In wrapping up novels 101 –
200 I should point out a distinction between the first 100, which were all
classics, and the second 100, which included some contemporary novels which cannot
yet be considered classics – though they may still be considered “great”.
This post is rather longish, but if you just want to see the list...it's at the end, with hyperlinks to each individual review.
I began the second century of
my quest on July 1, 2018 and completed it June 30, 2022 or four years to the
day from the first page of Gadsby * to the last page of The Princess Bride. The
longest amount of time I spent on one book was 75 days for The Tale of Genji;
the shortest was a few hours to read The Little Prince. The average was 15 days
per novel.
* not to be confused with The
Great Gatsby, which coincidentally was the first novel of 1 - 100.
The longest book was The Tale
of Genji with 1182 pages. The shortest was The Little Prince at 93. The total page count was 34,102, or an average of 341 pages.
The oldest book was The Tale
of Genji, which some call the World’s First Novel, probably written very early
11th century. There were two novels from the 16th
Century, three from the 18th, 30 from the
19th, 60 from the 20th,
and four from the 21st century. The average year of publication was
1907.
There were eight novels by
Charles Dickens, four by Arthur Conan Doyle, and two each by A.A. Milne, Iris
Murdoch, Lewis Carrol, Ray Bradbury, and Truman Capote. There were also two completely different novels of the same title: Greenmantle and...of course Greenmantle by James Buchan and Charles de Lint.
I intended to show my trophy
case here: bookcases in my home office with all 200 hardcover books, but I’ve
moved recently, and most of my books are in storage ***sigh*** I miss them.
A few of my prized copies: I
have a first-edition of The Little Prince. My edition of Ender’s Game is
autographed by Orson Scott Card and my edition of Devil in a Blue Dress is
autographed by Walter Mosley.
Covers: These do not all
represent the version I read, but rather covers that I find emblematic of the
story.
Ratings are not commentary on
the “Greatness” of these works, rather they reflect my personal enjoyment of
the read – very opinionated. Secondly, in order to differentiate amongst a
group that are all considered “Great”, I set the bar very high for 5 or even 4
stars. 3.5 is above the median; still a good rating. If you plot my ratings on
a graph, the result is a fairly standard bell curve, which suggests consistency
in rating.
Average Rating: 3.8 stars
A few distinctions:
Top 10 Favorites
A Tale of Two Cities
The Little Prince
Watership Down
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Bleak House
The Cellist of Sarajevo
Of Mice and Men
The Old Man and the Sea
The Man Who was Thursday
Fahrenheit 451
Top 10 Dislikes
The Recognitions
Portnoy’s Complaint
The Tale of Genji
Journey to the End of the
Night
Monkey: Journey to the West
Gargantua and Pantagruel
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
The House on the Borderland
Phantastes
The Collector
Best Subtitles/Alternate
Titles:
Gadsby: 50,000 Word Novel
Without the Letter “E”
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values
The Oak Openings or The Bee
Hunter
The Monkey King’s Amazing
Adventures: Journey to the West
Oliver Twist or The Beggar Boy’s
Progress
The Princess Bride: S.
Morgenstern's Classic Tale of True Love and High Adventure, The "Good
Parts" Version Abridged by William Goldman
Most Unusual:
Gadsby
If on a Winter’s Night a
Traveler
The Princess Bride
Most Surprising:
The Man Who was Thursday
Most Underappreciated:
The Oak Openings
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Most Overrated:
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Papillon
Candide
Happiest Ending:
Bleak House
Oliver Twist
Saddest Ending (in a good
way):
A Tale of Two Cities
The Little Prince
The Cellist of Sarajevo
Saddest Ending (in a just
plain ole sad way):
The Collector
Most Unexpected Ending:
The Man Who was Thursday
Most Satisfying Ending:
A Tale of Two Cities
The Oak Openings
Oliver Twist
Least Satisfying Ending:
The Collector
Favorite Hero:
Sydney Carton – A Tale of Two
Cities
Hazel – Watership Down
Tom Sawyer – The Adventures of
Tom Sawyer
Parson Amen – The Oak Openings
Dr. Watson – The Sign of the
Four
Tom – Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Pooh – Winnie the Pooh
Easy Rawlins – Devil in a Blue
Dress
Favorite Heroine:
Arrow – The Cellist of
Sarajevo
Dorothea – Middlemarch
Esther – Bleak House
Mina Harker – Dracula
Eliza – Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Molly – Wives and Daughters
Best Villain:
Frederick Clegg – The
Collector
General Woundwort – Watership
Down
Perry Smith – In Cold Blood
Count Dracula – Dracula
Other Mother – Coraline
Manfred – The Castle of
Otranto
Simon Legree – Uncle Tom’s
Cabin
Ratman – Ratman’s Notebooks
Fagin – Oliver Twist
The Six-Fingered Man – The
Princess Bride
Most Interesting/Complex
Characters:
Sunday – The Man Who was
Thursday
The Little Prince – The Little
Prince
Mike the computer – The Moon
is a Harsh Mistress
Onoah – The Oak Openings
Charles Arrowby – The Sea, the
Sea
Jake Donaghue – Under the Net
Moses Herzog – Herzog
Papillon – Papillon
Saleem Sinai – Midnight’s
Children
Inigo Montoya – The Princess
Bride
Favorite Quotations:
…the time your friends need
you is when they’re wrong, Jean Louise. They don’t need you when they’re right.
