One of my greatest pleasures is to "discover," at this late point in my life, a well-known classic that I somehow have never read, and to discover that it is perfectly wonderful and amazing. And if the qualities that make it so amazing are such that I probably wouldn't have appreciated it at the age of 20 or even 30, so much the better!
I just finished My Ăntonia, by Willa Cather. I read it in a large-print edition from the library. I loved it. One of the outstanding features of this book (it sounds so trite to say this) is its amazing wealth of sensual detail about the appearance, sounds, smells, and feels of the early prairies, farms, and towns of Nebraska. I am not generally a great admirer of that kind of detailed scene-setting writing. I often get bored with it. If it's painting a picture, I think how I would much rather have the picture, and skip over it. But some of this writing, it's like poetry rather than prose, it's like music, music about history, dancing about architecture, it just defies category and opinion and sweeps you up into itself. Luscious. I loved it.
Books, Bookcrossing, Libraries, Bookstores, Publishing, Media, Political Writing, TV, Film, Criticism, Writers, Media, Art, Lyrics, Global Publishing, Web Publishing, IP, Poetry, Literature, Modern Culture
Showing posts with label 20th Century Literature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 20th Century Literature. Show all posts
2015-08-10
2004-04-09
Hungry Mind Book Review's Best 100 of the 20th Century
Blog editor's note: I confess, I am cheating on this one. The only thing that's the same as the original Deborama's Book Review and Store's post is the title. There has been so much water under the bridge. The original post, which was just a link and a promise anyway, happened to appear just before the Ruminator Bookstore, successor to the Hungry Mind of fond memories, closed. The Ruminator Review, also previously known as Hungry Mind, ceased publication in 2005. And the link this goes to looks dodgy and impermanent, so I am copying to the whole list in the post to preserve it.
Back in 1998, when I left the Twin Cities, one of the cultural jewels of our fair towns was the Hungry Mind bookstore, located on the Macalester College campus and owned by David Unowsky. He also published The Hungry Mind Review. The bookstore and the review changed their names to Ruminator in 2000, when Unowsky sold the rights to the name Hungry Mind to Hungry Minds, Inc., publishers of the ... for Dummies books.
Here's another great website with some more information about the associated publishing company, also called Hungry Minds and then later Ruminator.
Some time in the free book review's heyday, when it was still called The Hungry Mind Review, they published this list of the 100 best books of the 20th Century. In a lot of ways that I cannot pinpoint or justify, this seems to me to be a very Minnesotan list. Not that it has too many Minnesota books on it, oh, no. Because Minnesotans are like Brits in that way, smug and self-satisfied, maybe, but they would never blow their own horns. It's not perfect, but it's a lot better than most of these lists.
Source: The Hungry Mind Review. I am actually embarrassed to say how many of these I have read. I have bolded the author and title of those I have read, and just the author if I have read other works by her/him.
Back in 1998, when I left the Twin Cities, one of the cultural jewels of our fair towns was the Hungry Mind bookstore, located on the Macalester College campus and owned by David Unowsky. He also published The Hungry Mind Review. The bookstore and the review changed their names to Ruminator in 2000, when Unowsky sold the rights to the name Hungry Mind to Hungry Minds, Inc., publishers of the ... for Dummies books.
Here's another great website with some more information about the associated publishing company, also called Hungry Minds and then later Ruminator.
Some time in the free book review's heyday, when it was still called The Hungry Mind Review, they published this list of the 100 best books of the 20th Century. In a lot of ways that I cannot pinpoint or justify, this seems to me to be a very Minnesotan list. Not that it has too many Minnesota books on it, oh, no. Because Minnesotans are like Brits in that way, smug and self-satisfied, maybe, but they would never blow their own horns. It's not perfect, but it's a lot better than most of these lists.
