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The Best Fiction Books » Best Books by Nobel Prize in Literature Winners

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Best Books by Nobel Prize in Literature Winners

Last updated: February 02, 2025

The Nobel Prize in Literature, probably the most prestigious prize an author of books can aspire to, has been awarded annually (with some breaks) since 1901, with more than 115 winners. Alfred Nobel's will stipulated that the prize should go "to the person who shall have produced in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction", and its winners include not only novelists and poets but also philosophers and politicians. It is also an impressively international list, drawing attention to the authors from around the globe, writing in an array of languages.

The most recent winners have been: South Korean novelist, short story writer and poet Han Kang (2024),  Jon Fosse (2023), Annie Ernaux (2022), Abdulrazak Gurnah (2021), Louise Glück (2020), Peter Handke (2019), Olga Tokarczuk (2018), Kazuo Ishiguro (2017), Bob Dylan (2016), Svetlana Alexievich (2015).

Below, we've collected together all the times books by winners of the Nobel Prize in Literature have been recommended on Five Books. These books were chosen in interviews on an array of topics.

The Vegetarian by Han Kang
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The Vegetarian

by Han Kang

🏆 Winner of the 2016 International Booker Prize

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“A common thread in much of the South Korean literature I’ve read in translation, and something I love, is the focus on the average person…The Vegetarian is a novel about a woman called Yeong-hye. The first part of the novel is narrated by her husband, who describes her as being completely unremarkable. She’s a homemaker. She makes his dinner. She’s quiet. She wears black slip-on shoes. She’s a gentle presence that is always perfecting her surroundings. She can be seen as an accoutrement to the lives of those around her. I’ve chosen this book because it’s about how a seemingly average person is capable of extraordinary acts.” Read more...

The best books on Being Average

Eleanor Ross,

The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro
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The Buried Giant

by Kazuo Ishiguro

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“I absolutely love this book. It’s extraordinary. It’s essentially about memory and forgetting. It’s about terrible atrocities that have happened between different groups of people and how they can then manage to live together, and how they can break out of cycles of revenge and trauma…It’s a mistake to read historical fiction as a history lesson and I think Ishiguro absolutely does not want us to do that. His book features Gawain as a character, for instance, a mythic character. It also features a dragon, who symbolizes important themes in the book. The country is covered with a mist, which is making people forget. He is not trying to write a book that teaches us about what the period was like.” Read more...

Best Medieval Historical Fiction

Marion Turner, Biographer

The Books of Jacob: A Novel by Olga Tokarczuk, translated by Jennifer Croft
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The Books of Jacob: A Novel

by Olga Tokarczuk, translated by Jennifer Croft

***🏆  A Five Books Book of the Year ***

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“This book is attempting to embrace an entire world and culture, a particular period in Poland and Eastern Europe, and fold it into everything that can be known. It is a maximalist novel in that sense. There’s the theology of it, but also how market garden towns worked, how peasants lived, what beliefs people had and how those were challenged or changed. Both The Books of Jacob and A New Name are dealing with the numinous, a sense of God. But Jacob Frank is an apostate, he’s someone who is prepared to overturn centuries of his own religion in an attempt to create something new. Thanks to Olga—through Jenny—we get to witness this vast pageant of what it means to have lived through that time in Poland. It’s like a very, very large Bayeux Tapestry. But also, what it is to look back on that, given what we know now, because there are outside observers.” Read more...

The Best of World Literature: The 2022 International Booker Prize Shortlist

Frank Wynne, Translator

Aké by Wole Soyinka
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Aké

by Wole Soyinka

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“This is one of Wole Soyinka’s earlier memoirs. He chose a moment in his childhood, from when he was four to when he was 11 and he represented that. He wrote in the voice of an adult – Wole Soyinka, and he was able to capture the magic of childhood and his growing up and the complexity that he faced in a changing culture, the emerging Western culture encroaching on the traditional African culture…He uses particular tropes such as family, commerce, etc, to develop this theme of change. So, for example, using an institution like religion. His mother is called Wild Christian in the book, which exemplifies her total commitment to her religious belief…One other thing he uses very well is the Second World War. The book is set in the 1930s and 1940s, and, without overtly mentioning the war, you still have references to Hitler and the soldiers passing through the village.” Read more...

The best books on Nigeria

Helon Habila, Novelist

Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth by Wole Soyinka
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Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth

by Wole Soyinka

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“The Nobel laureate’s first novel in almost fifty years is billed by the publisher as ‘at once a literary hoot, a crafty whodunit, and a scathing indictment of Nigeria’s political elite’, which features stolen body parts, Yoruba royalty and a murdered engineer.” Read more...

Notable Novels of Fall 2021

Cal Flyn, Five Books Editor

The Bridge on the Drina by Ivo Andrić
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The Bridge on the Drina

by Ivo Andrić

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“Written in 1943 by the Bosnian Nobel Laureate Ivo Andrić, this is a novel about the darker side of the Ottoman Empire – the enforced labour of local Christian subjects in modern day Bosnia. Commissioned in 1572 by the Grand Vizier Mehmed Pasha, the famous bridge. which still stands today, is the epicentre of a community that experienced all the turbulence of the Balkan region throughout the last few centuries of Ottoman rule. This is a 20th century classic.” Read more...

Books on the Ottoman Empire

Alev Scott,

The Years by Annie Ernaux & translator - Alison Strayer
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The Years

by Annie Ernaux & translator - Alison Strayer

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“It’s one of those books that enriches your idea of what literature can do. It’s a really brilliant work. The rhythm of both the ideas in play and the words is incredibly seductive…It’s this notion of what you do with memory. It discusses an incredibly important 60 years and is a very important record of the female experience across those six decades. I think it does an extraordinary job as a record of the shared experience over those years. It’s also hugely, hugely enjoyable.” Read more...

The Best Novels in Translation: the 2019 Booker International Prize

Bettany Hughes, Broadcaster

A Shining by Jon Fosse, translated by Damion Searls
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A Shining

by Jon Fosse, translated by Damion Searls

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“Look out for the new book from Jon Fosse, A Shining, which will be released 31 October in the US and 1 November in the UK. It’s a surreal, dreamlike sequence set in the Norwegian woods, in which the narrator’s car becomes stuck in a rut on a remote track. Like his remarkable Septology, which floored me last year, the English translation is by the US writer Damian Searls—who learned Norwegian specifically to translate Fosse.” Read more...

Notable Novels of Fall 2023

Cal Flyn, Five Books Editor

In Light of India by Octavio Paz
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In Light of India

by Octavio Paz

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“If one were to put these books into an order in which they should be ideally read, I would actually put the Octavio Paz book In Light of India as number one. That is easily the most accessible and stimulating book or introduction to India that you can read. It is very briskly done, with a kind of poet’s brevity, and covers astonishingly wide regions of politics, art, literature and the economy.” Read more...

The best books on India

Pankaj Mishra, Political Commentator

An Area of Darkness: A Discovery of India by V.S. Naipaul
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An Area of Darkness: A Discovery of India

by V.S. Naipaul

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“I don’t think there’s ever been a writer, since Gandhi, who looked at India with such sharpness and such clarity. And I’ve never read another that has moved me so viscerally. I think anyone who wants to understand India today should read this book.” Read more...

The best books on Contemporary India

Kapil Komireddi, Journalist

Klara and the Sun: A Novel by Kazuo Ishiguro
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Klara and the Sun: A Novel

by Kazuo Ishiguro

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“Ishiguro is one of these novelists who is writing science fiction, but it’s not science fiction as we normally encounter it. It’s not the invention of a completely different world. Instead he takes one or maybe two conceits, and then explores their consequences in a setting that is relevant and immediately relatable to normal life. His writing is always so clear, spare, and vivid—and Klara and the Sun is no exception…literature has always been about understanding what it’s like to be a person, what it’s like to have a stream of thought, to be a human, to be an individual, or to be another individual. And that’s a key part of the story. Klara and the Sun is an absolutely remarkable example of how to develop this understanding. In ways I don’t yet know, it will no doubt make me think about my own work differently.” Read more...

