1001 Books: You Must Read Before You Die

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1001 Books: You Must Read Before You Die Page 11

by Boxall, Peter


  The text follows Equiano’s journey from his kidnapping in Africa, and incorporates slavery in the British navy; work on slave ships; the purchase of his own freedom; work on plantations; and finally a return to England. It is an explicitly religious meditation that simultaneously forges an identity for the author that is self-consciously both British and African. This is highlighted in his choice of names. While on abolitionist tours, in publications, and in public, he referred to himself as Gustavus Vassa; in this text his African identity is brought to the foreground, while the narrator is acutely conscious of his existence as both. The recent revelation that Vassa/Equiano may have been born in South Carolina, and that consequently he constructed his African identity, only enhances the remarkable insights the text offers into the ambiguities of such experience. As a result, it is as relevant now as it has ever been. MD

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  PRE-1800

  The Mysteries of Udolpho

  Ann Radcliffe

  Lifespan | b. 1764 (England), d. 1823

  First Published | 1794

  First Published by | P. Wogan (Dublin)

  Original Language | English

  An essential gothic novel, The Mysteries of Udolpho remains a classic today. It tells the story of Emily St. Aubert, who is imprisoned by her evil guardian, Montoni, in his grand gothic castle, Udolpho. Terror and suspense dominate Emily’s life within Udolpho, as she struggles to withstand Montoni’s perfidious schemes and her own psychological breakdown. The narration has a dream-like quality, which reflects Emily’s confusion and horror, and lends emphasis to the psychological battle she must engage in to survive her nightmares. Radcliffe’s spectacular descriptions of landscapes are used partly to reflect emotion in the novel, particularly melancholia and dread—but also tranquillity and happiness. Radcliffe’s characters are varied and well drawn, but where she really succeeds is in the creation of a likable and strong heroine.

  Although rarely considered a feminist, Radcliffe conveys a significant underlying message about the importance of female independence. Despite her apparent weakness and the extremity of her fears, Emily ultimately defeats Montoni through the strength of her own free will and her moral integrity. The Mysteries of Udolpho offers not just the supernatural horrors created by the imagination; the true horror that Emily must face is the dark side of human nature, a more potent terror than anything conjured by the mind. EG-G

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  PRE-1800

  Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship

  Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

  Lifespan | b. 1749 (Germany), d. 1832

  First Published | 1795–1796

  First Published by | Unger (Berlin)

  Original Title | Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre

  Despite Goethe’s forbidding stature, this is a delightful novel. Goethe is engagingly worldly and wry, telling a story of intellectual development and education with warmth, in what is often considered the classic example of the Bildungsroman.

  Initially disillusioned by unrequited love, Wilhelm Meister travels forth on various adventures, and joins a group of itinerant players who afford him apprenticeship in life. Offering a group portrait of the life of theater, much imbued with Shakespeare, the novel celebrates and then undermines the theatrical vocation. The humane realism of the early parts of the novel deepens and modulates into something altogether more unusual once the surfaces of theatricality and social performance are penetrated, and mysterious characters hint at a different kind of literary symbolism and intellectual purpose. Goethe builds a richly ironic account of human self-development across its knowingly flimsy plot structure, somehow combining the ironizing good humor of Fielding’s Tom Jones with something more philosophical. Not to be confused with Wilhelm Meister’s Travels, this novel is especially recommended reading for deluded thespians and wannabe aesthetes. DM

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  PRE-1800

  The Monk

  M. G. Lewis

  Lifespan | b. 1775 (England), d. 1818 (at sea)

  First Published | 1796

  First Published by | J. Bell (London)

  Full Title | The Monk: A Romance

  A 1913 edition updates Lewis’s eighteenth-century horror story to appeal to the taste of early twentieth-century decadents.

  “Who but myself has passed the ordeal of youth, yet sees no single stain upon his conscience? . . . I seek for such a man in vain.”

  An extravagantly, possibly gratuitously, dark gothic novel, M. G. Lewis’s The Monk caused controversy when it was first published, and remains shocking and chilling today. Unlike Ann Radcliffe, whose gothic fiction always comes with rational explanations, Lewis embraces the supernatural alongside the most extreme and gruesome acts of human depravity and cruelty. The monk of the title is Ambrosio, who is admired for his piety. As we discover, however, Ambrosio is truly the most hypocritical and evil representative of the Catholic church imaginable. His crimes begin relatively modestly but quickly escalate into the darkest and most blasphemous acts possible. Nor is he the only character so perfidious—the prioress of a nearby convent shows that she, too, is capable of barbaric excesses of cruelty. The novel offers an extreme picture of how power, perhaps especially the power held by spiritual figures, can corrupt absolutely.

