Comments on Best Books of the 20th Century - page 4
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He makes heroes of ever..."
Steinbeck was a New Deal populist of the first order. His writing, IMO, is not great prose, but the humanity he displays in Grapes of Wrath, Travels With Charley, and The Pearl qualified him for the Nobel Prize.

I have read many master pieces and can feel their depth and deep impact but when it comes to judging literary value of their works I am a poor judge because I compare them only on teh basis of my likes or dislikes.........

I have read many master pieces and can feel their depth and deep impact but when it comes to judging litera..."
Steinbeck is loved for his politics, especially by the Stockholm Nobel committee. Somehow I think I would "trust your gut" as much as I would the professors I had in college. Their are aesthetic criteria, but when it comes to poetry, what speaks to each of us is the best, don't you think ? If you love a poem, that poem is "yours" and surely no rules can take it from you. T. S. Eliot was once "top dog" among academics, but recently, Yeats has taken his place. Whatever, I say. I have always loved Robert Frost's poems, though many of them are dark with the legends of the Vermont hills. You are surely correct about Steinbeck, a man with a strong and generous heart who put People of good will ahead of "Great Men" in his affections and concern.

Try the 21st Century list. http://www.goodreads.com/list/show/7....

Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe - Mr. Poe died in 1849
The Book of Mormon - 1830
The Kite Runner - 2003
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix - 2003
The Awakening, by Kate Chopin - 1899
The Da Vinci Code - 2003
The Picture of Dorian Gray - 1891
Leaves of Grass - Though Mr. Whitman kept publishing his poetry under the same title, he died in 1892
The Zookeeper's Wife - 2007
Gulliver's Travels - 1726
Note: Left His Dark Materials the trilogy on the list, although the third volume was not published in the 20th Century. Ditto for Seamus Heaney's translation of Beowulf; the poem itself is a thousand years old; the translation is modern. (So I left it.)

None of those are 20th century."
LOL ba-a-a-a-aaaa-a


The form to add books to the list is at the right-hand side of the list.


Wonderful compelling read and socila history of 1920s rural Ireland...



Joyce is 20th century...

I'm SO WITH YOU on Henry James! At least Wharton made it.




The order is "random" because this is a popular list (currently over 14,000 voters), not one created by professional critics.







David, How many such lists have you wasted your time commenting upon ?

Don't be a douche. These lists are compiled by users. They don't descend from heaven on stone tablets. Librarians edit them to make them more accurate.


BUT still below To kill...
personaly (and i believe universaly),Tolkien's masterpiece is a greater story in every sense and a better classic. it should be in first place.. <3
RINGER for life

The Good Soldier Schweik (Jaroslav Hasek)
A Dance to the Music of Time (Anthony Powell)
The Search (C.P. Snow)

lets stand for proust!!!!
aller Marcel, il est fantastique"
Lo apoyo de todo corazon. Es una maravilla de libro.

I'm thrilled about Harry Potter and all the kids who loved the books and now(one hopes) love to read. But it is definitely not one of the 100 best books of the 20th century! I read the first one when it came out; expecting Tolkien, I was deeply disappointed. I just checked out the 2nd since there's been so much fuss recently about the series. It is derivative, uninspired writing. It is certainly not great; it is barely even good.
He makes heroes of everday ordinary folks. I don't know of anybody else who has achieved this feat.