Best Books on the Neuroscience of Consciousness

Anil Seth, Scientist

Jazz by Toni Morrison
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Jazz

by Toni Morrison

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“It’s set in the 1920s and in it there’s a beautiful commingling of jazz, Harlem streets and a sense of romance and possibility. The novel, formally, feels like a piece of jazz. It feels like riffs and improvisations and recurring refrains. In that sense it’s a fairly experimental novel, which is perhaps why it hasn’t been as seized upon, or lauded, within her oeuvre. Again, I think it’s a novel of desire and intoxication, something we keep coming back as we talk about New York and its fictions.” Read more...

Hermione Hoby on New York Novels

Hermione Hoby, Journalist

Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets by Svetlana Alexievich
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Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets

by Svetlana Alexievich

☆ Shortlisted for the 2016 Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction

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“The power comes from the stories themselves, the people she found and talked to. Some are in the Caucasus and different parts of the country, people trapped in different Republics, who then face terrible discrimination and have undergone horrible experiences. There are others who, at the time property rights were being established, had their houses or apartments stolen from them by mafia groups. In some ways, this book is backward looking because it’s reminding people how fast Russia has changed and how many people that change has left behind. It’s about how dark the lives are of some of those people, who were brought up in a completely different environment. The book doesn’t have a traditional narrative structure. It’s not one you read in a straightforward way. It’s one you dip into, or pick up and become absorbed by for an hour or so and then step away from. But as a piece of reportage, it’s an extraordinary achievement.” Read more...

Best Nonfiction Books of 2016

Stephanie Flanders, Economist

The Fall by Albert Camus
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The Fall

by Albert Camus

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“This is my absolute favourite novel by Camus. It’s very short…One of the things that makes this one so interesting, particularly once you get a sense of who Camus was as a person, is how autobiographical it is and how much of this is him putting himself in the seat of judgment, trying to make sense of his own place in the world, his own decisions, and the impact that he’s had on other people…The narrator is telling the story of how, as he’s on the way home from work one night, a woman jumps from the bridge into the river and there’s this moment where he’s able to make a decision. He can turn back and save the woman, or he can continue on his path.” Read more...

The Best Books by Albert Camus

Jamie Lombardi, Philosopher

The Glass Bead Game by Hermann Hesse
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The Glass Bead Game

by Hermann Hesse

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“There’s the ideas of mathematics, of philosophy, of music all brought together in this game, the glass bead game…When I read that book I thought, ‘Yes, this is the game I want to play.’ That’s what I try to do in the work that I do, to combine my love of music, to explain why music and mathematics have these common themes, to bring mathematics alive through the theatre, write the books I do. That’s my ultimate aim, to become a master of the glass bead game. It’s the book I took on my desert island when I was asked to do Desert Island Discs. I just think it is a magical book.” Read more...

The best books on The Beauty of Maths

Marcus du Sautoy, Mathematician

The Log from the Sea of Cortez by John Steinbeck
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The Log from the Sea of Cortez

by John Steinbeck

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“I had no idea Steinbeck was interested in science. I thought he was a novelist of human rights and the American working class. This book is the log of a journey he made with a scientist he befriended while he was living in Monterey in southern California. They go on this boys’ trip, hiring a retired sardine fishing boat for nine weeks and going to collect invertebrates – crabs, lobsters, snails. It’s about amateur enthusiasm for the natural world and Steinbeck is a truly great science writer. He conveys a boyish enthusiasm for nature but some truly grown-up observations about man’s place in it – a real prescience for an environmental movement that hadn’t arrived when this book was written in 1941.” Read more...

The best books on Being Inspired by Science

Tom Clarke, Journalist

The Cleft by Doris Lessing
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The Cleft

by Doris Lessing

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“The Cleft tells of an island of women—an entire female society based on an island—that is, suddenly, “disrupted” by the introduction of a new species: males. No men have ever existed before, and then, out of nowhere, one man appears, bringing sex with him, and so bringing chaos. It’s a creation myth, created out of creation myths.” Read more...

The Best Political Novels

Joshua Cohen, Novelist

Caesar and Cleopatra by George Bernard Shaw
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Caesar and Cleopatra

by George Bernard Shaw

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“Shaw paints a portrait of Caesar in which all the motivations that romantic biographers and filmmakers like to show as being all for love, were actually driven by hard-nosed, brutal political calculations and realities. Shaw was making comments, in a sense, on the British occupation of Egypt, which had started in 1882, and relating it to the Roman occupation.” Read more...

The best books on Julius Caesar

Peter Stothard, Journalist

The Cairo Trilogy by Naguib Mahfouz
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The Cairo Trilogy

by Naguib Mahfouz

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“I think first of all that it is a great literary treat. I believe it is a really captivating novel…In my view, what Mahfouz has done brilliantly is to dissect the rich life of the middle class of that multifaceted city and presented it to his readers; he made the readers experience what it feels like to be a middle-class family in the first half of the 20th century in Cairo. This was a very interesting time because Cairo was slowly shedding its conservative Islamic heritage and more or less embracing Westernism. Through tracing the three generations of the family at the centre of the novel you see the change.” Read more...

The best books on The Arab World

Tarek Osman, Foreign Correspondent

Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead by Olga Tokarczuk, translated by Antonia Lloyd-Jones
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Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead

by Olga Tokarczuk, translated by Antonia Lloyd-Jones

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“It’s a murder mystery, and therefore it rattles along, but it’s also a philosophical contemplation on man’s relationship with the natural world, and our relationships to those that we deem to be marginal—at the edge of society—and how we react to them…The title is taken from lines of William Blake and there are passages throughout where characters celebrate Blake’s ideas and philosophies. So it’s incredibly rich, and it’s really transportive, both metaphysically and physically. You feel like you’re inhabiting the spaces and landscapes that are being described. We didn’t know what to expect, and we were all absolutely blown away by it. “ Read more...

The Best Novels in Translation: the 2019 Booker International Prize

Bettany Hughes, Broadcaster

My Early Life 1874-1904 by Winston Churchill
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My Early Life 1874-1904

by Winston Churchill

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“My Early Life is a more personal book. His memory is certainly not perfect in every respect. He does slip up, and for example says he makes a speech one year, when actually he made it the year before. But I think it’s the book that would be most likely to win you over to liking Churchill’s personality, even if you didn’t share his politics. There’s an ironic, kind of self-mocking tone to it, which I think casts him in a better light than much of his other more self-justificatory writing.” Read more...

The best books on Winston Churchill

Richard Toye,

Lust by Elfriede Jelinek & Translated by Michael Hulse
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Lust

by Elfriede Jelinek & Translated by Michael Hulse

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“Lust is a novel about rape in marriage, and…about power relationships within marriage. It tells the story of Gerti, who is trapped in a sexually and psychologically abusive relationship—it’s unflinching and it’s possibly the most relentless of Jelinek’s novels, which is saying quite a lot. I don’t think Jelinek is interested in plot. She’s not even interested in psychology. She does play a lot with fairy tales—she has written a series of works for theatre that are sometimes referred to as the Princess Plays, or the Princess Dramas, and which deconstruct figures like Snow White or Jackie Kennedy. And I suppose there is a simplicity to the narrative structure, that is fable-like. But it’s the darkest version of a fairy tale, in which daily violence is a key part. It’s more Brothers Grimm than Disney.” Read more...

Katie Kitamura on Marriage (and Divorce) in Literature

Katie Kitamura, Journalist

As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
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As I Lay Dying

by William Faulkner

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“Actually, thinking about it now, I would have liked to put As I Lay Dying (1930) on here, not least because it’s also a genuinely great comic novel. The line where the doctor says of Anse Bundren, ‘you could have stuck his head into the saw and cured a whole family’ is so pithy. I love it.” Read more...

The Best 20th-Century American Novels

David Hering,

Station Island by Seamus Heaney
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Station Island

by Seamus Heaney

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“Seamus Heaney’s poetry is so magnificent it’s difficult to do it justice. He engaged with politics and with the violence of the Irish struggle in a complex way. He says the poet is ‘stretched between politics and transcendence.’ In Station Island he goes back to his roots to look at his communal ties, his early beliefs and the dead of his past. In the center of the Station Island sequence, the speaker is visited by ghosts, some literary, some with a personal connection to him, some of the dead who died in the violence. It’s Heaney accounting for who he is in the midst of this violent political struggle, in the midst of complex cultural currents.” Read more...

