aggsliterature

Archive for 2009

Where does that text fit in the history of English Literature?

In Uncategorized on May 19, 2009 at 9:10 pm

BEFORE CHRIST

1900        Construction of Stonehenge begins around this time

12-1300   Invasion of England by Celtic-speaking peoples

55-54       Julius Caesar’s expeditions reach England

THE OLD ENGLISH PERIOD

5-40        Reign of Cunobelinus (Cymbeline)

43           Roman conquest of England

122          Romans begin construction of Hadrian’s Wall to defend Britain against invasions from the north

313          Christianity introduced in England

350          Invasion of Angles, Saxons, and Jutes begins

429          Withdrawal of Roman legions from England is complete by this date or earlier

5??           Arthur defeated and killed in Civil War

597          St. Augustine re-establishes the Roman Church in England

663          Roman Christianity is endorsed by the Synod of Whitby (instead of Celtic Christianity)

731          Bede, An Ecclesiastical History of the English People ["Caedmon's Hymn"]

757          Offa, King of Mercia, begins his reign

802          Egbert, King of Wessex

856-75     Viking raids at their peak

871-99     King Alfred the Great of Wessex (defeater of the Danes)

900-950   An English state is established

978           Ethelred the Unready reigns; Danish invasions resume

____         The Dream of the Rood
                 Beowulf
                 The Battle of Maldon
                 The Wanderer

1016         Canut of Denmark rules England, Denmark, and Norway

1042         King Edward the Confessor (Wessex line)

1066         William the Conqueror (NORMANDY) defeats Harold II in The Battle of Hastings

1086         The Doomsday Book

1087         William II (third son of William) King

1100         William II shot in ambush. Henry I (youngest son of William) King

1135         Stephen (BLOIS–grandson of William I by daughter) competes with Empress Matilda for throne (“The Anarchy”)

1154         Henry II (PLANTAGENT– grandson of Henry I by daughter)

1170         Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury,  murdered in the cathedral
                 Oxford University founded at about this time

1169         Conquest of Ireland is begun

1189         Richard I, Coeur de Lion (son of Henry II) King

1190         Richard goes on Crusade, to return in 1194

1199         John Lackland (son of Henry II, brother of Richard) King

 

THE MIDDLE ENGLISH PERIOD

1210     Cambridge University founded at about this time

1215     Magna Carta

1216     Henry III (son of John) King (builder of Westminster Abbey)

1272     Edward I, Longshanks, Prince of Wales King (son of Henry III)

1284     Conquest of Wales

1290     Jews Expelled from England

1307     Edward II (son of Edward I) King; deposed and murdered in 1327 by Queen Isabella and Mortimer

1327     Edward III of Windsor (son of Edward II, grandson of John) King

1337     100 Years War Begins (Edward III’s claim to crown of France)

1346     Battle of Crecy, England defeats France’s feudal armies

1348    The Black Death Strikes England

1362    William Langland, The Vision of Piers Plowman
            English officially replaces French as the language of the court

1375     Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

1377     Richard II (grandson of Edward III) King

1381    Peasant’s Revolt

1386     Chaucer, Canterbury Tales

1393     Julian of Norwich, Book of Showings, contains her visions from God

____    The Second Shepherds’ Play

1399     Henry IV (LANCASTER–grandson of Edward III) King

1400     Welsh revolt under Owen Glendower

1403     Henry Percy (Shakespeare’s Hotspur) defeated at Shrewsbury

1413     Henry V, Prince Hal (son of Henry IV) King

1415     Battle of Agincourt; five years later, Henry recognised as heir to French crown

1422     Henry VI (Son of Henry V)

1431    Joan of Arc is burned

1432     Margery Kempe, The Book of Margery Kempe

1453     Hundred Years War ends with conquest of of Guienne by the French

1455     The War of The Roses Begins–Lancaster vs. York

1461     Edward IV (YORK–Great-great-grandson Edward III) King, temporarily deposes Henry VI

1469     Sir Thomas Malory (Morte D’arthur)

1471     Henry VI murdered

1483     Edward V (son of Edward IV) King and murdered
             Richard III, Crookback King

1485     Richard III dies in battle at Bosworth–The War of the Roses ends
             Henry VII King (TUDOR– married Elizabeth, daughter of Edward IV)

____     Everyman

 

THE 16th CENTURY

1509     Henry VIII (son of Henry VII) King

1516     Sir Thomas Moore’s Utopia
            (also wrote History of King Richard III; he was killed for his Catholic faith)

1517     Reformation Begins

1533     Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterburry, validates Henry’s marriage to Anne Boleyn

1534-5  Papal authority abolished in England; Moore executed; Act of Supremacy

____   John Skelton, “Colin Clout”

1534     Henry VIII acknowledged “supreme Head on Earth” by Anglican Church

1537    Howard, Earl of Surrey (“My Friend,  the Things That Do Attain”) imprisoned

1538   Great English Bible

1541    Wyatt (“Whoso List to Hunt”) imprisoned

1547     Edward VI  King

1553     Mary I, “Bloody Mary” Queen (daughter of Henry VIII)
             Attempts to restore Catholicism, repeals anti-papal legislation

1554    Lady Jane Grey executed

1558     Mary I dies childless. Elizabeth I (daughter Henry VIII) Queen

1559    Act of Supremacy restores Anglican Church

1560    Anglo-Scottish Alliance in Treaty of Edninburgh

1561     Mary Queen of Scotts (Catholic) begins rule in Scotland
             Sir Thomas Hoby, translation of The Courtier

1563    The Thirty-Nine Articles of the Anglican Church

1564    Shakespeare is born

1567     Mary Queen of Scots imprisoned in England (driven from throne by Calvinists)

1578     John Lyly, Euphues: The Anatomy of Wit

1587     Elizabeth beheads Mary Queen of Scots for Catholic plots

1588     Defeat of the Spanish Armada

1590     Edmund Spencer, The Faerie Queen

1591     Sir Philip Sidney, “Astrophil and Stella”

1592     Christopher Marlowe, Dr. Faustus and Hero and Leander
             Thomas Nashe, Pierce Penniless, His Supplication to the Devil

1593   Richard Hooker defends existing practices in Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity

1598   Revolt in Ireland

1601   Essex executed for rebellion
           Thomas Campion (“My Sweetest Lesbia.” “Rose-Cheeked Laura,” “Fain Would I Wed”)
           Shakespeare begins Hamlet about this time

 

 EARLY 17th CENTURY

1603     Elizabeth dies. James I (STUART), James VI of  Scotland King

1605     The Gunpowder Plot
             Francis Bacon writes The Advancement of Learning (In 1620 Novum Organum)

1606     Ben Jonson’s play Volpone published

1611     King James Bible Published

1615    John Donne (“The Ecstasy”, “The Canonization”, etc.) becomes Anglican priest

1616     Shakespeare dies

1618     30 Years War begins in Europe

1620     Pilgrims depart for New England

1600’s   John Webster publishes his play The Duchess of Malf

1625     Charles I (son of James I) King

1629     Charles I dissolves parliament

1633     George Herbert, The Temple (“Jordan”, “The Pulley”, “Love”, etc.)

1638     Scottish revolt over imposition of Laudian liturgy

1640     Charles I, in need of tax money for war, convenes “The Long Parliament”
             Izaak Walton, The Life of Donne
             Thomas Carew, “A Rapture”

1641    Irish revolt

1642    English Civil War               
            Theaters closed
            Sir John Denham, “Cooper’s Hill”

1645     Edmund Waller, “Go, Lovely Rose!”

1646     Richard Crashaw, “Steps to the Temple”, “The Flaming Heart”
             Sir John Suckling, “Loving and Beloved”

1648     30 Years War Ends
             Robert Herrick, Hesperides (“The Vine”) and Noble Numbers (sacred)

1649     Charles I beheaded. Council of State rules (Commonwealth/Protectorate)
             Richard Lovelace “To Althea, from Prison” and “To Lucasta, Going to the Wars”

1650     Henry Vaughn, “Silex Scintillans”

1651     Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan

1653     Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector

____     First appearance of women on stage
___       First performance of an English opera

1656     Abraham Cowley, “Ode: Of Wit”

1658     Richard Cromwell, “Tumble-down Dick” (son of Oliver), Lord Protector

____     Andrew Marvell, “To His Coy Mistress”
             Samuel Pepys (diary later published in 1825)

 

THE RESTORATION AND 18th CENTURY

1660        The Restoration (Charles II)

1662         Royal Society of London incorporated to promote arts and sciences

1663         Samuel Butler, “Hudibras”
                 John Milton, Paradise Lost

1665         The Plague breaks out

1666         The Great Fire of London

1673         Test Act requires office holders to accept rites of the Anglican Church

1675         John Bunyan writes Pilgrim’s Progress during second imprisonment
                 Christopher Wren is chosen to design St. Paul’s

1676         Sir George Etherege, The Man of Mode

1677         John Dryden, All For Love

1678         Titus Oates exposes the details of a fictious Popish Plot to kill the King

1680         Exclusion Bill Crisis

1681         John Dryden, “Absalom and Achitophel”

1682         Thomas Otway, Venice Preserv’d

1685         James II King

1687         Isaac Newton, Principles of Mathematics

1688         The Glorious Revolution

1689        Bill of Rights passed

1690        John Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding

1696        Sir John Vanbrugh, The Relapse

1700        William Congreve, The Way of the World

1701        Act of Settlement stipulates that Anne, Protestant daughter of James II, is to succeed William

1702        Anne (second daughter of James II) Queen

1704         The Duke of Marlborough’s victory at Blenheim against the French

1707         George Farquhar, The Beaux’ Stragem
                 Act of Union (Scotland + England = “Great Britain”)

1709-11    Addison (paper Tattler)

1711         Alexander Pope’s “An Essay on Criticism” (later wrote “An Essay on Man”)

1711-2      Steele’s paper Spectator

1713         Treaty of Utrecht ends the war with Louis XIV

1714         George I (HANOVER–son of granddaughter of James I) King
                Alexander Pope, “Rape of the Lock”

1715         First Jacobite Rebellion:
                “The Old Pretender” (son of James II) attempts to restore Stuart rule

1719         Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe is published – the first novel in english

1726         Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels

1727         George II

1728         John Gay, The Beggar’s Opera

1729         John Wesley founds Methodist Society

1730         James Thomson, “The Seasons”

1731         Henry Fielding, Tom Thumb

1739         War of Jenkin’s Ear (with Spain) begins (to 1741)

1746         Second Jacobite rebellion crushed at Culloden
                 (Bonnie Prince Charles–grandson of James II–tried to regain the throne)
                 William Collins (“Ode on the Poetical Character”)

1740 – Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded is an epistolary novel by Samuel Richardson, first published in 1740. It tells the story of a maid named Pamela whose master, Mr. B, makes unwanted advances towards her. She rejects him continually, and her virtue is eventually rewarded when he shows his sincerity by proposing an equitable marriage to her. In the second part of the novel, Pamela attempts to accommodate herself to upper-class society and to build a successful relationship with him. The story was widely mocked at the time for its perceived licentiousness

1741 - An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews, or Shamela, as it is more commonly known, is a satirical novel written by Henry Fielding and first published under the name of Mr. Conny Keyber. (Fielding never owned to writing the work but it is widely considered to be his.) It is a direct attack on the then-popular novel Pamela by Fielding’s contemporary and rival, Samuel Richardson and is composed, like Pamela, in epistolary form.

1751         Thomas Gray, “Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard”
                 Henry Fielding, Amelia

1755         Samuel Johnson finishes his Dictionary (James Boswell later writes his biography)

1756         The Seven Years’ War (French and Indian Wars) begins

1759         Wolfe captures Quebec

1760         George III (grandson of George II) King

1761         William Pitt resigns as Prime Minister when his colleagues refuse to fight Spain

1763         Treaty of Paris ends the Seven Years War

The First Gothic Novel…

1764 – Horace Walpole’s Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto 

1768         Cook’s voyage to Australia

1770         Oliver Goldsmith, “The Deserted Village”

1771         Richard Cumberland, The West Indian

1773         Oliver Goldsmith, She Stoops to Conquer

1775         War for American Independence Begins
                 Jane Austen is born

1776         Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations
                 Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (first volume)

1777         Richard Brinsley Sheridan, The School for Scandal

1783         William Pitt (younger) prime minister

1785         William Cowper, “The Task”

1790 -  A Sicilian Romance – Ann Radcliffe

1791 - The Romance of the Forest - Ann Radcliffe

1794         William Godwin’s “Things as They Are or The Adventures of Caleb Williams” – the first thriller – and a real page turner

794 –  The Mysteries of Udolpho – Ann Radcliffe

1796 – The Italian – Ann Radcliffe

THE ROMANTIC PERIOD

1786     Robert Burns: Poems, Chiefly in the Scotish Dialect

1789     *The French Revolution begins*

1790     Songs of Innocence and Experience by William Blake

1792     Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

1793     Bastille stormed. Louis XVI executed. Reign of Terror under Robespierre.
             England wars with France; the Napoleonic Wars begin

1798     Wordsworth and Coleridge publish Lyrical Ballads

1801     Great Britain and Ireland Unite as the “United Kingdom

1804     Napoleon crowned emperor

1805     Battle of Trafalgar

1811     The Regency
             Prince of Wales acts as regent for George III, who has been declared incurably insane

1812     War with the United States

1813     Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

1815     Napoleon defeated at Waterloo

1817     William Hazlitt, critic, On Gusto
             Jane Austen dies

1818     Lord Byron begins “Don Juan”
             Mary (Wollstonecraft) Shelly, Frankenstein

1819     John Keats “Ode to a Nightingale”
             Sir Walter Scott, Ivanhoe
             Peterloo Massacre

1820     George IV (son of George III) King
             Thomas Love Peackock, critic The Four Ages of Poetry
             Percy Shelley “To a Skylark” and “Adonais”

1821     Thomas De Quincey Confessions of an English Opium Eater

1823     Charles Lamb, Christ Hospital Five and Thirty Years Ago

1829     Catholic Emancipation Act

1830     William IV (3rd son of George III) King
             Thomas Moore Life of Byron

 

THE VICTORIAN AGE / 19th CENTURY

1832     First Reform Bill

1834     Poor Law Reform Act

1837     Victoria (daughter of 4th son of George III) Queen
             Thomas Carlyle publishes The French Revolution

1841     Peel Prime Minister

1845     Great Potato Famine

1846     Corn Laws repealed (i.e the tariff on grains)

1847     Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre
             Anne Bronte, Agnes Gray
             William Thackery, Vanity Fair

1848     Emily Bronte Wuthering Heights
             Macaulay, History of England

1850     Tennyson publishes “In Memoriam” and succeeds Wordsworth as poet  laureate

1851     Matthew Arnold, “Dover Beach”
             Charles Dickens, Bleak House

1854    Crimean War

1855     Robert Browning, “Men and Women”

1856     John Ruskin ,”On the Pathetic Fallacy”

1857     Elizabeth Barret Browning, “Aurora Leigh”
             Anthony Trollope, Barchester Towers
             Indian Mutiny

1858     William Morris “The Defense of Guenevere”

1859     Charles Darwin, Origin of Species
             Edward Fitzgerald “The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam”
            George Eliot, Adam Bede

1861    John Stuart Mill, Representative Government

1865     Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland

1866     Algernon Swinburne, “The Triumph of Time” (“Poems and Ballads”)

1867     Second Reform Act

1868     Walter Pater, Aesthetic Poetry
             Gladstone Prime Minister

1870-1  Franco Prussian War

1871     George Eliot, Middlemarch
             Religious tests at Universities Abolished

1872     Christina Rossetti, “Goblin Market”

____     Thomas Henry Huxley gives his “Science and Culture” lectures
             Dante Gabriel Rosetti, “The House of Life”

1874    Disraeli Prime Minsiter
            Thomas Harding, Far From the Madding Crowd

1875     William Ernest Henley, “In Hospital–Waiting”
             Gilbert and Sullivan, Trial by Jury
             Britain acquires Suez Canal

1877     Gerard Manley Hopkins, “God’s Grandeur”
            
Victoria declared Empress of India

1879     George Meredith, The Egoist

1884     Third Reform Act

1886     Salsibury Prime Minister

1888     Kipling, Plain Tales from the Hills

1891     Thomas Hardy, Tess of the D’Urbevilles

 

TWENTIETH CENTURY

1894     Rudyard Kipling, Jungle Books

1895     Oscar Wilde, The Importance of Being Earnest

1899     Boer War

1900     Joseph Conrad, Lord Jim

1901     Edward VII (son of Victoria–SAXE-COBURG AND GOTHA)

1902     William Butler Yeats “Adam’s Curse”
             Balfour Prime Minister

1903     Henry James, The Ambassadors

1905     H.G. Wells, Kipps

1908     E.M. Forster, A Room With A View

1910     George V (2nd son of Ed VII–WINDSOR)

1913     D.H. Lawrence, Sons and Lovers
             Vachel Lindsay, General William Booth Enters Into Heaven

1914     World War I
             Ezra Pound organizes the Imagists

1916     Lloyd George Prime Minister

1918     Gerard Manley Hopkins’s poetry published after death
             Siegfried Sassoon “Glory of Women”; Wilfred Owen “Dulce Et Decorum Est”
            Women (age 30 or over) get right to vote; universal male suffrage

1920    Partition established in Government of Ireland Act

1922     T.S. Eliot, The Wasteland
             James Joyce, Ulyssess

1923     George Bernard Shaw, Saint Joan

1924     First Labour Government

1925     Virignia Wolf, Mrs. Dalloway             

1930     Evelyn Waugh publishes Vile Bodies

1932     Aldous Huxley, Brave New World

1933     A.E. Housman, The Name and Nature of Poetry

1934     Robert Graves, I, Claudius              

1936     Edward VIII (son of Geroge V) King then abdicates
             George VI (2nd son of George V) King
             Spanish Civil War Begins
             Keynes, General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

1937     W.H. Auden, “Spain, 1937″
             Louis Macneice, “Carrickfergus”
            Chamberlain Prime Minister

1938     Graham Greene, Brighton Rock
             C.S. Lewis, Out of The Silent Planet

1939     World War II

1940     Churchill Prime Minister

1945      George Orwell, Animal Farm
              Henry Reed, “Naming of Parts”

1947      Independence granted to India and Pakistan

1952     Elizabeth II (daughter of George VI)
             Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot

1954     William Golding, The Lord of the Flies

1955     Philip Larkin, “Church Going”

1956     Suez Crisis

1957     Stevie Smith, “Not Waving But Drowning”
            Ghana obtains independence

1960     Ted Hughes, “Relic”

1979     Thatcher Prime Minsiter

Novels which explore the struggle for modern identity

In Uncategorized on March 15, 2009 at 7:50 pm

1. The Road by Cormac McCarthy

Synopsis:

The Road follows a father and son, journeying together for many months across a desolate, post-apocalyptic landscape, some years after a great, unexplained disaster. Civilisation has been destroyed, and most species have become extinct. The sun is obscured by deep, dark clouds and plants don’t grow. Humanity consists largely of groups of cannibals, their food-source captives, and refugee-travellers who scavenge for food. Ash covers everything; it is in the atmosphere, it obscures the sun and moon, and the two travellers breathe through improvised masks.

The boy’s mother was overwhelmed by the desperate and hopeless situation and has committed suicide some time before the story begins. Her explanation, offered was that they all would be raped, killed and eaten, and that there was no hope left for a different fate. The father is skilled with firearms and knowledgeable about machinery, woodcraft, and human biology. He is alert, attentive and aware, and applies all he knows to anticipating and overcoming the challenges he knows are ever-present. He realises that he and his young son can’t survive another winter where they are, so the two set out across the road. They aim to reach warmer southern climates and the sea in particular. Along the way, threats to the duo’s survival create an atmosphere of sustained terror and tension.

The father coughs blood every morning and knows he is dying. He struggles to protect his son from the constant threats of attack and starvation. They carry a pistol with two bullets, meant for suicide should it become necessary; the father has told the son to kill himself rather than be captured. The father struggles in times of extreme danger with the fear that he will have to kill his son to prevent him from suffering a more horrific fate, examples of which include: the discovery of captives locked in a basement, their limbs gradually harvested by their captors for meat; and a decapitated human infant being roasted on a spit.

In the face of all of these obstacles, the man and the boy have only each other. They repeatedly assure one another that they are among “the good guys,” who are “carrying the fire.”

In the end, having brought the boy south without finding the salvation he had hoped for, the father succumbs to his illness and dies, leaving the boy alone on the road. Three days later, the grieving boy encounters a man who has been tracking the father and son. This man, who has a wife and two children of his own, invites the boy to join his family, this being the first ray of hope given in the storyline regarding the future of humanity.

Quotations

1.     ‘I don’t know. Who is anybody?’

Context: The father and son have just seen a fresh set of tracks in the road and the boy asks who they belong to.

Analysis: Questioning who is anyone? And what factors make up someone’s identity? But ultimately is a person’s identity lost when there are no other people to compare it with.

2.     ‘Are you a doctor? I’m not anything’

Context: Confrontation with another group of people.

Analysis: Are people’s jobs important to their sense of identity? Does success/failure affect who we are? When humanity no longer exists and most of the world is extinct do we lose our identities ie are they just wiped out? Do we no longer acknowledge what we did in the past life when humanity existed?

3.     ‘The man … the boy’

Context: Throughout the novel the father and son are referred to as ‘man’ and ‘boy’.

Analysis: The characters are not referred to by their names; it’s almost as if they are one/ the same identity. Nowadays it is the norm to call someone by their name. It makes us question whether or not our name defines who we are. In the road they certainly don’t as they feel no need to use them.

4.     ‘Is it bad guys?’ ‘They could be good guys’

Context: Father and son are the good guys as they don’t turn to cannibalism no matter how desperate they are for food.

Analysis: Grouping people into cliques just like normal life. Can everyone be grouped into one particular group? Bad/Good the only groups, very wide range for only two groups but the man and boy take comfort knowing they are part of the good group. Does a group’s identity belong to the group? Or is it a combination of all the group’s individual identities?

5.     ‘Will they know what we are?’

Context: Son asking father if the people in the wagon will know what they are.

Analysis: Grammatically odd – should be ‘who we are’ but it is what. Do identities combine or can they remain individual in such extreme circumstances?

6.     ‘But we did kill him’

Context: A man steals their cart; father finds him, takes back what’s theirs and leaves the man naked with nothing.

Analysis: Didn’t physically kill the man but the boy thinks they did. Does our appearance make up our identity? If our clothes/materialistic possessions were taken away would our identity be lost or at least change in anyway?

7.     ‘That the boy was all that stood between him and death’

Context: As they continue to journey on the road scavenging for any food they can find.

