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THE
75 GREATEST BOOKS EVER WRITTEN
by
Miles Mathis

Oh!
nature's noblest gift—my grey goose-quill! Slave of my
thoughts, obedient to my will. —Byron
First
published March 2009.
Updated
January 2017 to include more recent research on these authors.
In September
of 2008, Esquire
magazine published a list of
the 75 greatest books ever written. Since I don’t subscribe to
any magazines, I only just stumbled across it on the internet. I
found the list so preternaturally provincial, callow, and
time-locked that I felt I had to comment on it and provide an
alternate list for those young men not
striving to become the next
male Oprah Winfrey.
Here is the
list. Please read it carefully, including the “clever” blurbs
I have taken straight from the article.
What We
Talk About When We Talk About Love, by Raymond Carver. “That
morning she pours Teacher's over my belly and licks it off. That
afternoon she tries to jump out the window.” And that's not
even the best line.
Collected
Stories of John Cheever
Deliverance,
by James Dickey
The Grapes
of Wrath, by John Steinbeck. Because its all about the titty.
Blood
Meridian, by Cormac McCarthy
The
Brothers Karamazov, by Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Known
World, by Edward P. Jones
The Good
War, by Studs Terkel
American
Pastoral, by Philip Roth
A Good Man
Is Hard to Find and Other Stories, by Flannery O'Connor
The Things
They Carried, by Tim O'Brien. No one else has written so
beautifully about human remains hanging from tree branches.
A Sport
and a Pastime, by James Salter
The Call
of the Wild, by Jack London
Time's
Arrow, by Martin Amis
A Sense of
Where You Are, by John McPhee
Hell's
Angels, by Hunter S. Thompson. Because it's his first book,
and because he got his ass kicked for it, and because in the book
and the beating were the seeds of all that came after, including
the bullet in the head.
Invisible
Man, by Ralph Ellison
Dubliners,
by James Joyce
Rabbit,
Run, by John Updike
The
Postman Always Rings Twice, by James M. Cain
Dog
Soldiers, by Robert Stone. Begins in Saigon, ends in Death
Valley. Somewhere in between you realize that profit is second
only to survival
Winter's
Bone, by Daniel Woodrell. The best book by a modern-day
Twain, high on meth, drousy with whiskey
Legends of
the Fall, by Jim Harrison. Because of revenge. Because
Harrison is as masculine and raw and unrelenting as they come.
Under the
Volcano, by Malcolm Lowry
The Naked
and the Dead, by Norman Mailer
The
Professional, by W.C. Heinz
For Whom
the Bell Tolls, by Ernest Hemingway. A lesson in manhood:
even when you’re damned, you press on.
Dispatches,
by Michael Herr
Tropic of
Cancer, Henry Miller
Revolutionary
Road, by Richard Yates
As I Lay
Dying, by William Faulkner
Slaughterhouse-Five,
by Kurt Vonnegut
The Killer
Angels, by Michael Shaara. Because the Battle of Gettysburg
took place in that blue-gray area between black and white.
All the
King's Men, by Robert Penn Warren
One Flew
Over the Cuckoo's Nest, by Ken Kesey
Sophie's
Choice, by William Styron. It's not about Sophie or her
choice. It's about Stingo.
A Fan's
Notes, by Frederick Exley
Lucky Jim,
by Kingsley Amis
The
Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, by Haruki Murakami
Plainsong,
by Kent Haruf. Because: "A girl is different. They want
things. They need things on a regular schedule. Why, a girl's got
purposes you and me can't even imagine. They got ideas in their
heads you and me can't even suppose."
Master and
Commander, by Patrick O'Brian
A
Confederacy of Dunces, by John Kennedy Toole. The fart joke
as literature.
This Boy's
Life, by Tobias Wolff
Affliction,
by Russell Banks
Winter's
Tale, by Mark Helprin
The
Adventures of Augie March, by Saul Bellow
Women,
by Charles Bukowski
Going
Native, by Stephen Wright
Heart of
Darkness, by Joseph Conrad
The
Crack-Up, by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Because Fitzgerald knew
Lindsay, Britney and the Olsens better than we do. (And because
it was first published in Esquire.)
The Spy
Who Came in from the Cold, by John LeCarré
CivilWarLand
in Bad Decline, by George Saunders
War and
Peace, by Leo Tolstoy
The
Shining, by Stephen King
Winesburg,
Ohio, by Sherwood Anderson
Midnight's
Children, by Salman Rushdie
Moby Dick,
Herman Melville
Labyrinths,
by Jorge Luis Borges
The Right
Stuff, by Tom Wolfe
The
Sportswriter, by Richard Ford
The
Autobiography of Malcolm X, by Alex Haley
American
Tabloid, by James Ellroy
What It
Takes, by Richard Ben Cramer
The Power
and the Glory, by Graham Greene. A kind of flesh-bound Bible.