The best books on Veterans

Phil Klay, Military Historians & Veteran

The Cure at Troy by Seamus Heaney
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The Cure at Troy

by Seamus Heaney

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“The Vice President loves Irish poetry. Heaney is one of his favorites. He often quotes the last of these lines: ‘The longed-for tidal wave / Of justice can rise up / And hope and history rhyme.'” Read more...

The best books on Joe Biden

Ronald A. Klain, Lawyer

Letters From A Young Poet: 1887-1895 by Rabindranath Tagore
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Letters From A Young Poet: 1887-1895

by Rabindranath Tagore

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“t’s not one of his best-known books, but in my opinion, it is one of his very best. It’s a collection of letters to his niece. And when he wrote these, in most cases, there would have been absolutely no thought of publication, which makes their quality all the more remarkable. You might think of this book as an eastern epistolatory nature philosophy. It contains passages of astounding beauty about the natural world that Tagore was inhabiting, which was basically the river deltas around Calcutta. It also contains his reflections on how these give us a very different sense of what’s important and of how to live than one gets in the city. It’s a sort of Eastern counterpart, as I see it, of Romanticism, and again, very visionary.” Read more...

The Best Eco-Philosophy Books

Rupert Read, Environmentalist

Kim by Rudyard Kipling
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Kim

by Rudyard Kipling

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“Kim is the story of a young boy who falls in with a Tibetan lama and joins in with the lama’s search for his spiritual goal. I have always loved the book because of Kipling’s wonderful writing. I think it is Kipling’s greatest book. I also love it because the descriptions of India at that time are so vivid. Bear in mind what I said earlier about the way that the British were, on the whole, encouraged not to get too closely involved with India – encouraged to live separate lives. One of the great features of Kipling’s genius is the way that he did learn so much, and did get so involved in the life of India and Indians.” Read more...

The best books on India

Mark Tully, Foreign Correspondent

The Union Jack by Imre Kertész & Tim Wilkinson (translator)
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The Union Jack

by Imre Kertész & Tim Wilkinson (translator)

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“This is one of the most beautiful short novels, or novellas, ever written. And only one thing ever happens: Kertész’s narrator looks out a window and sees a jeep go by flying the Union Jack. That’s it. But just the sight of this flag, and the context of the sighting, reminds Kertész that there’s an outside world: a world beyond Hungary, a world of freedom.” Read more...

The Best Political Novels

Joshua Cohen, Novelist

Mario and the Magician and Other Stories by Thomas Mann
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Mario and the Magician and Other Stories

by Thomas Mann

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“The story is about a family vacation. The narrator, his wife and two young children—all German—travel to the town of Torre di Venere, a little town in Italy, in the 1920s. It begins with joy and enthusiasm and quickly deteriorates when the family meets the phenomena of Italian nationalism and Fascism. At the centre of the story is a hypnotists’s performance that ends in an unexpected and tragic way.” Read more...

David Grossman on the Books That Shaped Him

David Grossman, Novelist

Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage by Alice Munro
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Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage

by Alice Munro

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“Any Alice Munro story is a horrid story to boil down to an elevator pitch. I still don’t even know what the story “Nettles” is about, except I know that it’s about a woman who feels at home in the Alice Munro universe: she’s a writer, she’s a Canadian, she’s a mother, she’s sexually alive.” Read more...

The best books on Friendship

Lauren Mechling, Journalist

Watt by Samuel Beckett
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Watt

by Samuel Beckett

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“This is perhaps even more unique than his other writings…Here, Beckett finally seems to find his own voice…Purely linguistically, it is completely different. In its arrangement, the syntax predicts Beckett’s change to French in 1945 and 1946. It is a book that shows him reformulating who he is as a writer and finding his voice. That, for me, is why it’s such a fascinating book. At the same time, it’s just one of the funniest books by Beckett purely because he pushes his critique of rationality to its absolute limit. It shows the irrationality of rationality if taken to extremes.” Read more...

The Best Samuel Beckett Books

Mark Nixon, Literary Scholar

Being and Nothingness by Jean-Paul Sartre & Sarah Richmond (translator)
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Being and Nothingness

by Jean-Paul Sartre & Sarah Richmond (translator)

***🏆 A Five Books Book of the Year ***

This is a new translation of Being and Nothingness: “When you read the book having read large parts of the previous translation, it feels like putting on a pair of new glasses” 

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“This is a book that was published during the Second World War in occupied Paris by Sartre, who has since become known as a great existentialist thinker alongside his lifelong friend and lover Simone de Beauvoir. Being and Nothingness became the Bible of existentialism…Although this book is threateningly abstract in places, it’s also fundamentally practical. It’s about the nature of what it is to be human…For me personally, I became interested in studying philosophy because I wanted to try and understand some of Being and Nothingness and Sartre’s ideas…You’d be surprised how many philosophers have been inspired by Sartre, even though they’ve gone on to become very different sorts of philosophers from him…Being and Nothingness has got these amazing novelistic passages. Most famously, there’s the example of the café waiter. Sartre is sitting in a café, watching a waiter who he thinks is in ‘bad faith.’ It’s a kind of self-deception, a denial of his own freedom to be other than he is in terms of his role and what other people expect him to be.” Read more...

The Best Philosophy Books of 2018

Nigel Warburton, Philosopher

In a Free State by V.S. Naipaul
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In a Free State

by V.S. Naipaul

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“This was the first book of his I came to, and it remains for me his most shocking and blistering. I’ve probably read the opening suite of stories twenty times, while flinching away from the painful novella of the title. Naipaul’s work can be harsh, but it is nearly always moving.” Read more...

Esi Edugyan on Books That Influenced Her

Esi Edugyan, Novelist

Miguel Street by V.S. Naipaul
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Miguel Street

by V.S. Naipaul

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“I appreciate the intimacy and humour of the book, it feels so true to the Caribbean. It captures our idiosyncrasies, and the experiences of living in a small place. And it represents my favourite kind of collection: stories that all together bloom and bloom, revealing a larger world. But like many Caribbean people, I have a complicated relationship with V.S. Naipaul.” Read more...

The Best Caribbean Fiction

Alexia Arthurs, Novelist

The Good Earth by Pearl Buck
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The Good Earth

by Pearl Buck

Pearl Buck was the winner of the 1938 Nobel Prize in Literature “for her rich and truly epic descriptions of peasant life in China and for her biographical masterpieces”

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“O-Lan, the mother in this book, gives birth to two sons and two daughters, one of whom she strangles in infancy because there is not enough food to sustain the family. She’s born a slave. She’s plain and coarse. She toils silently and stoically all her life to provide for her family and is basically never rewarded. When her husband gets a little wealthier, virtually the first thing he does is take in a concubine.” Read more...

The best books on Being a Mother

Amy Chua, Lawyer

The Remains of The Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
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The Remains of The Day

by Kazuo Ishiguro

🏆 Winner of the 1989 Booker Prize

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“British actor and director Dominic West gives a pitch-perfect performance as the narrator of Ishiguro’s hauntingly beautiful novel. His Mr Stevens, an ageing butler looking back upon his life in service with mounting regret, is a carefully-constructed shell of English restraint, within which tempests rage. Listening time is 7 hours and 5 minutes” Read more...

Great Actors Read Great Novels

The Summer Before the Dark by Doris Lessing
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The Summer Before the Dark

by Doris Lessing

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“Around the time when the idea of the midlife crisis was being popularised in the 70s, there was a spate of novelistic representations of midlife crises. The Summer Before the Dark is emblematic and symptomatic; it’s a canonical depiction of the stereotypical female midlife crisis of the 1970s. It’s about a forty-five year old woman who has grown-up children and whose husband is going away for work for six months. She is at a loss with what to do with herself, but she happens to be fluent in several languages and gets hired by a global foods company. She goes off to Istanbul and begins a series of adventures about which she’s very conflicted and ambivalent.” Read more...

