Read more books.
Wait, here I have to vent here or a lump will stay stuck in my craw.
That lump is the statement from people who say they only read non-fiction.
And there I am, a person awaiting the
publication of my own non-fiction book.
Don’t get me wrong, non-fiction can
carry you to heights unknown, but
fiction? Fiction will carry you to the
Universe and Beyond.
Fiction will teach you ways
you won’t know until years later when
some thought will come zinging in like one of Zeus's
lightning bolts.
One aside is that many of the most
respected entrepreneurs -- from Bill Gates to Elon Musk -- are voracious
readers.
PBS just announced a new TV series called The Great American Read.
The series celebrates what PBS has deemed America's 100 favorite novels.
To select the top 100 novels, PBS polled thousands of people and asked
them to name their favorite novel.
Then, PBS pulled in 13 literary professionals to cull down
the list according to a few criteria. Each author got only one book for the list.
Series such as Harry Potter and Lord of
the Rings counted as one book.
Books could come from anyplace in the world and any time-frame, but they had to be fiction, and written in
English.
It’s fun to troll through the list and see how many you have read, how many you want
to read, and how many you say, “Nope,
I’ll pass on that one.”
Here's the final list of America's 100 best-loved novels:
- A Confederacy of Dunces,
by John Kennedy Toole
- A Game of Thrones,
by George R. R. Martin
- A Prayer for Owen Meany,
by John Irving
- A Separate Peace,
by John Knowles
- A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,
by Betty Smith
- The Adventures of Tom Sawyer,
by Mark Twain
- The Alchemist,
by Paulo Coelho
- Alex Cross Mysteries (series),
by James Patterson
- Alice's Adventures in
Wonderland, by Lewis Carroll
-
Americanah,
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
- And Then There Were None,
by Agatha Christie
- Anne of Green Gables,
by Lucy Maud Montgomery
- Another Country,
by James Baldwin
- Atlas Shrugged,
by Ayn Rand
- Beloved,
by Toni Morrison
- Bless Me,
Ultima, by Rudolfo Anaya
- The Book Thief, by
Markus Zusak
- The Brief Wondrous Life of
Oscar Wao, by Junot DÃaz
- The Call of the Wild,
by Jack London
- Catch-22,
by Joseph Heller
- The Catcher in the Rye,
by J.D.Salinger
- Charlotte's Web,
by E.B. White
- The Chronicles of Narnia (series),
by C.S. Lewis
- The Clan of the Cave Bear,
by Jean M. Auel
- The Coldest Winter Ever, by
Sister Souljah
- The Color Purple,
by Alice Walker
- The Count of Monte Cristo,
by Alexandre Dumas
- Crime
and Punishment, by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
- The Curious Incident of the Dog
in the Night-Time, by Mark Haddon
- The Da Vinci Code,
by Dan Brown
- Don Quixote,
by Miguel de Cervantes
- Doña Barbara,
by Rómulo Gallegos
- Fifty Shades of Grey,
by E.L. James
- Flowers in the Attic,
by V. C. Andrews
- Foundation,
by Isaac Asimov
- Frankenstein,
by Mary Shelley
- Gilead,
by Marilynne Robinson
- The Godfather,
by Mario Puzo
- Gone Girl,
by Gillian Flynn
- Gone with the Wind,
by Margaret Mitchell
- The Grapes of Wrath,
by John Steinbeck
- Great Expectations,
by Charles Dickens
- The Great Gatsby,
by F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Gulliver's Travels,
by Jonathan Swift
- The Handmaid's Tale,
by Margaret Atwood
- Harry Potter (series),
by J.K. Rowling
- Heart of Darkness,
by Joseph Conrad
- The Help,
by Kathryn Stockett
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy, by Douglas Adams
- The Hunger Games,
by Suzanne Collins
- The Hunt for Red October,
by Tom Clancy
- The Intuitionist,
by Colson Whitehead
- Invisible Man,
by Ralph Ellison
- Jane Eyre,
by Charlotte Brontë
- The Joy Luck Club,
by Amy Tan
- Jurassic Park,
by Michael Crichton
- Left Behind,
by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins
- The Little Prince,
by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
- Little Women,
by Louise May Alcott
- Lonesome
Dove, by Larry McMurtry
- Looking for Alaska,
by John Green
- The Lord of the Rings (series),
by J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Lovely Bones,
by Alice Sebold
- The Martian,
by Andy Weir
- Memoirs of a Geisha,
by Arthur Golden
- Mind Invaders,
by Dave Hunt
- Moby Dick,
by Herman Melville
- The Notebook,
by Nicholas Sparks
- One Hundred Years of Solitude,
by Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez
- Outlander,
by Diana Gabaldon
- The Outsiders,
by S.E. Hinton
- The Picture of Dorian Gray,
by Oscar Wilde
- The Pilgrim's Progress, by John Bunyan
- The Pillars of the Earth,
by Ken Follett
- Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen
- Ready Player One,
by Ernest Cline
- Rebecca,
by Daphne du Maurier
- The Shack,
by William P. Young
- Siddhartha,
by Hermann Hesse
- The Sirens of Titan,
by Kurt Vonnegut
- The Stand, by Stephen King
- The Sun Also Rises,
by Ernest Hemingway
- Swan Song,
by Robert R. McCammon
- Tales of the City,
by Armistead Maupin
- Their Eyes Were Watching God,
by Zora Neale Hurston
- Things Fall Apart,
by Chinua Achebe
- This Present Darkness,
by Frank E. Peretti
- To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee
- Twilight,
by Stephenie Meyer
- War and Peace,
by Leo Tolstoy
- The Wheel of Time (series),
by Robert Jordan
- Where the Red Fern Grows,
by Wilson Rawls
- White Teeth,
by Zadie Smith
- Wuthering Heights,
by Emily Brontë
I'm shocked that none of Ray Bradbury's books were listed. and I would think that Elizabeth Gilbert's Eat, Pray Love would beat out Fifty Shades of Gray, but what do I know, sex sells. The list was called The most favorite, not the best novels.
Some of my personal favorites are: Illusions by Richard Bach, The Color of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon (Oh, it was not written in English). Was Don Quioxite? (I do believe that was written in Spanish and translated.) The Gift from the Sea by Anne Morrow Lindbergh, The Shell Seekers by Rosamunde Pilscher, and my childhood favorite The Black Stallion by Walter Farley.
What are yours?
From my pen to your
eyeballs. Thanks for reading,
Joyce
PS. A comment from
an eighty-something lady: “I don’t read fiction because I will get so engrossed
it will keep me up all night.”
Whoa!
PPS.
Muriel Spark on writing: “If
you want to concentrate deeply on some
problem, and especially on some piece of writing
or paper-work, you should acquire a cat. Alone with the cat in the room where
you work… the cat will invariably get up
on your desk and settle under the desk lamp…And
the tranquillity of the cat will gradually come to affect you sitting there at
your desk. The effect of a cat on your concentration is remarkable and very mysterious.’
*From her character Mrs. Hawkins in A Far
Cry from Kensington.)
Three minutes ago:
PPPS. There is some explanation on
https://www.brunchforthesoul.com Give it a Look-see if you are so inclined. I am going to publish fresh material on that site. Ta Da.