Top 10 Greatest Novels of All Time

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @Snailbarf
    @Snailbarf 6 лет назад +2271

    Let me take a wild guess. Books without movie clips were disqualified.

    • @DigiShack55
      @DigiShack55 5 лет назад +38

      LMAO

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 5 лет назад +6

      I am more into ones like "A Boy and His Dog" from a graphic novel by Harlan Ellison. My kind of comedy.
      I read a lot besides those "recommended" and required for English classes.
      I also read "The Thirty Years that Shook Physics" by Gamov. Of course that was not required or suggested.

    • @ulyssesjoyce7734
      @ulyssesjoyce7734 5 лет назад +3

      I agree. Movie clips could've been shown now and then, not most of the time..

    • @snoopy8481
      @snoopy8481 5 лет назад +1

      😁😁

    • @iseekq
      @iseekq 5 лет назад +4

      MIke MIhaljevich I was thinking the same about their judgement. Why wasn’t The Master and Margarita on the list. An absolute masterpiece and no sign of it. Pfffft!

  • @nicholasreid1836
    @nicholasreid1836 5 лет назад +1036

    This should really be called "Ten Books Senior American High School Kids Have Heard About [ and probably not actually read]"

    • @RadinV1
      @RadinV1 5 лет назад +15

      Exactly

    • @mandalorianscum1138
      @mandalorianscum1138 4 года назад +15

      Few have read Moby Dick, Anna Karinena or war and peace! Those books can kill you! 😂😂😂 i'm a survivor of all three, but it was a struggle!

    • @lisamichels1825
      @lisamichels1825 4 года назад +3

      Ha ha you are correct!

    • @nicholasreid1836
      @nicholasreid1836 4 года назад +20

      @@mandalorianscum1138 I have read two of these three masterpieces. Excellent books. One simply has to get used to reading works for grown-ups.

    • @mandalorianscum1138
      @mandalorianscum1138 4 года назад +1

      @@nicholasreid1836 i don't read annything else, i love to chalenge myself!

  • @jjjjjjjjjj11ify
    @jjjjjjjjjj11ify 8 лет назад +582

    Everyone is complaining that their favorite book isn't on the list but honestly making a top 10 books of all time list is simply imposible. It should really be top 10 thousand.

    • @paulrichardson5892
      @paulrichardson5892 8 лет назад +2

      +jjjjjjjjjj11ify i agree.

    • @DevoMaxicus
      @DevoMaxicus 8 лет назад +23

      Surely everyone's own top ten book of all time is a snapshot that won't last long, new books added, older ones remembered after the first list was drawn up, favorite themes and plots and characters shifting as our lives develop. Variety is the spice of life, and man and woman don't live by ten books alone.

    • @milkshakes7758
      @milkshakes7758 8 лет назад +1

      exactly

    • @edbarros3504
      @edbarros3504 8 лет назад +8

      I agree, but this list is horrible

    • @paulrichardson5892
      @paulrichardson5892 8 лет назад +8

      i agree too. everyone has a different view. I tend to rank the classic books in my top ten. They stand the test of time. Also societal values change fashions come and go. some books are deeper than others, Some are landmarks others are entertainment.My top two ,simply for quality of the prose are war and peace and wuthering heights. many will disagree but for me those rate. good luck with any top ten

  • @kgpar1960
    @kgpar1960 5 лет назад +488

    Any attempt to select the top ten novels of all time, without breaking literary works into different categories, is, in my opinion, far too ambitious a quest.

    • @edtheman28
      @edtheman28 5 лет назад +11

      Indubitably

    • @robertwill23
      @robertwill23 5 лет назад +2

      What categories are those exactly? You suggest calling War and Peace epic war novel and Catcher in the Rye to b categorized as Bildungsroman Coming of age type? That's too neurotic. It is for genre fiction. Not for literary fiction.

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 4 года назад

      No .... It's Stewpid!

    • @giahunggiang1797
      @giahunggiang1797 4 года назад +1

      A highschool knows "In search of the lost time"? HAHAHAHA xD

    • @miraqen7801
      @miraqen7801 4 года назад +1

      _robert frost_

  • @nayancat5321
    @nayancat5321 8 лет назад +202

    Because it's not the greatest novel of all time if it's not made into a movie

    • @spencer1531
      @spencer1531 8 лет назад +12

      Most classics where adapted to movies. It's not like they are discriminating.

    • @jizanthapus3099
      @jizanthapus3099 7 лет назад +20

      Nayan D'Souza the Catcher in the rye has never been made into a movie and never will because the author hated movies and refused letting anyone have the rights to it even after he dies.

    • @daynaholgate4839
      @daynaholgate4839 5 лет назад +2

      Spencer Not every book needs to be a movie 🙄

  • @Brian_Spellman
    @Brian_Spellman 8 лет назад +504

    Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment deserves a listing.

    • @saulgoodmanbrah
      @saulgoodmanbrah 8 лет назад +3

      Ikr

    • @vozamaraktv-art5595
      @vozamaraktv-art5595 8 лет назад +14

      So true! Such an unfair list, not even ann honourable mention of Crime and Punishment, but they included Moby Dick? Give me a break!

    • @zanerosenbaum3015
      @zanerosenbaum3015 6 лет назад +6

      Brother Karamotzov does but not crime and punishment, it offers much less

    • @flavio7180
      @flavio7180 5 лет назад

      Shine Joy Moby Dick is fantastic, don’t know why you’re mad but I agree other than that.

    • @noahi.1381
      @noahi.1381 5 лет назад +6

      Well, this video is American

  • @FoxEarendil
    @FoxEarendil 5 лет назад +345

    There’s no way to sum up the top ten greatest novels of all time. It’s just not possible. There are too many books out there, too many classics especially.

    • @carolfromhr9900
      @carolfromhr9900 5 лет назад +3

      Hell, it would be too hard a task for me to even pick ONE novel as my favorite.

    • @David-se5ph
      @David-se5ph 5 лет назад +4

      This should be a top 20 list

    • @wisco9er536
      @wisco9er536 4 года назад +1

      @@David-se5ph top 20, but with ties available

    • @davidbowman4259
      @davidbowman4259 4 года назад

      Agree.

    • @David-se5ph
      @David-se5ph 4 года назад

      Wisco9er yep .

  • @misterpro8738
    @misterpro8738 5 лет назад +128

    My personal list:
    10- The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck
    9- Penpal - Dathan Auerbach
    8- War and Peace - Leo Tolstoy
    7- The Outsiders - S. E. Hinton
    6- Going Bovine - Libba Bray
    5- The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
    4- To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee
    3- 1984 - George Orwell
    2- The Lord of the Rings - J.R.R. Tolkien
    1- The Catcher in the Rye - J.D. Salinger

    • @jackoconnor4303
      @jackoconnor4303 5 лет назад +2

      Nice list

    • @misterpro8738
      @misterpro8738 5 лет назад

      Jack O'Connor Thanks

    • @waldoabrysh3913
      @waldoabrysh3913 2 года назад +1

      The outsiders should be number one

    • @zebulynnhanson791
      @zebulynnhanson791 2 года назад

      💯

    • @conradjones3507
      @conradjones3507 2 года назад +4

      10. 1984
      9. The Catcher and the Rye
      8. Of Mice and Men
      7. Grapes of Wrath
      6. Death In the Afternoon
      5. For whom the Bell Tolls
      4. Fried Green Tomatoes At the Whistle Stop Cafe
      3. To Kill a Mockingbird
      2. The Book Thief
      1. East Of Eden
      This is my personal favorites not the best

  • @scaleofc1966
    @scaleofc1966 7 лет назад +965

    What did the librarian say to the student?
    Read more

  • @jack_amie
    @jack_amie 8 лет назад +448

    The Brothers Karamazov? Not even an honorable mention?

    • @SP990
      @SP990 7 лет назад +2

      Why do they even try😶

    • @ScottADeJong
      @ScottADeJong 7 лет назад +16

      I was thinking the same thing. I don't know how someone could possibly exclude that from a list of the best/most important novels of all time. I can only imagine they haven't read it.

    • @SuperAngelofglory
      @SuperAngelofglory 7 лет назад +8

      or "Les Miserables"

    • @kathrynhaught630
      @kathrynhaught630 6 лет назад

      I thought that too.

    • @sonyatnp5778
      @sonyatnp5778 6 лет назад +13

      as a Russian, I am really impressed that Dostoevsky is so popular. That is great)

  • @noxwheaties
    @noxwheaties 8 лет назад +164

    Another list without any Dostoyevsky, like really?

    • @dakotanack6453
      @dakotanack6453 8 лет назад +9

      I was hoping Crime and Punishment would make the list.