The best books on Midlife Crisis

Kieran Setiya,

Voices From Chernobyl by Svetlana Alexievich
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Voices From Chernobyl

by Svetlana Alexievich

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“Alexievich is a Belarusian investigative journalist, essayist, and oral historian. In 2015, she became the first journalist to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. The wider literary aim of all her books is to capture the lost cultures of Soviet and post-Soviet communities…The Chernobyl disaster had a devastating impact on the community that was there in terms of all the lives lost and the environment becoming toxic—and with that a whole way of life, a whole cultural memory and way of being in the world. ..Alexievich writes about this book as being a missing history.” Read more...

The best books on Tech Utopias and Dystopias

Mahlet Zimeta, Philosopher

Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling
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Just So Stories

by Rudyard Kipling

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“I love these stories and the way Kipling addresses the reader as ‘Best Beloved.’ It’s so charming. His pen and ink work is superb. The way he drew is quite beautiful. Really fantastic. The layout again is wonderful to look at. He has such simple backgrounds and then all this incredible detail.” Read more...

Korky Paul on Inspiring Illustrations

Korky Paul, Cartoonists & Illustrator

Growth of the Soil by Knut Hamsun and Sverre Lyngstad (translator)
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Growth of the Soil

by Knut Hamsun and Sverre Lyngstad (translator)

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“As every Russian writer is rolled out of Gogol’s coat, every Norwegian one is an offspring of Hamsun, admittedly or otherwise…He tore apart both the grammar and the lexicon of our language, mixed high and low, dialect and aristocratic speech, and put all the pieces beautifully together again—in the totally new fashion we call contemporary Norwegian literature…We have made a taciturn deal—to punish him postmortem for his political ideas, and simultaneously, and reluctantly, praise him for his contribution to literature” Read more...

Essential Norwegian Fiction

Roy Jacobsen, Novelist

Death in Venice by Thomas Mann
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Death in Venice

by Thomas Mann

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“Von Aschenbach has been an artist but a very formulaic one. He’s had great acclaim, but he’s never been struck by the divine madness. And then he is struck. In Death in Venice—as in Plato’s Phaedrus—an erotic madness and artistic madness are merged together; for von Aschenbach the instrument of this merging is Tadzio, a young boy. The mad experience is falling in love with beauty, as embodied in this young boy. What the novel is really asking us to contemplate or judge is: is it the good, or is it the bad kind of madness?” Read more...

The Best Philosophical Novels

Rebecca Goldstein, Philosopher

Not I by Samuel Beckett
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Not I

by Samuel Beckett

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“They all push our subjective experience to its extreme, they all enact what Lacan calls ‘subjective destitution.’ In every play, the hero is pushed beyond a certain limit, out of the domain in which rules of normal human existence apply; he or she finds him or herself in what Lacan called ‘between-the-two-deaths'” Read more...

Slavoj Žižek on His Favourite Plays

Slavoj Žižek, Philosopher

The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann
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The Magic Mountain

by Thomas Mann

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“Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain introduces us to Eros and Thanatos, the twin forces of life and death, and they become the subject of profound meditations and conversation. There’s more than a whiff of spookiness to the work, a fascination with disease, suffering, and death. Mann described his novel as a Zeitroman, a novel that takes time as its subject matter but also captures an entire era.” Read more...

Talismanic Tomes

Maria Tatar, Literary Scholar

Lord of the Flies by William Golding, with a foreword by Stephen King
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Lord of the Flies

by William Golding, with a foreword by Stephen King

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“I think his imagination was terrible to him, because it was so vivid and he could not escape. He described the intensity of it. Sometimes he said he had to externalise this imagination in order to deal with it because he just couldn’t keep it in.” Read more...

The Best William Golding Books

Judy Golding, Memoirist

Existentialism and Humanism by Jean-Paul Sartre
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Existentialism and Humanism

by Jean-Paul Sartre

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“Serious Sartreans get quite annoyed with this book because it’s a very accessible, easy-to-read, non-technical, public lecture. Many Sartreans think that unless you’ve read Being and Nothingness from cover to cover and pored over the footnotes, you don’t really understand Sartre. For them, people like me who say, ‘I like Sartre, I like Existentialism and Humanism’ are a bit like people who say ‘I really like Wagner, that ‘Ride of the Valkyries’ is a great tune.’ …The reason I wanted to include it is that in contemporary Britain, atheists and humanist organisations are keen to stress the cheerful side of atheism…What you see in Sartre represents that tradition in thought pointing to troubling aspects of accepting a world without God. There are difficulties involved. Primarily, it’s this issue around responsibility. Without God, there’s nothing to fall back on as an authority, nothing to tell us what the right way to live is, or what the correct moral code is, nothing to show us what makes life meaningful. We really do have to make that decision for ourselves.” Read more...

The best books on Atheism

Julian Baggini, Philosopher

Herzog by Saul Bellow
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Herzog

by Saul Bellow

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“What Bellow does — magically almost — is to make the schlemiel into a liberal humanist. Herzog is cuckolded. Here you have this great intellectual, this man who has written a tome on romanticism, Moses Herzog, a prominent professor and what happens? His best friend is making out with his wife and everybody knows about it. The only person who doesn’t know about it is he. That’s a classic comic situation, from Chaucer onwards everybody has always made the cuckold into a comic figure. But here again, Herzog is in control of the narrative. Everything in the book is seen from his perspective…It’s actually one of the most autobiographical works that Bellow wrote. Not only in the sense of being based on the facts of his life, but in that he really draws on his own childhood, on his own use of Yiddish. Bellow was one of the best Yiddish speakers I ever met in my life” Read more...

The best books on Jewish Humour

Ruth Wisse, Literary Scholar

Finders Keepers by Seamus Heaney
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Finders Keepers

by Seamus Heaney

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“I don’t want to be accused of being negative about the whole cult of celebrity. Seamus Heaney is part of my redress against this. One positive thing celebrities can do for us is to dramatise those values and meanings which we think of as important and commendable. They can do that in the tormented way of a gossip magazines or the admirable, generous-hearted but always accurate way which you find in Seamus Heaney’s collections of both poems and essays.” Read more...

The best books on The Cult of Celebrity

Fred Inglis, Social Scientist

Beloved by Toni Morrison
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Beloved

by Toni Morrison

🏆 Winner of the 1988 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

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“Beloved was Morrison’s fifth novel. It’s a gripping story, inspired by a famous abolitionist case, the true story of a woman who runs away from slavery with her children, but when the slave catchers catch up with her, she kills one of her own and tries to kill the others, rather than returning them to slavery. The specter of slavery is unrecognized and unnamed; it is embodied in a ghost-like, other-worldly figure. It’s a novel about trauma and psychic scarring, but it’s a novel that points toward a necessary reckoning with what she calls the black and lonely dead, those lost from the Middle Passage, through abolition to the racial violence of the twentieth century.” Read more...

The Best African American Literature

Farah Jasmine Griffin, Literary Scholar

A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway
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A Moveable Feast

by Ernest Hemingway

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“We think of Hemingway as an American writer, but much of his writing is set outside of the United States, just as much of his life was set outside of the United States…A Moveable Feast takes place in Paris. It’s Hemingway’s memoir of the time he spent there with his first wife and it was stitched together by his last wife. It gives you the sense that he yearns for his first wife and the time when they were young together in France. Very often transnational literature is concerned with abrogating an implicit border of belonging. And very often it concerns the question: Does one have the right to be where one is or where one wishes to be? But in A Moveable Feast one never gets the sense that Hemingway questions whether he can or should be in Paris. There seem to be no visa issues or racial questions. Perhaps there is a sense of entitlement to the expatriate experience that the rest of transnational literature lacks. At the same time, it’s a book about a border that cannot be crossed—the border between past and present. Hemingway is reaching back into his past. It turns out even our most manly of writers can be wistful.” Read more...

The Best Transnational Literature

Mohsin Hamid, Novelist

The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
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The Sun Also Rises

by Ernest Hemingway

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“Many people don’t appreciate what a big commitment writing this novel was for Hemingway. He was used to writing short stories. It meant he had to spend a lot of time on one book that could have been spent more profitably writing short stories. Like many of Hemingway’s later novels, it is stitched together from shorter pieces – in this case, what he’d already written about Pamplona…It can be summed up by the phrase ‘grace under pressure’, and looks at the code of ethics that emerges from bullfighting. It starts in Paris and then goes to Spain. The main event is a bullfight in Pamplona. The main characters are a group of expatriates, including a Jewish man, Robert Cohn, who was a boxing champion at Princeton. The narrator, Jake Barnes, was injured in World War One and his impotence is strongly suggested.” Read more...

