I have read none of the books on the recently released New York Times list of the 'best works of American literature published in the last 25 years'. This makes me feel inadequate, so naturally I seek for alternative explanations that will place the blame squarely on the list, as opposed to on myself.
After a little digging, I find one. Via The Elegant Variation I found this mediabistro rant. The New York Times surveyed a list of a couple hundred a couple of hundred prominent "writers, critics, editors". But those judges are entirely old media. No bloggers! We have been snubbed!
I nominate myself as the conductor of a similar survey among authorities of the blogosphere. I will be emailing prominent literary weblog owners and asking them to nominate "the single best work of American fiction published in the last 25 years." Criteria for inclusion: you must have a blog that writes about books.
Or, since this is an inclusive era, you can add a comment or email me at mapletree spam @geocities.com. Identify yourself by your online screenname and 'site' of residence and I will include your vote.
May the best book win!
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25 comments:
I think The Color Purple just about makes it under the wire for the 25-year deadline?
Is it OK to vote for that? I loved it when I read it, but it was ages ago. It made me cry, which is a pretty good indicator of an excellent book, I think.
I suppose people would say it isn't very literary, but, as we say over here, I am a bit of a pleb!
Thanks for asking my opinion.
all best
Maxine.
Hun, as far as I'm concerned you can vote for Alan Dean Foster's novelixzation of Star Wars if you want!
But you draw the line at Da Vinci, right? ;-)
Have just posted at Petrona, by the way, so I hope my many readers (about 10 of them) will be over to vote too.
http://petrona.typepad.com/petrona/2006/05/american_book_p.html
I also see that Frank Wilson has posted a link on Books, Inq, which should bring you about 1000 times more voters than Petrona!
Looking forward to your result.
Maxine.
Thanks!
And yes. Since I am making the rules, no-one is allowed to vote for The Da Vinci Code. Good catch there.
Along those lines, if I vote for anything by RJ Waller you really won't throw me? I'm not going to vote for him--I'm just checking.
Cross my heart and hope to die.
I cannot pick my favourite, but I am a big fan of Paul Auster's stuff. I was actually surprised that he didn't get on the list, considering he met the criteria of being a middle aged white man.
Tough choice but if I can only vote for one, then it has to be Mama Day by Gloria Naylor.
for some reason...I have to spend days and days on this. I'll do it in my blog.
Take your time, everybody - I'm going to need several days to make a good pick myself. And I'll announce a deadline before summarizing the responses I've gotten.
A popular/populist shortlist:
The Cider House Rules, John Irving
The Silence of the Lambs, Thomas Harris
Presumed Innocent, Scott Turow
Neuromancer, William Gibson
My personal choice:
Soldier of the Mists, Gene Wolfe
Wait, I'm tempted to change my vote to Lonesome Dove, Larry McMurtry.
Morrison and McCarthy are worthy choices for the top of the list, but I'd go with Infinite Jest, which is as devastating as it is daunting.
I got a copy of All the Pretty Horses to see what the fuss was about. It is okay so far. It is set in a parallel-universe version of 1949 Texas, similar to our own reality except that the comma, apostrophe, and quotation mark have not been invented.
Well, I just checked the list, and I have not read any of those novels either. Oh well, I emailed my choices. I look forward to the results.
What Richard Mason said. That's a good shortlist.
"Best" is such an elusive quality. In the past 25 years there have probably been ten thousand brilliant novels by gifted writers that have, for one reason or another, sold just 300 copies and then vanished forever into Remainder Hell. "Best" isn't a good enough criteria; it also must have been a successful and influential book.
With that in mind, I'd like to nominate John Grisham's The Firm and Tom Clancy's The Hunt for Red October for the shortlist. Neither are particularly scintillating writing, but Dear God, were they ever influential!
Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers
An absolute modern day classic.
Sorry, how could I forget This Present Darkness, Piercing The Darkness, and The Oath?
Almost anything Peretti.
Best thing I've read in a very long time: Peace Like a River by Leif Enger. Second choice would be Snow Falling on Cedars by what's his name? Oh yeah, Dan Guterson, I think.
Top Five:
Erica Jong Fanny
Samuel Delany Hogg
Annie Prolux Close Range
Toni Morrison Beloved
Ishmael Reed Mumbo Jumbo
I found you from blog bibliophilebullpen.
My votes:
A Prayer For Owen Meany (actually the works of John Irving as NYT did for John Updike)
New York Trilogy by Paul Auster
The Crimson Petal and The White by Michel Faber
My votes:
Peace Like a River by Leif Enger
Straight Man by Richard Russo
Lucky You by Carl Hiaasen
Oops...
...and The Evening Star by Larry McMurtry
Okay, I'm Canadian, but I'm going to weight in with my opinion as well. My top pick is The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon. Runners up: Annie Proulx's The Shipping News,
Alice Walker's The Colour Purple and John Irving's A Widow for One Year.
When I was giving this some thought and scanning my bookshelves for the books with the most worn spines (a measure of my affection), I noticed that I really read very little current American fiction. I seem to read more "classic" American stuff (Faulkner, Cather). I'll definitely have to check out some of the books other readers have suggested in their comments.
Hello,
I have a litblog http://lineralucas.blogspot.com/
and would like to vote for the best American novel of the past 25 years, as I too read the NYTimes article and disagreed fiercely with the results.
My vote is for THE NAMESAKE by Jhumpa Lahiri.
Please refer to me as Linera Lucas at blog.
thank you for doing this,
Linera Lucas
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