    • @FilmsAtDusk
      @FilmsAtDusk 8 лет назад

      As was I

    • @alekseinilychkirillov8230
      @alekseinilychkirillov8230 8 лет назад +13

      Oh my... what a shitty list. Allways the same overrated novels like Gatsby, Lolita, Moby Dick, but no "Brothers Karamazov" or "Demons". It´s regrettable.

    • @christina113704
      @christina113704 8 лет назад

      christiandoritos several authors are like that, but it's generally the older ones that that got paid by the chapter.

    • @elichaitman3294
      @elichaitman3294 3 года назад

      @@alekseinilychkirillov8230 Gatsby isn't overrated

  • @TonyfromBham
    @TonyfromBham 6 лет назад +56

    People too often use “greatest” and “my favorite” interchangeably. These two categories are definitely not synonyms.

  • @ruthjohnson4380
    @ruthjohnson4380 8 лет назад +265

    Top ten novels is like saying " Who is your favorite child?" But I am disappointed that Victor Hugo isn't on the list. Either "Les Miserables" or "The Hunchback of Notre Dame". Dostoyevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov" is a great read. No Bronte on the list, either?

    • @Byakkun06
      @Byakkun06 8 лет назад +13

      Oh God !!! All those books are from my all time favourite, I didn't think people like you still exist, you saved me, thanks :D

    • @hannahmoran2149
      @hannahmoran2149 8 лет назад +5

      "Les Miserables" is absolutely in my top 10, maybe even top 5 books of all time. However, I've never actually read "The Brothers Karamozov".

    • @jawharali
      @jawharali 8 лет назад +12

      The Brother Karmazove is the best piece of litrature in human history.

    • @edbarros3504
      @edbarros3504 8 лет назад +8

      I adore Lolita and To Kill Mockinbird, but I don't think they deserve to be on the list.

    • @SublimeSati
      @SublimeSati 8 лет назад +1

      The epitome of a Russian Novel. Gotta be in any top 10 list.

  • @user-vt1ix6tn8f
    @user-vt1ix6tn8f 7 лет назад +302

    George Orwell’s “1984” novel should be in the top ten.

    • @jonahpoulard7674
      @jonahpoulard7674 4 года назад +30

      Hate to say it, but quite frankly it's not top 10

    • @jamesalexander5623
      @jamesalexander5623 4 года назад +5

      It should be #2!

    • @martinmalloy8119
      @martinmalloy8119 4 года назад +5

      @@jamesalexander5623 it should be # 1 ;)

    • @TheGyroBarqusShow
      @TheGyroBarqusShow 4 года назад +5

      This one of the novels that should be in every novels/Sci-Fi/Dystopia books top.

    • @lateshpatil5307
      @lateshpatil5307 4 года назад +2

      @@TheGyroBarqusShow well it's my fav distopian entry LoL

  • @anthonykammas3276
    @anthonykammas3276 6 лет назад +70

    No Dostoevsky, Faulkner, Joyce??? I would have liked to see The Stranger too... but come on, man, really??? Even Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian. Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow? Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain???

    • @lorraineforte9175
      @lorraineforte9175 5 лет назад +1

      All great,and don't forget Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand was amazing, she changed the way I now see the world.

  • @jinhunterslay1638
    @jinhunterslay1638 5 лет назад +170

    The Picture of Dorian Gray...

    • @huntrrams
      @huntrrams 5 лет назад +3

      That book was great

  • @MetaphorInVain
    @MetaphorInVain 10 лет назад +622

    You can't simply do a list like this and not mention Animal Farm...

    • @joewilson2929
      @joewilson2929 10 лет назад +55

      MetaphorInVain I liked 1984 more but ya. Wheres the Orwell?

    • @blutackguy
      @blutackguy 10 лет назад +6

      YEAH! WHERE'S ANIMAL FARM???!!!

    • @soby26
      @soby26 10 лет назад +18

      I do agree that Animal Farm is great, but it is more of a novella than a novel.

    • @NightOwlReader2790
      @NightOwlReader2790 10 лет назад +1

      Implantedclub If that was intend as an insult, I don't think anyone will get offended by that. Animal Farm is a really good book.

    • @plazasta
      @plazasta 10 лет назад +3

      well they mentioned a similar book by the same author (1984)

  • @odinson99m
    @odinson99m 7 лет назад +327

    Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and Bram Stoker's Dracula deserve Honorable Mentions. They are every bit as iconic and culturally important as any book on this list.

    • @Chris-w8r7y
      @Chris-w8r7y 6 лет назад +5

      Frankenstein sucked bro, what a drag to get through

    • @johnreremoana9564
      @johnreremoana9564 6 лет назад +14

      H.G.Wells: 'The War Of The Worlds' and 'The Time Machine', and most probably 'The Invisible Man'.

    • @kennybuxton3974
      @kennybuxton3974 6 лет назад +10

      Honestly Frankenstein is a masterpiece but its extremely well.known so people will assume you're not well read, whereas something like lord of the flies, which in my opinion is a classic is still well known and commonly assigned in schools. So no I don't think Frankenstein should be on the last but perhaps something like far from the madding crowd or jude the obscure (both by British novelist and poet, Thomas hardy, who is my favourite writer)

    • @divisdecos5271
      @divisdecos5271 6 лет назад +5

      odinson99m Dracula doesnt deserve a spot but Frankenstein sure does. We read that in English 4 during my senior year in high school

    • @howie9751
      @howie9751 4 года назад +3

      @@divisdecos5271 I disagree. Dracula was a great novel and better than Frankenstein.

  • @itzSHISS
    @itzSHISS 6 лет назад +51

    Top ten books with movies I can use to keep audience attention

  • @slime_entertainment_inc.
    @slime_entertainment_inc. 6 лет назад +297

    The Sound and the Fury
    Ulysses
    Crime and Punishment
    Brothers Karamazov
    The Trial

    • @awhyte55
      @awhyte55 5 лет назад +10

      Ulysses is suspiciously absent. Crime and Punishment should also be in the Top Ten.

    • @lawrencesumblin3325
      @lawrencesumblin3325 5 лет назад +2

      Great list.

    • @jamesaritchie1
      @jamesaritchie1 5 лет назад +1

      Otherwise known as "five books you've never read".

    • @BartasRapowanie
      @BartasRapowanie 5 лет назад +5

      Not a one book by hemingway
      No catch 22
      1984 is a fucking honorable mention
      Also fucking draculla maybe?

    • @Octavio12341000
      @Octavio12341000 5 лет назад

      Many people have told me that Ulysses is very difficult to read. Is that true?

  • @lucascarvalho8215
    @lucascarvalho8215 6 лет назад +91

    Fyodor dostoevsky, Balzac, Gogol?

    • @zofiar4753
      @zofiar4753 4 года назад +6

      Don't expect WatchMojo to actually know something about literature.

    • @jedscratchard1204
      @jedscratchard1204 4 года назад +7

      facts how do you have a top 10 list and not include dostoyevsky

  • @iNeologism
    @iNeologism 10 лет назад +132

    I feel like watchmojo produce videos like this to provoke people to click on the video and get views. How can you possibly rank something like this? At LEAST, you can break it down by the decade like you did with the movie list. This is ridiculous.

    • @WatchMojo
      @WatchMojo  10 лет назад +17

      We ranked dictators. You find THIS ridiculous? ;)
      Signed
      Mr X

    • @sleepful1917
      @sleepful1917 10 лет назад +1

      WatchMojo.com
      not to mention sandwhiches

    • @interista10100
      @interista10100 10 лет назад +4

      WatchMojo.com You're right. Basically everything you guys do is idiotic. This is just an example of that.

    • @jqckthewolf1513
      @jqckthewolf1513 10 лет назад

      LOTR not on this bullshit to the highest degree hang them or at least the hobbit and you signing everything is annoying

    • @NARKISDUDE
      @NARKISDUDE 10 лет назад

      WatchMojo.com hey he just gave you another series.

  • @greghufton6561
    @greghufton6561 8 лет назад +278

    The way she pronounced Karenina made me cringe. Also, the lack of Fyodor Dostoevsky on this last made me cringe

    • @nottomrowntree5013
      @nottomrowntree5013 8 лет назад +6

      I am fairly certain that's the correct pronunciation

    • @MalharetasLair
      @MalharetasLair 8 лет назад +6

      +nottomrowntree No it's not. The way she pronounces it sounds weird because one part of the name's all jumbled and then long vowels seem to pop up at random places. And I'm a native russian speaker, by the way. I totally get where T-o-lstoy is coming from in terms of a stress, though, because it's much easier for english-speakers to say it that way than it is to articulate Tolst-o-y as his actual last name was (not to mention that the name's "Lev" not "Leo" but let's leave that for translators' consciense to bear;) )
      On a side note, I'm fairly sure that her french pronunciation isn't that accurate either... Oh, those vowels!..
      I'm not the one to judge, certainly, but why go out of your way trying to sound like you know some language or other when you clearly don't? It only leads people to think you're all bragging, condescending, and just generally a know-it-all... which is a confusing choice for the image to say the least.
      P.S. I sincerely apologise to those who got offended by either the point I made or grammar/spelling/odd sentence structure. As you could've guessed by now (insert an eye-roll), english is not my first language and it's not even the second one so bear with me. Although I am a not-so-soon-to-be translator so that's something.

