NY Times Best 100 Books of the 21st Century | How Many Have I Read And What Do I Really Think?! 🤔

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  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024

Комментарии • 61

  • @camillalucyify
    @camillalucyify 2 месяца назад +1

    Such a great idea for a video. Demon copperhead is my fav on this list. I had a quick scroll through the nyt list but didn't click with many other than several which you mentioned and I'd already read so my tbr pile is safe for now! Personally not a fan of Ferrante. It would be great to compare lists between countries and see if there are any common books. Thanks for a great video 😊

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      Thanks pal for watching and commenting! I've not read Demon Copperhead, a few of you have mentioned that one so it's maybe one I need to check out. It would be interesting to see different country's lists for sure.

  • @lindywilson3847
    @lindywilson3847 2 месяца назад

    'Never Let me go' is probably my favourite book ever, but only because I knew nothing about the plot before I read it. I loved 'My brilliant friend' and the rest of the series, but I listened to it on audio which might have made a difference. Loved hearing your thoughts on these.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      I've not read Never Let Me Go I have heard many good things. I am so glad you love My Brilliant Friend :)

  • @jennifermead4420
    @jennifermead4420 2 месяца назад

    I'd read 2! And am not planning to read any of the others on the list!
    I think you've done well to read that many, very impressed!

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      I surprised myself but as you can see didn’t love a lot of the ones I did. Tbh it’s probably only because of book group that I have 😂

  • @jensreadinglife
    @jensreadinglife 2 месяца назад

    First off, I keep saying it is TOO EARLY for a heat of the 21st century list. And best according to him and using what criteria? The only criteria I’ve found is that the book had to have been published in the U.S. on or after 2000.
    I’ve read 13 of the 100 and a few of the same that you’ve read. I did absolutely love Small Things Like These which would be my number one recommendation off the list. I also really enjoyed Pachinko, Americanah, and Station Eleven. And I definitely want to read The New Jim Crow and Persepolis. Great video! I love a good opinionated take on this list! 😅

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      He he opinionated one word for it! It’s a very “exclusive” list based on specific criteria which means there’s bound to be opinions on it.
      Thanks so much for watching friend x

  • @MJ-in-Canada
    @MJ-in-Canada 2 месяца назад +2

    I wish they’d made 2 lists instead of 1; one for fiction and one for nonfiction. Do you follow Greg of the “Supposedly Fun” channel? Yesterday, he posted a video you might enjoy. He talked about what made the list, what got left out, and a bit about the background of how the list was made.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      No I haven't thanks for pointing me in his direction I will check it out!

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      No I haven't thanks for pointing me in his direction I will check it out!

    • @MJ-in-Canada
      @MJ-in-Canada 2 месяца назад

      @@MeMyDogAndBooks I enjoy Greg's channel very much. Sometimes his husband Joel and their dog Teddy make an appearance, too.😀

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      SOLD!!!

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      subscribed!

  • @tanyamcculloch7103
    @tanyamcculloch7103 2 месяца назад

    Very interesting video. Out of the ones you read I’ve only read one , the Claire Keegan and really enjoyed it xx

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      that's a good 'un - cannot wait to see the movie adaptation!

  • @estelleblake2224
    @estelleblake2224 2 месяца назад +1

    morning Johanna - I love your content and videos as they feature books i have not read and a genre that I don't read - horror! Can I say that My Brilliant Friend is not good in English and it's amazing in Italian (original language) as it captures the culture better obviously - imagine Trainspotting being translated into mainstream English without all the Scottish Colloquillism. I loved The Sellout by Paul Beattty and I think it's a must read. he takes 5 years to write his books. anyway - off to check the list out
    finally - keep being brilliant as you shine.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      That's a brilliant example re trainspotting! So possibly in translation the vibe, meaning and overall essence of the book is lost. If only i could read in Italian maybe I would have loved it.
      I appreciated the sellout's message but i struggled with the style for me but that's more me than the book.

    • @estelleblake2224
      @estelleblake2224 2 месяца назад

      @@MeMyDogAndBooks yes. Probably the essence is lost. I speak Italian and some of the original book is dialect like Trainspotting etc. dialect changes from city-town-village in Italy. The Montalbano books are full of Sicilian dialect that is lost in translation. T
      But keep challenging us to read different books.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      someone I used to work with loved Montalbano books!