The Hungry Mind Review's 100 Best 20th Century Books
Rank | Author | Novel and Year |
1 | Henry Adams | The Education of Henry Adams (1918) |
2 | James Agee and Walker Evans | Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941) |
3 | Dorothy Allison | Bastard out of Carolina (1992) |
4 | Rudolfo Anaya | Bless Me Ultima (1972) |
5 | Sherwood Anderson | Winesburg, Ohio (1919) |
6 | Maya Angelou | I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1970) |
7 | Gloria AnzaldĂșa | Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza (1987) |
8 | James Baldwin | Go Tell It on the Mountain (1953) |
9 | James Baldwin | The Price of the Ticket: Collected Nonfiction (1985) |
10 | Edward Ball | Slaves in the Family (1998) |
11 | Saul Bellow | Herzog (1964) |
12 | Paul Bowles | The Sheltering Sky (1948) |
13 | William Burroughs | Naked Lunch (1959) |
14 | Truman Capote | In Cold Blood (1966) |
15 | Raymond Carver | Cathedral (1983) |
16 | Willa Cather | O Pioneers! (1913) |
17 | Willa Cather | Death Comes for the Archbishop (1927) |
18 | John Cheever | Collected Stories (1978) |
19 | Sandra Cisneros | House on Mango Street (1984) |
20 | Don DeLillo | White Noise (1985) |
21 | Joan Didion | Slouching Towards Bethlehem (1968) |
22 | Vine Deloria Jr. | Custer Died for Your Sins (1983) |
23 | John Dos Passos | U.S.A. (1930) |
24 | Theodore Dreiser | An American Tragedy (1925) |
25 | W.E.B. DuBois | The Souls of Black Folk (1903) |
26 | Ralph Ellison | Invisible Man (1952) |
27 | Louise Erdrich | Love Medicine (1984) |
28 | William Faulkner | The Sound and the Fury (1926) |
29 | William Faulkner | As I Lay Dying (1930) |
30 | William Faulkner | Go Down, Moses (1940) |
31 | F. Scott Fitzgerald | The Great Gatsby (1925) |
32 | M.F.K. Fisher | The Art of Eating (1954) |
33 | Francisco Goldman | The Ordinary Seaman (1997) |
34 | Alex Haley | Roots (1976) |
35 | Joseph Heller | Catch-22 (1961) |
36 | Ernest Hemingway | The Sun Also Rises (1926) |
37 | Ernest Hemingway | The Short Stories (1938) |
38 | Michael Herr | Dispatches (1984) |
39 | Chester Himes | My Life of Absurdity: The Autobiography (1976) |
40 | Linda Hogan | Mean Spirit (1990) |
41 | bell hooks | Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism (1982) |
42 | Zora Neale Hurston | Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937) |
43 | Henry James | The Wings of the Dove (1902) |
44 | LeRoi Jones (Amira Baraka) | Blues People: Negro Music in White America (1963) |
45 | Jack Kerouac | On the Road (1957) |
46 | Ken Kesey | One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1962) |
47 | Jamaica Kincaid | Annie John (1983) |
48 | Maxine Hong Kingston | Woman Warrior (1976) |
49 | Jerzy Kosinski | The Painted Bird (1976) |
50 | Harper Lee | To Kill a Mockingbird (1960) |
51 | Li-Young Lee | The Winged Seed (1995) |
52 | Sinclair Lewis | Babbitt (1922) |
53 | Cormac McCarthy | The Crossing (1994) |
54 | Carson McCullers | The Heart is a Lonely Hunter (1940) |
55 | Norman Mailer | The Naked and the Dead (1948) |
56 | Bernard Malamud | The Magic Barrel (1958) |
57 | Malcolm X and Alex Haley | The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) |
58 | Rollo May | Love and Will (1969) |
59 | Thomas Merton | The Seven Storey Mountain (1948) |
60 | Henry Miller | Tropic of Cancer (1934) |
61 | N. Scott Momaday | House Made of Dawn (1968) |
62 | Wright Morris | Field of Vision (1956) |
63 | Toni Morrison | Sula (1973) |
64 | Toni Morrison | Song of Solomon (1977) |
65 | Toni Morrison | Beloved (1987) |
66 | Toni Morrison | Jazz (1992) |
67 | Vladimir Nabokov | Lolita (1958) |
68 | John G. Neihardt | Black Elk Speaks (1932) |
69 | Flannery O'Connor | A Good Man is Hard to Find (1955) |
70 | Charles Olson | Call Me Ishmael (1947) |
71 | Tillie Olson | Tell Me a Riddle (1961) |
72 | Jon Okada | No-No Boy (1977) |
73 | Grace Paley | Collected Stories (1994) |
74 | Walker Percy | The Moviegoer (1961) |
75 | Katherine Anne Porter | Flowering Judas and Other Stories (1930) |
76 | Thomas Pynchon | Gravity's Rainbow (1973) |
77 | Adrienne Rich | On Lies, Secrets and Silence (1979) |
78 | Philip Roth | Portnoy's Complaint (1969) |
79 | J.D. Salinger | The Catcher in the Rye (1951) |
80 | May Sarton | At Seventy (1984) |
81 | Leslie Marmon Silko | Ceremony (1977) |
82 | Isaac B. Singer | The Collected Stories of Isaac Bashevis Singer (1982) |
83 | Gertrude Stein | The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (1993) |
84 | John Steinbeck | The Grapes of Wrath (1937) |
85 | William Styron | Sophie's Choice (1979) |
86 | James Thurber | A Thurber Carnival (1945) |
87 | Jean Toomer | Cane (1923) |
88 | Mark Twain | Letters from the Earth (1962) |
89 | John Updike | Rabbit, Run (1960) |
90 | Gore Vidal | The United States: Essays (1952-1992) |
91 | Kurt Vonnegut | Slaughterhouse Five (1969) |
92 | Alice Walker | The Color Purple (1982) |
93 | Robert Penn Warren | All the Kings Men (1946) |
94 | Nathanael West | The Day of the Locust (1939) |
95 | John Edgar Wideman | Philadelphia Fire (1990) |
96 | William Carlos Williams | In the American Grain (1925) |
97 | Edmund Wilson | To the Finland Station (1940) |
98 | Thomas Wolfe | You Can't Go Home Again (1941) |
99 | Richard Wright | Native Son (1940) |
100 | Wakako Yamauchi | Songs My Mother Taught Me (1994) |
Source: The Hungry Mind Review. I am actually embarrassed to say how many of these I have read. I have bolded the author and title of those I have read, and just the author if I have read other works by her/him.
Labels:
20th Century Literature,
Books,
Bookstores,
David Unowsky,
Hungry Mind Review of Books,
Lists,
Minnesota,
Saint Paul
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)