~ Uncle Jack from Go Set a Watchman
…she is, at once, sure of two
things. The first is that she does not want to kill this man, and the second is
that she must. ~ narrative regarding Arrow, from The Cellist of Sarajevo
“Adventures are all very well
in their place”, he thought, “but there’s a lot to be said for regular meals
and freedom from pain.” ~ Tristran Thorn
Best Film Renditions:
The Princess Bride (1987) –
Just about perfect: perfectly written, cast, and acted. And although this part is not part of the
book, at the end, when Peter Falk’s character says “as you wish” to his
grandson played by Fred Savage…it just about kills me (in a good way).
Honorable mentions:
Of Mice and Men (1939)
Watership Down (2018 TV
miniseries)
Bleak House (2005 TV
miniseries)
The Ox-Bow Incident (1942)
Murder on the Orient Express
(2017)
Worst Film Renditions:
I want to say Breakfast at
Tiffanys because it is not true to the book, Audrey Hepburn does not match the
description of Holly Golightly, and there is terrible casting and offensive
portrayal of a Japanese person, but if you just accept the film is not the book
and ignore the Japanese portrayal, the film is iconic. Hepburn makes the film
and the role her own.
So, my genuine answer for
Worst Film Rendition is Ender’s Game. Though 90 percent of the film is pretty
OK. It completely blows the all-important big reveal near the end.
Now what? 201-300 of course. I
read other forms of literature, but predominantly novels. My TBR of novels
alone is over 2,000 titles. I might even occasionally read something not on any
of my lists, which could inspire a new list. I love lists. By the way a lover
of lists is an albumiphile – a term I created. You read it here first (unless
you first read it on my recap of the first 100 novels)
Quite obviously, I won’t
finish my TBR in this lifetime. I have no idea what the Heavenly library is
like, so I make no promise for the next. There are a few authors I hope to talk
to though.
And finally...here are the 101 thru 200
Greatest Novels of all Time (hyperlinked to individual reviews)
101 Gadsby
102 The Pickwick Papers
103 The Little Prince
104 The Man Who Was Thursday
105 Of Mice and Men
106 Three Men in a Boat
107 A Tale of Two Cities
108 Breakfast at Tiffany's
109 The Old Curiosity Shop
110 Middlemarch
111 The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
112 The Invisible Man
113 The Idiot
114 Dream of the Red Chamber
115 A Study in Scarlet
116 The Moon is a Harsh Mistress
117 The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym
118 An Antarctic Mystery (The Sphinx of the Ice Fields)
119 Watership Down
120 Bleak House
121 The Ox-Bow Incident
122 Wise Blood
123 Papillon
124 Candide
125 In Cold Blood
126 The Old Man and the Sea
127 The Valley of Fear
128 Gargantua and Pantagruel
129 The Shadow Over Innsmouth
130 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
131 Picnic at Hanging Rock
132 The Oak Openings
133 The Day of the Triffids
134 Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
135 Through the Looking Glass
136 Coraline
137 A Christmas Carol
138 Dracula
139 The Universal Baseball Association
140 Lost Horizon
141 Zen and the art of Motorcycle Maintenance
142 If on a Winter's Night a Traveler
143 Riders of the Purple Sage
144 Jude the Obscure
145 The Sea, The Sea
146 At Swim Two-Birds
147 Fahrenheit 451
148 The Sign of the Four
149 Phantastes
150 The Castle of Otranto: A Gothic Story
151 The Tale of Genji
152 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
153 Cry, the Beloved Country
154 Nicholas Nickleby
155 The Stranger
156 Ragtime
157 Where the Red Fern Grows
158 Something Wicked This Way Comes
159 The House on the Borderland
160 The Hound of the Baskervilles
161 Wide Sargasso Sea
162 Under the Net
163 Greenmantle
164 Greenmantle
165 Jonathan Livingston Seagull
166 Winnie the Pooh
167 The House at Pooh Corner
168 Germinal
169 Big Trouble
170 Uncle Tom’s Cabin
171 Wives and Daughters
172 The Country of the Pointed Firs
173 Herzog
174 Ratman’s Notebooks
175 Journey to the West
176 Devil in a Blue Dress
177 Sybil; or, The Two Nations
178 Journey to the End of the Night
179 Hard Times
180 The Golden Compass
181 The Wonderful Adventures of Nils
182 Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha
183 The Loved One
184 Murder on the Orient Express
185 The Corrections
186 The Worm Ouroboros
187 Rebecca
188 The Collector
189 The Haunting of Hill House
190 At Play in the Fields of the Lord
191 Ender’s Game
192 The Cellist of Sarajevo
193 The Recognitions
194 Go Set a Watchman
195 Stardust
196 The Death of the Heart
197 Portnoy’s Complaint
198 Midnight’s Children
199 Oliver Twist
200 The Princess Bride
Wrap-up of Novels 1 – 100 HERE
.