  • @LibrariesandLattes
    @LibrariesandLattes 2 месяца назад

    So interesting to hear your thoughts on this! I’ve only read two books off the list 😳😂 The Year of Magical Thinking (didn’t like) and Tomorrow x3 (loved)! Several on my TBR though, especially Station Eleven, The Fifth Season, Americanah, Pachinko, My Brilliant Friend (even though you didn’t like it haha), Sing Unburied Sing, Bel Canto, and Demon Copperhead! I don’t usually pay attention to these kinds of lists and it feels like it’s a lot of literary fiction and nonfiction, which are two genres I don’t read a whole lot of. I wish there was more fantasy and just more accessible kinds of books for your average reader because it does feel a bit pretentious, haha. But an interesting conversation nonetheless!!

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      It's okay I know as many people that didn't like My Brilliant Friend as who also loved it so don't let my thoughts put you off. And you have a good TBR list there! I agree such lists can come off as pretenious and I feel a lot of genres are missed so it can come off as high brow whether that's the intention or not. That's not to say if people have read 50+ of these books and loved them that they are pretenious unless they "poo poo" anything not on this list he he he he

  • @janeandclementine
    @janeandclementine 2 месяца назад +1

    I’ve read 26 of the listed books and liked them all except for My Brilliant Friend. I was actually embarrassed to admit that I didn’t like it so gave book 2 a go…..only to discover that it was every bit as dull and DNFd it after 50 or so pages. From the list a personal favourite author is Jesmyn Ward.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      I genuinely (back in the day) think that's why I also gave it 2 stars, but now I am like NOPE! Jesmyn Ward was the only offer I wanted to read more of!

  • @aLadNamedNathan
    @aLadNamedNathan 2 месяца назад +1

    The link to the NYT is pretty useless if you haven't paid a subscription. For those of you who haven't, here it is:
    100. Denis Johnson: Tree of Smoke
    99. Ali Smith: How to Be Both
    98. Ann Patchett: Bel Canto
    97. Jesmyn Ward: Men We Reaped
    96. Saidiya Hartman: Wayward Lives Beautiful Experiments
    95. Hilary Mantel: Bring Up the Bodies
    94. Zadie Smith: On Beauty
    93. Emily St. John Mandel: Station Eleven
    92. Elena Ferrante: The Days of Abandonment
    91. Philip Roth: The Human Stain
    90. Viet Thanh Nguyen: The Sympathizer
    89. Hisham Matar: The Return
    88. Lydia Davis: The Collected Stories of Lydia Davis
    87. Torrey Peters: Detransition, Baby
    86. David W. Blight: Frederick Douglass
    85. George Saunders: Pastoralia
    84. Siddhartha Mukherjee: The Emperor of All Maladies
    83. Benjamin Labatut: When We Cease to Understand the World
    82. Fernanda Melchor: Hurricane Season
    81. John Jeremiah Sullivan: Pulphead
    80. Elena Ferrante: The Story of the Lost Child
    79. Lucia Berlin: A Manual for Cleaning Women
    78. Jon Fosse: Septology
    77. Tayari Jones: An American Marriage
    76. Gabrielle Zevin: Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow
    75. Mohsin Hamid: Exit West
    74. Elizabeth Strout: Olive Kitteridge
    73. Robert A. Caro: The Passage of Power
    72. Svetlana Alexievitch: Secondhand Time
    71. Tove Ditlevsen: The Copenhagen Trilogy
    70. Edward P. Jones: All Aunt Hagar’s Children
    69. Michelle Alexander: The New Jim Crow
    68. Sigrid Nunez: The Friend
    67. Andrew Solomon: Far from the Tree
    66. Justin Torres: We the Animals
    65. Philip Roth: The Plot Against America
    64. Rebecca Makkai: The Great Believers
    63. Mary Gaitskill: Veronica
    62. Ben Lerner: 10:04
    61. Barbara Kingsolver: Demon Copperhead
    60. Kiese Laymon: Heavy
    59. Jeffrey Eugenides: Middlesex
    58. Hua Hsu: Stay True
    57. Barbara Ehrenreich: Nickel and Dimed
    56. Rachel Kushner: The Flame Throwers
    55. Lawrence Wright: The Looming Tower
    54. George Saunders: Tenth of December
    53. Alice Munro: Runaway
    52. Denis Johnson: Train Dreams
    51. Kate Atkinson: Life After Life
    50. Hernan Diaz: Trust
    49. Han Kang: The Vegetarian
    48. Marjane Satrapi: Perseopolis
    47. Toni Morrison: A Mercy
    46. Donna Tartt: The Goldfinch
    45. Maggie Nelson: The Argonauts
    44. N. K. Jemisin: The Fifth Season
    43. Tony Judt: Postwar
    42. Marlon James: A Brief History of Seven Killings
    41. Claire Keegan: Small Things Like These
    40. Helen Macdonald: H Is for Hawk
    39. Jennifer Egan: A Visit from the Goon Squad
    38. Roberto Bolano: The Savage Detectives
    37. Annie Ernaux: The Years
    36. Ta-Nehisi Coates: Between the World and Me
    35. Alison Bechdel: Fun Home
    34. Claudia Rankine: Citizen
    33. Jesmyn Ward: Salvage the Bones
    32. Alan Hollinghurst: The Line of Beauty
    31. Zadie Smith: White Teeth
    30. Jesmyn Ward: Sing, Unburied, Sing
    29. Helen DeWitt: The Last Samurai
    28. David Mitchell: Cloud Atlas
    27. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: Americanah
    26. Ian McEwan: Atonement
    25. Adrian Nicole LeBlanc: Random Family
    24. Richard Powers: The Overstory
    23. Alice Munro: Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage
    22. Katherine Boo: Behind the Beautiful Forevers
    21. Matthew Desmond: Evicted
    20. Percival Everett: Erasure
    19. Patrick Radden Keefe: Say Nothing
    18. George Saunders: Lincoln in the Bardo
    17. Paul Beatty: The Sellout
    16. Michael Chabon: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
    15. Min Jin Lee: Pachinko
    14. Rachael Cusk: Outline
    13. Cormac McCarthy: The Road
    12. Joan Didion: The Year of Magical Thinking
    11. Junot Diaz: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
    10. Marilynne Robinson: Gilead
    9. Kazuo Ishiguro: Never Let Me Go
    8. W. G. Sebald: Austerlitz
    7. Colson Whitehead: The Underground Railroad
    6. Roberto Bolano: 2666
    5. Jonathan Franzen: The Corrections
    4. Edward P. Jones: The Known World
    3. Hilary Mantel: Wolf Hall
    2. Isabel Wilkerson: The Warmth of Other Suns
    1. Elena Ferrante: My Brilliant Friend