Analysis: The father’s caring and loving nature towards his child spurs him on to keep surviving and try to battle the inevitable fate of death. His relationship with his son is a big part of his identity. Quite an extreme quotation – if the father didn’t have the son he would have nothing to live for.

8.     ‘And somewhere two hunted animals trembling like ground – foxes in their cover’

Context: Father beginning to think death is on its way as they continue to trudge along the road.

Analysis: Comparing the 2 men to 2 animals. Differences between them are indistinguishable and blurred; they are almost becoming animals scavenging for any meat. Their identities are fading.

9.     ‘They came upon themselves in a mirror and he almost raised the pistol. It’s us, Papa’

Context: Father and son are in a solitary house in a field looking for supplies.

Analysis: They don’t recognise themselves anymore. Is your appearance solely your identity? Does it define you and would other people recognise who you were if your appearance changed? If appearance is lost/changed, are you no longer the person you were before?

10.                         ‘Shuffling through the ash, each the other’s world entire’

Context: Start of the novel, father and son set off down the road to the coast.

Analysis: Their identities are each other; that is what principally makes them up. Shows how important their relationship is – they are each other’s world and this is what keeps them going.

 

How does the text link to identity?

The Road is a beautifully written, heartfelt book about what the world would be like if a catastrophe caused the majority of the world’s population to disappear. It investigates whether or not you still have your own identity which makes you different to those around you or if you are just grouped into a group like the ‘good guys’ or ‘survivors’. The father and son in the book are described as the ‘good guys carrying the fire’; however there are also the ‘bad guys’ – cannibal gangs. I believe the Road emphasises that even in the most extreme circumstances relationships can be sustained and even grow stronger. Throughout the novel the father teaches the boy things and the boy learns about the past from his father, which both contribute to their senses of identity. What makes up their identity is each other predominately, as the narrator says they are ‘each the other’s world entire’. However, it is very much about the present and the future and the past is only dwelled on fleetingly. Both the father and son live for the present, taking each day as it comes.

Several aspects of identity are explored in The Road including how big a role religion plays in someone’s identity. Especially for the son, God is an important figure who he questions as to why he is making them go through the hell of their journey down the road, but who he also turns to when ultimately his father dies at the end of the novel. The son speaks to his dead father regularly when living with his new family as the woman believes in God too showing that the son finds a way to contact his father; through God.

The most important aspect of both their identities is their relationship with each other; family is shown to make them both survive and their relationship itself is what takes them both so far with neither of them ever giving up. The importance of the mother’s suicide is that all the father has is the son and vice versa and despite everything they carry on showing their strength and determination to not commit suicide. Even though neither one of their names is mentioned, the boy calls his father ‘papa’ an affectionate term showing their close bond. The most powerful image I find is that of the son crying over his father’s body and the book states the boy is saying the father’s name over and over again. The father is now known by his name going to heaven and not just as a man.

However, how do the father and son show their identity? It is not through their name but more through their actions. The father cares for and looks after the boy feeding him rather than himself. There are paragraphs in the book when it is unclear who is speaking; I believe Cormac has down this to show it could be either of them saying the lines for they are both at an equal level and are quite indistinguishable from one another. Identity becomes blurred, where the reader is unsure of who is speaking showing that ultimately when there is no one to compare yourself with your identity is lost and is only rediscovered when remembering the past or when confronted with other people. All the other while the father and son trudge along the road hardly conversing meaning they could be one person for all the reader knows.

 

 

 

 

2. Spies – Michael Frayn

Synopsis

The story begins with Stephen as an old man. He makes a return trip home to England, bent on remembering why and how the familiar smell of something he cannot recall stirs so much emotion inside him.

Stephen enjoys spending more time with his best friend Keith Hayward’s family than his own, especially as Keith’s mother treats him like a person. It isn’t that his own family is mean or neglects him; they are just dull compared to Keith’s. His own father is always so busy with work, vanishing all day long.

One day, Keith tells Stephen that he believes his mother is a German spy. Stephen automatically believes his best friend’s allegations without question, and they dedicate their days and evenings to spying on her.

Keith’s mother makes multiple trips each day to visit her sister who lives just a few houses down. From there, she always heads toward the market. She also makes several trips a day to the post office to mail a multitude of letters. Keeping a good distance behind, the boys plan to follow her.

Their spying quickly uncovers more than they could have imagined. Keith’s mother is not going to town. She is headed into a deserted tunnel. The boys find a hidden box by the railroad tracks with peculiar items locked away inside, and always the mysterious mark of the letter “X”. Soon, though, their game of spying on Keith’s mother gets out of hand, Keith’s mother is on to their spying and lets Stephen know that his behaviour is not acceptable, and that she does not appreciate being followed. She lets him know exposure could turn out to be quite dangerous.

It is when Stephen continues to follow her that he learns the whole truth; Keith’s mother goes through the tunnel to visit a man in an abandoned barn. Stephen suspects that she is having an affair with this man, which is true, but what makes it so controversial is that the man is her sister’s husband, Uncle Peter who is a local hero. Uncle Peter was a British air pilot who went missing in action, and rather than facing the possibility of returning to war, he hid out in the barn where Keith’s mother supplied him with food ect. to stay alive.

The story ends by revealing that Keith’s mother is not a German spy, however Stephen’s own father was. Stephen’s family are actually Jewish Germans, who moved to England to escape persecution and to assist the British government. 

Relation to Identity

By beginning the story as an old man, the entire novel is about the identity of his younger self. The younger Stephen doesn’t consciously acknowledge any search for identity, yet he is continually comparing him self to others, and the identity of those around him. He feels weak, inferior and cowardly compared to his best friend Keith, when in fact Keith is disliked by all the rest of the children, yet Stephen’s insecurities and naivety make him cling onto Keith. He’s nicknamed “weeny weedy Wheatley” and lets other people’s insults define his identity.

Rather than looking at what kind of a person he really is, he focuses on very superficial aspects of identity. Appearance plays a large part in his categorisation of others as does a person’s family; he is most aware of the fact that Keith’s family are “interesting” where as his are dull. Stephen has no grasp of the concept of identity; he immediately accepts that Keith’s definition of a person must be true yet these definitions are often assumptions based on rumours throughout the town.

When old Stephen begins to speak, we realise his perception of identity has matured. He notes how his identity developed as he was growing up, however his struggle was made more difficult by continually being in Keith’s shadow. At the time, Stephen only thoughts of identity was his sense of inferiority towards Keith and his family and the concept of “who he should be”. When he later learns his German and Jewish origins, he struggles, even as a matured man, to find his identity – whether it be an English man or a German Jew. Stephen always felt that his life “never took flight” regardless of what country he was in, or who he was acting as. Stephen struggled for his identity both as a child and as a man, however his struggle during his later years were more difficult as he was aware of the entire “identity” concept.

Quotations

 

“I felt a great restlessness stirring in me – it’s the longing to be elsewhere [but] also a longing to be home.” (Old Stephen)

 

“You understand that sometimes people find themselves isolated. Perhaps they’re picked on – something about the way they look, or talk, or because they’re not very good at games. Just because they’re who they are.” (Keith’s mother talking to young Stephen)

 

“…announces Elizabeth Hardiment, and her words carry authority because she wears glasses.”(Young Stephen)

 

“If you’re a boy and hope to be a man, you’re called upon to show courage you don’t really possess.” (Young Stephen)

 

“There’s something sad about our life, and I can’t quite put my finger on what it is” (Young Stephen)

 

“Why can’t we be called something more like Hayward?” (Young Stephen)

 

“I feel more strongly than ever the honour of my association with Keith.” (Young Stephen)

 

“He understands that there’s something not quite right about him and his family” (Old Stephen reflecting on his childhood)

 

“Everything about him was yellow and black; everything about me was plainly green and black” (Young Stephen talking about Keith – everyone is socially colour coded; yellow was for the upper classes, where as green was for more common people.)

 

“My marriage was never quite a real marriage, my job in the engineering department of the local polytechnic was never quite a real job.” (Old Stephen talking about his later life.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Things Fall Apart

‘Things Fall Apart’ is the story of a West African man called Okonkwo. He is renowned for his strength in wrestling and as a warrior. He has three wives and a large family with many children, and is influential in his village, Umuofia. However, when he accidentally kills a fellow member of his clan, he is exiled for seven years to a neighbouring village. During this time Christian missionaries arrive to convert the people of the clan from their tribal religion. Okonkwo is disgusted by the English pastor, and even more so by those clansmen who decide to convert, one of whom is Okonkwo’s son, Nwoye. He is promptly disowned by Okonkwo. When the family returns to Umuofia after their exile, they discover that many things have changed- the Christian missionaries exert much influence, and many clansmen have converted. Oknokwo and a group of other men destroy the church which has been built in Umuofia, and are jailed for a ransom. When the non- Christian tribesmen hold a meeting, it is interrupted by some converts demanding that they disperse. Okonkwo murders one of these, and then hangs himself from a tree.

Link to Identity

Okonkwo feels at the beginning of the book that he has a solid and respectable identity. However, the double upset of his accidental killing and the arrival of the missionaries disturb this identity him because the aspects of his identity by which he defined himself; his physical strength and bravery, are no longer relevant. His identity is also heavily defined by his lazy and unsuccessful father, who drives much of his desire to succeed and to ensure that his sons follow in his footsteps.

The identities of those around them are also important to the struggle for modern identity, particularly those of the women. They are referred to consistently throughout the book as ‘Okonkwo’s second wife’ or ‘Okonkwo’s third wife’ etc. This shows how their identities are heavily dependent upon their husband. The women are also unable to participate in many important events and are often grouped with the children in terms of their cowardice and vulnerability.

This book is important to the struggle for modern identity because it deals mainly with the clash of cultures between the African tribesmen and the English missionaries. The collective cultural identity of the tribe is important. Their lives revolve around their tribal religion and their priestess ‘Agbala’. When the arrival of the Christians upsets this the structure and organisation of the clan begins to break down.

Quotations

‘Okonkwo’s fear was…fear of himself, lest he should be found to resemble his father’ p11. Outlining the character of Okonkwo- his father’s failure is important to his character. He decides that he must ‘hate everything that his father… had loved. One of these things was gentleness and another was idleness’. Shows how his father’s character determines his own and his identity as a strong and ruthless man.

‘he had called him a woman. Okonkwo knew how to kill a man’s spirit’. P20 further description of Okonkwo reveals that he is dismissive of those without ‘titles’. ‘Agbala’- the word for a woman- is one of the gravest insults that can be given to a man. This shows the diminished view of women and their identity as undesirable, weak creatures to be.

‘Okonkwo drew his matchet and cut him down. He was afraid of being thought weak.’ P44 Okonkwo kills his adoptive son because the Oracle has told him to. This quotation shows how the influence of others (‘peer pressure’) impacts upon our view of ourselves- our identity. It affects Okonkwo to the extent that he is willing to kill an adoptive son, of whom he was very fond. Also shows the influence of religion upon identity- it was the ‘Oracle’ who decreed that the son should be killed. This is a theme throughout the book.

‘It was that faith alone that gave her life any meaning’  p58. Ekwefi, Okonkwo’s second wife, has lost nine children in infancy. Her only daughter, Ezinma is hugely important to her, to the extent that her life is shaped by her frequent ‘bouts of sickness and health’. The ‘faith’ is in Ezinma’s survival.  Shows how a woman’s identity is so strongly affected by her children.  Also shows how women are dependent upon others to give their lives any meaning.

‘His life had been ruled by a great passion- to become one of the lords of the clan…then everything had been broken.’ P96 shows Okonkwo’s obsession with achieving titles and prestige and how this defines him.

‘A man belongs to his fatherland when things are good and life is sweet. But when there is sorrow and bitterness he finds refuge in his motherland.’ P98 part of wider connotation of ‘female’ aspects of a man’s life- e.g. ‘female’ crimes (when you accidentally kill someone), ‘female’ crops (they are not allowed to grow yams, the most important crop). 

‘He felt a relief within as the hymn poured into his parched soul’ p108- Nwoye, Okonkwo’s eldest son, is captivated by the Christian religion- it is a part of his identity that he had been missing. His soul is incomplete- the religion gives him the motivation that his father does not give him- ‘Blessed is he who forsakes his father and his mother for my sake’ p112- the Christian preacher tells Nwoye this. Achebe shows how religion is a place where those who do not feel comfortable elsewhere can derive identity.

‘I cannot live on the bank of a river and wash my hands with spittle’ p121- proverbs like this are very commonly used by the clan- they all know them and use them to express themselves. Shows their group identity. When the Christians arrive their interpreter speaks a foreign dialect of their language ‘Ibo’ – he therefore does not know any of their proverbs and his influence contributes toward the breakage of their group identity. 

‘He has put a knife on the things that held us together and now we have fallen apart’ p 129- the tribe’s group identity- their religion, language, customs and superstitions have been destroyed by the arrival of another culture intent on destroying theirs. Also violent imagery.

‘He saw things as black and white. And black was evil’ p134- the pastor ‘Reverend James Smith’ sets much store by racial identity which previously had not been a problem.

‘The story of this man who had killed a messenger and hanged himself would make interesting reading…almost write a whole chapter on him…perhaps…a reasonable paragraph…the title of the book…The Pacification of the Primitive Tribes of the Lower Niger’ p152 (last page)- these are the thoughts of the Commissioner on Okonkwo after discovering that he had committed suicide. Apart from being heavily ironic (you’ve just finished a whole book on Okonkwo), this shows how the identity of the Africans is very blurred in the eyes of the Commissioner- they are all almost identical.

 

4. Small Island by Andrea Levy

Synopsis

Within the novel Andrea Levy explores class, race and prejudice during the Second World War. She predominantly explores these topics within the city of London in 1948 but she also explores them within the setting of the country of Jamaica, the country of origin of two of the main characters. The novel so far is told by three narrators, Queenie Bligh, Gilbert Joseph and Hortense Roberts. Queenie Bligh is the typical English woman in war time Britain, left alone to keep house whilst her husband Bernard is off fighting in the war. However she does not remain this way for long, as to the disgust of her neighbours she takes in a ‘darkie’ called Gilbert Joseph as a lodger when her husband does not return from the war. The ‘darkie’, Gilbert Joseph, originates from Jamaica and had met Queenie during the war when he was stationed in Falmouth. He entered the war thinking that he would be no different from any other member of the RAF and that he would experience the perks that belonging to the ranks was supposed to bring, however when he reached America he soon realised that life is not as good for coloured people at home and that he certainly wouldn’t be benefitting from any of the perks of being a man in uniform.  Gilbert’s wife Hortense is the final narrator of the novel. A young Jamaican school teacher born out of wedlock, the daughter of a famous and respected man, Lovell Roberts, but a not so well respected mother, she is brought up by her father’s cousin Philip, along with their son Michael. As their childhood friendship blossoms into love, well on Hortense’s part anyway, Michael is caught in a compromising situation with Mrs Ryder, the owner of the private school at which Hortense is a teacher, and he is then sent away to war in shame. Sometime later Hortense then mistakes Gilbert for Michael and they have an interesting introduction, only later to find he is the ‘sweetheart’ of her friend Celia. Although this is not to last for long, as after five days Gilbert and Hortense marry in a deal so as to get Gilbert back to his beloved England and Hortense the ability to ‘go anywhere she pleased’ principally England. But the England of Hortense’s dreams is not the England of Hortense’s reality; she is disheartened to find a dishevelled husband living in an even more dishevelled house with another woman. Their marriage isn’t the deal she signed up for as Hortense embarks on a new life, completely different from the comfortable life she left behind in Jamaica.

Why does this book link to identity?

The novel relates to identity in several ways. One way in which it looks at identity, is through Levy’s characters perceptions of each others identities. For example Blanche or Mrs Smith perceived Gilbert to be a bad man, and believed the stereotypical thought that all coloured men had ‘animal desires’ and it was these he was exhibiting when ‘he raised his hat to her one morning’. This kind gesture was seen as some sort of rudiment because of the identity that had been imposed on Gilbert by those around him.

The novel also links to identity as through this behaviour the novel also shows the identity of the people judging that of others, as it shows them to be unkind, unwelcoming, small minded, and uneducated, which then shows even stronger the identity of those who help those with coloured skin, in particular Queenie. This is because even though Queenie is near on made an outcast by those around her, she sticks to her guns and does not change who she is.

Furthermore the novel also looks at how identity changes as you move across the world, as it shows its characters identity’s to be very different from one country to another, in several ways. One way in which this identity differs is through the way Gilbert changes from a man in a ‘double breasted suit jacket’ to the man Hortense is met with on her arrival, a man that is incapable of even dressing himself.

 

Quotes

1.       ‘wakey,wakey,wakey-let go your cocks and grab your socks’

Context: Gilbert is at the barracks in America, being awakened for the day ahead

Analysis: this shows the stereotypical male identity, that even first thing in the morning it’s all he can think about and obviously until last thing at night

2.       ‘If a body in its beauty is the work of God, then this hideous predicament between his legs was without doubt the work of the devil’

Context: Hortense and Gilberts wedding night and he is expecting the traditional happenings

Analysis: shows Hortense’s naivety, as she is so embarrassed and scared that she is unable to even use his penis’s proper name. This also shows their identity as a couple, as he wants to try to be the stereotypical working couple, whereas she obviously does not see it in that way whatsoever and does not even want to share a bed with him.

3.       ‘it might just help relations around here if all our coloured brethren understood how to behave’

Context: Mr Todd, one of Queenie’s neighbours, speaking of how the coloured people of England should step out of the way for the white people, rather than the white people being forced to step out of the way for the coloureds, i.e. basically saying that the coloured people should know their place as lower members of society.

Analysis: shows how small minded British people were at the time, as this would have been a stereotypical belief as is shown by the reactions of Queenie’s neighbours to Gilbert. It also shows how in this society the coloured people of Britain had, had an identity thrust upon them; they were not allowed to create their own.

4.       ‘I took him in because I knew Bernard would never let me’

Context: Queenie explaining why she took Gilbert in

Analysis: give’s an identity as being her own woman; her identity isn’t thrust upon her by her husband through his rules and beliefs as it was for many women of the time. Also she is, not in a malicious way however, manipulative as she uses Gilbert as a route to making her husband come back, but she is clever also as it gives her both a lifeline and a route.

5.       ‘women gonna fall at your feet. In my uniform of blue’

Context: Gilbert looking at himself in the mirror picturing what his life as a man of the RAF will be like

Analysis: he is giving his perception of the identity of both women, and the identity his uniform will give him. He obviously thinks women are either fickle, as they are more favourable to men in uniform, or easy as they will give themselves to someone they know full well they will never see again. He is also showing himself to be naive, as he cannot see past his own country and has no understanding of what life will be like for him, and is like for people like him outside of Jamaica.

6.       ‘But there was I! Standing at the door of a house in London and ringing the bell.’

Context: she has just arrived in London, and is telling of how it was not Celia but her that was living out Celia’s dream

Analysis: she has formed her identity upon another’s dreams. She has taken another person’s ambitions, to ring the bell. She has taken someone else’s sweetheart and made him her husband. But will someone else’s identity make her happy?

7.       ‘The sound of my father’s name could still hush a room long after he had left Savannah-La-Mar’

Context: The first real description we get of her, this is the first line

Analysis: she defines herself by her father’s status; she mentions it numerous times showing the importance she places upon status. Also it is her father who has given her, her identity, if it had not been for whom her father was she would have had a very different life, and would have more than likely become a very different person. Also shows how she is not an emotional person, as it is not those she loves that she mentions first but a man who she has never even met!

8.       ‘I’d seen old ones with backsides as big as buses but never a young one with a trim waist’

Context: describing Hortense

Analysis: shows how even Queenie judges a book by its cover sometimes. Also shows how Hortense may well be different from all the others, gives her a unique identity.

9.       ‘Coloured, black, nigger. All these words had been used to characterise me in the last few minutes’

Context: Gilbert is sent to pick something up from the US army base

Analysis: shows how to others his identity is his race, to them he is nothing more.

10.   ‘This is a small island man, we just clinging so we don’t fall off’

Context: talking of Jamaica

Analysis: their identity is the island, they’re clinging onto this because they are scared of who they really may be, scared of what is out there in the world

11.   ‘I was a giant living on land no bigger than the soles of my feet’

Context: metaphorically comparing his identity/himself to the island of Jamaica

Analysis: his identity has outgrown Jamaica, a place stuck in its traditional ways, he is different from all the others, he needs a place where his identity will be able to flourish, which is in his eyes England

12.   ‘that was how I’d always seen Bernard’s father, Arthur: a human apostrophe. He was there but only to show us that something precious had gone astray’

Context: describing Arthur in relation to an apostrophe, ‘an apostrophe is a mark to show where something is missing’

Analysis: the ‘something precious’ is his identity, through the loss of his speech/ his unwillingness to speak, he has lost his identity, raises the idea of the importance of speech in relation to identity. Also shows how precious a person’s identity is, a person isn’t a full person without it, hence the apostrophe metaphor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time” by Mark Haddon

            Christopher Boone, the main narrator in this book, is 15 years old and has Asberger’s Syndrome, a form of autism. This means that he has difficulty understanding other people’s behaviour and emotions, but at the same time has a flair for maths (he takes A Level maths at the age of 15) a photographic memory, and an inability to tell lies. He has an extreme attention to detail and lives his life through numbers, lists and timetables (eg. all chapter numbers in this book are prime numbers), whilst also harbouring irrational phobias of things that are brown or yellow. He also hates human contact, and screams if anyone touches him.

            All events in the story are told through Christopher’s eyes. At the beginning of the book he finds his neighbour’s dog murdered. The main purpose of the story is to find the killer, but along the way Christopher discovers that his mother had had an affair with a neighbour and left to go his father, and that his father had concealed this by telling him that she was dead. It is also revealed that Christopher’s father killed the dog, and as a result Christopher becomes frightened of his father and runs away to find his mum in London. He travels from Swindon to London, overwhelmed by the number of people and the complexity of life, and finds his mum, who agrees that he can stay there for a while. The mum’s new relationship consequently breaks down, and the two return to Swindon, where Christopher gets an A in A-Level Maths, and the dad attempts to re-build his relationship with him.

 

How this book relates to identity

            Mark Haddon shows some of the worst aspects of British society, in that Christopher finds it impossible to identify with other people, and as a result lives in his own little world. In many cases, people he meets are rude and inconsiderate regarding his disability. He finds other people weird and confusing, and prefers to be on his own. For example, his favourite dream is that everyone in the world that isn’t like him dies, and he lives on his own perfectly happy and without interference from others. His disconnection from other people is also physical, whereby he hates being touched and is even given a police caution for hitting a policeman who touched him on the arm.

            Haddon also makes Christopher stand out through his hobbies and his superstitions. For example, he relaxes by doing very hard maths questions, and judges how good his day will be according to how many red cars he sees in a row on the way to school. He hates films, because actors are “liars” and aren’t doing things that have really happened in life. He physically cannot lie, as when he thinks of one thing that might have happened instead, a million other possibilities crowd into his head and he feels overwhelmed.