    • @MalharetasLair
      @MalharetasLair 8 лет назад +1

      +Fantastic Bookworm See? That's ^ what they call "holier-than-thou" attitude. ;D

    • @edbarros3504
      @edbarros3504 8 лет назад +12

      It is the worst top 10 of all time.

    • @Shinjin666
      @Shinjin666 7 лет назад +4

      Greg Hufton ikr? Where the fuck Dostoevsky?!

  • @saptorshighosh1049
    @saptorshighosh1049 5 лет назад +75

    It was unfair not including any of Dostoyevsky's works 🤷

    • @weirdguy4948
      @weirdguy4948 4 года назад

      Bet you haven’t even read either of them

    • @saptorshighosh1049
      @saptorshighosh1049 4 года назад +11

      @@weirdguy4948 i didn't even know I had 25 likes on this one till you made your baseless assumption, thanks man.

    • @josephkoepke1251
      @josephkoepke1251 3 года назад +4

      @@saptorshighosh1049 and to put Anna Karenina #1? That book is overrated as hell. Its a culture piece drowned in metaphor. You can identify with Dostoyevsky's Raskolnikov, Alyosha, and the Underground man from Notes from Underground. Those characters were interesting and made you think. I was 200 pages into Anna Karenina and was like "CAN THIS BITCH DIE ALREADY?!" I know I'm smacking a historical "classic" in the face, but Tolstoy couldn't hold a candle to Dostoyevsky.

    • @bugle1100
      @bugle1100 8 месяцев назад

      Big Dostoevsky fan, but he actually acknowledged Anna Karenina was a great novel. But I don’t see how Crime and Punishment or Brothers Karamazov don’t make the list.

  • @GoblinsAreReal
    @GoblinsAreReal 7 лет назад +104

    Tale of Two Cities? Of Mice and Men?

    • @adrianbooklecter7545
      @adrianbooklecter7545 5 лет назад +1

      ikr where is omam and animal farm

    • @francisbennett3054
      @francisbennett3054 5 лет назад +4

      Of Mice and Men is a novella not a novel

    • @adrianbooklecter7545
      @adrianbooklecter7545 5 лет назад

      @@francisbennett3054 no it's not

    • @francisbennett3054
      @francisbennett3054 5 лет назад +4

      @@adrianbooklecter7545 If you would take the 5 seconds needed to Google it, you would see that of Mice and Men is in fact a novella.

    • @adrianbooklecter7545
      @adrianbooklecter7545 5 лет назад +1

      @@francisbennett3054 the first edition wrote below the title: A novel
      So it was meant to be one, it doesn't matter it's length, it's like Animal Farm

  • @allanprovost109
    @allanprovost109 8 лет назад +439

    Whoever made up this list is not as well-read as they think they are.

    • @SouthPark333Gaming
      @SouthPark333Gaming 8 лет назад +27

      agreed, wheres all the doctor who novels?

    • @ianw.5047
      @ianw.5047 8 лет назад +17

      SouthPark333Gaming fuck. Im laughing because i dont know if your serious. But i have seen the doctor who collection at barns and nobles

    • @webwalker1942
      @webwalker1942 7 лет назад

      Love Doctor Who but is a TV show not a Book.

    • @letters_from_paradise
      @letters_from_paradise 7 лет назад +2

      bernie b There are books about it, so you obviously don't love it that much.

    • @adamjames6953
      @adamjames6953 7 лет назад +7

      >"Greatest *Novels*"
      >"Where's Macbeth? Where is the epic of Gilgamesh?"
      C'mon dude think about what you're typing.

  • @jedscratchard1204
    @jedscratchard1204 7 лет назад +294

    You can't have a top 10 novels of all time list and not even mention Dostoyevsky. Crime and Punishment is definitely top 10, and The Brothers Karamazov is worthy of greatest book ever written. All these novels on this are super overrated: The Great Gatsby, The Catcher in the Rye, To Kill a Mockingbird. Come on now. These books don't hang a lantern on Dostoyevsky.

    • @michaelngolding478
      @michaelngolding478 6 лет назад +12

      Absolutely. Also, what about Faulkner and Thomas Mann?

    • @Fantumh
      @Fantumh 5 лет назад +19

      I love the writing style of The Great Gatsby, but it's not a particularly great book. The Catcher in the Rye is way overrated, and is quite juvenile. To Kill a Mockingbird is quite good, but not top 10 ever good.

    • @hannejeppesen2887
      @hannejeppesen2887 5 лет назад +8

      The Catcher in the Rye might be overrated, but I believe it was the first of the kind. Portraying teen age anxiety and angst, I read it when I was about 16-17 as a teen ager in Denmark in the early sixties, and I loved it. I believe it is a very important book, although to my disappointment my daughter who was born in 1980 did not like it at all.

    • @Fantumh
      @Fantumh 5 лет назад +3

      @@hannejeppesen2887 Oh, I read Catcher when I was younger and loved it, no doubt about it. I tried to reread it later on and just found the book way too juvenile and frankly a little obnoxious. It is a very important book and quite a good book, but it's still way overrated. It's too bad Salinger never was able to follow it up with more mature works, but then maybe he didn't have it in him. (Or else he just never showed the world.)

    • @hannejeppesen2887
      @hannejeppesen2887 5 лет назад +3

      @@Fantumh I tried to read some of Salinger's other work, but the writing could not hold my attention. I grew up in Denmark and was a teenager in the early sixties, I was probably about 16-17 years old when I read Catcher in the Rye, in Danish. When I came to the US as an au pair 22 years old, I had Catcher in the Rye with me. I had only had about 2 years or less of English in school, but living in the US and watching TV and mixing with young people my age (dating) I learned English fairly fast, also took night classes, it wasn't long before I could read Catcher in the Rye in English, it helped I had my Danish version. By the way about the same time Denmark had 2 famous authors who also published books about coming of age, the confusing, sex etc. Both was a little more edgy than Salinger's and one was quite dark, but still a great book.

  • @henrydavis8910
    @henrydavis8910 4 года назад +26

    Jane Eyre is my favorite classic novel. Not only is it a compelling story, but it is couched in such exquisite prose as to make the vehicle as enjoyable as the journey. Strangely and unfortunately, Bronte's other works were nowhere near as good as this one.

  • @TheZavinskiStories
    @TheZavinskiStories 10 лет назад +143

    I know this list must have been hard to make, but Charles Dickens is seriously only an honorable mention?! The man practically gave birth to the modern novel! A Tale of Two Cities is my favorite novel of all time personally. And no Steinbeck either? Of Mice and Men and The Grapes of Wrath are masterpieces! And, also, Crime and Punishment deserves a high spot on this list. Talk about a novel with an incredibly thought-provoking social conscience and profundity. And lastly, I was forced to read Madame Bovary in tenth grade, and after reading a bunch of classic literature, I can firmly say that that sad excuse for a book is by far the worst thing I've ever read. I've never hated a character more than I have Bovary herself. She's a disgrace to female characters in literature throughout all time. That book's story isn't even that good. The cyanide-induced suicide at the end was my favorite part for a reason.

    • @seventeencents
      @seventeencents 10 лет назад +4

      I totally agree. A Tale of Two Cities is too good to not make a list like this, I mean the iconic opening lines were literally paraphrased to describe what a different book on this list touched on! I also agree that no Steinbeck or Crime and Punishment is sort of surprising. Perhaps instead of two Tolstoy's they could've made room for one of these?

    • @TheZavinskiStories
      @TheZavinskiStories 10 лет назад +1

      Sean O'Sullivan I agree! They should have had the one novel per author role. While I do love Great Expectations, I just find AToTC a lot more fun and impactful to read.

    • @seventeencents
      @seventeencents 10 лет назад +1

      EZ64 Yeah it would be a little difficult to narrow down a Dickens to just the one, but my personal favorite was always AToTC and I feel like the list is incomplete without at least one. Then again the same argument could be made for likely Orwell and Steinbeck and plenty of others so I don't exactly envy whoever had to make the final call on this list.

    • @TheZavinskiStories
      @TheZavinskiStories 10 лет назад

      Sean O'Sullivan Yeah, had to be one of their harder ones to compile.