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      Weird I could read it without a subscription but either way thank so much for putting the full list in the comments 🙌🏻

    • @aLadNamedNathan
      @aLadNamedNathan 2 месяца назад

      @@MeMyDogAndBooks I'm guessing you must not look at the NYT website too often then. They'll let you see a certain number of articles for free, but after that, you run into a paywall which you can't get past without a subscription. I hit the paywall at least a decade ago.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      Ah that'll be it, plus I use incognito browsers sometimes too so that might be it !

  • @caoilo6812
    @caoilo6812 2 месяца назад

    I do love reading these lists but I always remind myself not to take them as a reading challenge. I instinctively want to read them all but I am not really into literary fiction. And I do think this list is quite pretentious. I looked over it and I think the only books on here that i have read are
    Station 11 which was a DNF
    The Argonauts which I also DNF'ed (I felt like i was trapped in a public place with people who were having a domestic)
    The Human Stain (I finished it but only because it was for course. I didn't love it which was a shame because I liked the movie)
    Small Things Like These (absolutely loved. some people still deny what the church has done and continues to do)
    I have owned copies of ten or so other books on the list but have unhauled them before reading them. If I ever change my mind about reading any of them I will probably get them from the library first.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      I find the list the same. I am very excited about the movie adaptation of Small Things Like These :)

  • @allisonryder4781
    @allisonryder4781 2 месяца назад +3

    Books lists like this serve no purpose in my opinion. I ignore them!I read what I like and I don’t feel I am unintelligent or uninformed if I have t read any of the books on a list curated by a newspaper. We all read at different levels and different genres. I detest book snobbishness and find it condescending. I have not even looked at the list but will get back to you on how many I have read. I doubt there are many. I read for pure pleasure and life is too short to waste time on books I dont like or books that are deemed “the best” by a corporate entity. There are ages and stages of my reading life and it ebbs and flows like my life itself. I’ve been re reading my childhood favorites this year; does that make me a poor reader? I don’t care what others think. 😂 the key is to read. Period. One comment here said you are limited in your reading and I disagree and call that out as an example of book snobbishness and quite a presumptuous judgement on their part. Shame, that we feel we have to decide for others what constitutes a worthy read!

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +2

      here here here I think that's why I've seen so many people on Instagram sharing THEIR fave books of the 21st century which don't look anything like this list

    • @allisonryder4781
      @allisonryder4781 2 месяца назад

      I have read 1! Bel Canto! Label me unrefined😂😂😂😂😂😂so ​@@MeMyDogAndBooks

    • @janeandclementine
      @janeandclementine 2 месяца назад

      Hard agree. Wonderful comment.