The best books on Hemingway in Paris

Wai Chee Dimock, Literary Scholar

One Man’s Bible by Gao Xingjian
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One Man’s Bible

by Gao Xingjian

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“In this novel, we read about how an average man experienced the Cultural Revolution. The Cultural Revolution had a huge impact on Gao Xingjian, and it’s an experience which speaks to many people in China. By reading One Man’s Bible, anyone can empathise with that experience. He combines reality, history and literature very well. Gao Xingjian is also an exiled writer. If he was in China, he wouldn’t be able to write this book. Of course, writers inside China such as Yu Hua and Mo Yan can also write about the Cultural Revolution, but the Cultural Revolution they write about is not the Cultural Revolution Gao Xingjian writes about, because they are subject to state censorship.” Read more...

The Best Chinese Dissident Literature

Ma Jian, Novelist

Lenin in Zurich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
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Lenin in Zurich

by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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“I chose this book because it’s a work of fiction, and fiction is sometimes better at giving you a sense of the man than fact. Lenin, though a historical figure, is also a mythical figure. For many, he was not really a human being. His statue was in every town in the Soviet Union. He became a cult. Whether you love him or hate him he’s a sort of god, and as such he’s very difficult to recover through purely historical materials. What Solzhenitsyn has done is rescue Lenin from that weirdly effacing fame. Of course it isn’t the real Lenin he gives you, but it’s the sense of a real human being, written by a man who had thought about Lenin a great deal.” Read more...

The best books on The Russian Revolution

Roland Chambers, Biographer

Age of Iron by J M Coetzee
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Age of Iron

by J M Coetzee

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“The author is JM Coetzee, the Nobel prize-winning author and, in my view, one of the top five living writers in the English language. Age of Iron is quite a short book – you could probably read it in a couple of hours. It’s set in mid-1980s South Africa, a time of tremendous political ferment. Mandela was imprisoned in 1964 and what followed for the next 10 years was a grave-like quiet of resignation by black people. In 1976 the first simmerings of rebellion occur and by the mid-1980s you had clashes daily in practically every township all around the country. You had the black political movement in full-on insurrectionary mode. It’s against that background that the novel is set. But Coetzee doesn’t go out and give you vivid descriptions, he’s never overtly political, he’s concerned much more with conveying a moral atmosphere.” Read more...

The best books on Nelson Mandela and South Africa

John Carlin, Journalist

Babbitt by Sinclair Lewis
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Babbitt

by Sinclair Lewis

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“Sinclair Lewis isn’t thought of these days as a funny writer, but his portrayal of the fictional Midwestern bore Babbitt is very funny, and it’s been ripped off many times – usually a sign that something works.” Read more...

Andy Borowitz recommends the best Comic Writing

Andy Borowitz, Comedians & Humorist

East of Eden by John Steinbeck
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East of Eden

by John Steinbeck

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“The philosophical question that’s really animating the story isn’t the drawbacks of polarized thinking, but the limits of human freedom. Aron and Cal are only the latest iteration of a moral struggle that has wracked their family for decades. Their role in the novel is to illustrate the possibility that all of us might escape the confines of our original character and circumstances and reach freely toward either good or evil.” Read more...

The best books on Twins

Helena de Bres, Philosopher

The Captive Mind by Czeslaw Milosz
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The Captive Mind

by Czeslaw Milosz

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“The Captive Mind isn’t a straight memoir. Although Milosz is writing about his own life and his past, he is also grappling with a larger subject: How his generation of liberal intellectuals came to collaborate with, and work alongside, the Communist party. And he is trying to understand his own behaviour: Why did I act that way?” Read more...

The best books on Memoirs of Communism

Anne Applebaum, Historian

The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
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The Grapes of Wrath

by John Steinbeck

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“This was first published in 1939 while the US was still grappling with the Depression, and what is brilliant about it is that it reveals that economic problems can’t just be dealt with through some wave of the free-market magic wand. It’s a very harrowing read…His sense of people finding themselves hugely disadvantaged is something that has a modern-day connotation – the whole debate about immigration today is tied up with this. In both cases it’s about migrant labour. In The Grapes of Wrath it’s migrant labour from within the US, and it’s those people who are often the most vulnerable. This is the human aspect of that story, and I think that Steinbeck summarised much of what happened in the Great Depression far better than many economists did, because he really dealt with the true losses that came through for people who just happened to be down on their luck.” Read more...

The best books on Globalisation

Stephen D King, Economist

The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis by Giovanni Pontiero (translator) & José Saramago
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The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis

by Giovanni Pontiero (translator) & José Saramago

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“A few years ago, I discovered two authors whom I confess I had known nothing about before, and I discovered them in translation. One was WG Sebald and the other was José Saramago. It was the shock of my life. I was stunned by The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis. I read it in Giovanni Pontiero’s translation and I was so overwhelmed by the book – both by Saramago’s vision of the world and by the beauty and skill of the translation – that I started to devour Saramago novels, one after the other.” Read more...

The best books on Translation

Edith Grossman, Translator

One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez, translated by Gregory Rabassa
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One Hundred Years of Solitude

by Gabriel García Márquez, translated by Gregory Rabassa

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“What García Márquez does is tell a story of the history and culture of Latin America from the point of view of the ordinary person. He manages to do that through this deadpan narrator who can mix the savagely real with the wonderful, and narrate a family saga which is also a history of Latin America. This book really put Latin American literature on the international map because it is a novel which, while deeply Latin American, is also accessible to all readers.” Read more...

The Best Latin American Novels

John King, Literary Scholar

Chronicles by Bob Dylan
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Chronicles

by Bob Dylan

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“Dylan has had a career of extraordinary richness and variety. Yet here he is writing a memoir that completely ignores everything which made him a world figure. It ignores all of his most famous songs, it ignores all the periods in which he was a great star. It’s all about times when he was trying to learn, when he was confused and lost but absolutely alive with the thrill of discovering new ideas, new singers, new information. It’s a marvellous, eyes-wide-open partial-autobiography. It’s also wonderfully written; the words are alive on the page. It clearly wasn’t co-written or talked into a tape recorder. It’s a great piece of writing.” Read more...

The best books on Rock Music

Greil Marcus, Musicians, Music Critics & Scholar

Less Than One by Joseph Brodsky
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Less Than One

by Joseph Brodsky

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“Brodsky lived through the first part of the siege as a baby, in a one-room flat on the Liteiny, right in the centre of town. He brilliantly describes the atmosphere of the postwar city: the bombed-out buildings – ‘haggard and hollow-eyed’ – and the feeling of emptiness, of crowding ghosts. He’s good, as well, on how pinched and harsh life continued to be well after the war. One of his earliest memories is of being given a white bread roll – not a common black one – for the first time. It was such an event that he ate it standing on a table, surrounded by admiring adults.” Read more...

The best books on The Siege of Leningrad

Anna Reid, Journalist

Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkuhn As Told by a Friend by Thomas Mann, translated by John E. Woods
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Doctor Faustus: The Life of the German Composer Adrian Leverkuhn As Told by a Friend

by Thomas Mann, translated by John E. Woods

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“It’s extraordinary. It’s set in Germany in the early decades of the 20th century. Adrian Leverkühn is this fictional German composer who has a likeness to Arnold Schoenberg in that he develops a 12-tone system. He also makes a deal with the demon Mephistopheles—to create wonderful music for a certain time before being taken off, like Faust in the legend, to a horrible fate.” Read more...