            Through this book, Haddon also questions how much parenting impacts on your identity. Christopher has little understanding of “love”, and instead cares more for dogs and his pet rat Toby. He detaches himself from his parents very easily, not seeming too bothered when describing his mum’s “death” and running away from his dad. He refers to them as “mother” and “father”, which aren’t very affectionate terms. He also doesn’t realise the impact he has on other’s relationships, as both his parents and his mum and her boyfriend split up on account of him.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Important Quotations

·        “My name is Christopher John Francis Boone. I know all the countries of the world and their capital cities and every prime number up to 7,507”

o       Introduction to narrator, 2nd chapter

o       Christoper defines himself through what he knows

o       Already makes him stand out, these aren’t normal things people know

·         “I sometimes think of my mind as a machine…it makes it easier to explain to other people what is going on inside it”

o       Describing when a policeman is asking him “too many questions”

o       “Machine” – Suggests removal of all abstract aspects of imagination etc , are concrete things (eg. knowledge, experience) the only crucial bit to the human mind?

·         “I think prime numbers are like life. They are very logical but you could never work out the rules, even if you spent all your time thinking about them”

o       All of the chapters are numbered using prime numbers

o       Rules of life – are there any? Christopher lives his life by rules, gives reader another perspective on life etc

·          “She didn’t have to stay at home and be his wife”

o       Talking about when Mr Shears had an affair and left his wife; Mrs Shears is somewhat liberated

o       Marriage = restricted? Are women still bound down and are supposed to act as housewives?

o       Shows how deep-rooted in society these old-fashioned idea are, even Christopher (who doesn’t know the “rules” of society) is aware of them

·        “Everyone has learning difficulties because learning to speak French or understanding Relativity is difficult, and also everyone has special needs, like Father who has to carry a little packet of artificial sweetening tablets around with him to put in his coffee to stop him getting fat”

o       Christopher talking about being labelled as having “special needs” and “learning difficulties”

o       Haddon shows how patronising these politically correct terms can be, even to those who do have the disabilities

o       Everyone is “disabled” in some way, some (eg. Christopher) more extreme than other

·        “because loving someone is helping them when they get into trouble, and looking after them, and telling them the truth”

o       Christopher’s definition of love, he values concrete things eg. help and being truthful, disregard affection etc

o       What is the definition of love? Is there one?

·        “Most people are lazy. They never look at everything. They do what is called glancing which is the same word for bumping off something and carrying on in almost the same direction”

o       Christopher is extremely observant and doesn’t see why others aren’t

o       Represents fast culture of today, people are rushing everywhere and not appreciating the world around them

·          “People believe in God because the world is very complicated and they think it is very unlikely that anything as complicated as a flying squirrel or the human eye or a brain could happen by chance”

o       Christopher doesn’t believe in God/religion and is sceptical of those who do

o       Shows diversity of world and the complexity of the stuff around us. Evolution etc

·         “I didn’t know what you’ll catch your death meant”

o       When his mother tells him to come inside she uses this saying, and Christopher doesn’t understand metaphors etc at all (they don’t represent real things)

o       Highlights the amount of useless/meaningless phrases we use, do they add to the language as a whole?

·         “And I started to feel a pain in my chest like I did on the underground because I thought I wasn’t going to be able to go back to Swindon and take my A Level”

o       His mother tells him he can’t go back and take his maths A Level

o       “pain in my chest” – emotion, sadness. He isn’t used to these feelings so he doesn’t know what they are or what they mean.

 

 

           

 

 

 

 

                        6. “The God Of Small Things” Arundhati Roy

Synopsis:

The story is set in India and is primarily about the caste system and Communism, told from Rahel and Estha’s point of view (time shifts from 1969- before their birth- to 1993), twins who were separated when they were 7 because they ran away from home (due to Velutha and Ammu). Sophie, the twin’s friend, drowns, Velutha (their mother’ s lover) is blamed for her death and the twins witness him being tortured for crossing caste boundaries, which scars them for life. When they revealed the actual cause of her death to the police, the police recognise Velutha as a Communist whose unfair torture would cause Communist riots so force the twins to change their story by threatening them and convincing them that they pushed her out of the boat to her death. The novel tells the family history, for example,  Velutha who resides in the lowest caste and who loves Ammu, from a higher caste, which results in his death and the twins’ ‘grandfather’ who abuses his family. The twins are eventually reunited and both are traumatised by their past, Estha unable to speak at all. The twins spend a day together and then sleep with each other- incest.

Identity:

-          The novel follows the twins family history as the main factor affecting them in the future, proven by the fact that Estha is so traumatised by her past that she’s mute when she’s older.

-          As well as this, it shows the injustice of the caste system and the role it plays in identifying someone. Velutha died because he loved someone socially superior to himself and the relationship was condemned by society. This shows how society can shape a person’s future and how it can break up a person or a relationship.

-          Also tied into the story, is the idea of race: Baby Kochamma changes her religion for a man and people fight against the rules of their religion throughout the book, yet ultimately, the religion defines their society and therefore, their identity.

Character listing (copied and pasted from Wikipedia to make the Synopsis/Quote Analysis/Identity points easier to understand)  

  • Ammu – Rahel and Estha’s mother, sister of Chacko, daughter of Pappachi and Mammachi.
  • Baba – Rahel and Estha’s father, tried to beat Ammu and prostitute her, later re-married, of a lower caste than Ammu.
  • Baby Kochamma (Navomi Ipe) – Pappachi’s sister, aunt to Chacko and Ammu, and grand-aunt to Sophie Mol, Estha, and Rahel.
  • Chacko – Brother to Ammu, son of Pappachi and Mammachi, father to Sophie Mol and divorced from Margaret Kochamma.
  • Comrade Pillai – Leader of the local communist party.
  • Estha (Esthappen Yako) – Rahel’s twin brother, son of Ammu and Baba.
  • Father Mulligan- Baby Kochamma’s love interest. A Roman Catholic.
  • Joe – Second husband of Margaret.
  • Kari Saipu – English paedophile who lived in the History House before Estha and Rahel arrived in Ayemenem; Vellya Pappen pins his ghost to a tree with his sickle, ghost remains there asking for a cigar.
  • Kochu Maria – Housekeeper to Rahel, Grandmother.
  • Larry McCaslin – ex-husband of Rahel, travels to India to teach and falls in love with Rahel, bringing her back to the USA with him.
  • Mammachi (Shoshamma Ipe) – Blind. Wife of Pappachi, mother of Chacko and Ammu, grandmother of Estha, Rahel, and Sophie Mol. Also founder of the family pickle factory.
  • Margaret Kochamma – Chacko’s ex-wife, mother of Sophie Mol. The Kochamma’s are Christian.
  • Murlidharan – Homeless, insane person who crouches naked on the welcome sign for Cochin. Carries keys to his last residence around his waist expectantly.
  • Orangedrink Lemondrink Man – Paedophile from Estha’s past.
  • Pappachi (Shri Benaan John Ipe) – Father to Chacko and Ammu, grandfather to Estha, Rahel, and Sophie Mol. He was an imperial entomologist.
  • Rahel – Estha’s twin sister, daughter of Ammu and Baba, divorced from Larry McCaslin.
  • Sophie Mol – Cousin of the twins, daughter of their uncle Chacko and Margaret Kochamma.
  • Inspector Thomas Mathew – Police inspector who interviews Baby Kochamma on the night Velutha dies. Somewhat ambivalent about his men’s practices of beating Untouchables nearly to death with no substantiated reason.
  • Urumban – Velutha’s imaginary twin brother.
  • Kuttappen – Velutha’s paralyzed brother.
  • Velutha – The title character, local carpenter, an untouchable (lower social caste) by birth.
  • Vellya Paapen- Velutha’s father, a Pariah.

Quotes:

(Page 32) “Suddenly they become the bleached bones of a story”

- bleached bones-  understatement, detracts from the humanity, also symbolic of the search for family history- excavation. Bleached- colourless- ironic of the Westernised relationships in an Indian culture, eg, separation and origin of caste.

(Page 4-5) ”In those early amorphous years when memory had only just begun, when life was full of Beginnings and no Ends, and everything was Forever, Esthappen and Rahel thought of themselves together as Me, and separately, as We or Us.  As though they were a rare breed of Siamese twins, physically separate, but with joint identities.”

- separated during childhood, search for their own identities- traumatising and difficult, main point of the book: how the injustice in life will affect their future.

–when memory had just begun: earliest memories are most damaging for the twins later,

(Page 33) “That it (the story) really began in the days when the Love Laws were made.  The laws that lay down who should be loved, and how.  And how much.

Basically a summary of caste- Velutha and Ammu are ruled by the ‘Love Laws’ and ultimately this causes the twins to commit incest- a more serious violation. Shows how the caste system controls the people in love and can even be the responsible for the death of them. Paradoxical: Western beliefs are that ‘love’ and ‘laws’ are paradoxes. Shows the structure of Indian society.

Insight into the rest of the book.

(Page 44-5) ”The fate of the wretched man-less woman.”

Ammu can’t get a man so settles for the drunkard- implies she’s not a woman. Although the reader is made to question later which is more punishable, to be a ‘wretched man-less woman’ or to love outside caste. ‘Fate’ implies a sense of helplessness and the inability to control society, yet in reality, the statement is based upon society’s tradition- not fate.

John Berger epigraph: “Never again will a single story be told as though it’s the only one.

John Berger- original novel was ‘G’ in which the main character was a serial lover of women- many people affected by the life of one. Strongly reflected in the novel in the way that Ammu and Velutha affect the twins so profoundly, or the way the priest affects Baby Kochamma, or how Pappachi affects Mammachi with abuse and then neglection- this quote highlights how all the stories in the novel are interrelated and have an effect upon the other (very much an Indian perspective upon society). An epigraph gives the basic message within the story, states the meaning.

(Page 31) “They all broke the rules. They all crossed into forbidden territory. They all tampered with the laws that lay down who should be loved and how. And how much.”

This quote pretty much opens the “real” story, emphasises the consequences- and how much- that society’s laws have upon its inhabitants. The basis for a later quote about ‘Love Laws’and the shocking stories- ‘forbidden territory’ sounds ominous, a brief summary of what’s to come.  

(Page 217) “If he touched her, he couldn’t talk to her, if he loved her, he couldn’t leave, if he spoke, he couldn’t listen, if he fought, he couldn’t win”

Always has to concur to society, Ammu made a mistake with her husband (a drunk) and has to endure ‘cruelty’ yet society is unforgiving and harsh towards her. The rights of women is a view which Roy clearly sets out to put across by showing how much they’re violated within Indian society. Ultimately, Ammu goes insane and dies because of the family horror towards her divorce and the hypocritical Communist leader’s disdain.

(Page 207) “And there it was again. Another religion turned against itself. Another edifice constructed by the human mind, decimated by human nature.”

States  how nobody helped Velutha when he was dismissed from his job, aimed towards the Communist leaders who didn’t help the poor. Highlights Roy’s belief that Communism is a hypocritical form of Capitalism.

(Page 182) ‘A pair of actors hopped in a recondite play with no hint as plot or narrative, stumbling through their parts, nursing someone else’s sorrow. Grieving someone else’s grief’

The twins are unable to control what happens to them and are abused by many people in the play, for example, the orange- leman man in the theatre abuses Estha and no adult really cares about it- this is supposed to come across as shocking and violent to the reader. Accents the children’s childhood, ‘stumbling’, ‘nursing’, ‘grieving’ being key adjectives to describe the children. 

 

(Page 191) “You are not the Sinner. You are the Sinned Against. You were only children. You had no control”

Again, highlights the twins’ abuse and how they had their innocence taken away when they were very young. To tie into this point is the description that the two people who make the twins suffer the most are “both men whom childhood abandoned without a trace…truly, terrifying adult”. Shows the empathy towards childhood which Roy has yet also highlights just how much innocence can be forcibly removed by society.

 

 

 

 

 

7. The Great Gatsby

 

Nick moves to New York in the summer of 1922 to learn about the bond business. He rents a house in the West Egg district of Long Island. Nick’s next-door neighbour is a mysterious man named Jay Gatsby, who lives in a gigantic mansion and throws extravagant parties.

 Nick is unlike the other inhabitants of West Egg—he was educated at Yale and has social connections in East Egg, a fashionable area of Long Island home to the established upper class. Nick drives out to East Egg one evening for dinner with his cousin, Daisy Buchanan, and her husband, Tom, an erstwhile classmate of Nick’s at Yale. Daisy and Tom introduce Nick to Jordan Baker, a beautiful, young woman with whom Nick begins a romantic relationship. Tom has a lover, Myrtle Wilson and Nick travels to New York City with Tom and Myrtle. At a vulgar, gaudy party in the apartment that Tom keeps for the affair, Myrtle begins to taunt Tom about Daisy, and Tom responds by breaking her nose.

 Nick goes to one of Gatsby’s legendary parties. He encounters Jordan Baker and they meet Gatsby. Gatsby asks to speak to Jordan alone, and tells Jordan that he knew Daisy and is deeply in love with her., Nick invites Daisy to have tea at his house, without telling her that Gatsby will also be there. Gatsby and Daisy re-establish their connection and begin an affair.

 Tom grows increasingly suspicious of his wife’s relationship with Gatsby. He forces the group to drive into New York City, where he confronts Gatsby. Daisy realizes that her allegiance is to Tom, and Tom sends her back with Gatsby.

 Gatsby’s car has struck and killed Myrtle, Tom’s lover. Nick learns that Daisy was driving the car when it struck Myrtle, but Gatsby intends to take the blame. Tom tells Myrtle’s husband that Gatsby was the driver. George finds Gatsby and shoots him dead then shoots himself.

 Nick stages a small funeral for Gatsby, ends his relationship with Jordan, and moves back to the Midwest.

 

How does it link to identity?

In the great Gatsby, characters such as Jay Gatsby use various social settings to reject reality and present themselves as anything rather than who they truly are. Possessions seem very important to these characters and there whole identity is based around the name they have build up for them self. Gatsby throws extravagant parties in order to attract his first love Daisy and intrigue her back into his life. This shows the reader he can’t just be himself which might lead you into thinking that Gatsby is struggling with his identity and doesn’t know himself who he is and hasn’t reached self actualisation. Through out the text Fitzgerald has characters question Gatsby, how he came into his money, who he is and what he does, and this incisively make the reader question him. Fitzgerald might be doing this to show that Gatsby’s identity is perplexed and that people in the 20s in America didn’t know who they were.  Fitzgerald could be suggesting that the struggle for identity is damaging and shows this when Nick discovers that he is Gatsby’s one true friend and he finds himself “on Gatsby’s side and alone.” This shows that after everything Gatsby does to impress Daisy, even she deserts him.

Social Class, money and wealth are all very important concepts of identity that are explored by Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald criticizes American society in the 1920’s for its emphasis on money, superficial relationships, and obsession over class as being the main parts of what make up someone identity.

 

Quotations

 

·         “Whenever you feel like criticizing anyone,’ he told me, “just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had” page1. This is what Nicks (the narrator) fathers say to him when he was younger. Society has a great part to play in shaping the identities of individuals. From a young age Nick was taught to differentiate people by there wealth and this suggests that he shouldn’t criticise people in lower classes that him and that he is at an ‘advantage’ because he has come from a family with money and belongs to a higher social class. Throughout the novel, the characters that he comes into contact with were immediately associated with their money and their level of wealth. This shows that class and wealth are the most important parts of people identity.

·         “Shirts of sheer linen and thick silk and fine flannel” page89. When Daisy comes to Gatsby house. The narrator exceedingly describes materialistic aspects of Gatsby and all his belongings. This proves the ostentation associated with the characters identities and that Gatsby feels that showing off all his clothes and all his wealth will impress her, showing again the importance of possessions.

·         “voice full of money” page126. This is what Gatsby says about Daisy when he and Nick are discussing her. This shows how affected by money she is. Although she was infatuated and perhaps in love with Gatsby when she was younger she is now infatuated by his wealth and this shows that she identifies someone by how much money they have. Your voice is what lets you accent your opinions so it is very significant and if her voice is full of money it suggests it’s the only thing she cares about.  

·         Money has managed to shape the identity of Tom also. He is arrogant, self-confident and a totally careless and brutal man. He boasts about his home saying, I’ve got a nice place here” most of the conversation if not all is about who has what and the possessions of others, Fitzgerald is doing this to show the reader that people in American in the 20s were gripped by wealth as almost all the characters identities were summed up by what they owned, the character are know for what they own rather that who they are.

 ·          “Mr. Nobody from Nowherepage 136, Gatsby says it when they are all at the Plaza hotel. Tom is mocking Gatsby’s lack of origins, as he has new money which is not a like and the fact that tom picks this as a criticism shows how important someone’s wealth is and how it makes up someone’s identity so strongly. Nowhere also suggests to the reader that he is lonely and desolate and confused about his own identity as no one knows truly who he really is and I believe neither does he.

 

 

 

 

 

8. Nineteen-eighty four

Synopsis

Nineteen-eighty four is a time under the ruthless control of a dictatorship, “The Party”, where any independent thought or unorthodoxy is suppressed by “The Thought Police”.  The Party, and Big Brother is “always watching you”, mainly through the tele-screens, a device compulsory letting big brother see anyone and can’t be turned off.

1984 follows the life of Winston Smith who works in “The Ministry of Truth” correcting any wrong data: a person taken by the Thought Police has not died, they never existed, so he erases all evidence of them.  But Winston is secretly a rebel and believes life is not right and, at one time before, society must have been different.

He starts a relationship, sealing their fate of death but they believe they can delay fate if they are out of Big Brother’s knowledge. They do this by meeting at the flat above Mr Charrington’s shop as there are no tele-screens. They join a rebellious organisation, “The Brotherhood”, lead by O’Brian.  But are caught in Mr Charrington’s flat by the Thought Police of which mr Charrington is a member.

They are separated and Winston is kept in a windowless cell “where there is no darkness”. He is tortured by O’Brian into submission and to forget any love, especially for Julia. When this doesn’t work he is taken to “Room 101” to be tortured with rats-the one thing that he hates-when he shouts for Julia to take his place.

After, he can go back to daily life but now he is an example of orthodoxy.  He sees Julia and they admit that they betrayed each other but it is clear that they no longer love each other and it finishes with Winston watching the tele-screen and he now “loved Big Brother”.

 

Link to Identity

This book links incredibly well to the theme of identity because orwell wrote the book as a cry for more freedom of thought and freedom and of expression in his own society, although it is still very relevant today.

Orwell explores the idea of how a person would live and react under a dictatorship when not  allowed to have any identity.  In 1984, being orthodox to the Party meant being like a robot and not like a person.  So they do not think for themselves or question anything around them, and in order to stay alive someone has to be just like everybody else with no characteristics of eccentricity or difference to the accepted norm. through this Orwell is saying that people in society need to express themselves and their own personality and identity without being suppressed with any sort of ideals in the society in which they live.

Also in 1984, a person could never know anybody else’s identity as the outward identity that they portrayed was very different from who they really were.  For exaple Mr Charrington seems like a lonely old man who misses the days when people could be private but in reality he is a member of the thought police, arresting people for unorthodoxy.  Similarly O’Brian seems like a person that Winston can trust and seems to feel the same about the party and is a leader in The Brotherhood but he turns out to fully believe in the system run by the party andtortures anybody that does not comply fully.

Julia is also someone that hides her true identity from Big Brother but in a different way to Mr Charrington and O’Brian.  She seems like a person completely taken in by the party and does a lot of extra work for them after her working hours including being a member of the Junior Anti sex league but she does not believe any of it at all and simply does so much to hide her complete rebellion inside.  Through these characters, Orwell is showing a society where you literally could not trust anyone and where a true identity can always be hidden and a new one created. This links to our socirty where some people hide who they really are and take on another personality but Orwell is telling the reader that a person should show their own identity because they have the right to do so, unlike people living in dictatorships like the one in 1984.

Quotations

       “BIG BROTHER IS WATCHING YOU”…the words written on posters all over Oceania-there is never a time when you can be alone or be yourself-you always have to act in accordance to how the Party want-not how you want.

       “You had to live…in the assumption that every sound you made was overheard” …Winston thinking about his tele-screen and the thought police.  No privacy-always checked on so that not thinking for yourself.

       “to dissemble your feelings, to control your face, to do what everyone else was doing was an instinctive reaction” …during 2 minutes Hate.  The dictatorship was so strict that even if your face looked suspicious it could be dangerous. You never showed true identity in anyway.

       “wearing on his face the look of grim enjoyment which was considered proper” …during morning exercise.  People were not allowed to have different opinions or different likes or dislikes which forms a huge part of everyone’s identity.

       “you could not have friends nowadays, you had comrades” …talking about syme in the canteen at work.  The Party stopping people having any kind of relationship where any love or partiality to a person could develop-many people’s identity is developed through their relationships with other people but when those relationship are banned-identity is banned too. Evertone is equal.

       “you’d prefer to stick to Oldspeak, with all its vagueness, its usless shads of meaning” …Syme talking to Winston about the difference between Oldspeak (normal English) and newspeak (developed by the party where more and more words are made redundant and the language is very specific.  When there are less words a person cannot  physically use as many to think-the party controlling the minds of the people by literally not giving them words that could show unorthodoxy or rebellion. Words are very important for a person’s identity.

       “orthodoxy means not thinking” …syme talking about how newspeak will affect people’s lives. Could link to religion-some people are so ruled over by religions that they don’t think for themselves and their identity is formed by their faiths without them even realising it.

       “freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two makes four”…Winston writing in his diary. A simple sum learned in primary school can be overruled by the party if they want to-they are that powerful-if we are allowed to believe in facts then we are free

       “who controls the past”, ran the Party slogan, “controls the future: who controls the present controls the past”…The Party’s slogan. They are in control of the present so they are in control of absolutely everything-they decide how people will live, if they will die…a person basically has no identity because it is controlled

       “being in a minority, even a minority of one, did not make you mad”…Winston thinks that he is the only one that does not love big brother. Just because a person is different, and thinks differently to apparently everyone else they are not necessarily wrong and they should be allowed to think as they wasn’t because it is their identity.

 

 

 

 

 

9. The English Patient

After WWII, Hana, a young Canadian nurse, is staying in a villa in Italy caring for a man burned beyond recognition in a plane crash. The man claims to be English and carries only a copy of Herodotus’ Histories. Soon, Caravaggio, a thief who worked for British Intelligence during the war and a friend of Hana’s father’s, arrives at the villa to find Hana. Shortly after, a sapper from the Punjab, named Kip, comes to dismantle the area’s mines.