  • @allisonryder4781
    @allisonryder4781 2 месяца назад

    Edit: so here is how the books were chosen: As voted on by 503 novelists, nonfiction writers, poets, critics and other book lovers - with a little help from the staff of The New York Times Book Review.
    The list would be wildly different if it had been a public vote and the fact that there was “some help” from the staff of NYT invalidates this list for me. 503 people don’t get to chose the best of the 21st century imo😂😂😂😂

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +2

      NOBODY chooses our fave books of the 21st century! ;)

  • @tracydk
    @tracydk 2 месяца назад

    I 💯 agree with you regarding number 1 - I really didn’t like it at all, I have read 13 of list and have 25 of them on my shelves still to read 📚

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      I feel less alone knowing this!! Is there any out of the 25 on your shelf you are itching to read?

    • @tracydk
      @tracydk 2 месяца назад

      The Vegetarian keen on that one and Trust although I got Trust when if first came out and not got to yet 😊 others I’ve had way too long 🤦🏽‍♀️

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      Oh yes the Vegetarian I fancy too!

  • @emilmueller8108
    @emilmueller8108 2 месяца назад +1

    I read 9 but out of those 9 I only enjoyed Station Eleven. I don't think that list is for me :D

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      I am genuinely surprised I had read so many if I am honest.

  • @Maeve_Ever_Books
    @Maeve_Ever_Books 2 месяца назад

    I have 2 on the list that I tried to read and dropped. And 4 on the list I actually want to read. 😅

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      that's more on the list than I wanna read but could be convinced otherwise.

    • @Maeve_Ever_Books
      @Maeve_Ever_Books 2 месяца назад

      @@MeMyDogAndBooksYou’ve already read 3 of the 4 that I want to try. 😂
      Station Eleven
      Tomorrow, Tomorrow and Tomorrow
      The Road
      And the last of the 4 is Demon Copperhead.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +1

      A few people have mentioned Demon Copperhead as one they've enjoyed so might need to add that!

  • @Alfred_51
    @Alfred_51 2 месяца назад +2

    Love your opinions but these lists serve no purpose. Like how you mix things up in your vlogs. Happy reading 😊

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад

      Thank you! It was good to chat about it with you all as I also feel these lists are a bit meh!

  • @moirashapiro100
    @moirashapiro100 2 месяца назад

    Hi Johanna. First off the bat I do not share your taste in reading but I enjoy your vlogs and personality. I feel that you are limited in your reading. If it wasn, t perhaps for your book club you wouldn't have ventured into reading books that weren't primarily focused on race, gender etc.
    As for your short analysis on My Brilliant Friend ,I feel you took it superficially. . The story is superficial..friendship. but there is so much more to a book. I read the book in italian ( actually the majority of the book was Neapolitan dialect) which even native Italians find difficult to comprehend.
    Although the wonderful translators are extreme skilled in their craft, there is always something " lost in translation ". It's not just the plot but the intonation rhythm phrasing and musicality and beauty of the language that makes this and all of the books of the Neapolitan quartet masterpieces.

    • @allisonryder4781
      @allisonryder4781 2 месяца назад +3

      Reading is reading , no matter what you read and your comment comes off as presumptuous and condescending . We all have different opinions and books we are interested in. You seem like a book snob to me.

    • @MeMyDogAndBooks
      @MeMyDogAndBooks  2 месяца назад +3

      Thanks for watching and commenting. I think that's the great thing about reading and books, that we don't all have to read or even enjoy the same books. And we all have different tastes and opinions. Perhaps there was a lot lost in translation for My Brilliant Friend but for me it's a book I struggled to stay engaged with and the older I get the quicker I am to move on from books that don't engage me, that's not to takeaway from those that adore this book though or undermine their opinions mine are just different. It's why books that I love will have bad reviews just as much as some of the books you love too. I've been in my book club for 20 years so I tend to read quite broadly. Although high fantasy/explicit romance and often Jane Austen type classics (many I have read) I tend not to leans towards so much as it's my least enjoyable genres. But that's not to say if someone say "try this book i think you'd love it" I wouldn't give it a go if I trusted their recommendations - that the fun part of BookTube.

    • @MJ-in-Canada
      @MJ-in-Canada 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MeMyDogAndBooks I like that you're such an eclectic reader.😀

    • @janeandclementine
      @janeandclementine 2 месяца назад +1

      @@MeMyDogAndBooksI’m enjoying your blogs for precisely this reason. You have introduced me to authors I have never heard of and who have now become “must read authors” for me. The NYT list seemed to me to be quite sniffily pretentious.

    • @MJ-in-Canada
      @MJ-in-Canada 2 месяца назад +1

      @@janeandclementine Johanna has opened my eyes to some new authors and new books, too. She even managed to get me reading a bit outside of my usual genres!