    • @Templedelagloire
      @Templedelagloire 10 лет назад +5

      I agree but I think Dickens' real masterpiece is bleak house

  • @frankieslittlemonster132
    @frankieslittlemonster132 8 лет назад +146

    Alice in Wonderland? 1984? Crime and Punishment?

    • @wunderkind7762
      @wunderkind7762 8 лет назад +8

      FrankiesLittleMonster Now that I have heard 1984 does not make the list makes me die a little inside.....

    • @nikolavideomaker
      @nikolavideomaker 7 лет назад +6

      It is on the list... 1984

    • @craftpaint1644
      @craftpaint1644 6 лет назад +3

      Alice and Wonderland is just a weird batch of ridiculous.

    • @---ck2vv
      @---ck2vv 6 лет назад +1

      Greg Espinoza That is YOUR opinion.

  • @LuckyGuu
    @LuckyGuu 8 лет назад +245

    1984, George Orwell

  • @michaelbillypec
    @michaelbillypec 6 лет назад +44

    100 Years of Solitude, most beautiful book I have ever read; Catcher in the Rye is good, but Seymour is better; Gravity's Rainbow is an astonishing work and simply must be read by anyone who cares about literature...

    • @Pythagoras1963
      @Pythagoras1963 Год назад

      G R is a very difficult read

    • @michaelbillypec
      @michaelbillypec Год назад +1

      @@Pythagoras1963 it’s well worth the effort

    • @AfterGODsheart
      @AfterGODsheart 8 месяцев назад +1

      100 years of solitude ✍🏾

    • @michaelbillypec
      @michaelbillypec 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@AfterGODsheart Cloudstreet by Tim Winton

  • @alicetucker8863
    @alicetucker8863 10 лет назад +18

    I've read The Catcher In The Rye and I still don't understand why it's such a classic

    • @theoracle7148
      @theoracle7148 3 года назад +4

      Because it captures everything.

    • @morganclare4704
      @morganclare4704 2 года назад

      COULDN'T AGREE MORE! CHEERS

    • @jmsl910
      @jmsl910 2 года назад

      i think it requires a certain mindset. it's very dark. it's okay if it's not your cup of tea. i'd encourage you to pick it up again in a few years... i hope you will

    • @ultimatelv27
      @ultimatelv27 Год назад

      I don't know why it's consider a classic but I keep reading it multiple times. lol

  • @user-ep4jo1ev3j
    @user-ep4jo1ev3j 8 лет назад +66

    Lolita. Lolita. But wait Lolita wasn't a young tempress... she was the victim of HH

    • @marvelgirl68
      @marvelgirl68 8 лет назад

      What's HH?

    • @gabrielle9893
      @gabrielle9893 7 лет назад +3

      Victoria Godwin yeah. I'm so fucking pissed about their description. They obviously only saw the 1962 adaptation of the novel.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 7 лет назад +1

      No, edenstore, you've confused the narcissistic, self-justifying narrative of the pedophile with the point of the book. The actual point of the book is that Humbert Humbert is a delusional idiot who is chasing after his vanished youth and his childhood girlfriend, imposing that psychosexual dynamic onto his relationship with Dolores, and ruining her life in the process. It's just too evident that Humbert Humbert and Dolores have nothing in common and that he's only convinced himself that she is the love of his life merely because she's there at the right age and thus she becomes a stand-in for Annabel. It's a satire on a superficial American culture that is stuck in a perpetual adolescence.
      This is like reading Michel Houellebecq's _Submission_ and coming away with the notion that the message of the novel is that Sharia law is totally awesome merely because the main character finds himself settling in quite happily to the new arrangement, out of an excess of pathetic, 21st century European anomie which makes any ethical system seem better than none. Both are acidly funny satires if you don't fall into the trap of seeing things through the narrator's eyes.

    • @terilefevers6189
      @terilefevers6189 7 лет назад

      Victoria Godwin exactly

  • @godriczimmerman
    @godriczimmerman 9 лет назад +385

    Catcher in the Rye and The Great Gatsby ahead of Don Quixote? No Dickens? Madame Bovary no.2? This is the worst list i've seen yet.

    • @ItinerantIntrovert
      @ItinerantIntrovert 9 лет назад +7

      +godriczimmerman Opinion.

    • @godriczimmerman
      @godriczimmerman 9 лет назад +16

      Kyle Witzen Yes, my opinion. Thank you for stating the obvious. It's simply an opinion, but one that i can argue pretty strongly for, if you wish to. But then again, it's not really just my opinion, but one that, i'm sure, is shared by many others. Have you read Dickens greatest novels? Have you read Don Quixote? and you still think that Catcher in the Rye is better art? One of the top 10 literary achievements in history?

    • @ItinerantIntrovert
      @ItinerantIntrovert 9 лет назад

      I have written my own list in the comment section, it is in the public domain, fit for your dismissal.

    • @helenzoramthangi2815
      @helenzoramthangi2815 9 лет назад

      look at the inspiration scale its not that bad though l didi not agree to all the list too

    • @MisterCharlton
      @MisterCharlton 8 лет назад +5

      +godriczimmerman CitR is number one for me. I hold it close to my heart.

  • @יאירכץ-פ5ס
    @יאירכץ-פ5ס 5 лет назад +40

    This list is very American-inclined , since there is no way novels like Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment , Kafka's The Trial & Camus's The Plague , shouldn't be included in any top ten list.

    • @ChocolatMudBaby
      @ChocolatMudBaby 5 лет назад +2

      Did you watch the video? I guess Tolstoy was American lol

    • @trailmixgang
      @trailmixgang 3 года назад +2

      You like the Brothers Karamazov too?

    • @edwardelric2905
      @edwardelric2905 3 года назад +1

      Just because you don’t like the selection on the list, doesn’t mean the list was American-inclined. There was Tolstoy who is Russian, Proust who is French, and Cervantes who is Spanish.

    • @168Laura
      @168Laura 2 года назад +1

      I would recommend “Dream of the Red Chamber” by Chinese author Cao Xueqin in mid-18th century to be the top one.

  • @ReactarooSkidoo
    @ReactarooSkidoo 5 лет назад +11

    How The Brothers Karamazov wasn't mentioned here is beyond me.

  • @dark1951
    @dark1951 9 лет назад +46

    No Dosteyevski ? YOU GOT TO BE KIDDING ME !!!!!

    • @robertd2558
      @robertd2558 7 лет назад

      I know, can you believe it!? How can a list of the top 10 greatest novels NOT include the famous (in your mind) Russian writer "Dosteyevski"? It's a trevesti.

    • @ferchavez7292
      @ferchavez7292 7 лет назад

      i mean, literally taste might be subjective, but are you saying Dosteyevski isn't famous? C'mon!

  • @Mmora6
    @Mmora6 8 лет назад +172

    100 years of solitude?

  • @jpuh4783
    @jpuh4783 6 лет назад +64

    I thought “The Count of Monte Cristo” would be here.

    • @BardofHorror36
      @BardofHorror36 4 года назад +2

      My favourite!! The movie didn't do it justice. Wish they do a reboot.

    • @raspberrycrowns9494
      @raspberrycrowns9494 4 года назад +2

      Not that famous, I mean I love the book but compared to others in this list it's sort of not that popular ( except for no. 8 I have never heard of that book don't even remember the name )

    • @yelyharmony2047
      @yelyharmony2047 4 года назад +6

      @@raspberrycrowns9494 How on Earth "The count of Monte Cristo isn't famous?

    • @raspberrycrowns9494
      @raspberrycrowns9494 4 года назад +1

      @@yelyharmony2047 it's one of my favorites but it doesn't get enough recognition like say, Pride and Prejudice

    • @weirdguy4948
      @weirdguy4948 4 года назад +1

      @@raspberrycrowns9494 pride and prejudice sucks

  • @TS50ER
    @TS50ER 9 лет назад +28

    1: The Brothers Karamazov
    2: The Count of Monte Cristo
    3: Le Miserables
    4: Bleak House
    5: Under The Volcano
    6: Brideshead Revisited
    7: Father Goriot
    8: The Tale of Peter Rabbit
    9: Noddy Goes to Toyland
    10: Zuleika Dobson
    11: Coming Up For Air
    12: The Master and Margarita
    13: The Red and The Black
    14: Catch 22
    Honorable Mentions: Stranger in a Strange Land, Dead Souls, Heart of a Dog, The Bridge of San Luis Ray, Villette, and many many more...

    • @sheilabloom6735
      @sheilabloom6735 9 лет назад +1

      Bleak House, of course. In my opinion', Dickens' greatest with its scathing indictment of the law. Jarndyce v. Jarndyce.