Prompted by the others, the English patient recalls his explorations of Africa, his love affair with Katharine Clifton, a young married woman, and her death. When she was severely injured in a plane crash, the English patient was unable to summon help and she died in a cave in the desert. Having returned to retrieve her body, his plane was shot down and fell on fire into the desert. Caravaggio suspects the English patient is in fact László Almásy, a Hungarian spy working for the Germans.

Kip and Hana form a romantic relationship. He recalls his army training, which he signed up for willingly, in England. The death of his mentor and his friends in a mine explosion has left him emotionally isolated, but his relationship with Hana helps him feel comfortable with other people again. Then he hears the news of the atomic bomb attacks on Japan: feeling betrayed by the Western world, he threatens to kill the English patient and leaves.

Years later, Hana and Kip are living separate lives. Kip did not respond to Hana’s letters, but he still often thinks of her.

 

Why is identity important in The English Patient?

As it is set just after the war, national identity is particularly important. When Caravaggio suggests that Almásy isn’t English, Hana and Kip protest against this: to them, this would mean he is ‘the enemy’ and would call into question their affection for him. The relationship between Kip, as a citizen of post-colonial India, and the West is also important. Unlike his brother, who is an Indian nationalist, he wishes for a world where nationality does not define people.

Relationships are seen as shaping identity. As well as Almásy’s intense love affair with Katharine, the relationship between Hana and Kip is central to the book. Ondaatje emphasises how sexual relationships are expected to change us; Katharine is angry at Almásy because it seems that the affair will ‘not change’ him.

Everyday experience, a person’s sense of their body and their surroundings, is also shown to affect identity. Unable to face the horrific events of war, Hana, Kip and Caravaggio try to live entirely in the present. Emphasis is placed on their explorations within the villa and their daily routines rather than past experience.

The book questions how much history impacts on identity. Although it concentrates very little on the events of the war, suggesting the characters’ shell-shocked state, the book frequently refers to more distant times. This, and the frequent references to other literature, from Herodotus to Anna Karenina, implies that the characters’ personalities are determined by a combination of personal experience and awareness of their history and culture.

 

 

 

Quotations about identity

 

As she tends to the English patient alone in the villa, Hana constructs an identity for him.

‘Hipbones of Christ, she thinks. He is her despairing saint.’

-The identity of the English patient is determined by how others see him: he is a ‘blank slate’. To some extent this is true of all people.

- Coming from a Christian culture and scarred by her experiences in the war, Hana characterises the English patient as a ‘saint’ to give her a sense of purpose. This perception is determined by her past experience and the cultural context in which she lives, showing how these things impact on identity.

 

Hana sees the English patient for the first time, in the war hospital.

p48 ‘A man with no face…all identity consumed in a fire.’

-Without any signs of his personal history, The English patient seems not to have an identity.

-The uselessness of his body prevents him from fully experiencing life in the present day: thus his identity is determined by his past.

 

Caravaggio recalls what happened when, having been caught stealing, the thuggish Tommasoni is cutting off his thumbs.

P59 ‘Then Ranuccio Tommasoni picked up the razor and came over to him. Caravaggio, right? He still wasn’t sure.’

-This scene mirrors a historical event: the C17th artist Caravaggio killed local thug Ranuccio Tommasoni in a sword fight. Ondaatje suggests that our identity in the present day is affected not only by events in our own past, but events in our cultural past.

 

p90 ‘She [Hana] smells her skin, the familiarity of it. One’s own taste and flavour.’

-Hana’s identity is affected by her physical sense of her body. Her awareness of her body gives her a sense of being independent from other people.

-the ‘familiarity’ of one’s body can often lead one to forget how important it is to identity. The character of the English patient, ‘a man with no face’, emphasises this importance.

 

Almásy reflects on how his attitude to the world at the time he met Katharine differs from his attitude now.

p141 ‘We were young. We knew power and great finance were temporary things.’

- Almásy’s identity hass changed as he has got older. The idealism of early adulthood has faded; now, he is more aware of his own mortality and what he will leave behind him.

 

Katharine to Almásy, when they have resolved to end their relationship for her husband’s sake.

p157 ‘From this point on in our lives…we will either find or lose our souls.’

-Katharine and Almásy each feel that their love for the other determines their own identity.

-Both know that the loss of the relationship will fundamentally change their sense of themself; the effects of love on a person’s identity can last long beyond the contact with the other person. (This is mirrored in the ending with Hana and Kip.)

 

Caravaggio to Hana.

p163 ‘I think the English patient is not English.’

-National identity is important in shaping people’s sense of personal identity and their relations with others. Hana immediately denies Caravaggio’s idea because she assumes that, if he is an Englishman he must be a good, intelligent man caught up unfairly in the war, as someone siding with the Germans he must be a scheming, immoral deceiver who brought the war down on all their heads.

-Ondaatje protests against letting our beliefs about national identity divide us from others.

 

When taking an engineering test in England, Kip reflects on the different attitudes to the discipline in India.

P188 ‘He had come from a country where mathematics and mechanics were natural traits.’

-Kip’s values and identity have been determined by the culture he grew up in. Placed in a new and different culture, he feels himself to be fundamentally different to those around him.

 

Caravaggio observes Hana.

p222 ‘He loved her more now than when he had understood her better, when she had been the product of her parents. What she was now was what she had decided to become.’

-As a child, Hana’s identity was moulded by her parents and family.

-Her own experiences of the world away from her parents, and of war, have widened her awareness. She is now able, to some extent, to develop her own identity. This is a part of reaching maturity.

 

Almásy reflects on his experiences in the desert.

p261 ‘We are communal histories, communal books. We are not owned or monogamous in our taste or experience.’

-Our identity is less governed by personal choice than we think: though we can change our identity to some extent, it is largely dependent on our experiences of history and culture. Almásy illustrates this with the example of desert tribes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10. Vernon God Little by DBC Pierre

 

Synopsis:

Vernon Little is a 15-year-old boy living in Martirio, Texas, suspected of being involved with the mass murder of eighteen of his school classmates. His close friend Jesus was responsible for the murders and committed suicide after the massacre, but the townspeople, media and police are all searching for an accomplice, so they can see some form of justice. As his closest friend and having been spotted at the scene of the crime, the finger points to Vernon. Evidence then begins to mount against him and feeling the pressure, he flees to Mexico. While on the run, more deaths occur which he is also considered to be responsible for, and when he is finally captured, he finds himself on trial for a total of 34 murders. In the trial he is found innocent of the random killings that occurred after the massacre, but guilty of the eighteen deaths of his classmates and put on death row. While he is there, the whole of death row is filmed for a reality tv programme, in which the public votes for who they want to die next. When Vernon is chosen, he calls a number of people in his life and ‘gives them what they want’, having learned this lesson from a fellow inmate. Just before he is given the lethal injection, he is pardoned due to new evidence and the book ends with ‘everything back to normal’.

 

How the text links to identity:

The text ‘Vernon God Little’ links quite well to the idea of mistaken identity, since Vernon is considered to be a murderer when he is in fact innocent. The novel explores the idea of ‘fate’, as many of the reasons why Vernon is considered to be a murderer are due to pure coincidences, implying that your identity isn’t necessarily defined by yourself and how you act, but the people around you and your experiences. An example of this is that almost everyone in ‘Martirio’, Vernon’s town, believe him to be involved in the mass murder of the school pupils, although he hadn’t done anything that would make people think that. Although this is outside of himself and his control, it still defines his identity in a way, as he then follows the life of a guilty man, fleeing his home town for Mexico.

The novel also explores how wealth and success define your identity. While in Mexico, Vernon meets people who have very little wealth, compared to the enormous amounts of money he has in Martirio. This proves to be a problem as they eventually realise that they won’t be able to be friends, since the Mexican could never fit in, in Vernon’s town. This implies that people from different social backgrounds, with different amounts of money cannot truly mix, as they will never be on an equal level with each other. Identity can therefore be defined by wealth, as it can determine who you can spend your time with, and have as your close friends.

Identity is also shown to be defined by your friends and family. Vernon’s new identity as a criminal is mainly the fault of his best friend Jesus, since by mixing with him, people think that he is also responsible for the murders. Vernon also seems to be really impacted on by the death of his father, saying that his life had got much more difficult afterwards, which shows just how important parents are in forming a person’s identity. His mother is also very important to him, and we see that Vernon thinks about his mother often in the novel, both in a positive and negative way.

 

Some Quotations:

“It’s like she planted a knife in my back when I was born.”

- Vernon speaking about his mother (pg. 7)

  • contrasts to the generic representation of mothers as caring and loving, instead referring to a mother’s betrayal of her son ‘knife in my back’
  • shows the importance of the mother to someone’s identity, a knife = scarring and thus a large impact on someone’s life and their identity.
  • ‘planted’ links to ’seeds of life’ which in this case is changed to the ’seeds of betrayal’

“It cuts even deeper now that daddy ain’t around to share the pain.”

- Vernon speaking again of his mother’s betrayal, whilst mentioning the loss of his dad (pg 7)

·          shows the importance of the father and the impact of a father’s death on identity

·          shows the strength a father can gave to his child since ‘it cuts deeper’ without him

‘daddy’ – childlike and innocent, showing a childish wish/dream to have his father back in his life, shows a child’s longing for his father, even in teenage years.

“If you don’t quiver, you’re fucken guilty”

-Vernon’s narrative, talking about people not showing emotions about crimes (pg 33)

·          shows your identity to be defined by your personality, less emotional people appear guilty, even when they’re not

·          shows the judgemental nature of people

“What kind of fucken life is this?”

- Vernon commenting on the falseness and therefore pointlessness of life (repeats throughout the book) (strong links to Catcher in the Rye)

  • Vernon has no hope for the future, impacting on his identity.
  • Asking questions improves intelligence, intellect etc. but Vernon isn’t receiving answers, impacting on his identity as he feels lost, as if his life is unfulfilling and false.

“I have my ma to protect, now that I’m Man of the House and all”

-         Vernon (pg 36)

  • Vernon feels this is part of his identity, almost his profession as he gives himself the title of ‘Man of the House’
  • shows women to be presented as weaker, and part of a man’s identity is protecting a woman
  • shows the strong family bond

“a jury would convict on his fucken shoes alone”

- A comment made by Vernon’s attorney (pg 49)

·          shows the importance of appearance to your identity, as the shoes you wear could make you guilty

·          shows the importance of impressions and how other people can affect your identity – making you a murderer with one verdict

·          shows the judgemental nature of people

·          shows the importance of uniqueness, as Vernon’s friend who was the murderer had the same shoes at him, implicating Vernon too

“What an incredible boy”

- said by Vernon’s mum about a 12-year-old one hundred thousand millionaire

·          shows the importance of wealth to Vernon’s family, which contrasts strongly to Vernon’s own opinion – “Ricky just sits there like a spare prick, in front of the Lamborghini he can’t even drive.”

“who lives on the other side is a wealthy couple; at least their house is painted wealthy”

- Vernon’s narrative (not imp. to story) (pg 83)

·          identity can be determined by not necessarily who you are, but what you represent, or appear to be like

·          it can be important to be seen as wealthy, money and possessions large part of identity

·          appearances are important, and fitting in on the social ladder – social status important to some

“I’m a kid whose best friend took a gun into his mouth and blew off his hair, whose classmates are dead…..”

- Vernon’s narrative (pg 113)

·          your identity can be defined by other people – friends, since Vernon recognises his friend’s actions as part of him

·          identity can be defined by your past and your experiences

“As if he knows my natural habitat is in one of these towers full of wealthy people.”

- Vernon, about his Mexican friend Pelayo. (pg 183)

·          identity defined by wealth, people with different amounts of wealth cannot mix

·          ‘these’ diectic, separating the two friends with their wealth

·          ‘natural’ where Vernon belongs is among wealthy people

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11. Snow Falling On Cedars

Synopsis.

 

Snow Falling On Cedars is written by David Guterson and is set in the 1950’s. It opens with the dark tale of how a fisherman is found dead, tied up in the nets of his boat. The main suspect is a Japanese man, Kabuo Miyamoto, put on trial for the murder of Carl Heine. The town of San Piedro is taken up by the murder, which affects everyone. Ishmael Chambers, the town’s newspaper reporter, covers the case yet finds it hard to stay neutral. He was a WW2 veteran who fought the Japanese. From this came a hatred towards them, many of whom came to live in San Piedro after the war. Furthermore Kabuo’s wife, Hatsue, had a deep relationship with Ishmael, who struggles to overcome his love for this woman.

 On top of this, family feuds had broken out between the Miyamoto’s and the Heine’s over land matter, which further lead the town to suspect Kabuo of murder. As time goes on the suspense grows thicker along with suspicions, yet the final chapter reveals the death of Carl Heine was merely a fishing accident, like many others which happen at sea. The reader is torn between the love story of the protagonist and the moral aspects of the novel involving Kabuo. 

 

 

Identity.

 

Identity holds a large part in this novel for the jury can only decide the outcome of the trial by unpicking the identity of characters involved to come to a sensible and just decision. The ingrained hatred towards some of the Japanese on the island is held against Kabuo which leads him to be held suspect despite, at the very end, him being clear of murder. Since WW2 the inhabitants of San Piedro have disliked the Japanese.“…an enemy on the island is an enemy forever.” Kabuo was innocent throughout but the hatred was deep set. The protagonist had his arm blown off by the Japanese in the war which doesn’t aid our view for the story is told through him.

 

Ishmael’s first love was Kabuo’s wife, Hatsue. He was unable to be with her due to race. The two races were not allowed to mix and so she was taken away from him by Kabuo. Of course Ishmael suffered from this, deepening his hatred toward the Japanese. Race is a large part of identity and defines who you are. There was danger at the time in having inter-race relationships. “‘Still,’ said Hatsue, ‘you’re not Japanese. And I’m alone with you.’ ” This quote is significant in highlighting how the two races are meant to be enemies. However deep the love, she still cannot have him, no matter what. The fact that they are alone is also important for it shows how hostile the races were. At their age, to them race would have been next to nothing, irrelevant, yet they were both aware of the possible outcome of being found together. Race has always played a large part in who were are and always divides people during the war. In this novel it is WW2. Civil wars are caused by race and Nazi anti-semitism is the most famous racial war in all of history.

 

This novel shows how others in our lives can affect our own identity. Living in a close-knit community such as San Piedro, your own business isn’t your own for long. “…I find you’re a part of me. Without you, I have nothing.” If we spend enough time with someone they can have an effect on who we are, their views can influence our own and so on. Ishmael found that Hatsue became a part of him and therefore found it increasingly harder to move on from her when Kabuo married her. This resulted in hostility toward him which didn’t bode well for his murder case.

 

Significant Quotes.

 

“Never could tell them guys apart.”

 ® To others, some races can look very similar.

®  Race is a huge part of identity.

®  Identity should be individual, and different, yet here one race has been classed together.

     This suggests that they have no identity other than their race.

®  Restricts how people can express themselves.

 

“She was a mother, too, to four sisters” p76

® Responsibilities have a lasting effect on your identity.

® Family is a classic example of identity. She is forced to grow up quickly to mother her

    sisters and therefore became the responsible grown up.

 

 

“You take some steps for me okay?” p70

® Trapped inside the prison Kabuo cannot see his children, see life outside the jail etc.

® He passes his identity onto his wife, asking her to experience the world for him.

® Being confined restricts your life and therefore your identity. The effects of your life rub

    off on your personality and identity.

 

 

“I’m not guilty of anything.” p136

® The convicted Kabuo states upon trial that he isn’t guilty.

® He is being identified as guilty, yet to he says he is innocent. Our sins affect our identity

    which is shown clearly by the fact that Kabuo is up for trial.

 

 

“ ‘Still,’ said Hatsue, ‘you’re not Japanese. And I’m alone with you.’ ”

® Race confines who you see, marry, socialise with etc. It also brings fear.

® Race plays an enormous part on status. Take Nazi Germany. Those who didn’t fit the

     ‘perfect’ person were discriminated as the very least.

®  Here they have to hide from their identity.

®  Identity brings danger, separates races and causes divisions.

 

 

“When Kabuo was eight his father put a weapon in his hands for the first time.”

® This tradition is part of identity.

® Cultures and traditions influence who we are and so has an effect on our future. People

    believe Kabuo to be just like all the other Japanese Samurai warriors.

 

 

 

“Susan Marie Heine had been a widow for nearly three months…but had not grown very much accustomed to it yet.”

® We can establish an identity as Susan did when she fell in love with Carl yet we can find

     it hard to change identity once it has been set.

 

 

“…he disliked most human beings.”

® Being reserved, unsociable, unfriendly. These are all traits of personality and identity.

® Our identity comes from our past as in this case.

 

 

“…I find you’re a part of me. Without you, I have nothing.” p196

® This is taken from a letter to Hatsue from Ishmael.

® Love plays a part in who we are. With her he feels one, whole. Without her, the opposite.

® His identity relies on the role of another. People around us influence our identity as we

    change to suit different people or situations.

 

 

“…an enemy on the island is an enemy forever.” P469

® Grudges last in tight knit communities.

® Enemy is a strong word and shows the hatred felt toward the Japanese following the

    war. This is once again a group identity as opposed to individual yet single people are

    discriminated due to their background.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12. Once in a House on Fire – Andrea Ashworth

 

I haven’t finished this book yet but so far:

It’s Andrea Ashworth’s memoir. Her father died when she was five, he is seen as a kind of ideal or hero figure throughout the book and juxtaposes her awful stepfather. Her father was part Maltese and part Italian, so the protagonist and her sister (Laurie) are darker haired and skinned with dark large eyes. They could easily be mistaken for Pakistani and this causes Andrea some trouble at school and in her 70s/80s Mancunian neighbourhood. Her mother re-marries and has another daughter (Sarah) by this man, she is much paler, blonde haired and blue eyed – as a family they get some odd looks in the street. Her stepfather is abusive towards them all and treats his own daughter more favourably than Andrea and Laurie. Her stepfather persuades her mother that they should all move to Canada for a new and more prosperous life, and of course it all goes horribly wrong. When they finally find a house to live in, after living with relatives for months, her stepfather drinks away any money he’s earned and comes back fuelled by whisky to beat her mother. Her mother eventually plucks up the courage to leave Canada with her children and without her husband, (he follows them back, their abusive relationship continues on and off) but has to sell her only remaining heirlooms to do so. When they come back to Manchester her mother struggles to find a job or a house and they have to move away from the suburbs and into Rusholme to live with Aunty Jackie, sacrificing Andrea’s place at the local grammar school. Andrea survives at the local comprehensive because she keeps to herself and isn’t seen as white or black (so she’s accepted by all of the cliques), she’s also very clever, but also physically strong so she’s respected by the playground.

 

 

Connected aspects of identity:

 

Race – her race is confused and people treat her differently when they think she is of different races. Compare to the treatment of her more Caucasian looking sister Sarah.

 

Parents – her mother is overly dependant on her stepfather, portrayed as quite weak and self-pitying, but Andrea still loves her mother dearly and wants to care for her. Her father is dead; when she recounts memories of him they are only ever happy ones. Her stepfather is physically violent, an alcoholic and abused Andrea sexually (although only one very short sentence mentions this) – he is the main cause of the “fire” in the house.   (I think).

 

Possessions – as a family they are very poor, partly because her mother finds it hard to find work but also because her stepfather drinks away a lot of what they earn. There is one instance where Andrea is told to back her school exercise books in “something sturdy” but her mother tells her they cannot afford brown paper so she is to use pages out of old My Guy annuals, but this gets her in trouble at school.

 

Future prospects – Andrea is really clever, she narrates her love of Enid Blyton and reading and how the other kids at school ask her to do their homework and how she does it to stay on the ride side of her peers. Thanks to her colour and the respect she gets at school she isn’t mocked for her intelligence, but respected – “ “Ras!” A wave of rasping and clucking washed across the back rows. “Da bitch knows how to stick it!” ”

 

Class – Her family are poor and they are of a fairly low class. They move about in north Manchester, from Rusholme to Moss Side, always living with relatives. She talks about the fleas in her Auntie Jackie’s house biting her and how she has to share a bed with her mother and two sisters.

 

Relationships – Andrea’s fairly close with her sister Laurie and loves her mother dearly, but because she is depressed a lot of the time she isn’t really fit to be a good motherly figure. Her stepfather is abusive and violent, although on page 160 she says, “My chest swirled with funny feeling, like love, when I looked into his pink, snuffly face.” So she hasn’t got any close friends at school, but there is a girl she does work for in return for a bit of defence at school called Stacey.

 

Past – Her past does define her. She is tough at school because of the violence she has seen at home and her peers treat her differently because of her muddled Mancunian / Canadian accent and her odd Maltese / Italian mixed heritage.

 

Quotations:

 

  • What I got out of our partnership [with Stacey]… was protection from being called Pakistani. ‘Oi! Shut yer cakehole!’… ‘Andrea’s half Maltese and half Italian, yer spasmo! Definitely not one bit Paki.’ Protection suggests physical defence is needed, which shows the extent of the racial hatred/ abuse at the time. Stacey also defends her so staunchly because she doesn’t want people to think she would be friends with a ‘Paki’. Pg 125
  • “ ‘You need that bastard… like you need a hole in the head.’” Auntie Jackie to Andrea’s Mother, about her stepfather. Shows us that every one can see how destructive Andrea’s parent relationship is, every one apart from Andrea’s mother. Pg 108
  • “ ‘We’re not a proper family, are we?’ I asked her on the way home through the rain.” Understands her family doesn’t function according to the usual stereotype, part of this is about the difference in skin colour between the three sisters. Pg 108
  • “Where there were no lights on, I lifted the flap of the letterbox to breathe in the scent of the stranger’s house. You could smell the fancy wallpaper in their hall and all the braised lamb dinners they’d ever eaten, caught in the carpet.” Andrea entertains herself while she isn’t at school, curious and intrigued by how other people live. Pg 89
  • “The skin gave a quick shout then turned a deep, slow red, but our mother’s face stood still.” Pg 78
  • “Tamsyn swore by Margaret Thatcher and has her sights ser on gathering enough O levels to make her middle-class” pg 215
  • “Since God never seemed to come up with the goods, we eventually found ourselves concentrating less on prayers and more on high marks at school.” Pg 256
  • “I was desperate to chisel the brace off my teeth, to let my mouth mingle with some one else’s”. ‘Chisel’ suggests a violent urge, ‘mouth’ is very sensual, beginning of sexual growth/journey. Pg 255
  • “Pear drops were pinging out of the tree, as if it were crying. I climbed right up to the top to join my little sister.” Their stepfather comes to visit, giving each daughter a bag of their favourite sweets to soften them up. Laurie runs off to sit in a tree, Andrea leaves her parents to talk and goes to her sister. The imagery suggests Laurie is upset and emotional, but that she is also deep in thought and the tree might be a contemplative place for her. Pg 95
  • “I strained in my sweaty cocoon [sleeping bag] to work out why evil took root inside grown-ups, making them waste their lives in wicked ways.” Shows child-like innocence and reinforces her fascination with books and stories, where things are good or evil, no shades of grey. Pg 150

 

 

 

13. I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou

 

I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings the first of the six parts that comprise Maya Angelou’s autobiography. It details her life from the age of three when she and her older brother, Bailey, are both sent to live with their grandmother, Momma, in Arkansas to the birth of her child at age seventeen. It deals with social isolation, racism, rape, coming of age, adultery, family and motherhood.

