Modern
Library's 100 Best Novels In English
of the 20th CenturyCopyright 1998 The New York Times Company
The New York Times July 20, 1998, Monday, Late Edition -
FinalRead Article: 'Ulysses' at Top As
Panel Picks 100 Best Novels
- 1. "Ulysses," James Joyce
- 2. "The Great Gatsby," F. Scott
Fitzgerald
- 3. "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young
Man," James Joyce
- 4. "Lolita," Vladimir Nabokov
- 5. "Brave New World," Aldous
Huxley
- 6. "The Sound and the Fury," William
Faulkner
- 7. "Catch-22," Joseph Heller
- 8. "Darkness at Noon," Arthur
Koestler
- 9. "Sons and Lovers," D. H.
Lawrence
- 10."The Grapes of Wrath," John
Steinbeck
- 11. "Under the Volcano," Malcolm
Lowry
- 12. "The Way of All Flesh," Samuel
Butler
- 13. "1984," George Orwell
- 14. "I, Claudius," Robert Graves
- 15. "To the Lighthouse," Virginia
Woolf
- 16. "An American Tragedy," Theodore
Dreiser
- 17. "The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter," Carson
McCullers
- 18. "Slaughterhouse Five," Kurt
Vonnegut
- 19. "Invisible Man," Ralph
Ellison
- 20. "Native Son," Richard Wright
- 21. "Henderson the Rain King," Saul
Bellow
- 22. "Appointment in Samarra," John
O'Hara
- 23. "U.S.A." (trilogy), John Dos
Passos
- 24. "Winesburg, Ohio," Sherwood
Anderson
- 25. "A Passage to India," E. M.
Forster
- 26. "The Wings of the Dove," Henry
James
- 27. "The Ambassadors," Henry
James
- 28. "Tender Is the Night," F. Scott
Fitzgerald
- 29. "The Studs Lonigan Trilogy," James T.
Farrell
- 30. "The Good Soldier," Ford Madox
Ford
- 31. "Animal Farm," George Orwell
- 32. "The Golden Bowl," Henry
James
- 33. "Sister Carrie," Theodore
Dreiser
- 34. "A Handful of Dust," Evelyn
Waugh
- 35. "As I Lay Dying," William
Faulkner
- 36. "All the King's Men," Robert Penn
Warren
- 37. "The Bridge of San Luis Rey," Thornton
Wilder
- 38. "Howards End," E. M. Forster
- 39. "Go Tell It on the Mountain," James
Baldwin
- 40. "The Heart of the Matter," Graham
Greene
- 41. "Lord of the Flies," William
Golding
- 42. "Deliverance," James Dickey
- 43. "A Dance to the Music of Time"
(series), Anthony Powell
- 44. "Point Counter Point," Aldous
Huxley
- 45. "The Sun Also Rises," Ernest
Hemingway
- 46. "The Secret Agent," Joseph
Conrad
- 47. "Nostromo," Joseph Conrad
- 48. "The Rainbow," D. H.
Lawrence
- 49. "Women in Love," D. H.
Lawrence
- 50. "Tropic of Cancer," Henry
Miller
- 51. "The Naked and the Dead," Norman
Mailer
- 52. "Portnoy's Complaint," Philip
Roth
- 53. "Pale Fire," Vladimir
Nabokov
- 54. "Light in August," William
Faulkner
- 55. "On the Road," Jack Kerouac
- 56. "The Maltese Falcon," Dashiell
Hammett
- 57. "Parade's End," Ford Madox
Ford
- 58. "The Age of Innocence," Edith
Wharton
- 59. "Zuleika Dobson," Max
Beerbohm
- 60. "The Moviegoer," Walker
Percy
- 61. "Death Comes for the Archbishop," Willa
Cather
- 62. "From Here to Eternity," James
Jones
- 63. "The Wapshot Chronicles," John
Cheever
- 64. "The Catcher in the Rye," J. D.
Salinger
- 65. "A Clockwork Orange," Anthony
Burgess
- 66. "Of Human Bondage," W. Somerset
Maugham
- 67. "Heart of Darkness," Joseph
Conrad
- 68. "Main Street," Sinclair
Lewis
- 69. "The House of Mirth," Edith
Wharton
- 70. "The Alexandria Quartet," Lawrence
Durrell
- 71. "A High Wind in Jamaica," Richard
Hughes
- 72. "A House for Mr. Biswas," V. S.
Naipaul
- 73. "The Day of the Locust," Nathanael
West
- 74. "A Farewell to Arms," Ernest
Hemingway
- 75. "Scoop," Evelyn Waugh
- 76. "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie," Muriel
Spark
- 77. "Finnegans Wake," James
Joyce
- 78. "Kim," Rudyard Kipling
- 79. "A Room With a View," E. M.