    • @iminthemomentru3003
      @iminthemomentru3003 8 лет назад +4

      Catcher in the rye isn't in your top 14? Just because of the concepts.A Judge cop etc or a love are just a bunch of phonies. A false front or a delusion of what you think you know? No one will ever know anyone.It's Fight club,Donnie Darko,Powder,A clockwork orange,lolita and Nietzsche IQ all rolled into one
      Book

    • @robertd2558
      @robertd2558 7 лет назад

      Actually, you already have four Honourable Mentions in your top "ten" list. So I suppose you mean "MORE Honourable Mentions"?

    • @kimmy4156
      @kimmy4156 6 лет назад

      Omg love Count of Monte Cristo❤️❤️❤️

    • @ariqsetyawan4993
      @ariqsetyawan4993 2 года назад +1

      gud

  • @MrKJ444
    @MrKJ444 10 лет назад +30

    The count of monte Cristo? Les Misarables? All quiet on the western front? A tale of two cities? The lord of the rings as an Honorable mention? What the hell are you guys smoking

    • @lordmaximus5
      @lordmaximus5 10 лет назад +3

      Ikr

    • @StazoLT
      @StazoLT 10 лет назад

      MrKJ444 All quiet on the western front FTW! And isn't LOTR too complex to be a novel? Idk tho

    • @trey1645
      @trey1645 10 лет назад

      I'm gonna have to agree with Mr. Poe on this one.

    • @lordmaximus5
      @lordmaximus5 10 лет назад +2

      legofreak446 poe's poems pwn posers.

    • @mitchlmitten5874
      @mitchlmitten5874 10 лет назад +1

      I just finished reading Tale of Two Cities. That book was *SO* hard, but *SO* good!

  • @mihohirono2697
    @mihohirono2697 5 лет назад +62

    Dostoevsky, Kafka, and Mann should be listed. Two Tolstoy's are too many.

    • @Dida16
      @Dida16 5 лет назад +3

      I agree but Tolstoy deserves to be on the list. These 3 writers you mentioned are in my top 5 too! Anyways, I 've seen hundreds of lists, never agreed fully. It's normal. I think this list is kinda the books we should all read before turn 18. Kafka and Mann are mostly understandable to advanced learners and Dostoevsky is a writer that people either love or hate. Imo as said he is a phenomenon.

    • @bbblueblun
      @bbblueblun 5 лет назад

      Tolstoy deserves spots but I personally wish they could’ve included other books, not just obvious classics even non readers will know. yk?

    • @jonahpoulard7674
      @jonahpoulard7674 4 года назад

      I would have 2 Tolstoy's and 2 dostoeyevskys

  • @albertnash888
    @albertnash888 2 года назад +4

    One of the best things about these beloved novels as that even though the acclaimed authors who wrote them are long gone, but the stories are immortal and continue to delight and inspire readers to this very day.

  • @tseamus8288
    @tseamus8288 8 лет назад +51

    Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Count of Monte Cristo by Alxandre Dumas

    • @10killboy
      @10killboy 8 лет назад +6

      Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë, The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, 1984 by George Orwell, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Moby Dick by Herman Melville, The Iliad by Homer, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll, Around the World in 80 Days by Jules Verne, Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, Candide by Voltaire, The Sorrows of Young Werther by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Ode to Joy by Friedrich Schiller, All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque, The Call of Cthulhu by H.P Lovecraft

    • @mikefuller6959
      @mikefuller6959 8 лет назад +4

      "Man is human, and the small amount of intelligence one may possess counts as little or nothing against the rage of passion and the limits of human nature pressing upon him!"
      Spoken by Werther
      From 'The Sorrows of Young Werther' ( 1774, revised 1787 )
      Johann Wolfgang von Goethe ( 1749 - 1832 )

    • @theRaptor0726
      @theRaptor0726 6 лет назад

      Dont worry, they got covered with pride and prejudice on Mrs mojo.

    • @theRaptor0726
      @theRaptor0726 6 лет назад

      And two pride and prejudice is too courtly love and crap. While les miserables is so dam long, and wonders on to characters that I dont care about, and backstories about characters such as Myriel, Fantine, and other characters that are interesting, but knowing their backstory doesn't matter. Count of Monte Cristo is okay, but the three musketeers is Alexandres best work

    • @bodinian
      @bodinian 6 лет назад

      I found pride and prejudice to be the most boring book I ever read. Sensibilities changed since her days.

  • @chuckaudio3191
    @chuckaudio3191 6 лет назад +115

    What about "Lord of the Flies" or "Fahrenheit 451"?

    • @rancor4513
      @rancor4513 4 года назад +1

      That's not really a novel

    • @chuckaudio3191
      @chuckaudio3191 4 года назад

      @@rancor4513 Oxford dictionary definition of novel: "a fictitious prose narrative of book length, typically representing character and action with some degree of realism." Which one does not qualify?

    • @williamfinch1548
      @williamfinch1548 4 года назад +4

      Fahrenheit 451 is massively overrated

    • @chuckaudio3191
      @chuckaudio3191 4 года назад

      @@williamfinch1548 What was your least favorite part?

    • @doncorleone7482
      @doncorleone7482 4 года назад +2

      I enjoyed reading Fahrenhiet 451 , great book
      And my some must read would be
      Brothers Karamazov
      Crime and punishment
      Ramayana
      1984
      Ulysses

  • @mf12060825
    @mf12060825 8 лет назад +23

    what about the Bronte's or Austen or Dickens or Sir Arthur Conan Doyle?!? how was this list complied?

  • @ThatReadingGuy28
    @ThatReadingGuy28 5 лет назад +34

    Fahrenheit 451, Crime and Punishment, The Grapes of Wrath, Brave New World all need a mention

  • @ChristalJ
    @ChristalJ 10 лет назад +273

    What about Twilight and 50 Shades of Grey?

  • @r0kus
    @r0kus 7 лет назад +18

    For Dickens, I would have chosen _A Tale of Two Cities_ instead of _Great Expectations._ And I would have elevated the choice to one of the top 10, instead of just honorable mention.

  • @raphaelbruckner1599
    @raphaelbruckner1599 9 лет назад +5

    The list should be named: Top 10 Most Influential Novels of Western Culture.
    (even then, it is not really accurate)
    Anyway it should include:
    1. Shadow Over Innsmouth/ anything from H.P Lovecraft (created the horror-genre)
    2. The Lord of the Rings - Tolkien (created the high-fantasy-genre)
    3. Ulysses - James Joyce (extreme variety of narrative)
    4. Pride and Prejudice/ anything from Jane Austen (feministic literature)
    5. Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte (created the speculative fiction)
    6. Robinson Crusoe - Daniel Defoe (marked generations)
    7. Unlce Tom's Cabin - Harriet Stowe (opened discussion about slavery)
    8. Dracula - Bram Stoker (first big novel where media are important)
    9. Germinal - Emile Zola (opened discussion about exploitation)
    10. The Stranger - Albert Camus (opened discussion about immigration)

    • @168Laura
      @168Laura 2 года назад

      Totally agreed. I would recommend “Dream of the Red Chamber” by Chinese author Cao Xueqin in mid-18th century to be the top one.

  • @balor325
    @balor325 5 лет назад +8

    I can't believe none of the books listed have pictures in them

  • @kutluhanbayraktar2614
    @kutluhanbayraktar2614 9 лет назад +128

    Crime and Punishment

  • @williamcalvert6162
    @williamcalvert6162 8 лет назад +37

    Would it be considered too artsy-fartsy to mention Ulysses by James Joyce?

    • @sab85ful
      @sab85ful 8 лет назад +1

      That's why I don't think it made a top ten list. Same with most of the novels I enjoy lol.

    • @Nullifidian
      @Nullifidian 7 лет назад

      +Alexander Riley Perhaps, but _The Catcher in the Rye_ is also polarizing for those who have read it and that didn't stop it from getting mentioned. Holden Caulfield is literary Marmite. (Personally, I hated him and the book when I had to read it in high school. And if it doesn't click with you in high school, then it never will.)

    • @giraffesinspandex
      @giraffesinspandex 6 лет назад

      ulysses belong here

    • @johnwatters3431
      @johnwatters3431 6 лет назад

      Yes.

    • @giraffesinspandex
      @giraffesinspandex 6 лет назад

      it's not artsy fartsy - ulysses is talked about more than it's read. it's penetrable - finnigans wake is unreadable. quite literally. i believe the two have been confused with each other. ...ulysses is not artsy fartsy & if you can not read it then it's on you. ...ulysses belongs.

  • @samaelrising666
    @samaelrising666 6 лет назад +99

    The Brothers Karamatzov? Hello?!!!

    • @agall1013
      @agall1013 5 лет назад

      what translation do you recommend??

    • @bbblueblun
      @bbblueblun 5 лет назад +3

      beanie angela Pevear and Volokhonsky are often preferred for Russian translations. I have the Constance one tho.