 

Maya and Bailey live with Momma in Stamps, Arkansas and work in her store. Black people are poorly treated and Maya struggles to understand the reason for this. The children’s father arrives and they relocate to St Louis to stay with their mother and her boyfriend known only as Mr Freeman. Mr Freeman avoids the children until he molests Maya and rapes her at the age of eight. Mr Freeman is at court convicted of rape yet before the night before his sentence he is mysteriously killed, although unsaid it is likely to be the work of Maya’s mother’s family. Maya blames herself and lives in a detached silence for over a year. She and her brother are sent back to Stamps where Maya meets an old black lady, Mrs Flowers, who teaches her the importance of speech and writing and begins Maya’s love with literature. Maya is sent to learn manners in a white woman’s house at ten years old. She is treated badly as she is black and so breaks Mrs Cullinan’s plates in order to be fired. She and Bailey dream of their mother, and Maya longs to leave Stamps. She watches her black neighbours work hard each day, then look to religion for relief or, she sometimes thinks, as an escape. Bailey, a year older, gets initiated into sex by a fourteen-year-old, who then leaves town, breaking his heart. Maya attends her eighth grade graduation, at first proud of herself, but then disappointed when a white guest speaker tells the crowd that they can only be good at sports, not academics. Momma decides that Maya and Bailey have to go to California to be with their parents. Maya doesn’t know why, but she thinks it’s because Bailey has seen, up close, a dead black man and a white man who is happy to see the man dead. Maya thinks Momma is afraid for her grandson, who is becoming a man. In California, Maya at first lives with her grandmother, then her mother who marries Daddy Clidell, who is like Maya’s first real father. In San Francisco during the war, Maya witnesses racism against blacks and Japanese people. She spends the summer with her father and his young girlfriend. Her father takes her to Mexico for a night, and Maya learns that he has a mistress there. Her father gets so drunk Maya has to drive him home. She gets into a fight with her father’s girlfriend and decides to leave. She lives in a junkyard with a group of teenagers for a month. Back in San Francisco, she decides to work as a streetcar conductor, though black people are not allowed to do this. She persists until they finally hire her. She works for a semester before going back to school. Bailey and their mother continually fight and Bailey finally leaves home and gets a job on a railroad train. Maya is disappointed in him. She reads some lesbian literature and, not understanding her developing body and mind, thinks she is a lesbian. She decides to find a boyfriend. She approaches a popular boy and asks him to have sex with her. He agrees and the experience is disappointing and bores Maya. She forgets him, and three weeks later finds she is pregnant. She hides it from her mother and stepfather for 8 months, and when she finally tells them they are at first angry but then accept it. Maya gives birth at the end of the book and begins her journey to adulthood by accepting her role as mother to her newborn son.

 

 

 

 

If you ask a Negro where he’s been, he’ll tell you where he’s going.

-This view of the black community can be seen as both positive and negative. On one hand insolent, backward people but also, and this is more likely, people that can rise above their past and persist with their lives. Maya herself has ambitions to detach herself from both her life in Stamps and in California and sees more promise in the future.

If growing up is painful for the Southern Black girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat.

- Maya notes that she not only fell victim to a hostile, racist, and sexist society, but to other social forces as well, including the displacement she felt from her own family and peers. The society itself is the ‘razor’, an object of threat and harm and this is exacerbated by her loss of place in any situation. Maya’s supposes that ignorance to her situation would be less dangerous. ‘Growing up is painful’ is juxtaposed with ‘razor that threatens the throat’ to show the true danger that went unnoticed by many, childlike awkwardness is replaced with genuine danger as Maya grows, having experienced first hand what society may have put down to teenage angst. ‘Threatens the throat’- alliteration, connotes violence and murder.

 

I remember never believing that whites were really real.

-Romanticised idea of white society, even she saw them as superior. She deems the lives of whites unattainable perfection. Also an indication of the segregation- she didn’t believe in them as she wasn’t permitted to be around them, to her blacks and whites were truly separate.

 

There was an army of adults, whose motives and movements I just couldn’t understand and who made no effort to understand mine.

-Army- body of power, but is it an army that protects or brings harm?

Maya tried to comprehend their ideals and couldn’t and feels that they were indifferent to her views. ‘Movements’- Maya is aware of the advances within her society even if she cannot analyse them.

 

All knowledge is spendable currency, depending on the market

-Importance of education, desire to learn. ‘Depending on the market’- Maya lives where she is not valued yet dreams of a potential where her thoughts have worth and she can live her own life and teach others of her suffering. The idea of ‘all’ knowledge indicates the probable importance of her past, that it can help form her future self.

 

My race groaned. It was our people falling. It was another lynching, yet another Black man hanging on a tree

-‘My race’ ‘our people’- finds unity with other blacks. ‘Falling’- from a better place

‘yet another’- the unchanging treatment of blacks, part of life for Maya. ‘hanging on a tree’-public warning, example of whites’ power.

 

Of all the needs a lonely child has, the one that must be satisfied, if there is going to be hope and a hope of wholeness, is the unshaking need for an unshakable God.

-The ‘lonely child’ is Maya herself but could mean countless children. The ‘hope of wholeness’ typifies a coming-of-age novel and suggests that an adolescent and young adult is striving to find their fully formed identity. ‘unshakable’ here reveals Maya’s need for something solid and secure in her life of turmoil and uncertainty.

 

           

In Stamps the segregation was so complete that most Black children didn’t really, absolutely know what whites looked like.

-’Complete’ signifies that the segregation is a calculated  white endeavour, as if in Stamps the separation of blacks and whites is a triumph for some.

‘Know what whites looked like’ not merely the literal sense that they couldn’t visualise whites, it’s as if the blacks do not know the whites as fellow people at all, and vice versa

 

 

The Black female is assaulted in her tender years by all those common forces of nature at the same time that she is caught in the tripartite crossfire of masculine prejudice, white illogical hate and Black lack of power. The fact that the adult American Negro female emerges a formidable character is often met with amazement, distaste and even belligerence.

-Towards the end of the novel Maya Angelou writes with increasing eloquence. Maya states that against black women there is not only the triple threat of sexism, racism, and black powerlessness, but also the “common forces of nature” that assault and confuse all children. She notes that all the (black) women in her life ‘emerge’ from this turmoil as strong, awe inspiring characters. ‘Tender years’ refers to adolescence and innocence and greatly contrasts with ‘assaulted’ and ‘crossfire’.

 

 

 

 

 

14.     Beloved

By Toni Morrison

 

 

 

Beloved is about the physical and emotional trauma that is caused by slavery, and how survivors are effected. Morrison shows the more painful and taboo aspects of slavery such as sexual abuse and violence, and the idea of what it means to be a mother is explored. It is about a black woman called Sethe, and her daughter Denver who try to get on with their lives once they have escaped. They live in a house called 124 Bluestone, which is haunted by a poltergeist, who causes many troubles for the family, and leads to people avoiding them and their house. Sethe had to murder her baby daughter Beloved by slitting her throat years previously, and this baby then haunts the house. Sethe’s partner Paul D arrives and beats the ghost out of the house. Then a girl called Beloved arrives at the house and they take her in, and Denver realises straight away that she is a reincarnation of the baby, as she knows so much already about the Sethe and is able to sing songs known only to Sethe and her children. Later when Beloveds presence starts to take away Sethe’s life, the black community come to help exorcize her, she disappears.

 

How the novel links to identity

The central theme through the novel is identity. Throughout it we learn how a persons identity can be defined by different aspects, including apperance, family, relationships, men, opression and liberation, motherhood, and age. We see the devastating effects of slavery on peoples lives, and how it has consequences on the rest of their lives. Once free, the people have to try to discover their identities by themselves, and we see the struggle they go through to achieve this.

      The theme of motherhood is shown to effect identity as it makes women love their children so strongly they will go through anything to help them. Sethe’s maternal instincts lead her to kill her own child, and almost lead to her own self destruction. Some women feel they only exist to look after their children, so the loss of a child can lead to loss of self. When Sethe has her milk stolen, she loses that symbolic bond that mother and daughter have, so cannot get over the trauma of it. Age makes up a part of whom they are, as children are vulnerable, even to their own mothers as we see from the fear Sethe’s remaining children have. Once Sethe’s sons were old enough, they ran away so they could start their own lives safely, and find their own identities. Her relationships help make her stronger, because it means she has someone there to look after her and give her advice. When Paul D arrives he beats the ghost out of the house, making Sethe feel safer and less worried about it. Paul gives her a positive outlook on life, because she thinks she can finally move on from her awful past and start a new life. He is the only man who is not an oppressive or a threat towards women, which gives him a completely different identity to the other men in the novel.

        The oppression through slavery, and then the sudden transition to freedom, causes the characters to have to struggle to find out who they are. They have the memories of a horrific past, and need to forget about them or come to terms with them to move on and find their ‘self’. The repression in the past caused them to lose their true self of identity, so they must accept what happened and get back their original identity. When her daughter Beloved returns, it makes all the characters come to terms with themselves, and realise things that they hadn’t noticed before, showing identity can be affected by those around you. She knows all about their pasts, and can make them recall memories that they had forgotten, so that they can piece together all the painful events that made them who they are today. She forces Sethe to confront her past, and by the end Denver is able to have a grasp on who she is.

 

 

Quotations

 

  1. “A man ain’t nothing but a man. But a son? Well, now, that’s somebody.”

This shows how a person’s identity can be defined by their age, and their family. A son is a boy who is growing up and becoming a person who is characterized by the people around him and the way he is brought up. Man is a very general term which can be used for the whole human race, or for one gender, so this quotation is saying it is too impersonal to define a single identity, but a son is more specific and individual.

 

  1. There is no bad luck in the world but whitefolks.”

This shows how a person’s identity can be distinguished by the colour of their skin, not by their inner personality. To some people, it is only the way people look that matters, and so you can stereotype them by their colour, race, religion etc. Here it is a black person speaking, who has been badly mistreated and enslaved by a white person, so they are bound to have some hatred towards white people. When they escape the slavery they are only around black people, and their lives start to improve so they are bound to think white people are the problem for their difficult lives, which explains the “bad luck”.

 

  1. “Here… in this here place, we flesh; flesh that weeps, laughs; flesh that dances on bare feet in grass. Love it. Love it hard”

This quotation shows the appreciation from these people to be alive. They suffered violence and abuse in slavery, so now appreciate the freedom, and so it shows how liberation can define a person’s identity.  They understand how great life can be, and how lucky they are that they have escaped and can express themselves through emotions and dancing. By laughing and crying, they show who they truly are inside, by letting out their inner most emotions. Their flesh, is the way they look on the outside, this also makes up their identity, as it gives them an image. This also makes a link to the colour of people skins, and how age can define you as when you get older so does your skin.

 

  1. “Because slavery had ‘busted her legs, back, head, eyes, hands, kidneys, womb and tongue’ she had nothing left to make a living with but her heart.”

This refers to Baby Suggs, who was Sethe’s mother-in-law. It shows how slavery ruined most of her body, destroying her life. The valuable parts of her body which she needed for everyday life were ‘busted’ which meant she could no longer continue her life how she may have wanted. Her busted womb meant she couldn’t have any more children. This links to how a persons family defines them, and she couldn’t have any more children after she was free, which will have been very upsetting for her. Her busted tongue shows how slavery effected what she said, as she might not have wanted to talk about the horrific experiences she went through. Her eyes represent the dreadful sights she saw. The only thing slavery couldn’t break was her heart, which shows she was still capable of loving people, and that made her identity one of a loving and caring person.

 

  1. “My first-born. All I can remember of her is how she loved the burned bottom of bread.”

This refers to Beloved, Sethe’s first child who she killed. The first sentence gives the impression she was proud to have her whilst she was still alive. To have had a child was an accomplishment for her. The only memory she has of her daughter was what she loved most, showing how a persons likes and dislikes can define their identity. The fact that this is a memory could show how memories can be what define a person, as we only have this to know what they are like, plus often memories are what are kept because they are important to the individual. The ‘burned’ bread shows how Beloved could have pleasure even from the things that could be considered negative in life, making her seem like a better person.

 

  1. The kind of man who could walk into a house and make the women cry.”

This shows how his identity comes from the way acts around women, and the way he makes them feel, showing identity can come from personality, gender and a relationship. He is able to make women relax enough so that even though they hardly know him, they will let out their feelings to him with ease. His identity comes from his gender, and how it makes him different, and so the effect this has on others. The way he walks into the house, shows no force is involved, so the women are voluntarily showing how they feel, which makes him sound like a trusted person, who understands women.

 

  1. “Beloved, you are my sister, you are my daughter, you are my face; you are me.”

From this quotation we can see a person’s identity comes from who they are in relation to others. Family and relationships make people who they are. It shows how strong love can be between family, and how precious family members are to one another. They become so close that they are one unit.

 

  1. “the four horsemen came — schoolteacher, one nephew, one slave catcher and a sheriff.”

Here we see how a person’s slef can be defined by the job they hold, or the relationship they have with other people. These people are not given names, as that wouldn’t show us who they are, instead all we know about them is who they are for Sethe. To anyone else, these people sound harmless, or even protective, but to Sethe they are a threat, as they are after her because she is an escaped slave, who needed to escape all of these people. It does not matter what their personalities are like, because no matter what, they are frightening to Sethe, and their identities represent danger. They arrived on horses, making them seem bigger and stronger than her,

 

  1. Freeing yourself was one thing; claiming ownership of that freed self was another.”

This shows how although being liberated may define a person , you still have to take control over your own life to be your own person. Identity can come from having power, or from the struggle to gain power. A slave who is free has to attempt to reclaim there individual indentity, but the effects of slavery can still haunt them and stay with them forvever, meaning they are never truly free. Sethe has to struggle to enjoy her life and feel worthy of freedom after everything she has been through. Identity comes from owning yourself, and not being controlled by another.

 

  1. “You your best thing Sethe. You are”

This is what Paul D tells Sethe at the end of the novel, to get her to realise she is now free, and has her own life to think of, not just her childrens. She needs to acknowledge her reason for being alive isn’t just to be a mother. So whilst identity may come from having children and being in a family, your own individuality comes from your personal characteristics and attributes. Personality can come from having confidence in yourself, and feeling powerful as an individual.

 

 

 

15. Brick Lane by Monica Ali

 

 

Brick Lane is a novel that portrays the life of Nasneen , a underprivileged Bangladeshi girl who marries a fellow Bangladeshi who is currently living in England. She is thrown into a new world and culture where her religion and culture is not accepted fully. As well as this she is made to submit to her demanding husband who is old enough to be her father. When she gives birth to her son Raqib, she naturally seems to be much happier, however when her son becomes ill and eventually dies she her world is turned upside down again, however she does finally get closer to her husband Chanu.

As well as learning about Nasneen’s traditional Bangladeshi life in England, we are also exposed to her sister’s. She turned her back on the traditional Bangladeshi marriage and decided to have a love marriage, both sisters now have to deal with the situation they are in and make the best of their life.

Nasneen also forms an affair with a young man called Karim. Karim is everything that Chanu is not. He is young, westernised and very sure of himself and this obviously excites Nasneen. He values her in ways Chanu does not and she falls in love with him.

 Towards the end of the novel, the September 11th terrorist attacks in America put even more strain on the Bangladeshi community in London, with the young Muslims, headed by Karim, forming a gang to protect their religious identity. After going into depression and finally recovering, Nasneen watches her husband Chanu leave England, but Nasneen remains as the desperation to return to Bangladesh had diminished.

 

http://litsum.com/brick-lane/

Brick Lane is the story of Nazneen, a young Bangladeshi woman given into an arranged marriage to Chanu Ahmed, a man almost twice her age. Chanu takes her to London, where he has lived and worked for almost two decades. Nazneen not only has to learn to live with Chanu, but she has to survive in a whole new culture as well.

In the small Bangladeshi estate community in London, Nazneen falls in love with ice-skating, which she learns about from television. Nazneen meets other Bangladeshi people who grow through their own struggles. Nazneen gives birth to a son, Raqib, and, as they watch Bengali youth turn to drugs and alcohol, Chanu vows to take his family back home before they are affected by such acts. Many Bengalis plan to return, he explains, but they can never raise the money that they need for such a move. When Raqib dies before his first birthday, the traumatic event brings Nazneen and Chanu closer to each other. Nazneen begins to understand that they’re both seeking the same thing, but are taking different paths towards their goals. Chanu, for his part, begins to show Nazneen more respect. He makes a vow to stop talking and to start acting.

Through a series of letters that go on for thirteen years, Brick Lane begins to tell the story of Nazneen’s younger sister, Hasina. Hasina eloped in a “love marriage” and ran off to Dhaka, the capital city of Bangladesh. Nazneen and Hasina must deal with the lessons their mother taught them before she died. The mother warned her daughters not to struggle against Fate and to treat life with the same indifference with which life would treat them.

As the drug problem in their London community gets worse, even affecting Razia’s son, Tariq, and as his own adolescent daughters become more Westernized, Chanu becomes more determined to bring his family back home. Chanu is so desperate that he borrows money from Mrs. Islam, lets Nazneen do some sewing work at home, and accepts a job as a cab driver with Kempton Kars. These new developments change the course of their lives drastically, as Nazneen begins having an affair with the man who brings her the sewing work from his uncle’s sweatshop. Karim excites her because, in her view, he knows his place in the world. Karim is sure of himself and he makes Nazneen feel that everything she says is important.

By the time Karim appears in Nazneen’s life, the Bengali youth in their community have formed gangs, and they are being affected by the now infamous September 2001 attacks on America. When a group known as the Lion Hearts begins passing anti-Islam leaflets around, Karim forms a group called the Bengal Tigers to counter their claims and defend their religion.

With the all the pressures weighing on her; having to balance the needs of her family, the near approaching trip home, their debt, and the illicit affair that Karim wants to see end in marriage, Nazneen eventually suffers a nervous breakdown. After her recovery, Nazneen finds the power within herself to stop Mrs. Islam, to be more assertive at home, and to end the relationship with Karim.

In the end Dr. Azad gives Chanu the rest of the money they need for the trip, but Nazneen tells Chanu at the last moment that she and the girls can’t go. For Chanu, the dream of returning is too important to ignore and he tells Nazneen he can’t stay.

                                     __________________________________________________

 

“Shefali will make a love marriage over my dead body.”-  Razia’s daughter is not allowed to choose who she gets married to. Getting married is part of one’s identity, however Razia is unable to choose, she must leave this important decision to her mother.

 

“They did not have money and money was needed.”- Nasneen and Chanu wish to return to Bangladesh however their lack of money means they are unable to do so. They feel as though they can return to the land where their identity lies due to the financial situation.

 

“She cleaned and cooked and washed. She made breakfast for Chanu and looked on as he ate.”- This was a daily routine for Nasneen as she was expected to take care of her husband. For a Bangladeshi woman was expected to submit to her husband and some would say it is some what part of the Bangladeshi identity.

 

“The pull of the land is stronger even than the pull of blood.”- They feel that the country is even more valuable or important than blood ties. Its shows how passionate the British Bangladeshi’s are about their origins.

 

“In Bangladesh it was no more possible to be both poor and fat than to be rich and starving.” – In the Bangladeshi community, being fat and poor was unheard of as poor people are so poor, that they are malnourished. In the British society, being skinny is very much linked with celebrity culture.

 

“Without him, life would not be possible”- Nasneen is referring to her son. She cannot imagine living without him; he’s a very big part of her life and her identity.

 

“There had been no chance to make her prayers in the usual way.”- Religion plays a big part in Nasneen’s life as she is a devout Muslim. “usual way” shows how praying is regular feature in her life and part of her identity.

 

“Chanu had not beaten her yet.” – Nasneen was expecting her husband to play the dominant figure in the relationship. She was quite familiar with the fact that Bangladeshi men beat their wives and was surprised he had not done so as soon as they were married.

 

“But now our children copy what they see here.” – “here” is referring to England. Bangladeshi parents feel as though their children are following the western drinking culture whereas it is forbidden within Bangladesh and Muslim society. It seems as though the British Bangladeshi children are losing their culture and its identity.

 

“Going Home Syndrome.”- Most Bangladeshi’s feel that the influence of the Western culture is a bad one for their children and so most of them have a desire to return home. They call this feeling of longing for their homeland, “the going home syndrome.”

 

   

Brick Lane is a novel about the difficulties a woman- Nasneen- faces as she is thrown into a new world and culture and where her identity is not understood. She cannot speak any English therefore limiting her communication, and her husband’s chauvinist behaviour doesn’t help the situation.

Her identity is defined mainly by her husband. She is expected to be a good Bangladeshi wife and take of him. Without her husband, Nasneen’s life would be pointless as her behaviour has a direct effect on him.

The society that she is now living seems to be very critical of her cultural and religious identity. She is living in a society where Islam is a religion of danger and killing and where the British Muslim children are torn between two different cultures, resulting in many straying from the right religious path and many turning to extremism. Nasneen has to deal with not only the demands of her husband but also being a good Muslim in a world where the colour of skin, her religious beliefs, the way she dresses and the way she speaks is something to be feared.

Nasneen’s relationship with Karim makes her take control of her life. Karim’s character understands his identity and place in the world and this changes Nasneen more than anything.

 

 

 

16 The Kite Runner

Khaled Hosseini

 

 

The Kite runner is an epic tale about friendship, fathers, sons, betrayal, tribute and redemption. The novel is based on two boys, Amir and Hassan living in Afghanistan. The narrator Amir begins the story by recalling his childhood memories. Mocked and teased for his background, Hassan doesn’t have many friends except Amir, they spend their day’s together Kite flying and so Amir enters a local kite runner tournament hoping to win his fathers praise.  During the tournament Assef, a violent bully at school attacks Amir for being friends with Hazara but Hassan bravely stands up to him and threatens to ‘shoot out his left eye’. In response Assef backs of but seeks for revenge. During the contest he attacks and rapes Hassan and Amir turns a blind eye to this, to me this is the key event to the book as this event leaves Amir distressed, upset, hurt and guilty and leads him into the following events to occur in this life. From this we see Amir, Hassan and Aseef’s characters and true identities shine through. The whole novel is based around how Amir commits a terrible sin against his friend and half-brother, Hassan. The journey he travels, what he does and where he goes to seek and find atonement shows he wants to be good again and the how far he’s willing to go to succeed. The novel is filled with despair but uplifting at times and travels through a journey of different emotions and relationships.  The whole theme of the book links into identity and self discovery, The kite runner demonstrates both internal conflict within individuals and external conflicts that affect them.