Forster
- 80. "Brideshead Revisited," Evelyn
Waugh
- 81. "The Adventures of Augie March," Saul
Bellow
- 82. "Angle of Repose," Wallace
Stegner
- 83. "A Bend in the River," V. S.
Naipaul
- 84. "The Death of the Heart," Elizabeth
Bowen
- 85. "Lord Jim," Joseph Conrad
- 86. "Ragtime," E. L. Doctorow
- 87. "The Old Wives' Tale," Arnold
Bennett
- 88. "The Call of the Wild," Jack
London
- 89. "Loving," Henry Green
- 90. "Midnight's Children," Salman
Rushdie
- 91. "Tobacco Road," Erskine
Caldwell
- 92. "Ironweed," William Kennedy
- 93. "The Magus," John Fowles
- 94. "Wide Sargasso Sea," Jean
Rhys
- 95. "Under the Net," Iris
Murdoch
- 96. "Sophie's Choice," William
Styron
- 97. "The Sheltering Sky," Paul
Bowles
- 98. "The Postman Always Rings Twice," James
M. Cain
- 99. "The Ginger Man," J. P.
Donleavy
- 100. "The Magnificent Ambersons," Booth Tarkington.
'Ulysses'
at Top As Panel Picks 100 Best Novels
By PAUL LEWIS
"Ulysses," that sprawling, difficult, but uniquely original
masterpiece by James Joyce, has been voted the finest
English-language novel published this century by a jury of scholars
and writers.
The book -- in which an immensely long account of a single day in
the lives of a group of Dubliners becomes a metaphor for the human
condition and the author experiments with language almost to the
point of unintelligibility -- heads the list of 100 novels drawn up
by the editorial board of Modern Library, which has been publishing
classic English-language literature at affordable prices since 1917
and is now a division of Random House.
The list is to be released on Friday at a workshop for young
publishers known as the Radcliffe Publishing Course at Radcliffe
College of Harvard University. The board members are Christopher
Cerf, Gore Vidal, Daniel J. Boorstin, Shelby Foote, Vartan Gregorian,
A. S. Byatt Edmund Morris, John Richardson, Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr.
and William Styron.
"Ulysses" was banned in the United States as obscene from 1920 to
1933, when the ban was lifted by a Federal judge, John M. Woolsey,
who called the book "a sincere and serious attempt to devise a new
literary method for the observation and description of mankind."
"Ulysses" is followed in descending order by "The Great Gatsby,"
F. Scott Fitzgerald's magical tale of romance, mystery and violence
among rich Long Island socialites in the 1920's; another work by
Joyce, "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man," his
autobiographical account of a young man's intellectual awakening";
"Lolita," Vladimir Nabokov's tale of the aging Humbert Humbert's
doomed passion for the nymphet Dolores Haze, and "Brave New World,"
Aldous Huxley's satirical horror tale of a civilization where humans
are literally made to order.
These five novels originally tied for first place, with each
winning the support of 9 of the editorial board's 10 members. In a
second separate vote, the panel then placed them in their final
order. Executives at Random House said they hoped that as the century
drew to a close their list would encourage public debate about the
greatest works of fiction of the last hundred years, thus both
increasing awareness of the Modern Library and stimulating sales of
novels the group publishes.
"It's a way to bring the Modern Library to public attention,"
Random House's president and editor in chief, Ann Godoff, said in an
interview. "We want to grow the Modern Library and its stable of
classics" Random House was recently bought by the German Bertelsmann
group, already the owners of the American publishing house of Bantam
Doubleday Bell, and which then became the largest commercial book
publisher in the world.
Executives say the Bertelsmann group currently publishes 59 of
the 100 novels on the Modern Library list. And of the Modern Library
board members, all but Professor Gregorian are published by Random
House or the Bertelsmann group. Modern Library plans to reissue at
least 10 novels on the list in paperback over the next eight months.
These will include Samuel Butler's autobiographical attack on
Victorian morality, "The Way of All Flesh" (No. 12); Joseph Conrad's
tale of intrigue "The Secret Agent" (No. 46); "Zuleika Dobson," Max
Beerbohm's comic tale of a femme fatale at Oxford University (No.
59); "The Call of the Wild" by Jack London (No. 88), and "The
Magnificent Ambersons" by Booth Tarkington (No. 100).
Random House, which in 1934 published the first legal American
edition of "Ulysses," will place promotional material in bookstores
that are offering novels from the Modern Library's list. And the
company is inviting readers to send in on-line suggestions for an
alternative list of great English-language fiction of this century to
www.randomhouse.com/modern library.
In the next few months Random House also plans to expand the size
of the Modern Library's editorial board. It will then invite the
expanded board to make a list of the 100 best nonfiction books
published in this century. "That is something that has never been
done before," Ms. Godoff noted.