    • @jonahpoulard7674
      @jonahpoulard7674 4 года назад

      @@agall1013 david mcduff for penguin classics was excellent

    • @jedscratchard1204
      @jedscratchard1204 4 года назад +1

      greatest novel of all time. Not an exaggeration

  • @giovannyespinoza7162
    @giovannyespinoza7162 5 лет назад +21

    Gone With the Wind
    Rebecca
    Drácula
    Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus

    • @lorraineforte9175
      @lorraineforte9175 5 лет назад +1

      Gone With The Wind,I consider a soap opera read,certainly not literature.

    • @gailjarvis2592
      @gailjarvis2592 4 года назад

      Gone With the Wind should have been included in place of To Kill a Mockingbird which was a politically-correct choice.

  • @amc82770
    @amc82770 7 лет назад +19

    I thought all those books are good, but my favorite is "The Sun Also Rises"

  • @matthewlum9737
    @matthewlum9737 9 лет назад +21

    nineteen eighty four should have been number 1, the effect it has is just unbelievable

  • @VictorWilliams12
    @VictorWilliams12 10 лет назад +95

    You just called the bible a work of fiction

    • @VictorWilliams12
      @VictorWilliams12 10 лет назад +4

      Same. But they basically are calling any and all religious literatures fake.

    • @VictorWilliams12
      @VictorWilliams12 10 лет назад

      ***** time for me to move out of America 😂

    • @VictorWilliams12
      @VictorWilliams12 10 лет назад +1

      ***** you're right. 😂 I'm just gonna live a life of a recluse. And disable all RUclips comments

    • @VictorWilliams12
      @VictorWilliams12 10 лет назад

      Miguel Tejo oops

  • @andyiswonderful
    @andyiswonderful 5 лет назад +41

    I've read 7 of these, and most of the runner ups. I was disappointed in Catcher in the Rye. Kept hearing about how wonderful it was.
    No Victor Hugo? No Dostoyevsky? No Dickens?

    • @karmaking1263
      @karmaking1263 4 года назад

      andyiswonderful if you read it again you will love it

    • @lesliematteis8010
      @lesliematteis8010 4 года назад

      andyiswonderful Great Expectations is by Charles Dickens

    • @andyiswonderful
      @andyiswonderful 4 года назад

      @@lesliematteis8010 oops. My Alzhiemers. I read that in high school.

  • @DoctorXander
    @DoctorXander 10 лет назад +401

    Great Gatsby and Huckleberry Finn make the top 10 while Lord of the Rings, Frankenstein, and Paradise Lost don't.
    Please Watchmojo, stick to Movies, TV and Video Games.

    • @Templedelagloire
      @Templedelagloire 10 лет назад +30

      what's wrong with gatsby?

    • @WatchMojo
      @WatchMojo  10 лет назад +143

      DoctorXander Paradise Lost is an epic poem homie.
      Signed,
      KG

    • @DoctorXander
      @DoctorXander 10 лет назад +22

      WatchMojo.com Touché

    • @DoctorXander
      @DoctorXander 10 лет назад +11

      Templedelagloire It's not a bad book, but I don't think it even compares to LOTR

    • @gab_gallard
      @gab_gallard 10 лет назад +11

      Frankenstein is great, but maybe too generic as a horror-sci-fi novel, and technically LOTR is not a novel, but a high fantasy legendarium.

  • @HansLandaNaranja
    @HansLandaNaranja 9 лет назад +36

    Don Quixote number 9? No Victor Hugo, Alexandre Dumas, Goethe? This list is horrible :s

    • @Elldorado12
      @Elldorado12 9 лет назад +2

      +Hans Landa I'm currently reading "The count of Monte Cristo" by Alexandre Dumas, amazing, just amazing...

    • @antonwooldridge2233
      @antonwooldridge2233 9 лет назад +1

      +Hans Landa Hemingway, Steinbeck... the list goes on.

    • @antonwooldridge2233
      @antonwooldridge2233 9 лет назад +1

      +Anton Wooldridge Vonnegut...

    • @TrueOTFitness
      @TrueOTFitness 9 лет назад

      +Outhmane Rassili Great choice!

  • @originoflogos
    @originoflogos 9 лет назад +5

    The Fact that Blood Meridian, Gravity's Rainbow, White Noise, The Brothers Karamazov, Infinite Jest, among others are not on here is absolutely criminal.
    Blood Meridian better be on the top of the twentieth Century. that books is the essential book.

  • @ventureonic3149
    @ventureonic3149 5 лет назад +48

    I'm not satisfied with the list as it doesn't include "One Hundred Years Of Solitude" even in the honourable mentions.

    • @yazmorales9015
      @yazmorales9015 5 лет назад +3

      Venture Onic maybe they only included books that were adapted to movies

    • @ventureonic3149
      @ventureonic3149 5 лет назад +1

      @@yazmorales9015 I realized that some weeks ago.😅

    • @ludwigvansolo1999
      @ludwigvansolo1999 5 лет назад +1

      One hundred years of solitude is top tier. The best multigenerational novel of all time

  • @timkjazz
    @timkjazz 6 лет назад +13

    1) Blood Meridian - Cormac McCarthy 2) One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez 3) War and Peace - Leo Tolstoy 4) Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon 5) Ulysses - James Joyce 6) The Magic Mountain - Thomas Mann 7) Don Quixote - Cervantes 8) The Brothers Karamazov - Fyodor Dostoevsky 9) Beloved - Toni Morrison 10) Pedro Paramo - Juan Rulfo

  • @jaekim2554
    @jaekim2554 6 лет назад +7

    My favorite books of all time are 1. Notes from Underground by Dostoyevski 2. The Notebook, The Proof, The Third Lie by Agota Kristof and 3. No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai. My point is this is a rather subjective matter.

  • @CocoTaveras8975
    @CocoTaveras8975 4 года назад +23

    How is 1984 only an honorable mention! I mean seriously, it was a literary masterpiece and should of been placed on the actual list itself!

  • @thefauxenglishmajor6131
    @thefauxenglishmajor6131 4 года назад +1

    thanks! i love that this list is not the "typical" picks! im here to figure out what to read next for my channel!

  • @Wafflelover344
    @Wafflelover344 6 лет назад +8

    Is it just me or did anyone else find it weird when they said "It was the best of times it was the worst of times" during War & Peace. Wasn't that from a Tale of Two Cities? I'm sorry I was under the impression they were trying to sneak in a line from the book during the narration of the video. Great vid!
    BTW I'm surprised Ulysses didn't make the list.

  • @unkeptmoss3285
    @unkeptmoss3285 10 лет назад +117

    I'm so glad the hunger games didn't make the list!

    • @joeylafrond2472
      @joeylafrond2472 10 лет назад +8

      Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss makes me want to stay away from the movies too.

    • @zclan4130
      @zclan4130 10 лет назад +2

      The hunger games trilogy is great, but these are completely different books

    • @Melchiorblade7
      @Melchiorblade7 10 лет назад

      Zach Clanton Serious question. As someone who loves dystopian fiction such as Brave New World and 1984 to name a few, is Hunger Games a pretty good read? Or is it almost as bad as Twilight or other cash ins?

    • @zclan4130
      @zclan4130 10 лет назад +1

      ***** there is a lot of character development through out the beginning and then when the hunger games starts you wont be able to stop reading. it just receives a lot of criticism because for some reason people hate to see things succeed

    • @Melchiorblade7
      @Melchiorblade7 10 лет назад

      Ciaran Hufsky I just read Ayn Rand's Anthem after much delay. One of the most passionate dystopian narratives praising individualism I've read. Truly remarkable. Thanks for the suggestion btw, I'll look into Running Man.

  • @johncha96
    @johncha96 10 лет назад +32

    Why the fuck was Lord of The Rings not on the list J. R. R. Tolkien formed high fantasy as we know it today its one of the most influential and best selling novels of all time,

    • @Templedelagloire
      @Templedelagloire 10 лет назад

      why should it be?

    • @johncha96
      @johncha96 10 лет назад +4

      Templedelagloire As I've said its formed high fantasy as we know it, Everything Fantasy has been based of Tolkien universe and it "is one of the best-selling novels ever written, with over 150 million copies sold" So the real question is why the fuck isn't it on the list

    • @Templedelagloire
      @Templedelagloire 10 лет назад

      ***** neither of those reasons - influential to its genre and best-selling - are good enough to make it one of the best novels of all time

    • @MrCanadaben
      @MrCanadaben 10 лет назад

      Templedelagloire
      But since they have "invented" words that now are in the Oxford dictionary and have a huuuge fanbase (talking about the books, not the films) amongst all ages and both genders it should be on this list. And it is considered one of the best novels of all time

    • @TheStephano619
      @TheStephano619 10 лет назад

      Not everyone is a fat geek that says Lord of The Rings is the best best selling book of all time.

