The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Yes,
there is a film with Leonardo DiCaprio, but that doesn't get you off
the hook for reading this perceptive, pitch-perfect novel. Set in the
jazzy Roaring Twenties, Fitzgerald's tale of obsession, ambition, love,
money, and a world that would vanish with the Depression was to be his
Big Hit—and he was surprised and disappointed when it sold poorly. When
Fitzgerald died in 1940, he was an all but forgotten writer. Soon after
there was a revival of his work, and he is now viewed as one of the
great American novelists. Today, 500,000 copies of Gatsby are sold each year.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Lee's
only novel, published in 1960, has sold more than 40 million copies
worldwide. For all that it exposes the racial injustice of a particular
time and place, it is timeless and universal. As Pulitzer Prize winning
journalist Rick Bragg wrote in Reader's Digest, "Many people see To Kill a Mockingbird as a civil rights novel, but it transcends that issue. It is a novel about right and wrong, about kindness and meanness."
On the Road by Jack Kerouac
Kerouac's
agent spent more than four years trying to find a publisher for this
turbo-charged, road-trip novel about the postwar beat generation.
Finally published in 1957, On the Road—written
in a style at once breathless and disjointed—spoke to the deep
restlessness of young people chafing at mainstream Cold War culture.
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Tell Me a Riddle by Tillie Olsen
You might not have heard of Olsen, but her 1961 story collection Tell Me A Riddle
was one of the first to intimately chronicle the lives of working-class
women. One entry is plainly titled, "I Stand Here Ironing," and
chronicles a mother's regrets with wisdom, bravery, and not an ounce of
self pity. Olsen opened a window onto a world not often seen before in
American literature and influenced a generation of women writers,
including Margaret Atwood, Sandra Cisneros, and Alice Walker.
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
You
might’ve been assigned the tale of Pip the ambitious orphan in school.
But we promise it’s more entertaining to read as an adult, because the
humor that sailed over over your head will be evident now—and besides,
you won't need to write a paper about it. Dickens, in his time, was as
famous as a rock star (or, a Kardashian) because his novels were written as page-turners, with whip-smart observations about ambition and human nature.
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Marie Remarque
Remarque's
searing war-is-hell novel gave millions of readers their first view of
the suffering of ordinary German soldiers and civilians during WW1. All Quiet on the Western Front serves as a reminder of the real people on the other side of any battle.
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War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
We know, it's looong and the Russian names are complicated, but seriously: If you can follow thousands of pages of Game of Thrones and the rest of the Ice and Fire series (which we love, by the way) then you can handle the challenge of one of the greatest novels of all time. War and Peace is
set in the years before, during, and after Napolean's invasion of
Russia. Tolstoy brilliantly chronicles the world of a crumbling
aristocracy—on the battlefield, in society, and at home. His research
was meticulous, his characters (the soldiers, lovers, seekers)
unforgettable.
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers
McCullers
was just 23 years old when her novel about a deaf-mute and the travails
of the people he encounters was published. She wasn't the first to
write about about people at the margins of society, but in The Heart is a Lonely Hunter,
she did so indelibly. Quotable quote: "And how can the dead be truly
dead when they still live in the souls of those who are left behind?"
Native Son by Richard Wright
Published in 1940 (as was The Heart is a Lonely Hunter),
Wright's graphic, violent protest novel was an eye-opener about racial
tensions and poverty in America. For hundreds of thousands of readers,
the story was a conversation starter: Wright's protagonist Bigger Thomas
commits an accidental murder, and spirals downward into more violence
and despair. Some schools have tried to ban Native Son, but the novel endures.
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The Road by Cormac McCarthy
Pulitzer Prize-winning author McCarthy is one of our greatest living prose stylists. His post-apocolyptic novel, The Road,
in which a father and young son struggle to survive, is made all the
more profound by its brevity. It's a quick read that stays with you.
Intrepid readers undaunted by a more ornate, challenging, Faulknerian
style should also read McCarthy's masterpiece Blood Meridian.
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Shelley was still a teenager when she created the iconic mad scientist and monster. Frankenstein
never loses its grip on our imaginations, because the questions it
raises about science, ambition, and our humanity remain as urgent as
ever.
A Good Man is Hard to Find by Flannery O'Connor
A
deeply religious woman, O'Connor wrote about morally flawed characters
with humor, compassion, and a razor-sharp mind. She was a master
storyteller, as evidenced in her best known and most-loved collection, A Good Man is Hard to Find.
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The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
Disaffected
teenage narrator Holden Caulfield—thrown out of prep school, surrounded
by "phonies"—has touched millions of readers. For decades, almost every
book about alienated adolescents was invariably compared to The Catcher in the Rye,
but none has matched the original. Salinger had his finger on the pulse
of a generation in a way that few writers can match, and he broke with
tradition by writing in a colloquial voice, which had everyone wanting
to talk like Holden.
The Chroncles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
Yes, The Chronicles of Narnia
are children's books and no, they don't age. These complex fantasy
novels, which have sold more than 100 million copies worldwide (and
clearly influenced, among others, J.K. Rowling), have been praised and
criticized for their Christian themes, but there's a lot more going on
here than simple allegory. Read them again. Better yet, find a child to
read them to. You'll be amazed by the richness of storytelling.
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