The best books on Sound

Caspar Henderson, Journalist

Selected Essays by T S Eliot
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Selected Essays

by T S Eliot

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“It’s not a biography of Dante in the ordinary sense, and I don’t think Eliot thought of it as such. I chose it because he sets out a schema that was of huge importance to Eliot’s life and achievement. You don’t have to have read Dante’s The Divine Comedy to know that the inferno is followed by purgatory followed by paradiso. Eliot argues that this is a universal life and a universal pattern, and he wanted to tap into that pattern. It’s the schema of a life which moves from a sense of sin to an awareness of a broken-down life – a Waste Land life – and which moves deliberately through a purgatorial phase of suffering. One could say the equivalent was Eliot’s poem “Ash Wednesday”. In some sense Eliot remains a purgatorial poet, always looking towards a paradiso that he didn’t attain. He shared with Dante that sense of sin and introspection. Dante was, to him, the greatest exponent of the soul’s journey.” Read more...

The Best Literary Biographies

Lyndall Gordon, Biographer

The Myth of Sisyphus by Albert Camus
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The Myth of Sisyphus

by Albert Camus

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“The Myth of Sisyphus is a small work, but Camus’s meditation on faith and fate has personally been hugely important in developing my ideas. Writing in the embers of World War II, Camus confronts in The Myth of Sisyphus both the tragedy of recent history and what he sees as the absurdity of the human condition.” Read more...

The best books on Morality Without God

Kenan Malik, Science Writer

Waiting for the Barbarians by J M Coetzee
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Waiting for the Barbarians

by J M Coetzee

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“Waiting for the Barbarians was the Coetzee book that I was always most attached to – I think it’s the Coetzee book that most South Africans are attached to. Coetzee takes the mood of the 1980s state of emergency – when people were being detained and disappearing and there was a fear of communist or black madness on the borders – and he makes it more interesting by creating this partial allegory of some unnamed empire…It’s about a magistrate. He works for the empire, you don’t know what the empire is and you don’t know what century it’s taking place in. The magistrate is trying to administer law and order, he’s trying to be a figure of some kind of justice. And all the time there’s fear that the barbarians are about to invade and take down the empire. All sorts of draconian measures and violations of decency are carried out in the name of emergency. Needless to say, it ends unhappily.” Read more...

The Best South African Fiction

Imraan Coovadia, Novelist

A World of Strangers by Nadine Gordimer
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A World of Strangers

by Nadine Gordimer

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“A World of Strangers is Gordimer’s best novel. It’s reminiscent of EM Forster’s Passage to India – it is written in a very British mode…In some ways the book is about what happens to people when they come to a big city and how South African black people – who were 98% rural at the beginning of the 20th century – become urbanised, semi-residents of the city, where they had to have a pass and exist on sufferance at all times.” Read more...

The Best South African Fiction

Imraan Coovadia, Novelist

The Plague by Albert Camus
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The Plague

by Albert Camus

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“It has been said that he did extensive research for The Plague. The ‘plague’ is generally taken to be a metaphor or meta-commentary on Nazism during World War II. I’m not necessarily sold on that as the exclusive interpretation of the novel. Other people have argued that he was reading about plagues during the time that he was writing this. But one thing that’s really interesting in the background is that, for at least a period of time while writing the novel, Camus was trying to recover from a bout of tuberculosis and he was staying in a village in southern France in the Free Zone (Vichy). The remarkable events that took place there were the basis for the book called Lest Innocent Blood be Shed by Philip Paul Hallie. In this small, poor, rural village they banded together and pooled their resources to save somewhere between three and five thousand Jews from the Nazis. Camus was in this village as this was happening, as people were hiding, as they were separated from their loved ones, while he himself was separated from his loved ones. So, I’m not sure to what degree the astute nature of his writing can be attributed to his reading about previous plagues, or to his first-hand experience of being bedridden with an illness, embedded in a town where people were hiding from a much more militaristic and malignant sort of ‘plague’.” Read more...

The Best Books by Albert Camus

Jamie Lombardi, Philosopher

Conversation in the Cathedral by Mario Vargas Llosa
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Conversation in the Cathedral

by Mario Vargas Llosa

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“It was a difficult choice because he has written some 14 major novels. He is a writer who changes with every novel, adopting a range of different styles. But when I was reading around the Nobel prize, I learned that all the Nobel committee members read this novel when they were deliberating about the prize. And even though I have about four favourite novels of his, that seemed a good reason for picking this one. Conversation in the Cathedral represents a time in the late 1960s when Vargas Llosa was still very committed to the hope of radical social change in Latin America. In this novel he analyses the nature of a corrupt, unjust, hypocritical society that was the Peru of his adolescence, under a military regime. He thought that if you could expose the nature of the corruption you might move on and replace it with something better. He finds ways of telling his stories which are really quite extraordinary in terms of their architecture, their formal complexity and elegance. The title sounds like a religious topic but actually the cathedral turns out to be a seedy bar in downtown Lima.” Read more...

The Best Latin American Novels

John King, Literary Scholar

The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing
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The Golden Notebook

by Doris Lessing

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“Always in the past, the sexy heroines of men’s books have been idiots, but she asserted through her character of Anna that women were brains and bodies and that their brains and bodies interacted. I think that was so revolutionary…It was so important that Doris Lessing came along and wrote a heroine who was sexual and intellectual; she grappled with the issues of socialism, communism, Africa in turmoil, and yet at the same time she lusted for men and talked about the confusions of her love affairs.” Read more...

The best books on Women in Society

Erica Jong, Novelist

The Great Enigma by Robin Fulton (translator) & Tomas Tranströmer
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The Great Enigma

by Robin Fulton (translator) & Tomas Tranströmer

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“The very first poem is called ‘Preludes’: ‘Waking up is a parachute jump from dreams’. That was totally new to me…It stopped me in my tracks and I found myself opening up my imagination, trying not to force what I was doing, trying to let the language and the experience work for themselves…what enthrals me about Tomas Tranströmer’s work is how it just speaks and it doesn’t impose anything” Read more...

The best books on Poetry

John F Deane, Poet

One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
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One Day In The Life Of Ivan Denisovich

by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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“It was a critical book – an entirely objective account of a victim in a labour camp. Just one day in an ordinary labour camp. Not exaggerated, not even a particularly nasty day. The most extraordinary part is how is got printed. It ran contrary to everyone in the Communist Party in Russia, but the Novy Mir editor Tvardovsky snuck a copy in to Khrushchev and said, ‘This is awfully good, you ought to publish it’. And he did. It was an extraordinary stroke of luck. And once it was printed, as Galina put it, ‘The Soviet government had let the genie out of the bottle, and however hard they tried later, they couldn’t put it back in’…After One Day in the Life, Solzhenitsyn didn’t publish anything for a long time, but meanwhile he was hoarding the real killer book – The Gulag Archipelago. When he published that, he was arrested and sent to the West in handcuffs. That’s where I met him, in Zurich in 1976.” Read more...

The best books on Communism

Robert Conquest, Historian

Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
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Absalom, Absalom!

by William Faulkner

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“The classic Faulkner line that everybody trots out is: ‘The past is never dead. It’s not even past.’ Absalom, Absalom! is the great iteration of that line. It’s not even real; it’s become a chimera or a fabrication, another story being told. It’s a live issue that is sustaining and replenishing people. Or, in an awful way, they are kind of yoked to it, doomed to have the same argument again and again and never get to the end of it. Absalom, Absalom!—to the point that it baffles a lot of people—is the greatest exploration of that Southern theme.” Read more...

The Best Historical Fiction Set in the American South

Xan Brooks, Novelist

Worstward Ho by Samuel Beckett
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Worstward Ho

by Samuel Beckett

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“It’s a work that shuns adjectives. It’s a work that shuns plot. It’s a work that tries to replicate the act of the imagination. It’s a narrative voice that has no location and has no origin, in many ways, constructing or reconstructing images.” Read more...

The Best Samuel Beckett Books

Mark Nixon, Literary Scholar

Lyrical and Critical Essays by Albert Camus
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Lyrical and Critical Essays

by Albert Camus

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“This is a series of his political and literary essays that give you a sense both of who he was as a critical writer, as an essayist, and as a journalist, but also ties into his philosophy and the ideas that he was trying to make sense of.” Read more...