  Despite a convoluted plot, the novel moves at a good pace and the story flows easily. Although Lewis does not employ extravagant descriptions of landscape, The Monk is nonetheless a highly visual novel, conjuring vivid and thus memorable images of horror and destruction. This is ultimately a story of the complete crushing of innocence, with no softening redemptive message to lighten the horror. The Monk continues both to fascinate and to shock today, and few modern novelists could compete with the sheer grotesqueness of Lewis’s vision. EG-G

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  PRE-1800

  Camilla

  Fanny Burney

  Lifespan | b. 1752 (England), d. 1840

  First Published | 1796

  First Published by | T. Payne and T. Cadell (London)

  Original Language | English

  The full title of this novel is Camilla; or, A Picture of Youth and this is precisely what Burney gives us in this, her third novel. Camilla tells the story of a lively and spirited young girl’s entry into the world, of her eventual coming of age. Camilla’s story and those of her sisters—the beautiful Lavinia and the angelic, though disfigured and scarred, Eugenia—display the ideals, temptations, loves, doubts, and jealousies that both inform and trouble the passage from youth to adulthood. Burney’s characters, especially the women, are realistic, enabling the reader to be easily drawn in to their joys, sorrows, and concerns.

  Burney’s novel also gives a wonderful depiction of public entertainment and pleasure in late eighteenth-century England as well as the manners and fashions that made up the social theater—in particular, the social restrictions and even dangers that confronted young women. Burney uses the emotional extremes of popular gothic fiction to show that danger can be found close to home.

  In Northanger Abbey, Jane Austen’s narrator alludes to Burney’s novels Camilla and Cecilia, saying they are “work in which the greatest powers of the mind are displayed, in which the most thorough knowledge of human nature, the happiest delineation of its varieties, the liveliest effusions of wit and humour, are conveyed to the world in the best-chosen language.” Austen’s high praise is well deserved, and makes the strongest case yet for reading this novel. EG-G

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  PRE-1800

  Jacques the Fatalist

  Denis Diderot

  Lifespan | b. 1713 (France), d. 1784

  First Published | 1796 (written 1773)

  First Published by | Buisson (Paris)

  Original Title | Jacques le Fataliste et son maître

  Diderot’s Jacques the Fatalist is among those very few extraordinary novels that seem to anticipat
e the distant future of the genre, leaping ahead of itself by 150 years, into the company of Samuel Beckett’s anti-fictional transgressions of the novel form. It is an exceptionally interesting novel with an exceptionally uninteresting plot. Like metafiction of the twentieth century, it comments continually on its own procedures of composition and guesses continually at the reasons why its story might have turned out as it did, satirizing the reader’s appetite for romantic tales or the thrills of an improbable adventure. Diderot sprinkles a few such thrills into the narrative recounted by Jacques to his characterless Master as they roam about, but he is always sure to announce their arrival.

  Diderot was a polymath—philosopher, critic, and political essayist; hence, perhaps, his distrust and comedic handling of the novel form. His most famous literary labor, taking him almost twenty-five years, was on the Encyclopédie ou Dictionnaire raisonné des Sciences, des Arts et des Métiers, the great expression of French Enlightenment rationality co-authored, among others, by the mathematician D’Alembert. Jacques the Fatalist, which Diderot wrote around 1770 but never published during his lifetime, was a curious departure into a parallel zone of philosophical thinking, in which the so-called “problems of existence” can be staged as farces of self-expression and storytelling. KS

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  PRE-1800

  The Nun

  Denis Diderot

  Lifespan | b 1713 (France), d. 1784

  First Published | 1796 (written 1760)

  First Published by | Buisson (Paris)

  Original Title | La Religieuse

  Nuns take the offensive in an illustration to Diderot’s novel, captioned: “I was on the ground and they were dragging me.”

  The playful origins of this epistolary novel, published posthumously, are intriguing. In 1760, Denis Diderot and his friends wrote a series of letters to the Marquis de Croismare. The letters purported to come from Suzanne Simonin, an illegitimate child who had been forced to take religious vows to expiate her mother’s guilt. Having escaped from the convent, she apparently wanted the Marquis to help her annul her binding vows. In her letters, the nun recounts the details of her confinement against her will and describes its effect on her understanding of religion and her faith. The novel’s reputation as a succès de scandale is due in great part to its unashamed and explicit depiction of the narrator’s encounter with the cruelty prevalent in monastic institutions, and her attendant discovery of eroticism and spirituality.

  The Nun has been considered an attack on Catholicism, typifying the French Enlightenment’s attitude toward religion. It stirred public opinion anew when, in 1966, the Jacques Rivette movies version was banned for two years. More recently, The Nun has been much discussed for its emphatic portrayal of lesbianism and sexuality. Aimed at exposing the oppressive and unnatural structure of life in religious institutions, the narrator’s fate at the hands of monastic power provides a striking model for narrative and, indeed, life reversals. CS

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  PRE-1800

  Hyperion

  Friedrich Hölderlin

  Lifespan | b. 1779 (Germany), d. 1843

  First Published | 1797 (vol. 1), 1799 (vol. 2)

  First Published by | J. Cotta (Tübingen)

  Full Title | Hyperion, oder der Eremit in Griechenland

  Friedrich Hölderlin’s Hyperion appeared in two volumes between 1797 and 1799, and is a kind of autobiography written in letters from Hyperion mostly to his friend Bellarmin, but with some to Diotima. The text is set in ancient Greece, yet some 200 years after it was written, the words that describe invisible forces, conflicts, beauty, and hope are still relevant.