  • @tn-luna6915
    @tn-luna6915 5 лет назад +7

    C'mon! Don Quixote is not only "THE most important piece of writing to emerge from Spain's golden age", it is THE most important piece of writing to emerge, period.

  • @IveGotToast
    @IveGotToast 10 лет назад +36

    For me anyways
    1. Hitchhikers Guide/Restaurant At The End Of The Universe
    2. LOTR
    3. The Metamorphosis
    4. Animal Farm
    5. Cat's Cradle
    6. A Storm Of Swords
    7. A Clockwork Orange
    8.A Brave New World
    9. Something Wicked This Way Comes
    10. Hatchet

    • @mydogdaisy1212
      @mydogdaisy1212 10 лет назад +4

      Metamorphosis was a novella/short story. It's Brave New World, not "A Brave New World". If Hatchet and A Storm of Swords make this list, you need to read more novels (even if they are all Fantasy or Sci-Fi, there is no way those books crack a sensible top 10, opinion or not)

    • @mydogdaisy1212
      @mydogdaisy1212 10 лет назад

      IveGotToast To be clear, the list was greatest novels of all time, not favorite. You do understand there is a difference correct? Ulysses wouldn't be in my top 50 books I have ever read, but is it likely one of the top 10 greatest novels? Most certainly. You can argue that I am a "self-righteous" cunt, but it does not seem to be my problem that you misinterpret lists and seem to think that your preferred (or nostalgic) novels are synonyms with the ones you think are best. Understand that for those that read these books regularly and encourage reading of higher literature by more people, it is disparaging to see people list Hatchet as the 10th best novel of all time. If you had said Grapes of Wrath was in the top 10, I would have disagreed, but it would not have been idiotic and I would not have "discounted" what you had said. What you did was akin to listing Gerald Ford as one of the top 10 greatest leaders of all time. It makes no sense at all to do so. I am not being some stickler about technicalities (yes I corrected you on Brave New World, but if you read the book, you should know the title), I am basically stating the obvious that a book that no one in their right mind would list in the top 5,000 novels of all time is certainly not in the top 10.

    • @IveGotToast
      @IveGotToast 10 лет назад +1

      mydogdaisy1212 I began my comment with "for me anyways", so it was clear from the beginning that my list was opinionated. It's my list and I would refuse to put a book that i dislike, such as The Grapes Of Wrath on the list no matter how universally acclaimed it is.
      Since you can't stand to see a child's novel on the list, I will fix it. I googled "10 best novels of all time" and copied the first list I found.
      1. Ulysses
      2. The Great Gatsby
      3. A Portrait Of The Artist As A Young Man
      4. Lolita
      5. A Brave New World ;)
      6. The Sound And The Fury
      7. Catch - 22
      8. Darkness At Noon
      9. Sons And Lovers
      10. The Grapes Of Wrath
      Now that's a basic, boring, and unoriginal list that everyone can agree on.
      Now if you'll excuse me Vikings is on, and I have a date with a bunch of actors with bad accents. You probably don't care though. You strike me as someone who thinks TV is beneath you.

    • @Melchiorblade7
      @Melchiorblade7 10 лет назад

      IveGotToast You have good taste in literature my friend.

    • @Melchiorblade7
      @Melchiorblade7 10 лет назад

      IveGotToast You should read C.S. Lewis's "An Experiment in Criticism" captures the un-literary spirit of the so called literary experts so well. People who read books merely to criticize, and who bring things out of the work to match their own view on life rather than emptying all expectations going into a work and receiving whatever is to be had from the experience in and of itself. Read what you enjoy reading, not what others say you should enjoy

  • @kieransageant
    @kieransageant 9 лет назад +35

    I've read none of these books and I disagree

    • @nickgaming_2519
      @nickgaming_2519 9 лет назад +14

      Maybe you should read them

    • @tylersmith2491
      @tylersmith2491 9 лет назад +1

      +Nicholas Rodriguez im reading the catcher in the rye its great

    • @nickgaming_2519
      @nickgaming_2519 9 лет назад +1

      +Tyler Smith is it violent and have action

    • @angel23824
      @angel23824 9 лет назад +1

      +kieran sargeant How can you disagree if you haven't read them?

    • @nickgaming_2519
      @nickgaming_2519 9 лет назад

      Exactly

  • @Hiphopopotamus123
    @Hiphopopotamus123 10 лет назад +7

    This video should have definitely been split up more e.g. Top 10 fantasy, Romanticism, Classicism, Ancient Greek books. 10 is a ridiculously small number for a incredibly large number of absolute classics.

  • @12inter88
    @12inter88 2 года назад +3

    My personal list:
    10 - A Christmas Carol
    9 - Don Quixote
    8 - Pride & Prejudice
    7 - Grapes of Wrath
    6 - Catcher in the Rye
    5 - 1984
    4 - Crime & Punishment
    3 - Beloved
    2 - The Great Gatsby
    1 - The Count of Monte Cristo
    Honorable Mentions (in no order):
    - Cat’s Cradle
    - One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest
    - Brave New World
    - One Hundred Years of Solitude
    - Wuthering Heights
    - Kindred
    - Gravity’s Rainbow

    • @סטסאנטיפוב-ק9ב
      @סטסאנטיפוב-ק9ב Год назад

      Can you explain me how any of these is better than lord of the rings???

    • @samhartje723
      @samhartje723 Год назад

      @@סטסאנטיפוב-ק9ב personal taste

    • @סטסאנטיפוב-ק9ב
      @סטסאנטיפוב-ק9ב Год назад +1

      @@samhartje723 maybe in test but objectively nothing better than lotr

    • @samhartje723
      @samhartje723 Год назад

      @@סטסאנטיפוב-ק9ב objectivity doesn’t apply to subjective, personal lists like this. You sound like a fucking dweeb.

    • @izetyusein3323
      @izetyusein3323 Год назад

      @@סטסאנטיפוב-ק9בtry Malazan

  • @Alexander-tj2dn
    @Alexander-tj2dn 4 года назад +5

    The magic mountain, Hundred years of solitud, The Stranger, Hunger, On the road, Ulyses, Tropic of cancer.

  • @christinacarter6410
    @christinacarter6410 5 лет назад +19

    Wow ! Not a single Jane Austen book on the list. And what about Thomas Hardy with Tess of the d'Urbervilles.

    • @johnjohnson4628
      @johnjohnson4628 5 лет назад

      Of all the authors of prescribed texts for my high school and university studies, Thomas Hardy is the most vividly remembered regardless of whether or not he should be considered a great novelist. Jude the Obscure and Tess of the d'Urbervilles had a massive emotional and moral impact on me. Wuthering Heights and Pride and Prejudice will also always be remembered for their impact.
      Admittedly, it's pretty futile making a list of the 10 greatest novels. Many English-speaking nationalities would not even know anything about great Asian authors through the centuries. As for more contemporary writers, we shouldn't be intimidated in acknowledging somebody like Stephen King or Margaret Atwood just because they are popular. They should make the top 500 list!

    • @lorraineforte9175
      @lorraineforte9175 5 лет назад +1

      Love Thomas Hardy,have you read Jude The Obscure? It made me cry

    • @chloeauil4027
      @chloeauil4027 5 лет назад

      Tess of the d'Urbervilles is amazing. This book brought me to love classic literature.

    • @bugfeet73
      @bugfeet73 4 года назад

      This one SHOULD be required reading in High School!

  • @jonathanfesmiresteampunkau6983
    @jonathanfesmiresteampunkau6983 2 года назад +8

    Wow, Tolkien and Dickens get only an honorable mention? And Catcher in the Rye is on this list at all? Just wow.

  • @ahmadmumtaz4947
    @ahmadmumtaz4947 Год назад +1

    1.Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
    2.The Stranger by Albert Camus

  • @lilbambi159
    @lilbambi159 6 лет назад +4

    It is perfectly understood the great influence of Russian literature and the great impact it has on these dates, but something that I disagree is that there are better works compared to Nabokov and Lolita, nobody says it is bad because it is not, but does not deserve to be located in the top taking into account that no mention was made to Hemingway or Kafka.

  • @mikefuller6959
    @mikefuller6959 8 лет назад +8

    My favourite books are the Mr Men books, Exploring The Earth and Moon by Patrick Moore and the 1986 RAC Guide Book.

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 4 года назад +2

      @@Class_of_21
      That really was one of my favourite books.
      I used to read that a quite a bit at Primary School, even in my last years much to Mr Elliott's frustration.