The novel Kite Runner links to Identity through past events, race, discrimination, relationships and emotions. Amir the key character, makes everything around him form his identity, he forms his identity based on others and his relationships with others. Amir’s identity was mainly formed by the obsession he had with pleasing his father and doing everything for him, he changed things about him just for his father’s acceptation. The events in the novel lead up to Amir forming his identity, where at the end his true character shines through for what he’s done and his childhood dream becomes reality when he accepts Sozara as his son and redeems his love.                                                                                                                                               At he beginning of the novel Hassan and his father are mocked and teased about their status, money income, race and religion. In the streets people tease Hassan about his ‘mogal decndants’ and ‘flat nosed’ features, even the whole fight between Aseef and Amir had was due to the fact that Hassan was a different race and Assef didn’t want them being friends, he believed their race was superior. This shows that class and race are both important factors to form your identity through them people base their opinions on you and both appearance and religion play a big role in identity.                                                                                                                                                                                                     The book begins with an emotional phrase to summarise his thoughts on the devastating makes he was about to make- ‘I became what I am today at the age of twelve’. This quote revels all the devastation regret and sin he feels from the mistake that he has to learn from through this novel, but through this Amir finds self discovery and his true identity. This quote shows that your past events can affect your identity because it completely changed him and caused his jealously and obsession with pleasing his father to become a big part of his life.

1. ‘You bring me shame’

Amir’s identity was formed by the obsession that he wanted Baba to love him, the way he treats Hassan and he wanted to be treated the same so would lie to his father in attempt of pleasing him but in the end it was never enough. He even watched Hassan get raped just so that he would go home with the kite to please his father.

 

This quote shows how Baba’s acceptance makes such a big impact on Amir’s life, it was so important that it drove him to jealousy and then to deception towards his friend/ brother Hassan  which leads to something that he lives to regret for the rest of his life. But this lets him creates the events of self discovery, so his father’s treatment mapped out his future.

2.  ‘When we were children’

 ‘I kept thinking of that day’

These quotes show that your background and past affects your identity, Amir lives to regret his past.

3. ‘Mogul descendants’

Hassan gets mocked and teased for his ‘flat nosed’ features and his appearance plays a big part in his identity and how he’s treated by others. Due to his class, race and religion people disapprove of him showing all these factors play a big part in Identity as he isn’t accepted unlike his best friend Amir who has a well know successful man in the northern area of Kabul

4. ‘I ran. A grown man running with a swarm of children. But I didn’t care’

This quote shows that Amir is letting himself be free and not care about other peoples thoughts, therefore people do hold back in case of what others think of you so true identity is never necessarily shown.

5.’You are an honourable man’

‘I am proud to have you in our home tonight’

6. When Amir said he didn’t want to fly a kite, Hassan told him, “no monster,” and convinced him to proceed, showing Hassan was a strong character willing to face problems. Hassan is presented as determined and selfless whilst believing in his friend.

7.’ I feel like a tourist in my own country’

8. ‘There is a way to be good again’

Amir’s determined to regain himself from betraying his friend Hassan and therefore takes a journey of self discovery.

‘I had been peeking into that deserted alley for the last twenty two years’ Amir betrayed his best friend in an alley in Kabul and living with his regret is too hard to bare, the mistake he made is something he lives his whole life regretting until he makes this journey to redemption. 

9.  ‘Hassan slumps to the asphalt, his life of unrequited loyalty drifting from him like the windblown kites he used to chase.’ P219

10. ‘I became what I am today at the age of twelve’

Amir’s failure to stand by his friend is a crucial moment in the novel as it plays on his mind constantly and from then on he’s trying to regain Hassan’s forgiveness. Amir knows that by leaving his friend he’s lost his belonging and identity, he’s desperate to become ‘good again’.

11. Just like Amir’s and Hassan’s, Assef’s childhood tendencies showed how he would turn out as an adult. Amir seemed harsh when he called Assef a “sociopath” early in the story, Assef becomes like his idol, Adolf Hitler. He takes joy in hurting and humiliating innocent people. Showing that Assef was heartless and only tore people down for his own pleasure.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

novels about war and travel everyone must read (according to the guardian)

In Uncategorized on January 26, 2009 at 7:15 pm

Junghyo Ahn: Silver Stallion (1990)

It is September 1950, and General MacArthur — known throughout war-struck Korea as “General Megado” — has just landed his troops at
Inchon. The soldiers establish an encampment named Texas Town, receiving local women who, as a consequence, are publicly shunned as “Yankee wives”. The devastating impact of MacArthur’s assault is seen through the eyes of local teenager Mansik, whose mother joins the prostitutes after being raped. By diverting his attention away from military battle, Junghyo re-establishes the human cost of war: in this context, the real price is demonstrated by Mansik’s accelerated adolescence and the compromised sexuality of the so-called “UN ladies”.
Charlotte Stretch
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Richard Aldington: Death of a Hero (1929)

This deeply affecting tale depicts the short life of artist- turned-army soldier George Winterbourne, who (as we are told in the opening pages) is killed after deliberately exposing himself to machine fi re. We soon learn that it is George’s experiences of war, triggering a deep psychological decline, which draw him towards his fate. Death of a Hero perhaps lacks the relentless ferocity of its peers — details of actual physical combat account for less than half of the narrative. The real intensity of Aldington’s (partly autobiographical) novel instead lies in his savage condemnation of a society responsible for the slaughter of its own men.
Charlotte Stretch
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Beryl Bainbridge: Master Georgie (1998)

Two photographers are among an unlikely group of Liverpudlians who embark for Constantinople and become involved in the carnage of the
Crimean war. Master Georgie, the confl icted hub around which the others revolve, is seen from diff erent points of view in a series of snapshots. But whereas the photographs distort the truth, Bainbridge’s diamond- bright insights reveal the horror and humour of people’s struggle to remain in control of lives ruled by random events and accident with the vivid economy of a writer at the top of her form.
Joanna Hines
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Nigel Balchin: Darkness Falls from the Air (1942)

A love triangle played out against the London blitz, Darkness Falls From The Air is the tale of Bill Sarratt, an urbane civil servant whose work is hampered by needless bureaucracy. His marriage is equally wearing, with his wife Marcia openly involved in a long- running affair with dreamy writer Stephen. Infused with a deliciously dry wit, Balchin’s novel is a perfect portrayal of the stiff upper lip — with Bill appearing just as unperturbed by his wife’s infidelity as he is by falling bombs. Balchin’s experiences at the ministry of food, meanwhile, feed into his slyly satirical portrait of a complex and ineff ectual civil service.
Charlotte Stretch
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JG Ballard: Empire of the Sun (1984)

Ballard’s 1984 account of his childhood in occupied Shanghai is not reportage — the author juggled incidents, removed events and largely shunted his parents from view — yet remains an evocative and disturbing account of life in wartime. Young Jim survives in empty houses, ingeniously obtaining the materials of survival, and is interned by the Japanese. It’s full of potent moral ironies, in which atrocities sit alongside mundane events and Jim admires the very technology that has wreaked havoc upon his world.
John Sutherland
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Pat Barker: Regeneration (1991)

Inspired by her grandfather’s experiences in the first world war trenches, Barker’s trilogy of novels — which also includes The Eye in the Door (1993) and The Ghost Road (1995) — centres around the Edinburgh psychiatric hospital where soldiers were “cured” of psychological trauma before being sent back to the front. Rivers is the heroic therapist handling first public objector Siegfried Sassoon, then Wilfred Owen and the fictional Billy Prior, before sending them back to the devastation of the final few months of the war. There are horrifying descriptions of trench warfare, but it is Barker’s forensic examination of the psyche of these men that makes her novel both contemporary and timeless.
Nicola Barr
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Sebastian Barry: A Long Long Way (2005)

The familiar horrors of the first world war are seen from the fresh perspective of a young Irish volunteer in this passionate and lyrical novel, one of two by Barry to have been shortlisted for the Man Booker prize. Too small to be a policeman like his evered father, Willie Dunne is proud to enlist in the British army. But on leave in 1916 he helps put down the Easter Rising, only to discover that some of his fellow countrymen regard the “filthy Hun” as “our allies in Europe”. The appalling complexity of war for soldiers who have been rejected by their homeland and can no longer identify the enemy is gripping and inevitably tragic.
Joanna Hines
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HE Bates: Fair Stood the Wind for France (1944)

“Sometimes the Alps lying below in the moonlight had the appearance of crisp folds of crumpled cloth.” What could be more English than crumpled linen? Or HE Bates. And this novel is classically English in many ways. The brave, sensitive RAF bomber pilot John Franklin, for instance, is all restrained emotion even when his plane is shot down in France. Yet he falls so heartbreakingly completely for Francoise, the daughter of the mill owner who hides him in his home. Bates’s war novel concentrates on the continuance of love, and the possibility of renewal, his hero and heroine exhibiting levels of trust and commitment undimmed by their experiences.
Nicola Barr
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Nina Bawden: Carrie’s War (1973)

Twelve-year-old Carrie Willow and her younger brother Nick are sent to Wales to escape the dangers of wartime London. Housed with the grim Mr Evans and his timid sister Lou, they encounter warfare of a different
kind and seek refuge with the enchanting inhabitants of the farm at Druid’s Bottom. Carrie’s eff orts to help the people she has come to love lead her to commit what she believes to be a terrible crime. Though written primarily for children, this is an almost perfect novel, to be enjoyed at any age.
Joanna Hines
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Roberto Bolaño: The Savage Detectives (1998)

Central characters Arturo Belano and Ulises Lima are likened to “two Dennis Hoppers walking the streets of Mexico City”, but they are neither savage nor good detectives. They are part of a literary movement called “visceral realism” though, a minor movement engaged in gang warfare with another group, the “Stridentist”. At its heart, Bolaño’s novel is a kind of road novel: made up of interviews with Belano and Lima’s acquaintances, it sketches a scorching, epic portrait of the Americas. An novel as brilliant in its execution as it is bonkers in its conception.
Philip Oltermann
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Paul Bowles: The Sheltering Sky (1949)

A signifi cant forerunner of the Beat movement, Paul Bowles’ bestseller is the story of three jaded American travellers — Port Moresby, his wife Kit and their friend Tunner — drifting through postwar north Africa. Having rejected the comforts of civilisation in their search for identity and fulfi lment, the trio are soon under threat from the sense of alienation and hostility that surrounds them. Inspired by Bowles’ own period of exile in Morocco, this account of a difficult emotional journey made a huge impact on publication, having astutely tapped into a growing state of disaffection across America. Charlotte Stretch
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William Boyd: An Ice-Cream War (1982)

In the early stages of the first world war, newlywed Gabriel Cobb finds himself caught up in the fi ght for control over eastern Africa. Meanwhile, in England, Gabriel’s brother Felix and wife Charis are left alone together as a mutual attraction grows between them. Their aff air is cut short when they discover that Gabriel has been captured, prompting Felix to travel across an increasingly war-torn African landscape to fi nd him. Interspersing vivid action scenes with moments of tranquillity in Kent, Boyd’s novel is a stirring portrayal of decaying British imperialism and the ordinary lives that become shaped by conflict.
Charlotte Stretch
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Raymond Briggs: When the Wind Blows (1982)

This depiction of an elderly rural couple attempting to shield themselves from a nuclear blast by putting blind trust in government guidelines (cover windows with sheets and climb into paper bags) caused a sensation when it was published in 1982. Blacker-than-black comedy ensues as James and Hilda unwittingly succumb to radiation sickness, unable even to eat their reserved ginger nuts because their gums are bleeding uncontrollably. Surprisingly, it’s still classified as a children’s picture book in many a local library.
Chris Ross
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Italo Calvino: Invisible Cities (1974)

Gore Vidal called Calvino’s seventh novel — “or work or meditation or poem” — his most beautiful. Marco Polo describes his travels to Kublai Khan, presenting the world-weary emperor with fractal glimpses of 55 fantastic cities — the unfinished, the unforgettable, the dreamlike, the destroyed — that are all ultimately versions of his “first city”, Venice. This glittering jewel of a book has been an inspiration to travellers, architects and authors alike, its pages brimming with meaning and possibility.
Justine Jordan
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Elias Canetti: Auto-da-Fé (1935)

Peter Kien is an eminent sinologist in interwar Germany, comfortably insulated from humanity and any “touch of the unknown” by his library. Until, that is, he falls victim to his illiterate housekeeper and a proto-Nazi concierge, and begins a grotesque descent into madness and the urban underworld, guided by an evil dwarf. This is a blackly comic study of vulnerability, fascism and self-destruction by the polymathic author of Crowds and Power, and a serious novel of ideas in the grand Central European manner.
Chris Ross
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Willa Cather: One Of Ours (1922)

When it was published, Cather’s account of a Nebraskan farmer’s journey to the first world war and his sacrificial death in battle garnered high praise and vitriolic criticism in equal measure. The Pulitzer prize the following year was off set by condemnation from Hemingway, among others, for daring to tackle the “masculine” subject of war. But her novel is as much an epitaph for the passing of the pioneering experience and the infinite opportunities of Western expansion, and far more ambiguous and wide-ranging than her critics allowed.
Joanna Hines
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Louis-Ferdinand Céline: Journey to the End of the Night (1932)

This dark but humorous novel follows a young man, loosely based on the author, through the first world war and into the poorest suburbs of postwar Paris. With its use of natural speech patterns and unfl inching descriptions of misery and wickedness, it was hugely popular in the 1930s, and continued to be infl uential — Kurt Vonnegut, Joseph Heller and the Doors are among the many who have referred to it in their work — even though Céline was subsequently branded a Nazi sympathiser.
David Newnham
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Wu Cheng’en: Monkey (1590s)

In this Chinese classic, the monk Tripitaka travels to India to fetch sacred Buddhist texts, accompanied by three disciples: the greedy Pigsy, the river monster Sandy and Monkey (recruited so that they may atone for past sins), on the way doing battle with demons, monsters and evil magicians. This boisterous comic adventure tale is both an allegory for the individual’s journey towards enlightenment and a social and political satire. The quest may have been given to the blundering monk, but the real star of the story is its antihero, the irrepressible trickster, rule-breaker and troublemaker Monkey. The novel was the inspiration behind a cult Japanese 1970s television show, and its latest incarnation is Jamie Hewlett and Damon Albarn’s “pop opera” Monkey: Journey to the West.
Ginny Hooker
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Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness (1902)

The most explosive, and recently controversial, indictment of European
colonialism in British fiction. Conrad’s series hero, Charles Marlow, is discovered spinning a yarn to a group of friends on board his yacht, in the mouth of the Thames. Marlow ruminates about his early assignment, from the “Company” in Brussels, to steam upstream to the heart of the Belgian Congo, where the manager of the inner station, who is in charge of ivory harvesting, has apparently gone mad. Despite obstacles (and witnessing scenes of hideous colonial cruelty), Marlow completes his mission, and finds Kurtz — originally a fervent idealist — has reverted to savagery. He dies, with the words: “The horror! The horror!” Marlow himself has seen into the heart of darkness, and is a changed man thereafter.
John Sutherland
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Joseph Conrad: Lord Jim (1900)

Lord Jim takes the familiar narrative of the seafaring hero and turns it inside out, as only Conrad can. His Jim is a young idealist who is promoted in the merchant navy without ever really having had his mettle tested. When the moment comes, Jim makes the coward’s choice — an act that determines the rest of his life, down to his idolisation by a Malaysian tribe. But is he really in the wrong? Conrad uses every trick he knows to express the doubts and fears of a time when ideas of conventional morality seemed to be crumbling underfoot.
Carrie O’Grady
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Joseph Conrad: Nostromo (1904)

Settlers, natives and interlopers all battle for control of a silver mine in the fictional South American country of Costaguana. Many of Conrad’s familiar obsessions are here: revolutionary politics, the curdling of ambition into avarice, oppressive heat, confusion and corruptibility. But where Heart of Darkness draws us into a deeply subjective interior, the language of Nostromo is radically exteriorised — alienating, even. An essential modernist experiment, as rigorous and unsparing in its imagination as the glare of the midday sun that falls upon its cynical protagonists.
Chris Ross
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Bernard Cornwell: Sharpe’s Eagle (1981)

According to legend, Cornwell only started writing his first book about his
lantern-jawed, Napoleonic-era rifleman because green card regulations
prevented him earning a conventional living when he relocated to America. It’s a story guaranteed to infuriate unpublished writers suffering for their art. What makes the series so pleasurable: is Cornwell’s enthusiasm for his historical subject and delight in his rough-hewn hero’s escapades. His prose may be workmanlike, but his relish for the books is infectious. In short, Sharpe is fun.
Sam Jordison
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Francis Coventry: The History of Pompey the Little (1751)

Coventry’s satirical novel follows the adventures of a small canine across numerous different owners’ laps to the top of English society. He may have no religion, but Pompey, “always willing to fetch and carry”, has “courtly manners” and proves an object of adoration until he suffers “a violent physick” and barks his last. To describe this satire as unique barely does justice to its eccentric charm, but only recently has Coventry been recognised as a talent independent of his hero Henry Fielding. A shame, since this book deserves a wide readership.
Sam Jordison
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Stephen Crane: The Red Badge of Courage (1895)

When Crane started reading Civil war veterans’ reminiscences, he complained: “They spout enough of what they did, but they’re as emotionless as rocks.” So he created someone altogether more feelingful. His own Union army private Henry Fielding may start ardent for glory, but his first experiences of the horror and cruelty of battle forces him to plumb the depths of fear. Crane’s empathetic ability to convey the full gamut of these emotions, combined with the bracing realism of his battle sequences, make this a milestone in American literature.
Sam Jordison
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Daniel Defoe: Robinson Crusoe (1719)

This is the original adventure yarn. Crusoe rebels against his father, runs away to sea and has all sorts of adventures, including a daring escape from slavery in north Africa, before God decides to teach him a lesson and shipwrecks him on his desert island. The only survivor, our entirely resourceful hero, survives for 26 years by learning how to make everything from scratch, from pots to Christian theology (he does have a bible). He also defeats encroaching cannibals and pirates. The older, wiser Crusoe tells the story, seeing God’s will — “the Chequer-work of Providence” — at work in every event.
John Mullan
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Len Deighton: Bomber (1970)

Set over the course of a single day, Bomber charts the progress of an ill-fated RAF raid on Nazi Germany. The dramatic events are seen from multiple vantage points, adopting perspectives from both sides of the conflict.
The level of detail employed in this frequently underrated novel is what makes it truly shocking: its tone of cool, clinical analysis is always the same, whether applied to death and destruction or machinery and weather conditions. An acclaimed BBC radio dramatisation, starring Tom Baker, capitalised on the novel’s potent docu-drama feel by using a highly effective real-time framework, drawing out in full the terrifying intensity of Deighton’s writing.
Charlotte Stretch
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James Dickey: Deliverance (1970)

Four friends set out on a canoe trip down the Cahulawassee, a soon-to-be-dammed river in northern Georgia. While there, the men encounter two savage locals who quickly transform the weekend adventure into a traumatic ordeal — one that not everyone survives. Though frequently overshadowed by the success of John Boorman’s 1972 film adaptation, Dickey’s novel possesses its own strain of intoxicatingly visceral poetry. This compelling story of two cultures, brought together in a state of violent conflict, serves as a gripping examination of lost innocence and moral uncertainty in the quiet backwoods of America.
John Dugdale
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John Dos Passos: Three Soldiers (1921)

Dos Passos worked as an ambulance driver during the first world war, and this shows in a book which cleverly contains very little combat but all the boredom and brutality of the sidelines. The bewildering idiocies of boot camp, the interminable waiting around with no idea why, the affectless encounters with prostitutes — all combine to grind three Americans of diverse backgrounds into just so much “meat for guns”. Characteristically episodic and disorienting, this is a gem of an antiwar novel by an unjustly overlooked writer.
Chris Ross
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Norman Douglas: South Wind (1917)

In 1916 Douglas was arrested when a boy made a complaint to the police for (as Douglas said) “kissing [him] and iving him some cakes and a shilling”. He jumped bail, fleeing to Capri, whose salubrious atmosphere inspired this captivating song of praise to the beauties of the Mediterranean and the pleasures of hedonism. Often criticised for having no plot, South Wind is a mystifying, but still enlightening, conversational novel, full of entrancing discussions of love, pleasures and scandals that together form a touching plea for tolerance and fantastic evocation of bohemian life.
Sam Jordison
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Alexandre Dumas: The Three Musketeers (1844)

The story of the dashing d’Artagnan, the swashbuckling musketeers Athos, Porthos and Aramis and their epic struggles against the feline M’Lady is one of the best-loved in western culture. It may be the subject of more than a dozen films, not to mention endless TV serials, cartoons and spin-off books, but Dumas’s book is still the best place to go to really get to know the characters. Its fast-paced narrative and curious philosophical musings also ensure it remains the most entertaining and intriguing of all the versions out there.
Sam Jordison
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Lawrence Durrell: Justine (1957)

The first of the Alexandria Quartet — with Balthazar (1958), Mountolive (1958) and Clea (1960) following — which chronicles the lives and loves of a group of expatriates in Egypt before and just after the second world war, was an instant and lasting success, both popular and critical. The eponymous heroine is “a child of the city, which decrees that its women shall be the voluptuaries not of pleasure but of pain, doomed to hunt for what they least dare to find!” Alexandria, “the great winepress of love”, is evoked in prose of intoxicating lyricism, but for many readers these books are a vintage best appreciated in youth.
Joanna Hines

William Eastlake: The Bamboo Bed (1969)

Captain Clancy is leading his men across the Vietnam hills when he is mortally wounded. As he lies dying on his bamboo bed, search-and-rescue pilot Captain Knightsbridge makes love to the beautiful nurse Jane in his helicopter (which, in poignant synchronicity, is itself dubbed the “Bamboo Bed”). Meanwhile two hippies, Peter and Bethany, are attempting to resolve the conflict with flowers and a guitar. Eastlake, a former war correspondent, redraws the Vietnam war as a surrealist fantasy, filled with grotesque comedy and philosophical deliberation. His irreverent approach conveys, with startling eff ectiveness, the true absurdity of war.
Charlotte Stretch
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JG Farrell: The Siege of Krishnapur (1973)