  The novel works on several levels as a fictional reflection on, and interpretation of, the Enlightenment and the French Revolution. On the philosophical level, it can be interpreted as an investigation into the separation between subject and object, between individual and individual, man and nature, as a condition of their unity. On the political level, it expresses the ambivalence toward reason and revolutionary force as possible instruments of social and historical progress—elements that still exist in various twentieth-century forms.

  Hölderlin’s critical description of the German society of his day is still broadly applicable to bourgeois Western European existence in the third millennium. And those who have never felt Hyperion’s Utopian longing for harmony with nature and God, free of all alienation, should ask the divine cashier for their money back. The inexplicable reasons have to do with love, language, and Diotima. But for this one has to delve into the experience of reading the novel oneself. DS

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  1800s

  Contents

  Castle Rackrent

  Henry of Ofterdingen

  Rameau’s Nephew

  Elective Affinities

  Michael Kohlhaas

  Sense and Sensibility

  Pride and Prejudice

  Mansfield Park

  Emma

  Rob Roy

  Frankenstein

  Ivanhoe

  Melmoth the Wanderer

  The Life and Opinions of the Tomcat Murr

  The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner

  The Life of a Good-for-Nothing

  Last of the Mohicans

  The Betrothed

  The Red and the Black

  The Hunchback of Notre Dame

  Eugene Onegin

  Eugénie Grandet

  Le Père Goriot

  The Nose

  Oliver Twist

  The Lion of Flanders

  The Charterhouse of Parma

  The Fall of the House of Usher

  Camera Obscura

  A Hero of Our Times

  Dead Souls

  Lost Illusions

  The Pit and the Pendulum

  The Three Musketeers

  Facundo

  The Devil’s Pool

  The Count of Monte-Cristo

  Jane Eyre

  Vanity Fair

  Wuthering Heights

  The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

  David Copperfield

  The Scarlet Letter

  Moby-Dick

  The House of the Seven Gables

  Uncle Tom’s Cabin

  Cranford

  Bleak House

  Walden

  Green Henry

  North and South

  Madame Bovary

  Indian Summer

  Adam Bede

  Oblomov

  The Woman in White

  The Mill on the Floss

  Max Havelaar

  Great Expectations

  Silas Marner

  Fathers and Sons

  Les Misérables

  The Water-Babies

  Notes from the Underground

  Uncle Silas

  Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland

  Journey to the Center of the Earth

  Crime and Punishment

  Last Chronicle of Barset

  Thérèse Raquin

  The Moonstone

  Little Women

  The Idiot

  Maldoror

  Phineas Finn

  Sentimental Education

  War and Peace

  King Lear of the Steppes

  Alice Through the Looking Glass

  Middlemarch

  Spring Torrents

  Erewhon

  The Devils

  In a Glass Darkly

  Around the World in Eighty Days

  The Enchanted Wanderer

  Far from the Madding Crowd

  Pepita Jimenéz

  The Crime of Father Amado

  Drunkard

  Anna Karenina

  Martín Fierro

  The Red Room

  Ben-Hur

  Nana

  The Portrait of a Lady

  The House by the Medlar Tree

  The Posthumous Memoirs of Brás Cubas

  Bouv
ard and Pécuchet

  Treasure Island

  A Woman’s Life

  The Death of Ivan Ilyich

  Against the Grain

  The Regent’s Wife

  Bel-Ami

  Marius the Epicurean

  The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

  Germinal

  King Solomon’s Mines

  The Quest

  The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

  The Manors of Ulloa

  The People of Hemsö

  Pierre and Jean

  Under the Yoke

  The Child of Pleasure

  Eline Vere

  Hunger

  By the Open Sea

  La Bête Humaine

  Thaïs

  The Kreutzer Sonata

  The Picture of Dorian Gray

  Down There

  Tess of the D’Urbervilles

  Gösta Berling’s Saga

  New Grub Street

  News from Nowhere

  The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

  Diary of a Nobody

  The Viceroys

  Jude the Obscure

  Effi Briest

  The Time Machine

  The Island of Dr. Moreau

  Quo Vadis

  Dracula

  What Maisie Knew

  Compassion

  Pharaoh

  Fruits of the Earth

  The War of the Worlds

  As a Man Grows Older

  Dom Casmurro

  The Awakening

  The Stechlin

  Eclipse of the Crescent Moon

  Some Experiences of an Irish R. M.

 

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