The Modern Library's best-novels list includes 58 books by an
eclectic collection of American writers: William Faulkner's "Sound
and the Fury" (No. 6); Ernest Hemingway's "Sun Also Rises" (No. 45);
the "U.S.A." trilogy by John Dos Passos (No. 23) as well as three
works by Henry James -- "The Wings of the Dove (No. 26)," "The
Ambassadors" (No. 27) and "The Golden Bowl" (No. 32) -- although
James lived much of his life in England and eventually became a
British citizen.
But it also includes Joseph Heller's "Catch-22"(No. 7), Henry
Miller's "Tropic of Cancer"(No. 50) and Jack Kerouac's "On the
Road"(No. 55), as well as Dashiell Hammett's "Maltese Falcon" (No.
56) and James M. Cain's "Postman Always Rings Twice" (No. 98).
The 39 works by British writers include D. H. Lawrence's "Sons
and Lovers" (No. 9), "The Rainbow" (No. 48) and "Women in Love" (No.
49); E. M. Forster's "Passage to India"(No. 25) and "Howards End"
(No. 38); George Orwell's "1984" (No. 13) and "Animal Farm " (No. 31)
as well as novels by Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene and Anthony Powell.
In addition to his two works in the top five, Joyce's third
well-known book, "Finnegans Wake," also makes the list, in 77th
place. But apart from Joyce, the list contains no other works by
English-speaking writers from outside the United States and Britain,
although India, Australia and South Africa all have flourishing
literary traditions and have produced many distinguished authors.
In addition, only eight women make the list. They are led by
Virginia Woolf whose "To the Lighthouse" is in 15th place, followed
in 17th by Carson McCullers's "Heart Is a Lonely Hunter." Other women
represented are Edith Wharton (twice), Willa Cather, Muriel Spark,
Elizabeth Bowen, Jean Rhys and Iris Murdoch.
Several board members criticized the absence of writers from the
rest of the English-speaking world as well as the small number of
female authors selected. Calling the final list "typically American,"
Ms. Byatt regretted that the Australian Nobel Prize-winning novelist,
Patrick White, had not been chosen, and said there was "definitely
room for more women." Like the American author William Styron, she
regretted the absence of the South African writer Doris Lessing and
the American novelist Mary McCarthy.
Mr. Styron said that he was surprised, too, by the omission of
Patrick White and that he wished the list had included the American
writer Eudora Welty. But Professor Gregorian, who heads the Carnegie
Corporation, said he and several other judges had felt they should
choose only books that had been in print a long time, thus showing
that they "have really stood the test of time."
All the judges who could be reached for comment said they
believed "Ulysses" deserved first place and considered "The Great
Gatsby" a worthy second. Ms. Byatt called "Ulysses" "the first truly
modern novel, a real break with the past, like Picasso." Mr. Styron
said it was "the watershed novel of the 20th century from which all
modernism flows." Gore Vidal, the American novelist, called the
top five "about right."
But several of his colleagues on the board were unhappy with the
novels in third, fourth and fifth places. Edmund Morris, an American
historian, said he was "pleased" that "Ulysses" and "Lolita" had made
the top five. But he argued that "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young
Man" did not deserve so high a slot because it is really "a sketch
for 'Ulysses.' " He also dismissed "Brave New World" as "not Huxley's
greatest."
Shelby Foote, also a historian, said that he accepted "Ulysses"
and "The Great Gatsby" but that he had "trouble with the others" in
the top five slots. In his view, Lawrence's "Rainbow" and Faulkner's
"As I lay Dying" would have been better choices.
The historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. called the first three
choices "sensible" but said he would have preferred to see Henry
James's "Wings of the Dove" and E. M. Foster's "Passage to India" in
fourth and fifth places. He also thought Evelyn Waugh's World War II
trilogy, "Sword of Honor," would have been a better choice than
"Brideshead Revisited" (No. 80).
Other editorial board members who participated in the voting but
could not be reached were Mr. Cerf, son of Bennett Cerf, who bought
the Modern Library and founded Random House , and Mr. Boorstin, a
former Librarian of the Library of Congress.
In a recent interview, Harold M. Evans, currently editorial
director of U.S. News and World Report, said he had come up with the
plan to compile a list of the best 100 novels for the millennium when
he was president of Random House. But it was not completed until
after he had handed over the top job to Ms. Godoff last November.
CORRECTION-DATE: July 22, 1998, Wednesday
CORRECTION: An article on Monday about the selection of this
century's 100 best English-language novels by the editorial board of
the Modern Library referred imprecisely to some of the authors of the
selected works. Although they resided in the United States or Britain
for much of their careers, several of the authors were born in other
countries.