Farrell’s unconventional historical novel is set during the Indian Mutiny of 1857. The town of Krishnapur is under siege and the garrison is hard put to survive and, just as importantly to some of them, to cling to their Victorian values. They believe in science but their two doctors disagree about almost everything; they believe in their civilization but their subjects are rebelling. The local Indian populace picnic on a nearby hill and enjoy the spectacle of the unfolding drama. Violence is coolly recorded, derring-do excitingly narrated, yet this is a darkly funny book, whose unsentimental, omniscient narrator scrutinises the self-delusions of the colonialists.
John Mullan
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Sebastian Faulks: Birdsong (1993)

Novels depicting the horrors of war are seldom more moving than Sebastian Faulks’ 1993 bestseller. After embarking on a doomed love affair with the unhappily married Madame Azaire, Stephen Wraysford becomes an army officer fighting in the first world war. The novel traces Stephen’s harrowing experiences in the blood-soaked trenches of northern France, and his growing determination to survive the conflict. Almost universally considered Faulks’ finest moment to date, Birdsong hauntingly captures the essence of war in all its terrible brutality.
Charlotte Stretch
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Ford Madox Ford: Parade’s End (1924-28)

Less well known than The Good Soldier, and considerably longer, Ford’s depiction of the first world war and its impact on English society is a strangely haunting work. Christopher Tietjens, the central character, is passionately attached to a gentlemanly code that brings him nothing but trouble in Whitehall, the army and his marriage to the icy Sylvia. Ford’s kaleidoscopic descriptions of trench warfare are the book’s main claim on posterity, but the whole thing is shot through with an attractively eccentric sense of humour as well as nostalgia. Secondary characters include “Breakfast” Duchemin, an insane and sex-obsessed vicar.
Chris Tayler
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CS Forester: The African Queen (1935)

Set in “German Central Africa” in late 1914. Rose Sayer, the spinster sister of an English missionary, finds herself alone when her brother dies. She befriends by a cockney sailor, Charlie Allnutt, commander of the decrepit African Queen. Rose persuades the cowardly Charlie to sail down the Ulanga river and blow up a German warship. The subsequent hardship brings them together as lovers. The African Queen sinks before they can make their suicidal strike. They are taken prisoner by the Germans, who treat them well. The enemy ship is eventually sunk by the Royal Navy. John Huston’s 1952 Oscar-winning film starred Katharine Hepburn and Humphrey Bogart — playing against their conventional screen personalities.
John Sutherland
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George MacDonald Fraser: Flashman (1969)

The most enduringly popular of neo-Victorian novels. Flashman was the loathsome bully in Thomas Hughes’ Tom Brown’s Schooldays. Unlike that “prig” Brown, Flashy is not one to play up and play the game. On being expelled (for drunkenness and worse) from Dr Arnold’s Rugby, Harry Flashman joins the army to fi ght, as an officer and anything but a gentleman, in the fi rst Afghan war. It is the proverbial military cock-up. The series, allegedly based on the anti-hero’s “papers”, continued, volume by bestselling volume, to cast a cynical but hilariously comic anti-establishment light on “England’s century”. Ironically, Harry emerges as, underneath it all, rather a good fellow. A dispiriting number of American reviewers assumed this first volume to be authentic autobiography.
John Sutherland
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Charles Frazier: Cold Mountain (1997)

In Frazier’s Civil-war era novel, the injured and disillusioned Confederate soldier John Inman begins a long, treacherous journey back to his home to Ada, the woman he loves. On Cold Mountain, after the death of her father, Ada is struggling to run the farm she is ill-equipped to manage, until the arrival of the illiterate but formidably resourceful Ruby helps her to take control of her future. Echoes of Homer’s Odyssey run throughout and there are allusions to Ralph Waldo Emerson in a novel which is both an exploration of man’s relationship to nature and a narrative of the human devastation of war.
Ginny Hooker
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Alex Garland: The Beach (1996)

This, more than any other, was the novel that launched a thousand gap years. For a short time in the late 1990s, a copy of Alex Garland’s huge
bestseller was as much a staple of the travel kit as spare socks and a toothbrush. The story of Richard, roaming Asia in search of a secret Thai island, inspired an entire generation of backpackers. Its star might have waned in recent years — thanks in part to Danny Boyle’s disappointing film adaptation — but as a cautionary tale of paradise gone wrong, it still packs a mighty punch.
Charlotte Stretch
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William Golding: To the Ends of the Earth trilogy (1980-89)

A warship journeys from Old Albion to the Antipodes, some time in the early 1800s. We chart its progress through the journal of Edmund Talbot, whose tone is at first arrogant, as befits a young man with aristocratic connections. His chronicle of shipboard life eventually comes to focus on the decline of the Reverend Colley, a “new-hatched parson” who is gradually destroyed by his own lethal innocence and the cruelty of others. The sailing ship’s closed community provides the perfect setting for Golding’s brilliant and unsparing depiction of man’s capacity for inhumanity to man.
Joanna Hines
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René Goscinny Asterix the Gaul (1959)

Hard to imagine that anyone might not have encountered Asterix before they’ve grown up, let alone died. Spawning TV spin-offs, movies and theme parks, he is arguably not just a global cultural phenomenon, but part of the mental landscape of childhood. Let’s face it: Asterix, not Caesar, has shaped our understanding of the Gallic wars — and he is also the only means by which many of us could enjoy learning French. Asterix the Gaul, the first part of a series currently totalling 33, is still the best way to start.
Chris Ross
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Günter Grass: The Tin Drum (1959)

When The Tin Drum was published “it was as if German literature had been granted a new beginning”, stated the Nobel committee’s citation. This vibrant epic covers German history during the first half of the 20th century through the eyes of a diminutive protagonist. At the age of three, the precocious Oskar Matzerath decided to stop growing and acquired the ability to shatter glass with his scream. He was also given his first toy drum which became an extension of himself. Earthy, anarchic and funny, Oskar’s adventures brim with humour, insights and magical realist invention.
Joanna Hines
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Robert Graves: Count Belisarius (1938)

The Emperor Justinian and his wife Theodora are now familiar mainly from their mosaic portraits in Ravenna. With their greatest general, Belisarius, and his remarkable wife Antonina, they are brought to life in Graves’s lavishing story of 6th-century Byzantium. Campaigns in Persia, Carthage, Sicily and Italy, and a vibrant cast of dancing girls, concubines, charioteers, bear masters, Nestorian monks and Herulian Huns, and even a whale called Porphyry, combine to make this a vibrant account of a period that should be
better known.
Joanna Hines
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Vasily Grossman: Life and Fate (1960)

As a Soviet journalist in the 1940s, Vasily Grossman reported from the battle of Stalingrad and published the first account in any language of the Nazi death camps. Completed in 1960 but not published until the 1980s, and then only outside the USSR, Life and Fate is a conscious attempt to write the War and Peace of the second world war. Grossman takes his readers into Auschwitz and the Lubyanka, but he also describes the sense of freedom briefl y experienced by the defenders of Stalingrad before the state reasserted its grip on their lives.
Chris Taylor
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CT Rawi Hage: De Niro’s Game (2006)

Hage’s first novel, a blistering portrait of adolescent swagger set against the Lebanese civil war, came from nowhere to win the Impac award. War-torn Beirut has been a childhood playground for Bassam and George; now the former is dabbling in petty crime to fund his escape, while the latter looks for status and purpose with the local militia. In prose that is brutal, tender, bitter and deadpan by turns, Hage sketches a fresh and utterly convincing portrait of war’s brutalising effects.
Justine Jordan
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H Rider Haggard: King Solomon’s Mines (1885)

If Robert Louis Stevenson could do it with Treasure Island, why couldn’t he write a rattling adventure yarn for the millions, wondered Haggard? The result was this primal episode in the eventful life of “Hunter” Allan Quatermain of Natal. The big-game man is approached by Henry Curtis and Captain John Good to fi nd Curtis’s younger brother, who has disappeared in the interior of the dark continent — allegedly in search of the fabulous diamond mines of King Solomon, somewhere beyond the “Breasts of Sheba” mountains. The quest involves battles with natives and the discovery of both the lost white man and the Solomonic treasure. The novel — one of the great page-turners in English literature — launched the author on a bestselling literary career.
John Sutherland
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H Rider Haggard: She (1887)

The sexiest of Haggard’s many African yarns. Leo Vincey is left an iron box by his dead father, to be opened when he is 25. It contains the startling information that he is descended from an ancient Egyptian priest, Kallikrates. Leo is instructed to go to Africa and kill the mysteriously immortal queen whok killed Kallikrates. Braving shipwreck, cannibals, and crocodiles, Leo finally discovers Ayesha, or “She”, high in an impenetrable mountain range. She takes Leo as her lover. At the heart of her lair, she shows him the pillar of life — a flame that ensures immortality. But, perversely, when she enters it, the fire restores Ayesha to her true 2,000 years of age, and she dies resembling a shrivelled monkey. Leo returns to England, a wiser and older man. Few read the novel nowadays without visualising Ursula Andress, who made the titular character her own in the film version.
John Sutherland
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Patrick Hamilton: The Slaves of Solitude (1947)

This short novel’s slightly silly title and unexciting-sounding setting haven’t always worked to its advantage, but Hamilton’s fans consider it one of his best. In his hands, the story of a festering quarrel between the inmates of a dreary suburban boarding house becomes a comic tour de force as well as an unusually sardonic depiction of life on the home front during the second world war. Mr Thwaites, the heroine’s tormentor-in- chief, is one of Hamilton’s most memorably unpleasant characters, and the book’s mixture of pathos and comedy is perfectly judged.
Chris Tayler
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Robert Harris: Enigma (1995)

In March 1943, a group of codebreakers are attempting to break the German U-boat Enigma cipher from their secret Buckinghamshire base. Among them is Tom Jericho, who is in love with the beautiful but mysterious Claire Romilly. Her sudden disappearance, amidst suspicion that the team has been infi ltrated by a spy, propels Tom on to a desperate mission to uncover the truth. This twist-laden thriller, later adapted into a screenplay by Tom Stoppard, popularised the previously little-known story of Bletchley Park. That the site’s imminent closure is currently the subject public campaign is a strong testament to the power of Harris’s story.
Charlotte Stretch
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Jaroslav Hasek: The Good Soldier Svejk (1923)

Hasek was 39 when he died of tuberculosis, after decades of boozing and vagrancy. The Czech anarchist and prankster, once sacked by a wildlife publisher for writing articles about non-existent animals, didn’t get around to finishing his life’s great work, and translator Cecil Parrott claims that “sometimes it is apparent that he must have been drunk when he was writing”. Yet there is an irresistible, feverish energy to this picaresque comedy about a little man dodging the horrors of the great war. Without Svejk, Joseph Heller has said, there would have been no Catch-22.
Phil Daoust
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Ernest Hemingway: For Whom the Bell Tolls

Anyone who comes to this novel expecting simplicity of style and unthinking machismo will be swiftly disabused. Rather, this story of an American joining forces with Andalucian freedom fighters during the Spanish civil war is one of fiction’s most searching considerations of altruism, accountability and sacrifice. Hemingway’s deliberate archaisms and literalised Spanish jolt the reader into thinking a fresh about choices and the motives behind them. And it is a wonderful evocation of what it means to love a land and a people other than one’s own.
Chris Ross
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Anthony Hope: The Prisoner of Zenda (1894)

The novel which bequeathed adventure-fi ction writers “Ruritania” — one of the genre’s most profi table territories. Visiting the country, Rudolf Rassendyll is observed uncannily to resemble the soon-to-be- crowned King Rudolf. Villainous Duke Michael abducts him and Rassendyll is prevailed upon to impersonate the monarch whom, with the assistance of loyal Fritz von Tarlenheim, he later rescues. Things are romantically complicated when Rassendyll falls in love with the King’s intended bride, the Princess Flavia. Having put Ruritania to rights, he returns to England and a somewhat pointlessly unadventurous existence. Hope was inspired to write the novel by seeing two men in a London street who closely resembled each other.
John Sutherland
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Khaled Hosseini: The Kite Runner (2003)

Afghanistan, the land no outside power can conquer, is captured
in all its colour and complexity in Hosseini’s astonishing debut. Two boys grow up in the same household: Amir is privileged while Hassan is virtually a servant, but they remain uneasy allies until a brutal incident during Kabul’s annual kite-flying festival inflicts wounds that will never heal. A moving and ultimately life-affirming story of love and betrayal, redemption and forgiveness, and private worlds destroyed by public horrors.
Joanna Hines
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Richard Hughes: A High Wind in Jamaica (1929)

Before Lord of the Flies there was A High Wind in Jamaica, an unflinching, wryly observed portrait of the madness of children. Hughes filters his pirate adventure through the sensibilities of a band of middle-class siblings, and the effect is intoxicating. These primal creatures come at events from left-field — fastening on certain details while glossing over others, so that terrible events flutter, half-glimpsed, in the shadows. Some of these are even caused by the children themselves.
Xan Brooks
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Samuel Johnson: Rasselas (1759)

Tired of a life of constant pleasure in Happy Valley, Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia, travels to Egypt to meet scholars, astronomers, shepherds, hermits and poets, and discovers that “while you are making the choice of life, you neglect to live”. He then returns to Abyssinia. Written in eight days to pay for his mother’s funeral, Dr Johnson’s philosophical romance became a bestseller when it was published in 1759. The plot is thin and “nothing is concluded”, but its true appeal is as an essay on the nature of happiness and the vanity of human wishes.
Ian Pindar
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James Jones: From Here to Eternity (1951)

Set in Hawaii in 1941, just before the attack on Pearl Harbor, this novel is loosely based on the author’s experiences in the US army. The story follows several characters, including Captain Dana “Dynamite” Holmes and First Sergeant Milt Warden, but at its heart is a conflict between authority and individuality, as Private Robert E Lee Prewitt stubbornly resists the treatment meted out to him by his superiors to crush his spirit. Published in 1951, it became a bestseller and gave the world a memorable fictional hero who dares to take on the system.
Ian Pindar
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MacKinlay Kantor: Andersonville (1955)

The Confederate prisoner-of-war camp Andersonville held 33,000 Union POWs during the American civil war of 1861 to 1865. Based on prisoners’ memoirs, this Pulitzer prize-winning novel appeared in 1955, and uses real and fictional characters to explore the conditions in the camp from multiple viewpoints. The book includes a sympathetic portrait of Henry Wirz, the camp’s commandant, as well as the camp physician and various guards. Kantor also shows how the ordinary prisoners were preyed upon by a gang of thugs called the Raiders, led by a Union soldier called William Collins.
Ian Pindar
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Thomas Keneally: Confederates (1979)

This realist epic, shortlisted for the Booker prize, follows a ragbag Confederate army as it crosses Virginia to take part in the 1862 Battle of Antietam, the bloodiest confl ict of the American civil war. Drawing on his extensive research of the incident, Keneally spares the reader none of the horrors of war. He also adds a level of personal conflict, intrigue and romance by focusing on Private Usaph Bumpass, his wife Ephaphtha and her lover Decatur Cate, who is one of Usaph’s companions or “confederates” in the battle. Retribution comes when Cate suffers an emasculating injury.
Ian Pindar
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Thomas Keneally: Schindler’s Ark (1982)

Oskar Schindler, a German businessman and Nazi party member, set up a factory in Poland producing supplies for the German army. By the end of the war he had become an unlikely hero, risking his life to save more than a thousand Jews from being sent to the concentration camps. Inspired by meeting a Schindler survivor, and based on the testimonies of survivors and documents of the period, Keneally’s historical novel caused an outcry when it won the Booker in 1982. Was it a work of fiction or faction? Liam Neeson starred in Spielberg’s screen adaptation, Schindler’s List.
Ian Pindar
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AL Kennedy: Day (2007)

A young Lancaster tail-gunner during the second world war, Alfred F Day, bonds with his crew on an RAF bomber. When his plane is shot down, he parachutes to safety in a German prisoner-of-war camp, but after the war he discovers his crew are all dead. In 1949, while employed as an extra in a war film about a prison camp, the painful memories come fl ooding back. Through an extraordinary act of ventriloquism, she describes the waste and eventual resurrection of a young life shattered by war,” said the judges when they awarded Kennedy the Costa Book of the Year in 2007. “This book is a masterpiece.”
Ian Pindar
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Arthur Koestler: Darkness at Noon (1940)

Along with Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (which it strongly influenced), Koestler’s novel expresses his generation of intellectuals’ traumatic disillusionment with Soviet Communism — the “God that Failed” (as a book edited by Koestler called it). The narrative centres on the scandalously corrupt Moscow “show trials” (in fact a bloody Stalinist purge) of the 1930s. The novel ponders the question, why did so many of the accused meekly confess their guilt in court? The answer is given in the person of Koestler’s hero, Rubashov, who, under interrogation, is eventually “educated” into the admissions of wrongdoing that lead, inevitably, to his execution.
John Sutherland
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Jerzy Kosinski: The Painted Bird (1965)

After losing his parents in the mayhem of the second world war, a Polish child wanders through the countryside at the mercy of the brutal and ignorant central or eastern European villagers he encounters, who assume he is a Jew or a Gypsy. When it fi rst appeared in 1965, this controversial novel full of graphic descriptions of murder, torture, rape and bestiality was widely regarded as semi-autobiographical, but is now accepted as fi ction. Dogged by controversy, Kosinski committed suicide in 1991, leaving behind a note: “I am going to put myself to sleep now for a bit longer than usual. Call it Eternity.”
Ian Pindar
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Primo Levi: If Not Now, When? (1982)

Levi, most renowned for his coruscating documentary report on life in a concentration camp, If This Is A Man, published this, his only novel, in 1982. Set in 1943, it follows a group of Jewish partisans making their way, behind enemy lines, across a Europe unmarked by place names and directions, with Palestine their aim. The horrors they have endured are revealed only through dreams and halting recollections and, as in all Levi’s work, their days are characterised by the biggest threat of all: the disease of despair. “The war would last forever: death, pursuit, escape would never end, the snow would never stop falling, day would never break.”
Nicola Barr
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Jack London: The Call of the Wild (1903)

St Bernard Buck leads a good, even pampered life when he is abducted, sold into a team of dogs pulling sleds across the frozen Alaskan landscapes, transporting a new “yellow metal” that is changing men’s natures. “It was his introduction to the reign of primitive law, and Buck met it halfway.” Only the most extreme of traits — human or otherwise — are on show in London’s classic, relentless adventure story. Good, evil, respect, dignity, primal fear, blood lust, leadership, greatness and cowardice are all in constant battle as Buck struggles for survival against his new owners and the “devil dog” Spitz. Nicola Barr
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Alastair Maclean: The Guns of Navarone (1957)

Maclean evokes a daring British second world war commando raid against the fictional German-held island of Navarone. It is the German guns of the title that must be silenced to permit the evacuation of the British troops from a nearby island, and so change the course of the war. As loved for the depiction of his heroes’ backgrounds as for a plot that is unapologetically light on character development but big on thrills and daring do.
Nicola Barr
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Cormac McCarthy: All the Pretty Horses (1992)

In the fi rst novel in McCarthy’s Border trilogy, 16-year-old John Grady Cole, the last in a line of Texan ranchers, and his friend Lacey Rawlins travel across the border into Mexico in search of adventure in a brutal and unfamiliar country. There they meet the reckless Jimmy Blevins, a younger teenager in possession of a fine horse that may not be his, a pistol and a nose for trouble. Jimmy loses the horse and pistol in a storm; John and Lacey decide to help get them back, setting off a fatal chain of events which also have consequences for Cole’s love aff air with the daughter of a Mexican ranch owner. This is both a coming of age story and an elegy for a lost American era.
Ginny Hooker
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Cormac McCarthy: Blood Meridian (1985)

Blood Meridian is not a revisionist western so much as a gore-soaked demolition of the myth of manifest destiny. Using the true-life Glanton gang as its touchstone, McCarthy drops an unnamed protagonist (“the kid”) in among a band of bounty hunters and proceeds to paint the frontier in stark, Darwinian terms — as a brutal, bloody free-for-all. The New World is born out of violence. It belongs not to the humble settler but to men such as “the judge”, a corpulent, amoral monster who by the fi nal chapter has emerged victorious.
Xan Brooks
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Johnston McCulley: The Mark of Zorro (1919)

California in the 1880s was the origin of the famous masked crusader and camper, sexier and more ironic American-style Robin Hood. McCulley’s novel introduced to the world the effete, foppish, aristocratic Don Diego Vega and his swashbuckling, masked alter ego fighting those who exploit the poor. Just as fabulous are the corrupt governor, the hard-drinking Sergeant Gonzales, the revenge-hungry Captain Raman and the beautiful Señorita Lolita Pulido, who is torn between the man she loves and the man who will restore her reputation.
Nicola Barr
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Norman Mailer: The Naked and the Dead (1948)

Mailer was just 26 when his debut novel was published, three years after the end of the second world war. His tale of a platoon of young American soldiers making their way through treacherous jungle on the Japanese-held island of Anopopei was without respite. Its focus on the ordinary American in all his bullying pettiness and fear, its detailed depictions of armed combat and insight into the psychology of men in pursuit of power caught the mood of an American public searching for the reality of war; it made this a bestseller and Mailer a superstar.
Nicola Barr
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André Malraux: La Condition Humaine (1933)

Shanghai 1927. A random assortment of foreign communists and home-
grown terrorists join forces to overthrow their rulers in Malraux’s great novel. “Europeans never see the points of similarity between China and their own countries,” one character remarks, but this account of young men seeking meaning in their lives through indiscriminate carnage and terror in the name of an abstract higher good, of foreign nationals drawn to idealistic causes overseas, is as relevant and illuminating now as it was 75 years ago.
Joanna Hines
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Olivia Manning: The Fortunes of War novels (1960-80)

Six novels in two trilogies: The Balkan Trilogy comprising The Great Fortune, The Spoilt City and Friends And Heroes and The Levant Trilogy comprising The Danger Tree, The Battle Lost And Won and The Sum Of Things. Harriet Pringle and her infuriating communist husband Guy flee the German invaders through Romania and Greece to Cairo, in a novel thronging with expatriates, eccentrics and wisdom. This is a brilliant portrait of a particular marriage and of the world at war. Dramatic, comic and entirely absorbing, it was televised, equally brilliantly, by the BBC in 1987.
Carmen Callil
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Gabriel Garcia Márquez: One Hundred Years of Solitude (1967)

The jungle town of Macondo is a place where it is as possible to ascend heavenwards while hanging the laundry as to be machine-gunned by
agents of the local banana company. Márquez’s looping chronology and extended cast of interrelated characters give us history as a continuous
process of repetition and reconfi guration. This novel remains the beacon of magical realism and the standard bearer for Latin American literature; in Spanish, only Don Quixote has been more successful. Fluid, funny, wise, political: a perfectly achieved meditation on memory and the workings of fiction.
Chris Ross
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Frederick Marryat: The Children of the New Forest (1847)