The Best Books by Albert Camus

Jamie Lombardi, Philosopher

India: A Million Mutinies Now by V.S. Naipaul
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India: A Million Mutinies Now

by V.S. Naipaul

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“The book that comes closest to having the narrative energy of a work of fiction on my list is India: A Million Mutinies Now by V S Naipaul, which is why I chose it, in part. There’s this idea of the ‘Great American Novel’, which is deeply flawed because we know there isn’t one America. There are many, many Americas and no novel can hope to capture them all. This difficulty is even more pronounced in India. No novel can really capture the different textures of life there. But A Million Mutinies Now does an excellent job of describing the lives, the hopes and aspirations and frustrations of a diverse cast of Indians who have lived through the last 60 years. Some of them are even older figures, who can recall a pre-1947 India. Naipaul himself is very much a figure in the background in this particular book; he just lets people speak. And what you get through the stories that these people tell to Naipaul is a nuanced picture of the many different personal and political journeys since 1947. It’s probably the closest thing you can get to a good book of fiction about India.” Read more...

The best books on India

Pankaj Mishra, Political Commentator

Collected Poems 1909-1962 by T S Eliot
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Collected Poems 1909-1962

by T S Eliot

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“I think some of them are considered surrealist, like ‘The Hollow Men’: ‘This is the way the world ends: not with a bang, but a whimper.’ A lot of his poetry has gone into general usage. Being a city person, I also like the atmosphere of the city, of London, the descriptions of fog that I remember from my youth.” Read more...

Mysteries and Other Favourite Books

M C Beaton, Thriller and Crime Writer

August 1914 by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
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August 1914

by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

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“August 1914 is the 20th-century equivalent of War and Peace. But Solzhenitsyn rejects Tolstoy’s belief that individuals can’t change history. Solzhenitsyn viewed 1914 as Russia’s last opportunity to save itself from the Bolshevik horror. It was that moment when people united against a common enemy, but because of political shenanigans, lack of will and incompetence, that was lost. It sounds serious, but he’s quite mocking and joking. It’s a diatribe against Bolshevism and all its horrors and he uses every weapon including humour.” Read more...

The best books on Why Russia isn’t a Democracy

Martin Sixsmith, Foreign Correspondent

Shaw’s Music by George Bernard Shaw and edited by Dan Laurence
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Shaw’s Music

by George Bernard Shaw and edited by Dan Laurence

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“I think all these books are very good for demystifying the whole process of music-making, and George Bernard Shaw was great at that. He represented a school that was aiming at shedding the pomposity and pretentiousness in music criticism. He takes a very witty, very down-to-earth approach. He’ll spend as much time on the officiousness of provincial stewards and ushers as he will on the music and whoever is singing. He’s got a very good eye for those details that make it more relevant and interesting to the non-musical ear. His reviews are so much fun – almost every week I go back to another, and they’ve got brilliant titles as well.” Read more...

The best books on Classical Music

Igor Toronyi-Lalic, Musicians, Music Critics & Scholar

Mr Sammler’s Planet by Saul Bellow
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Mr Sammler’s Planet

by Saul Bellow

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“Mr Sammler’s Planet is really the first and only great classic of neoconservatism. Bellow’s character, Arthur Sammler, is a Polish Jewish émigré who survived World War II, raised on the great British liberalism of the early 20th century. His heroes are figures like H G Wells, a very pragmatic, quite utopian socialist. And Sammler, living in New York, sees and describes – and Bellow with his extraordinarily vivid tactile prose really brings it to life – the actual physical, sexual and moral decay of Manhattan. There is a kind of licentiousness in sexual relations, there is disdain for older, inherited values…Mr Sammler’s Planet made an enormous impression on me when I read it at the age of 18 or 19 when I was in college. It was the first time I had seen this great writer – probably the greatest of all modern American novelists – actually critique liberal assumptions. “ Read more...

The best books on Conservatism and Culture

Sam Tanenhaus, Journalist

Field Work by Seamus Heaney
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Field Work

by Seamus Heaney

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“Field Work is about the way we exist within place, the comfort we take from place and what happens when that apparent solidity and belonging is challenged. You can’t really narrow this collection down with ‘this is a good one.’ I’d read you every single poem in it.” Read more...

The Best Books of Landscape Writing

Dan Richards, Travel Writer

Canne al vento (Reeds in the Wind) by Grazia Deledda
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Canne al vento (Reeds in the Wind)

by Grazia Deledda

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“This is by Grazia Deledda, a writer from Sardinia, born in 1871 and died in 1936. She was from a small bourgeois family and was not permitted to study but she wanted to learn so much that she hid in bed at night to read. She started to write early and she sent short stories to several newspapers who published her and she became very famous and won the Nobel prize in 1926. She always wrote about Sardinia and was very linked to her territory. Canne al Vento is about four sisters in the country who stay with their father and don’t marry, but one goes away, is sent away by the father because she is pregnant and is not married. And after 20 years a letter arrives from her son: the woman has died but he says he wants to come to the house of the family and he wants to know them. So this handsome young man comes to the house of these three women who are so excited to see him, the new nephew. They love him, and do their best to welcome him in the big dark house. But, after some time, they realise that he came to see them because he needs money” Read more...

The Best Italian Literature

Dacia Maraini, Novelist

Explosions and Other Stories by Mo Yan
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Explosions and Other Stories

by Mo Yan

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“His book for me is like a dictionary to understanding the huge differences between life in the city and the countryside. Sometimes it feels like there is 500 years of difference. The problem is that the young people move to the city and learn so much and then when they go home it is very difficult to communicate with the older generation, who are often peasants who have never been educated or travelled to the next village.” Read more...

The best books on Understanding China

Xinran, Nonprofit Leaders & Activist

Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel García Márquez
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Love in the Time of Cholera

by Gabriel García Márquez

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“This is about love as opposed to sex. He’s talking about love in all its forms, including unrequited love that goes on for 50 years…It’s partly such a passionate book because of the beauty of the prose, describing love through time and how she found contentment – love, passion and sex all in one. The prose just drips sexuality and sensuality. It’s sexy enough without having to read about deep positions or anything” Read more...

The best books on Sex and Marriage

Kate Figes, Journalist

Only Yesterday by S Y Agnon
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Only Yesterday

by S Y Agnon

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“Shmuel Agnon is the only Israeli writer who has won the Nobel Prize for Literature. He is still regarded as the best writer in modern Hebrew literature. This book takes place in Jaffa between the end of the 19th century and the start of the First World War…I was very much inspired by his book. I read it three times in order to get the atmosphere and spirit of the place at that time.” Read more...

The best books on Israel and Palestine in Art

Alon Hilu, Novelist

Independent People by Halldor Laxness
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Independent People

by Halldor Laxness

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“Independent People is the book that has just bowled me over in the last couple of years, more than anything else I’ve read. It is incredibly moving, about a poor Icelandic farmer who does not want to be dependent on anyone for anything…The book is great because of the author’s ability to create a world utterly different from ours, with a value system so different but also so totally human. I don’t know why he is not better known – he clearly is not obscure, he did win the Nobel Prize. But why hasn’t the whole of Britain read him? It is long, though – Independent People is for when you have a large chunk of time.” Read more...

The best books on Education and Society

Alison Wolf, Economist

The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
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The Old Man and the Sea

by Ernest Hemingway

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“I taught this book to my students during the economic sanctions. And I feel like it gave me some kind of strength to continue. When I read about the struggle of the old man and the blood running from his hands because of the heat of the rope, I would always think, one day we will make it. At that time I had to work three jobs just to make ends meet. I thought I will struggle on and in the end things will come out fine, but they didn’t. We were invaded and our lives were shattered and people changed.” Read more...

The best books on Life in Iraq During the Invasion

May Witwit, Literary Scholar

The Jungle Books by Rudyard Kipling
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The Jungle Books

by Rudyard Kipling

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“Mowgli has great adventures: we have the Bandar-log, and Kaa the snake who at one point almost swallows up Mowgli’s later protector, Bagheera the panther. But there is nobody else…there is that terrible moment in The Jungle Books where he realises how the wolves in general hate him and he just stands there crying…because he has never understood that he was different. There’s a whole world there in that scene. I don’t even know if Kipling realised it when he was writing it, but it’s the utter breaking of innocence, because he thought he was part of them, that he was loved by them, that he was one of them, and then suddenly has to realise that he’s completely different and he’s not one of them.” Read more...