The
Continental Op, by Dashiell Hammett
So Long,
See You Tomorrow, by William Maxwell
Let Us Now
Praise Famous Men, by James Agee and Walker Evans
Native
Son, by Richard Wright
Angle of
Repose, by Wallace Stegner
The Dharma
Bums, by Jack Kerouac
The Great
Bridge, by David McCullough
Lonesome
Dove, by Larry McMurtry
Underworld,
by Don DeLillo
The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain
Lolita,
by Vladimir Nabokov
What is the
most amazing statistic about that list? Do you need Gloria
Steinem to tell you? I don't. One out of seventy-five, 1/75.
According to Esquire,
men don't need to read books by women. They can get all the
information they need from Kent Haruf, who is so wise to women
that he knows that, "They got ideas in their heads you and
me can't even suppose." No need to discover what those ideas
really are, by reading Jane Austen or George Eliot or A. S.
Byatt. No, just knowing that women are alien is enough.
But let’s
look at all those blurbs, in order. The Raymond Carver quote is
embarrassing for both the quoter and the quoted. It is hard to
tell what is the best
line in the book, but this
isn’t the worst line in the book. It is
representative of the book,
however, and that is the problem. The homely sentence posing as
modern, the careless posing as spare, and the insensible posing
as humorous. Beyond that, I am not convinced anyone at Esquire
actually read the book, since
this quote is taken straight from Amazon.com.3
You would think that someone
who had read the book could choose their own favorite quote. If
that isn’t the best quote, why not lead with the best? Because
that would require reading the book and forming a real opinion.
After that we
are told that The Grapes of Wrath is “all about the
titty.” Yes, just as The Odyssey is all about the
poontang. Go Calypso! Who says these guys aren’t qualified to
judge great literature?
The Tim
O’Brien blurb is pretty accurate, although they might have said
the same of Cormac McCarthy. In neither case does the prose match
the subject.
Re the Hunter
S. blurb: Should we really consider reading books for those
reasons? But the editors at Esquire clearly do. Take note:
this is the level of things that impress them.
In the Robert
Stone blurb, we find that “profit is second only to survival.”
To Donald Trump, maybe.
In the Daniel
Woodrell blurb, we have the modern-day Twain both high and
drousy. One question, would Twain, transported into the 21st
century, really be writing on meth and whiskey? No boys, it was
and still would be cigars.
We should
read Jim Harrison because “Harrison is as masculine and raw and
unrelenting as they come.” And because he has a big hairy dick,
no doubt. Could these editors sound any more wimpy and repressed?
Then we get
another “lesson in manhood” with Hemingway. These guys even
admit they need a lesson in manhood, and go to books to get it. I
wonder if they have tried gay porn.
Then we find
out that “Gettysburg took place in that blue-gray area between
black and white.” The guys couldn’t come up with anything
here, so they just cribbed from the jacket flap, stealing copy
from Joe the Office Squibber.
Also good to
know that Sophie’s Choice is about Stingo (since he’s
the narrator). They had to read all the way through page one to
discover that brilliant insight.
Then we get a
rotten quote from Kent Haruf, which could have just as easily
have been penned by Rocky Balboa.
After that,
we learn that A Confederacy of Dunces is the “fart joke
as literature”. An intelligent reader would not necessarily
take that as a recommendation, but Esquire knows it
audience.
The
Fitzgerald blurb is perhaps the worst of the bunch. F. Scott
would not want to know Britney or the Olsons any better (or at
all) but clearly these editors do, and they go to literature for
clandestine tips.
Lastly, we
are told that Greene has written “a kind of flesh-bound Bible.”
Really? Supposing that has some meaning beyond one that Hannibal
Lecter would understand, I find it unlikely that Greene has
exceeded the Bible in any category, especially in fleshiness,
rawness, or the ability to bind.
Now, I have
to admit I haven’t read all the books in this list. But I also
have to admit that these blurbs don’t lead me to rush out and
devour those few I am missing. Just the opposite. A
recommendation in this company falls like acid into my ear.
Beyond that, the list is heavy with new novels, and I avoid new
novels like the plague. These editors don’t seem to understand
that literature does not have to be novels, or even fiction. What
this list needs is a scrubbing of modern novels written for
businessmen, ex-jocks, and panty boys who think they wish they
had a war to go to, and their replacement with writings that
could actually broaden a reader beyond the late-American
war/sports/hometown boy level.
