Time Magazine has unveiled its list of "All Time Top 100 Novels", avoiding making sticky judgment calls by listing them alphabetically.
Many of the usual names appear but there are some surprises, too - Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go looks like the newest title to make the list; and Martin Amis' Money strikes us as an odd choice, indeed. We're not great fans of his fiction (we prefer his criticism) but we'd have expected London Fields or The Information to represent Amis. Tibor Fischer is nowhere in sight.
There's plenty to talk about in the list, and a nice added feature - some of the books feature liinks to the original reviews. Check it out.
Not quite "of all time" -- only novels from 1923 (year when Time magazine started) to the present. Also only English-language novels.
Posted by: Morris | October 17, 2005 at 06:57 AM
Mark,
TIME's list is restricted to English-language novels published since 1923, rather than being the more comprehensive list that "Top 100 Novels of all time" would indicate.
Dennis
Posted by: Dennis | October 17, 2005 at 07:36 AM
What? No love for Superfudge? Don't Grossman and Lacayo understand that Superfudge is more powerful than The Canterbury Tales, more moving in its family rivalry than Absalom! Absalom!, with prose as riveting as One Fish Two Fish Blow Fish Blue Fish. The parvenus!
Posted by: ed | October 17, 2005 at 05:16 PM
You can go crazy with lists like this, but Money is almost as funny as dad's Lucky Jim, which might be the funniest book of the century--like Woody Allen, Martin Amis is not necessarily better when he's more ambitious and "serious."
Posted by: yeselson | October 18, 2005 at 07:59 AM