    • @sherlockholmeslives.1605
      @sherlockholmeslives.1605 4 года назад +1

      Lol! Also the 'Tractus' by Wittgenstein and 'An Introduction to Quantum Statistical Mechanics' by Bogolubov and Bogolubov Jr.

  • @sorceroruk
    @sorceroruk 7 лет назад +4

    I think it's very difficult to produce a Top 10 of greatest novels - particularly with the silent addition "with film adaptations where we can show the clips". What is less important than people agreeing is people thinking. My main criticism would be that "1984" only got "an also ran",. The strength of the prose, the universality of Winston Smith's situation, the ever increasing relevance for our own time makes this novel an essential read for everyone on the planet. It still packs an incredible punch as a novel in its own right.S.x.

  • @PerpetualSolivagant
    @PerpetualSolivagant 4 года назад

    I spent a lot of time compiling a list of world greatest literary works, not limited to novels, and made a video about it. It includes 55 five literary works from 35 countries. It is nice to see there are some overlaps between your list and mine.

  • @emilhansen9941
    @emilhansen9941 8 лет назад +13

    Don Quixote really should be #1... Truly a renaissance masterpiece

  • @ronnysroom
    @ronnysroom 8 лет назад +43

    come on, Lord of the Flies should've been at least an honorable mention

    • @pervis3537
      @pervis3537 8 лет назад +3

      FlyDie heart of darkness >

    • @craftpaint1644
      @craftpaint1644 6 лет назад

      But kids are naturally clanish and pick on each other without mercy and without being stranded, so the introduction of stabilizing power not just laws was the message of order overcoming organized brutality. A foundation of affectual government.

    • @yourneggie
      @yourneggie 6 лет назад

      It was honestly an amazing book. It needs recognition on a Top 10 Novels of All Time list.

  • @rifway22
    @rifway22 10 лет назад +68

    where the fuck is ulysses?? it should easily be number 1 but its not even in the honorable mention here

    • @chandlersanchez4559
      @chandlersanchez4559 10 лет назад +1

      Ulysses is a poem.....

    • @TheStephano619
      @TheStephano619 10 лет назад +19

      Chandler Sanchez Ulysses is a novel.

    • @Templedelagloire
      @Templedelagloire 10 лет назад +2

      Chandler Sanchez lol no

    • @chandlersanchez4559
      @chandlersanchez4559 10 лет назад +2

      +Stephano619 Templedelagloire
      It's clsssified as an "epic poem," like the divine comedy by Dante. Just because it's long doesn't make it a book.

    • @MrAlanSnackbar
      @MrAlanSnackbar 10 лет назад +9

      Chandler Sanchez You have the Ulysses, written by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, which is a poem. But you have also Ulysses, which is a novel, written by James Joyce... So you both are correct :p

  • @GFSLombardo
    @GFSLombardo 6 лет назад +1

    The (Never Written) Sequel: Holden Caulfield is now a semi-retired Wall St. investment broker/financial advisor. He is a graduate of Harvard Business School (BBA, Class of 1960).He lives in Greenwich CT with his lovely third wife Cindy (a former Miss Ohio). He has three grown children, Holden Jr. , Craig (after Holden's dad ), and Melissa (affectionately nicknamed 'Missy"). All have or are attending Ivy League universities on full academic scholarships. Holden (or "HC" as he is affectionately known around town) is active in the civic and cultural affairs of his beloved Greenwich, the local yacht and country clubs, and is on the Board of Directors of his local Episcopal Church, St. Wetherspoon. He has served as elected chairperson or deputy chairperson of his local Republican Party for many years. He normally winters in Palm Beach, FL., has a summer cottage in Bar Harbor, Maine, and owns a 17th century restored chateau in Provence, France. When once asked by a local reporter how he accounted for such a rich and rewarding life? He smiled: "I owe everything to my old Prep School days-taught me everything I needed to know about life=Never be a phony!"

  • @yahiaham6774
    @yahiaham6774 8 лет назад +104

    da fuck ?? where is Crime and Punishment ?

  • @derekroberts6654
    @derekroberts6654 5 лет назад +10

    I’m surprised no one ever attempted to make a movie adaptation of “Catcher In The Rye”.

    • @HAL-vm3wn
      @HAL-vm3wn 5 лет назад

      Oh, Billy Wilder once wanted to

    • @Foxy-ve1oh
      @Foxy-ve1oh 4 года назад

      Derek Roberts it would probably ruin it. The catcher in the rye is a beautiful book by itself it doesn't need a movie to go with it

    • @shreyankarki4455
      @shreyankarki4455 4 года назад

      That's because its illegal

    • @Foxy-ve1oh
      @Foxy-ve1oh 4 года назад

      Shreyan Karki why is it illegal?

    • @shreyankarki4455
      @shreyankarki4455 4 года назад +2

      @@Foxy-ve1oh Salinger refused to sell the movie rights or something like that

  • @СветланаАбрамова-и6м

    M. Bulgakov's novel "the Master and Margarita" is a very bright and optimistic . The main characters in it are love and creativity as the main exponents of the forces of Good on earth. That is why, perhaps, I advise everyone to read this work. The novel is mystical, exciting and life-affirming, as it raises such issues that have always worried man: good and evil, courage and cowardice, unbelief and faith, creative and free personality, lies and truth, indifference and love, the problem of power, the theme of personal responsibility and personal destiny. Critics have made an analogy of Bulgakov's novel and the history of Faust, only in the "Master and Margarita" the situation is presented in an inverted form. Faust sold his soul to the devil and betrayed the love of Marguerite for the sake thirst for knowledge, and in the novel Bulgakov Margarita makes a deal with the devil for the love of the Master.

  • @ulyssesjoyce7734
    @ulyssesjoyce7734 5 лет назад

    Ulysses, Pride and Prejudice, Tristram Shandy, The Sound and the Fury, To the Lighthouse, The Trial, Crime and Punishment, Brothers Karamazov, One Hundred Years of Solitude, Jane Eyre, David Copperfield, The Sun Also Rises, The Magic Mountain, The Stranger, Things Fall Apart, Middlemarch, and more such deserve a place in this list more than some novels presented here. Even Alice's Adventure in Wonderland is worth mentioning despite being a children's book.

  • @cartervogt1663
    @cartervogt1663 8 лет назад +16

    Steinbeck should've been on here somewhere...

  • @edbarros3504
    @edbarros3504 8 лет назад +113

    WatchMojo, I think you must read more foreign literature. There are too many american novels on this list

    • @wwegirl8747
      @wwegirl8747 8 лет назад +7

      Ed Barros Alot of these writer's aren't even American ..... 😒

    • @edbarros3504
      @edbarros3504 8 лет назад +10

      Four authors are Americans and Nabokov wrote Lolita in English.

    • @williamrobinson6059
      @williamrobinson6059 8 лет назад +5

      Ed Barros The American literary canon has surpassed that of any other country, adequate competition coming only from England and Russia.

    • @igs1065
      @igs1065 8 лет назад +5

      Ed Barros why are you associating it being written english with it being american

    • @ruslanyaparov6338
      @ruslanyaparov6338 8 лет назад +9

      You must be kidding, greatest literute is French. Sartre, Camus, Proust, Hugo, Saint-Exupéry, Stendhal and many, many others. USA had the same quality of literature only from 20th century, when french literature was great already before america has been discovered.

  • @Arya-zb6ui
    @Arya-zb6ui 5 лет назад +13

    What about the picture of Dorian Gray

  • @basmeisters3
    @basmeisters3 4 года назад

    As your list progressed, I was wondering what might be your #1. And I guessed it right! These kind of lists are always open for debate, but you sure mentioned some of the great works of literature. Thanks for that.

  • @frankbalistreri5171
    @frankbalistreri5171 4 года назад +21

    "1984" should have been first, because it examines society as a whole, looking at our base instincts for the pursuit of power and self-survival. Intense, horrifying, prophetic.

    • @evanreichelt8745
      @evanreichelt8745 4 года назад +2

      In what way does 1984 examine our pursuit of power and self-survival?

    • @kingkante2913
      @kingkante2913 4 года назад +3

      @@evanreichelt8745 it’s overrated asf

  • @pato2200
    @pato2200 7 лет назад +7

    no mention of Joyce or Dostoevsky or Kafka.
    instead a montage of books which could provide convenient Hollywood film clips.

  • @MaxMustermann-go8xf
    @MaxMustermann-go8xf 10 лет назад +11

    You should have split it up in all the different genres or time periods.

  • @TheRockyhockey007
    @TheRockyhockey007 5 лет назад +1

    The Stand , Jane Eyre , Roots , Frankenstein , Dracula , Crime and Punishment , 12 Angry men , In the heat of the night , Ben Hur , it's imposible to pick 10 and say they were the best , but I like this list , certainly 10 of the best.