That takes us
down to this list:
Y
The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck.
Y
The Brothers Karamazov, by Fyodor Dostoevsky
X
Dubliners, by James Joyce
X
Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut
X
Winter's Tale, by Mark Helprin
Y
War and Peace, by Leo Tolstoy
Y
Moby Dick, Herman Melville
X
Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain
X
Lolita, by Vladimir Nabokov
[The
Xs and Ys were added 2017. X indicates a probable agent; Y
indicates a possible agent. Or, X indicates someone I have since
researched and found to be compromised; Y indicates someone I
have not researched, but who has sent up red flags in the
research of others.]
That leaves
us 66 places to fill. But I can’t even leave this list of 9
alone. The first half of Huckleberry Finn is a
masterpiece, but the rest is bombast. Same with Lolita. I
like both these authors, though, and want to leave them on the
list, so I am just going to replace the books recommended.
X
The Mysterious Stranger, by Mark Twain
X
Speak, Memory, by Vladimir Nabokov
To be clear,
I still recommend reading about Lolita and Huck. I just think
their faults keep them off this list. In this way, I am tipping
my hand: my list will not be the 75 greatest books ever written,
but 75 recommended authors, with sample books. The first list
would be heavy with repeats, and Shakespeare and Nietzsche and
Dostoevsky would hog all the top spots. Kurt Vonnegut and Mark
Helprin wouldn’t hope to make such list, and even so I am
keeping them mainly as a nod to the present. It is unlikely that
anything from the 20th century would make a final
list, compiled by the gods, but I also have an eye to my
audience. Neither they nor I want a list without anything
readable on it. They can get a list of textbooks from St. John’s
College, but I am trying to make up a list here that is at the
same time broad, readable, enlightening, and iconoclastic. No
sense me giving you a list that is the same as everyone else’s
list.
Here is the
rest of the list:
Y
Sartor Resartus, Thomas Carlyle
X
Lectures, Max Muller
Y
Postscript to the Logic of Scientific Discovery,
Karl Popper
Gypsy Ballads,
Federico Garcia Lorca
X
Revolt of the Masses, José Ortega y Gasset
X
Relativity, Albert Einstein
X
The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt
Y
The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath
The Crown
of Wild Olive, John Ruskin
Y
The Unsettling of America, Wendell Berry
Y
The American Language, H. L. Mencken
The Gentle
Art of Making Enemies, James McNeil Whistler
Notebooks, Leonardo
da Vinci
X
Homage to Catalonia, George Orwell
Sketches from a Hunter’s
Album, Ivan Turgenev
Don Quixote, Manuel
Cervantes
I, Claudius, Robert
Graves
Y
David Copperfield, Charles Dickens
Y
Remembrance of Things Past, Marcel Proust
The Wild
Duck, Henrik Ibsen
The Golden
Bough, James Frazer
Y
Hamlet, William Shakespeare
Faust,
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Y
Middlemarch, George Eliot
X
Manfred, Byron
Y
Death in Venice, Thomas Mann
Oedipus
Rex, Sophocles
Y
Darwinism, Alfred Russell Wallace
Y
Gulliver’s Travels, Jonathan Swift
The Lives
of a Cell, Lewis Thomas
Poems of
Ossian, James Macpherson
Y
Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen
The Mayor
of Casterbridge, Thomas Hardy
The Cherry
Orchard, Anton Chekhov
Poems,
John Keats
Y
The Fall, Albert Camus
Gigi, Colette
Y
Little Big Man, Thomas Berger
Girl in a Swing,
Richard Adams
Nibelungenlied,
Anon.
Kalevala, Elias
Lonnrot
Letters, Vincent van
Gogh
Kristin Lavransdatter,
Sigrid Undset
Y
Wives and Daughters, Elizabeth Gaskell
The Tale
of Genji, Murasaki Shikibu
Y
Poems, Heinrich Heine
Haiku,
Matsuo Basho
Y
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, William Blake
Y
Look Homeward, Angel, Thomas Wolfe
Y
The Catcher in the Rye, J. D. Salinger
Y
Ethan Frome, Edith Wharton
Civil
Disobedience, Henry David Thoreau
The Lord
of the Rings, J. R. R. Tolkien
Y
Essays, Ralph Waldo Emerson
Y
Possession, A. S. Byatt
On the
Genealogy of Morals, Friedrich Nietzsche
Y
Civilization and its Discontents, Sigmund Freud
Silent
Spring, Rachel Carson
Y
Dialogues, Plato
Iliad,
Homer
Daodejing,
Laozi
X
Deterring Democracy, Noam Chomsky
Les
Contemplations, Victor Hugo
Y
Meditations, Rene Descartes
At
Swim-Two-Birds, Flann O’Brien
Bury my
Heart at Wounded Knee, Dee Brown
[As
you see, I have learned a lot in the past 7 years. It is possible
that many others of these authors are compromised, or all
of them, but I will have to discover that for myself. I would
strike several of these listings completely, but I leave them up
for historical reasons—so that we can both remember how this
paper was originally written. The ones I would strike right now
are Chomsky, Nabokov, Arendt, Joyce, Twain, Muller, Orwell, and
Byron.]
