townsend Warner |
1955 | The Molloy Trilogy (1955–58) Samuel Beckett The Recognitions William Gaddis The Talented Mr Ripley Patricia Highsmith Lolita Vladimir Nabokov |
1956 | A Legacy Sybille Bedford Train to Pakistan Khushwant Singh |
1957 | Owls Do Cry Janet Frame On the Road Jack Kerouac Angel Elizabeth Taylor The Fountain Overflows Rebecca West |
1958 | Things Fall Apart Chinua Achebe Anecdotes of Destiny Isak Dinesen From the Terrace John O’Hara Saturday Night and Sunday Morning Alan Sillitoe |
1959 | Naked Lunch William Burroughs A Heritage and its History Ivy Compton-Burnett The Little Disturbances of Man Grace Paley |
1960 | To Kill a Mockingbird Harper Lee The Balkan Trilogy (1960–65) Olivia Manning The Rabbit Quartet (1960–90) John Updike Jeeves in the Offing P. G. Wodehouse (US: How Right You Are, Jeeves ) |
1961 | Catch-22 Joseph Heller A House for Mr Biswas V. S. Naipaul The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Muriel Spark Riders in the Chariot Patrick White |
1962 | That’s How it Was Maureen Duffy The Reivers William Faulkner The Golden Notebook Doris Lessing The Lonely Girl Edna O’Brien (renamed Girl with Green Eyes 1964) Ship of Fools Katherine Anne Porter |
1963 | The Little Girls Elizabeth Bowen The Spy Who Came in from the Cold John Le Carré The Group Mary McCarthy The Bell Jar Sylvia Plath |
1964 | Herzog Saul Bellow Heartland Wilson Harris Last Exit to Brooklyn Hubert Selby Jr. |
1965 | Memoirs of a Peon Frank Sargeson The Interpreters Wole Soyinka |
1966 | The Magus John Fowles A Jest of God Margaret Laurence Wide Sargasso Sea Jean Rhys The Jewel in the Crown Paul Scott Cotters’ England Christina Stead (US: Dark Places of the Heart 1967) |
1967 | The Confessions of Nat Turner William Styron A Grain of Wheat Ngugi Wa Thiong’o |
1968 | In the Heart of the Heart of the Country William H. Gass The Nice and the Good Iris Murdoch |
1969 | The Unfortunates B. S. Johnson Happiness Mary Lavin The Godfather Mario Puzo |
1970 | Fifth Business Robertson Davies Master and Commander Patrick O’Brian |
1971 | The Day of the Jackal Frederick Forsyth St Urbain’s Horseman Mordecai Richler Black List, Section H Francis Stuart |
1972 | The Optimist’s Daughter Eudora Welty |
1973 | The Siege of Krishnapur J. G. Farrell Gravity’s Rainbow Thomas Pynchon |
1975 | Ragtime E. L. Doctorow Heat and Dust Ruth Prawer Jhabvala Changing Places David Lodge |
1976 | The Lost Salt Gift of Blood Alistair MacLeod Interview with the Vampire Anne Rice Saville David Storey |
1977 | Injury Time Beryl Bainbridge Falconer John Cheever A Book of Common Prayer Joan Didion The Ice Age Margaret Drabble |
1978 | Tirra Lirra by the River Jessica Anderson Plumb Maurice Gee The Human Factor Graham Greene The Murderer Roy A. K. Heath The Cement Garden Ian McEwan |
1979 | The Year of the French Thomas Flanagan From the Fifteenth District Mavis Gallant Burger’s Daughter Nadine Gordimer Sleepless Nights Elizabeth Hardwick The Executioner’s Song Norman Mailer A Bend in the River V. S. Naipaul |
1980 | Earthly Powers Anthony Burgess The Transit of Venus Shirley Hazzard Riddley Walker Russell Hoban Lamb Bernard MacLaverty So Long, See You Tomorrow William Maxwell Housekeeping Marilynne Robinson A Confederacy of Dunces John Kennedy Toole Puffball Fay Weldon |
1981 | Lanark Alasdair Gray Red Dragon Thomas Harris Midnight’s Children Salman Rushdie A Flag for Sunrise Robert Stone |
1982 | On the Black Hill Bruce Chatwin Schindler’s Ark Thomas Keneally (US: Schindler’s List ) The Color Purple Alice Walker A Boy’s Own Story Edmund White |
1984 | Money Martin Amis Empire of the Sun J. G. Ballard Flaubert’s Parrot Julian Barnes In Custody Anita Desai The Children’s Bach Helen Garner Nation of Fools Balraj Khanna Machine Dreams Jayne Anne Phillips |
1985 | Family and Friends Anita Brookner Blood Meridian Cormac McCarthy Lonesome Dove Larry McMurtry Black Robe Brian Moore Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit Jeanette Winterson |
1986 | The Sportswriter Richard Ford An Artist of the Floating World Kazuo Ishiguro A Summons to Memphis Peter Taylor A Dark-Adapted Eye Barbara Vine (Ruth Rendell) |
1987 | Ellen Foster Kaye Gibbons Double Whammy Carl Hiaasen Misery Stephen King Beloved Toni Morrison In the Skin of a Lion Michael Ondaatje The Other Garden Francis Wyndham |
1988 | Oscar and Lucinda Peter Carey Where I’m Calling From Raymond Carver Paris Trout Pete Dexter The Sugar Mother Elizabeth Jolley Forty-Seventeen Frank Moorhouse Ice-Candy-Man Bapsi Sidhwa Breathing Lessons Anne Tyler The Bonfire of the Vanities Tom Wolfe |
1989 | The Book of Evidence John Banville The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love Oscar Hijuelos The Joy Luck Club Amy Tan |
1990 | Possession A. S. Byatt Age of Iron J. M. Coetzee A Home at the End of the World Michael Cunningham The Snapper Roddy Doyle Get Shorty Elmore Leonard Amongst Women John McGahern The Great World David Malouf Friend of My Youth Alice Munro |
1991 | The Regeneration Trilogy (1991–95) Pat Barker Wise Children Angela Carter A Strange and Sublime Address Amit Chaudhuri American Psycho Bret Easton Ellis The Redundancy of Courage Timothy Mo Mating Norman Rush Downriver Iain Sinclair A Thousand Acres Jane Smiley Reading Turgenev William Trevor Cloudstreet Tim Winton |
1992 | Death and Nightingales Eugene McCabe The Butcher Boy Patrick McCabe The Secret History Donna Tartt |
1993 | The Virgin Suicides Jeffrey Eugenides Birdsong Sebastian Faulks A River Sutra Gita Mehta The Shipping News E. Annie Proulx My Idea of Fun Will Self A Suitable Boy Vikram Seth Trainspotting Irvine Welsh |
1994 | What a Carve Up! Jonathan Coe (US: The Winshaw Legacy ) Captain Corelli’s Mandolin Louis de Bernières (US: Corelli’s Mandolin ) The Folding Star Alan Hollinghurst Original Sin P. D. James How Late it Was, How Late James Kelman |
1995 | The Tortilla Curtain T. Coraghessan Boyle The Blue Flower Penelope Fitzgerald A Fine Balance Rohinton Mistry |
1996 | Alias Grace Margaret Atwood Asylum Patrick McGrath Last Orders Graham Swift The Night in Question Tobias Wolff |
1997 | Quarantine Jim Crace Underworld Don DeLillo Cold Mountain Charles Frazier American Pastoral Philip Roth |
1998 | The Lady From Guatemala V. S. Pritchett |