The best books on Childhood Innocence

Ann Widdecombe, Novelist

Selected Short Stories by Rabindranath Tagore
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Selected Short Stories

by Rabindranath Tagore

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“It’s a masterpiece and hugely read. If you go to any house in Bangladesh or West Bengal you will find a copy of this collection of stories. In it you will discover everything about the lives of Bengali families. It would be very unfair of me to single out one or two stories because it will undermine the others – the collection is so good.” Read more...

The best books on Bangladesh

Syed Ashfaqul Haque, Journalist

The Elephant's Child (from the Just So Stories) by Rudyard Kipling
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The Elephant's Child (from the Just So Stories)

by Rudyard Kipling

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“I’ve picked the story of ‘The Elephant’s Child’. It’s pure nostalgia. It was the first book I was ever read and the first book I ever wanted to hear again and again and again simply because I just love the language of it. I love the music and the words and the way he writes, things like, ‘the great grey-green, greasy Limpopo River, all set about with fever trees’. I haven’t got a clue what any of it meant, but it didn’t matter. It was just a wonderful way of dropping richness into his language and it makes you smile and feel joyful to be alive.” Read more...

Michael Morpurgo recommends his Favourite Children’s Books

Michael Morpurgo, Children's Author

The Conservationist by Nadine Gordimer
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The Conservationist

by Nadine Gordimer

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“If you read her books and you know the history, I think that Nadine’s books are quite closely pegged to real events in Johannesburg and South Africa. And they’re always seen from the position of a white sympathiser – there’s one in every book. Quite often she’s written black characters, but the idea that she’s an African writer, that she has penetrated the African consciousness, it’s not possible…The protagonist is a good man trying to do good things – a businessman who owns a farm he runs as a sort of hobby. But the sense is that your priorities are not necessarily the priorities of the land or the people that you find yourself in. That’s what makes it a very good book.” Read more...

The best books on Being White in Africa

Justin Cartwright, Novelist

Disgrace by J M Coetzee
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Disgrace

by J M Coetzee

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“This book was written in the late 90s and although it is very difficult – especially with writers like J M Coetzee – to link the work to the man, my personal reading of the book is that it is a work of profound disappointment and sadness.” Read more...

The best books on Post-Apartheid Identity

Kevin Bloom, Journalist

Nausea by Jean-Paul Sartre
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Nausea

by Jean-Paul Sartre

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“It’s just a fascinating book and a great way into existentialism. You might not come out of it with a very sophisticated conceptual system of existentialist ideas, but you do come out of it — well I did anyway! — with curiosity to read more. It leads you on to his great work, Being and Nothingness, which explores the same ideas, but from a philosophical perspective…It’s readable, it’s powerful, it’s sometimes a bit ridiculous, but it’s intense. Although it is a novel, it’s a novelization of philosophical ideas, so you approach the philosophy through one literary character’s individual crisis and you approach that crisis through a sequence of ideas. It’s the story of a man called Roquentin, who undergoes a kind of philosophical nervous breakdown while he’s trying to write a biography of an 18th-century character, the Marquis de Rollebon. He tries to narrate a coherent story about that life, but instead Roquentin finds himself overwhelmed by things. The sheer physical being of the world around him causes a kind of nauseous horror and this crisis leads him to think about what are, in fact, all sorts of existentialist questions: what it is to be free, what it is to be human, what is to be able to look at other people and be looked at by other people, to be in time, to be in history, to try and impose some kind of sense or narrative on the raw facts of existence.” Read more...

The best books on Existentialism

Sarah Bakewell, Philosopher

Blindness by José Saramago
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Blindness

by José Saramago

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“This book brings up the question of what conditions are necessary for sanity and what happens when you take those conditions away, and also the idea that mental or physical wellbeing are really quite narrow states. They depend on all things being equal: things like having enough resources, having physical ability and a basic sense of justice and shared logic and so on, and Blindness highlights how far any of us are from becoming mentally unwell and unstable without those.” Read more...

The best books on Mental Illness

Samantha Harvey, Novelist

Murphy by Samuel Beckett
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Murphy

by Samuel Beckett

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“if you think about Murphy, what happens if I evacuate character, plot and emotional interest, what remains to this novel? There’s a way in which, when people criticise Murphy, I understand, because there’s a lot that’s adolescent in it – the glee of taking the sacred cow and punching holes in it. But what I like about these books is that they both have a weird sort of warmth and energy and liveliness, almost as if they had tried to empty the novel of character and just can’t quite do it. And there’s a note, too, of genuine humility. Murphy, for example, who is a kind of a Beckett projection, mocks the Puritans, but hates sex. At least the Puritans wanted to have children. Murphy’s not even sure if that’s a good idea.” Read more...

The best books on The Comic Novel

Allen MacDuffie, Literary Scholar

Notebooks 1935-1942: Volume 1 by Albert Camus
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Notebooks 1935-1942: Volume 1

by Albert Camus

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“These notebooks give many insights into Camus as a person, who he was and what he was trying to come to terms with day by day. They are indispensable, I think, for understanding what his larger project was throughout the rest of his writings.” Read more...

The Best Books by Albert Camus

Jamie Lombardi, Philosopher

The Rebel by Albert Camus
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The Rebel

by Albert Camus

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“This is Camus’ most academic book. It’s his attempt to make sense of the historical, political, and literary influences that have shaped our world, and how they inform our values in an attempt to figure out where we must go next. This is not as lyrical a book as any of the others, although there’s a chapter at the end where he talks about transcending nihilism that is quite powerful and he’s at his most eloquent.” Read more...

The Best Books by Albert Camus

Jamie Lombardi, Philosopher

Sanctuary by William Faulkner
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Sanctuary

by William Faulkner

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“I must admit, I hated Sanctuary for a long time and only recently changed my mind. Sanctuary tells an extremely disturbing story: a young woman, Temple Drake, is held captive by a gang of bootleggers in an abandoned house known as ‘the Old Frenchman place’. The novel outlines Temple’s often futile attempts to escape the gang and find the elusive sanctuary Faulkner conjures up in the title.” Read more...

The Best William Faulkner Books

Ahmed Honeini, Literary Scholar

Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
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Never Let Me Go

by Kazuo Ishiguro

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“It’s a difficult book to talk about because one almost doesn’t want to give away the premise, which drops on you like a ton of bricks around page eighty or so… It’s set at a very unusual boarding school where the students are being raised and educated for the absolute darkest of purposes, which they initially have no knowledge of or control over, and prove ultimately unable to escape from.” Read more...

Dark Academia Books

Lev Grossman, Novelist

Krapp's Last Tape and Other Shorter Plays by Samuel Beckett
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Krapp's Last Tape and Other Shorter Plays

by Samuel Beckett

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“It’s essentially a reflection of a life and the way in which, as Beckett had already said in an essay on Proust that he wrote as a young man, that there is no such thing as an individual, only a succession of individuals.” Read more...

The Best Samuel Beckett Books

Mark Nixon, Literary Scholar

Saint Genet: Actor and Martyr by Jean-Paul Sartre
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Saint Genet: Actor and Martyr

by Jean-Paul Sartre

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“It’s a biography…of Jean Genet, who was quite famous at the time as a novelist, a playwright, and a poet. But he wasn’t hugely famous. Sartre had been asked to write a preface to a collected works of Genet, and what he ended up writing was a 700-page psychoanalytic tome. He did talk to Genet and studied his writings, which were strongly autobiographical. But to some extent what he was doing with Saint Genet was not just presenting a biography of a particular person, but rather showing how a whole person, with all of their tastes and mannerisms and works, can actually be a manifestation of a single underlying project. In a way, it’s a description of a possible person, a description of how the theory can be coherent and give a story about a person. In that way it doesn’t matter whether it’s actually true about Genet; that’s what I think he means when he deflects with those disarming comments. In many respects, what he’s doing in Saint Genet is rethinking the existentialism of Being and Nothingness because he has abandoned the idea of radical freedom because he’s been persuaded finally that Beauvoir is right about sedimentation. That’s why he cites The Second Sex a few times in Saint Genet…It’s probably the definitive statement of Sartre’s existentialism” Read more...

Underrated Existentialist Classics

Jonathan Webber, Philosopher

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