I had to nix
Euclid’s Elements and Newton’s Principia as not
highly readable, although they are greater books than some on
this list. I also bumped other classics like The Divine
Comedy, Paradise Lost, and The Aeneid, to make
room for books you are more likely to read. I am replacing the
Esquire’s top 75, after all, not Mortimer Adler’s top
100. Admittedly, Karl Popper and Einstein are not much easier to
read, but they are a bit closer to home.
The main
difference, it seems to me, in my list and theirs is that I am
not trying to “prove my manhood” or show how hairy my arms
are. I don’t care if you know I am a man, much less an American
man, but the guys at Esquire have to throw that in your
face on every page, as if they are competing with the editors at
Playboy or Maxim. They don’t want to be mistaken
for Oprah Book Club pansies, so they don’t include Annie Proulx
or Barbara Kingsolver, but in making up this list they have done
Oprah one worse. At least Oprah is un-self-consciously shallow
and insular and pathetic. These guys couldn’t be more
transparent in their need to read about murder and war and sports
and the mob and cowboys and all the other middle-America
pseudo-manly pseudo-mythology of fake self-support. Oprah and her
50 million girls have no eye for beauty or depth, but at least
they don’t choose their soft-core reading to be “girly.”
These guys, as is usual with the modern man, have one eye on the
mirror and one eye on their co-workers, even as they claim to
read a book. This means they must be reading with their noses.
And even that
may be giving them too much credit. In compiling my own list1,
I realized how easy it would have been for Esquire to have
compiled this list from other lists, without ever cracking a
cover. I have already shown you how they borrowed their Carver
quote, and the rest of the blurbs are equally suspect. It looks
to me like Esquire collated two lists. First, they got a
list of recent book award winners, going back to, say, 1980. Then
they sprinkled that list lightly with choices from a great books
list, probably the Modern Library list. Their list has so few
older books simply because they didn’t recognize much on the
great books list. It was safer to stick with recent critically
acclaimed novels than to risk that an older choice had become
uncool, for reasons unknown to them.
And even that
may be giving them too much credit. It is also possible, even
likely, that this list is only a partial fake, rather than a
total fake. Meaning, the selection committee didn’t just cobble
together other lists, they actually tried to read these books,
tried to like them, and convinced themselves that they kind of
did. This is worse because it is infinitely more pathetic than
just flat out lying. I could respect someone who at least knew
modern literature wasn’t worth fooling with, and just copied
off the next guy’s paper to save himself the trouble. But it is
hard to respect someone who not only listens to critics, but also
takes them at their word.
Yes, this is
the modern way to look smart: you read the New York Times
and then parrot its opinions. If the publishers tell you Don
DeLillo is a great writer, via the hired hacks at the newspapers
and magazines, then Don DeLillo is a great writer. You would look
like a fool to deny it.
In this way,
literary criticism is an analogue of art criticism. Why should we
expect readers to have independent opinions when art buyers and
museum goers do not? The current milieu has made it clear that,
in art, people will take whatever you give them, and say they
like it. With books, we should expect the same. As in art, the
prize committees are populated by people with direct connections
to the market, and they are in the business of promotion. The
reader’s job is to swallow this promotion down whole, and the
modern reader does this job quite well. Critics and publishers
bemoan the fact that “serious literature” sells so poorly,
but given its quality, I am amazed it sells so well. I can’t
believe the market finds a single reader for most of this
“poetry” and novelizing and commentary.
While I am
here recommending things, I will recommend one of the only
sensible critiques of modern novels I have ever seen, B. R.
Myers’ A Reader’s Manifesto.2 Parts
of it were published in 2001 in Atlantic, and it has since
been published as a book. While in my opinion Myers still doesn’t
go far enough, as a whole, in his critique of new novels, he goes
into much finer detail than I have been able to go here.
1For the record, I made up my
list straight from my own shelves. I have all these books in my
house right now (unless they are loaned out to friends).
2http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Reader%27s_Manifesto 3http://www.amazon.com/What-Talk-About-When-Love/dp/0679723056/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1237166828&sr=8-1
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