Marryat’s last and most famous novel, set in 1647. The Royalist cavalier, Colonel Beverley, is killed at the Battle of Naseby. His wife dies shortly thereafter, leaving their four children orphans. The Roundheads burn
the Beverleys’ house, Arnwood, and the children, thought dead, are given refuge by a faithful old retainer, Jacob Armitage, in his cottage in the New Forest. The story follows their growing to adulthood and — with the Restoration — the rebuilding of Arnwood and the Beverley family fortunes. The novel was immensely popular with Victorian children and became the pattern for innumerable juvenile tales over the next century.
John Sutherland
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Herman Melville: Moby-Dick or, The Whale (1851)

We all know the story: man seeks unattainable object of deranged desire and causes general devastation in the process. This is the novel of restless human drive: to perfection, to mastery, to madness, to write a novel in the first place, to aim for something other than “a damp, drizzly November in the soul”. A Very Big Theme, necessarily expressed in dense, wildly idiosyncratic prose as ambitious as Ahab himself. But also: the best book ever written about whaling, which means the most richly detailed novel of the sea, work, friendship and ecology.
Chris Ross
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James Michener: Tales of the South Pacific (1847)

Now eclipsed by the fame of the Rogers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific, Michener’s collection of linked stories detailing the activities of American servicemen, nurses, native islanders and expats on the islands of the Coral Sea during the second world war won him the Pulizter prize in 1948. The exotic Tonkinese ladies and wistful Bali Hai romances give it lasting (and musical) appeal, but the morality of Michener’s tales is that heroism is not only seen on the battlefield, and his commander-narrator’s voice has a downbeat languor that captures the spirit of a war- weary nation (“The waiting. The timeless, repetitive waiting.”)
Nicola Barr
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Elsa Morante: History (1974)

Ida, a widowed schoolteacher, is living in 1940s Rome with her two sons: Nino, a reckless and angry teenager, and baby Giuseppe, conceived when Ida is raped by a German soldier. She (like Morante herself) is half-Jewish, and lives in a permanent state of fear that her forbidden faith will be discovered. Morante’s eight-part epic closely examines Jewish identity in a context of Aryan domination. The contrast between Nino’s involvement in the war and Giuseppe’s unsullied innocence further demonstrates the corrupting effect of war on its victims’ sense of self.
Charlotte Stretch
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Irène Némirovsky: Suite Française (2004)

Némirovsky, a bestselling novelist and a Russian Jew living in Paris, was taken to Auschwitz in 1942 and died the same year. Her handwritten manuscript was salvaged by her two young daughters who, orphaned and traumatised, did not release it for publication until 64 years later. The two unfinished novellas here (five were planned) detail with astonishing precision the wholly ignoble retreat from Paris as Nemirovsky witnessed it, and a year in a rural occupied France. Few heroes emerge in this take on French manners exposed in the most extreme circumstances.
Nicola Barr
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Bao Ninh: The Sorrow of War (1994)

The English translation of Bao Ninh’s debut (and, to date, only published) novel demanded the attention of western readers not only as a rare account of the “American war” by a veteran of the Vietnamese People’s army, but also for revealing that the post-traumatic disorder of a generation, so central to the American experience of the Vietnam war, has been a universal experience. The author’s history is never far from view as the book’s narrator, Kien, struggles to reconcile the tender dreams of his youth with the brutal memories of a decade of war and its arid, drug-ridden aftermath.
Emily Mann
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Patrick O’Brian: Master and Commander (1969)

So massively popular are Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey-Maturin novels that bookshops have a separate section just for them. At the time of his death in 2000, O’Brian was finishing his 21st novel in this massively successful seafaring series, over the course of which he seemed to encompass the entire world of the British navy in the Napoleonic wars. Whether you love the extrovert, impulsive, permanently hungover “lion in action, ass ashore” Jack Aubrey or the surgeon and intelligence agent Stephen Maturin, indeed whether you have ever set foot aboard a ship, O’Brian’s tales of naval derring-do are masterful in conception and execution.
Nicola Barr
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Tim O’Brien: The Things they Carried (1990)

“They carried the common secret of cowardice … Men killed, and died, because they were embarrassed not to.” That Tim O’Brien, as a soldier in Vietnam, experienced first- hand many of the things he writes about is not in doubt when the observations are this acute, but Things is fiction, and this 1990 novel is regarded as one of the most powerful of the Vietnam war. By creating the character of Tim O’Brien, O’Brien finds his way to comment on a war that he found nonsensical and repellent, as if normal narrative was simply too traditional to harness the absurdity and the horror.
Nicola Barr
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Baroness Emmuska Orczy: The Scarlet Pimpernel (1905)

Melodrama, cliched prose and unsubtle political messages are all forgiven in Orczy’s first of many journeys into the world of English aristocrat Sir Percy Blakeney and his alter-ego, the Scarlet Pimpernel, as he and his band of Englishmen attempt to rescue French aristocrats from Madame Guillotine in the French revolution. Orczy had huge success with her foppish, inane, kind-hearted, cold, proud, passionate and indefatigable Pimpernel and his wonderful wife Marguerite. Belief may need to be suspended as Orczy allows him to escape yet another tricky situation, but when the thrills are this swashbuckling, it is churlish to care.
Nicola Barr
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George Orwell: Burmese Days (1934)

Drawing on the experiences of his five years as an officer in the Burma police, Orwell’s first novel is a mordant aff air. Flory, a timber merchant disillusioned with the Imperial racket, falls for a pretty girl sent out east to stay with her relatives. He is cut out by a glamorous army officer and wins her back, only to fall victim to the machinations of a native magnate. Steeped in essence of Maugham and crammed with impressionistic descriptions of the Burmese landscape, it also harbours many an early signpost from the road that led to Nineteen Eighty-Four.
DJ Taylor
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Thomas Pynchon: Gravity’s Rainbow (1973)

Routinely hauled into the starting line-up of the race to be the Great American Novel, Pynchon’s vast postmodern masterpiece from 1973 is more than capable of intimidating the other competitors with its sheer physical solidity. Its staggering intellectual weight is what really leaves a dent, however, using the development of the V2 rocket in Nazi Germany as a starting point for a novel that is as densely packed as grey matter and equally mysterious.
Victoria Segal
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Rudolf Erich Raspe: The Surprising Adventures Of Baron Munchausen (1785) ?

Blowing up bears, being swallowed by fish, seeing off a pride of a thousand lions, visiting the moon (twice): every boastful big game hunter, self-aggrandising fisherman or pub raconteur owes a debt to this 1785 collection of satirical tall tales, inspired by the anecdotes of a real German aristocrat. Raspe himself lived a shadily picaresque life but could only have been an amateur compared with the baron, whose stories leap from the sublime to the ridiculous — then keep on jumping.
Victoria Segal
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Erich Maria Remarque: All Quiet on the Western Front (1929)

Best “war is hell” novel ever. Published in Germany as Im Westen nichts Neues, it became an international superseller after its blockbusting 1933 film tie-in. The story tracks the fortunes of six classmates swept up in the first world war, as narrated by Paul Bäumer. The soldiers reserve their hatred not for the enemy but the armchair warriors on the home front. On the day that Armistice is signed, Paul, realising that he can never readjust to civilian life, walks into no-man’s-land and is shot. The Nazis banned the detestably “pacifist” book, couldn’t get their hands on Remarque and so arrested his sister on a trumped-up treason charge and beheaded her. A literal hatchet job.
John Sutherland
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João Guimarães Rosa: The Devil to Pay in the Backlands (1956)

Riobaldo, an old farmer living in the arid hinterlands of Brazil, tells the story of how he became the leader of a gang of bandits, revealing on the way that he may have sold his soul to the devil. Often referred to as the “Brazilian Ulysses”, Guimarães Rosa’s novel comes with a mythic heft, a complex masterpiece of storytelling that attempts to map those psychological territories that are as remote and wild as any backcountry.
Victoria Segal
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Rafael Sabatini: Scaramouche (1921)

Sabatini’s swashbuckler certainly can do the fandango, twirling and ducking through Revolutionary France in the dashing company of its hero André-Louis Moreau. After a duel with a wicked marquis leaves his friend dead, the young man stirs up discontent against the upper classes and is forced to become a fugitive, joining a wandering theatre troupe as disguise. Those staples of historical adventures — honour, vengeance and dark family secrets — provide the kerosene; the political intrigue strikes the match.
Victoria Segal
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Rafael Sabatini: Captain Blood His Odyssey (1922)

According to George MacDonald [Flashman] Fraser this is “one of the great unrecognised novels of the 20th century”. It’s 1685. Dr Peter Syn is an Irish surgeon, peacefully plying his healing trade in the west country. He tends a dying officer, in Monmouth’s rebellion, and is sentenced to death by (hanging) Judge Jeffreys. The sentence is commuted to transportation to the Barbadoes. There Syn turns buccaneer as Captain Blood, aka Capitano Pedro Sangre. Pirates of the Caribbean adventures ensue, before a happy-ever-after in Devon. The novel is indelibly associated with Errol Flynn’s 1935 film depiction. Buckles never swashed more dashingly.
John Sutherland
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Jonathan Safran Foer: Everything Is Illuminated (2002)

Foer’s novel won the Guardian first book award and praise from John Updike and Joyce Carol Oates. Others have been deeply irritated by this story of a young American Jew who visits Ukraine in search of the woman who saved his grandfather from the Nazis. What do they hate so much? Chiefly the American’s local guide (and co-narrator) Alex, whose already shaky English is dangerously loosened by the gift of a thesaurus. “In Russian,” as Alex puts it, “my ideas are asserted abnormally well, but my second tongue is not so premium.” Oh, and there’s a farting dog.
Phil Daoust
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James Salter: The Hunters (1956)

Drawing on his experiences as a fighter pilot in the Korean War, Salter’s first novel exudes the kind of chill you might experience at 40,000 feet. Captain Cleve Connell arrives in Korea determined to become a MiG-destroying ace: instead of glory, he finds disenchantment and pilots who have let their sense of honour curdle and their masculinity turn septic. War, Salter argues, leaves a man’s heart missing in action even before the rest of his body follows.
Victoria Segal
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Walter Scott: Ivanhoe (1819)

After a series of bestselling Scottish novels, the Wizard of the North (still anonymous to his contemporary readers) turned to English history. The
story is set in the 12th century, at the time of the crusades. Saxon England is labouring under the “Norman yoke”. King Richard has been captured on his return from the Holy Land. The main strand of narrative (never Scott’s strongest point) follows the career of Wilfrid of Ivanhoe, a disinherited knight, who must choose in love between the Saxon beauty Rowena, and the beautiful Jewess Rebecca. Scott’s novel popularised the legendary Robin Hood, the medieval joust (the plot hinges on a great tournament) and idealised medievalism. It is probably, in terms of myths it propagated, one of the most infl uential novels in English literature. Now less read than it deserves to be.
John Sutherland
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Anna Sewell: Black Beauty (1877)

The most famous animal story of the 19th century. The novelty of the work is that it is narrated by a horse (apparently sexless), which is miraculously able to talk like a well-brought-up Victorian servant. Black Beauty tells his life story from foal to colt to broken-in mount and fi nally to broken-down hack. The work is strongly marked by Sewell’s passionate hatred of cruelty to animals and her campaign against the use of the “bearing reign”. The most good natured of quadrupeds, Black Beauty off ers a fi nal message: “We horses do not mind hard work if we are treated reasonably.”
John Sutherland
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Irwin Shaw: The Young Lions (1949)

Allegedly incurring Hemingway’s wrath by encroaching on his territory, Irwin Shaw’s rangy account of the second world war marches across vast swathes of territory, both literal — Africa, Europe, America — and intellectual. Focusing on three young soldiers — the Jewish Noah, the accidental hero Michael and the Nazi Christian, characters later played by Montgomery Clift, Dean Martin and Marlon Brando in the 1958 fi lm — Shaw’s first novel opens out into a spiritual and emotional panorama of war.
Victoria Segal
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Nevil Shute: A Town Like Alice (1950)

Jean Paget’s uncle believes women cannot handle money, and places her inheritance in trust: as his solicitor discovers, however, in wartime Malaya this “very fine girl” handled trials beyond her uncle’s imagining. There is romance in Shute’s popular 1949 book, but the underlying taste is as sharp as quinine, its key passages detailing Jean’s forced march round Malaya with 32 other women and children in an account of dirty rice, dysentery and death that loses none of its horror for being rendered in Shute’s reticent, terribly British style.
Victoria Segal
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Art Spiegelman: Maus: A Survivor’s Tale (1973-1991)

“No poetry after Auschwitz,” said Adorno, with serious implications for a book that attempts to represent the Holocaust and its aftermath as an extended cartoon. Maus exploded not merely any preconceptions about appropriate subject matter for a comic strip, but also suggested that the unspeakable might best be rethought through unexpected means. The relentless caricatures (Jews as mice, Germans as cats, Poles as pigs) remain challenging, even as they intensify a highly poignant depiction of ordinary aspirations in prewar Poland and Artie’s troubled relationship with his far-from saintly survivor father.
Chris Ross
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Stendhal: The Charterhouse of Parma (1839)

A romantic thriller that follows the fortunes of a young Italian nobleman, Fabrizio del Dongo, who somewhat accidentally finds himself fighting for the French at Waterloo. He then heads to Naples to study for the priesthood, has plenty of affairs, kills a man in a dispute over an actress and is caught and locked up in Parma’s highest tower, where he manages to fall in love yet again before effecting a daring escape. Alongside all this are the intrigues of court politics involving Fabrizio’s glamorous aunt Gina and her lover, the urbane Count Mosca. Both Balzac and Tolstoy were heavily influenced by Stendhal’s panoramic realism.
Adam Newey
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Neal Stephenson: Cryptonomicon (1999)

If the phrase “post-cyberpunk science fi ction” sounds altogether alarming, then you may disregard this novel. In fact Stephenson’s sprawling, picaresque epic at times reads like a straightforward history of the science of code-making and code-breaking in the second world war. But not for nothing is Stephenson known as “the Hacker Hemingway”, and his narrative also includes much heorising on the history of computing, the nature of money and mathematics. It ranges effortlessly all over the globe, between a past and a present brimming with conspiracy theories and paranoia. A much loved, popular novel that almost transcended the cult label.
Nicola Barr
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Laurence Sterne: A Sentimental Journey (1768)

Mr Yorick, a mischievous 18th century clergyman, who is his author’s alter-ego, narrates his thoroughly idiosyncratic journey through France. He meets and mocks both his fellow English travellers on their Grand Tours and the French philosophes whom he visits in their Paris salons (Sterne, as the celebrated author of Tristram Shandy, had recently cut a swathe through fashionable Parisian society). The sentimental traveller searches out not tourist attractions but “sentimental” encounters: touching meetings with those who are gifted with fi ne feelings. Oddly enough, these are usually attractive young women who are happy to have their pulses felt by a sympathetic gentleman.
John Mullan
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Robert Louis Stevenson Kidnapped (1886)

Stevenson’s most popular historical romance, set in 1751 in the aftermath of the ‘45 Scottish rebellion. David Balfour, an orphan, comes to live with his villainous uncle, Ebenezer of Shaws. Having failed to murder his ward himself, Ebenezer has his nephew kidnapped, as a white slave, on the brig Covenant. The vessel runs down a rowing boat containing a Jacobite rebel, Alan Breck. He and David conspire to escape their captors and, on land, the brutal English soldiery who are still ravaging Scotland. After many adventures the two heroes — one “canny”, the other wildly romantic (Stevenson loved dualism) — make it to Edinburgh, where David’s rights are restored. Alan takes refuge in France.
John Sutherland
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Robert Louis Stevenson: Treasure Island (1883)

The fi nest boys’ adventure story produced in the Victorian period. Young Jim Hawkins helps run the Admiral Benbow inn, in Devon. A buccaneer, Billy Bones, holes up there — pursued, it transpires, by shipmates who deliver him the dreaded “black spot”. Jim discovers a treasure map in the dead Bones’s sea chest and, with the local squire and doctor, embarks to the West Indies to discover the buried treasure of the pirate Captain Flint. Also on board their vessel, the Hispaniola, is the villainous, one-legged sea-cook, Long John Silver, who takes over the vessel. Jim foils the mutineers and returns rich — but still affl icted by nightmares of Silver and his parrot’s screech “Pieces of Eight!” Stevenson’s novel was much imitated. Without it, we would never have had Pirates of the Caribbean.
John Sutherland
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Robert Stone: A Flag for Sunrise (1981)

Stone is a former war correspondent and erstwhile member of Ken Kesey’s “merry pranksters” who writes tales of desperate jokers in dangerous places. A Flag For Sunrise deals out a dark farce of the Iran-Contra era, as a rag-tag troupe of misfits (nuns and drug smugglers, whisky priests and CIA operatives) jockey for advantage in a thinly-veiled Nicaragua. Dostoyevsky and Graham Greene are the obvious influences here, though Stone’s savage, seductive prose style is all his own.
Xan Brooks
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William Styron: Sophie’s Choice (1979)

Hugely ambitious and extremely controversial, Styron’s rendering of a three- seen. In lands of midgets, giants and a flying island, Gulliver wonderfully fails to see the analogies with the European civili sation of which he is so proud. Then on his last voyage he meets the Houyhnhnms, virtuous and perfectly rational talking horses, and his pride collapses into misanthropy and self-loathing. He and we are just Yahoos, the malevolent, cunning, libidinous beasts with whom the Houyhnhnms are fated to share their land.
John Mullan
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Leo Tolstoy: War and Peace (1869)

Tolstoy’s epic novel – the touchstone of 19th-century realism – sweeps from the glittering salons of Russian high society to the grisly horrors of the Napoleonic battlefields. Its dispassionate eye follows peasants, emperors, soldiers, and priests through decades, taking in life and death in all its forms. This is no heroic tale of good versus evil, of strategies and battle formations, but a vivid depiction of the banality, tedium and senselessness of war. In its time, it was so formally innovative that even Tolstoy himself didn’t consider it to be a novel in the conventional sense. He was so dissatisfied with the first version that he rewrote it and never felt he’d got it right. Its everyman hero, Pierre (played unforgettably on TV by Anthony Hopkins), blunders along, struggling to find meaning in his life, and each of the dozen or so central characters battle their own demons, searching for truth and peace. Their struggles are timeless, as is the unforgettable love story at its heart.
Imogen Tilden
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Mark Twain The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885)

The novel is narrated by Huck (“Tom Sawyer’s comrade”) in the “Pike County dialect”. Huck is semi-”sivilized”, thanks to the iron discipline of the widow Douglas who has adopted him. Huck’s villainous father returns, eager for the $6,000 his son has inherited. Huck escapes, and drifts by raft down the Mississippi, with a runaway slave, Jim. After various adventures (and reunion with Tom) all comes well. At the end, the two young heroes intend to light out to the Indian territory — a sequel Twain never wrote. The novel has fallen into disfavour because of Huck’s promiscuous use of the N-word, although its treatment of race is commendably liberal.
John Sutherland
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Jules Verne: Around the World in Eighty Days (1873)

Master of the voyage imaginaire , Verne also revealed himself adept at mingling high adventure with Thomas Cook-style tourism. This pioneer
romance of globalisation has always been among Verne’s most popular works in Britain for its ultra-English (as the French see it) hero, Phileas
Fogg, Esq. Fogg, having read of a new railway link in the Indian subcontinent, wagers his fellow Reform Club members that he can circumnavigate the world in 80 days. With his ingenious French “man”, Passepartout, he overcomes every obstacle, displaying across the globe the famous English sang –froid. The itinerary is meticulously chronicled. Fogg arrives back to foggy London, as he thinks, a day late — but he has forgotten that he has crossed the date line. He makes it to the club with seconds to spare.
John Sutherland
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Jules Verne: A Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1864)

With Twenty Thousand Leagues, the most reprinted of Verne’s voyages imaginaires, this one subterranean rather than submarine. The “hollow earth hypothesis” — which fantasised a parallel world to our under the world’s crust — was both popular and subscribed to, even by reputable scientists, in the 19th century. In Verne’s fantasy, Professor Lidenbrock, inspired by an ancient manuscript, leads an expedition through an extinct volcano to an underground world that is still prehistoric — having never been exposed to an ice age — with mastodons, jungles, and humanoids. Verne’s tale was flagrantly ripped off (by Edgar Rice Burroughs, among others, with his “Pellucidar” series) but remains the best of its (scientifically) preposterous
kind.
John Sutherland
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Gore Vidal: Williwaw (1946)

Vidal was 19 when he wrote this, his fi rst novel, published in 1946. And yes, he was living and working as a first mate on board a ship in the Aleutian Islands, the location for this novel, but the achievement is not the similitude, rather the ability to express the tension and claustrophobia as the crew members wrestle with war, personal animosity, boredom (no one is seen working on a novel) and some really really bad weather. A williwaw is a snow-laden hurricane, and 50 years before The Perfect Storm was a bestseller, Vidal showed us how it should be done.
Nicola Barr
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Voltaire: Candide (1759)

Our fresh-faced hero embarks on his picaresque journey across Europe and Latin America, which sees Enlightenment optimism sorely tested by — among other delights — rape, murder, syphilis, cannibalism, the wanton destructiveness of natural forces and the human cost of the western addiction to sugar. Not “the best of all possible worlds”, then, but certainly one of the best possible books about the limits of rationalism, the savagery of colonial exploitation and the vital importance of cultivating one’s own garden and independence of mind.
Chris Ross
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Kurt Vonnegut: Slaughterhouse-Five (1969)

Subtitled “Or The Children’s Crusade: A Duty-Dance With Death”, the most powerful anti-war novel to be generated out of the second world war. Vonnegut, like his ingénue hero, Billy Pilgrim, was captured in the Battle of the Bulge and imprisoned in Dresden, shortly before the firebombing in February 1945 which killed (as Vonnegut recalls) over 100,000 German civilians. The narrative opens with Billy “unstuck” in time. He is, perhaps, mad. Or, as he believes, he has been given the power of clairvoyance and time travel by extraterrestrial Tralfamadorians, whose prisoner he is. The Tralfamadorians have destroyed the universe by their bombing error but can enjoy the good moments of their previous existences. The narrative recoils
from graphic description of wartime atrocity to fanciful space opera. As Konnegut records, it was an immensely painful novel to write and, for all its incidental comedy and literary skill, remains painful to read. But necessary, none the less.
John Sutherland
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Evelyn Waugh: Put Out More Flags (1942)

Basil Seal, posh and feckless, has been a leader writer on the Daily Beast, a champagne salesman, a tour guide, a secret policeman in Bolivia, and an adviser on modernisation to the emperor of Azania – all way relationship between a young southern writer, a Polish Auschwitz survivor and a Jewish New Yorker interweaves a host of complex themes (survivor guilt, ancestral guilt, madness and betrayal). The movie was Oscar-nominated; the book was banned in libraries across the States. But this is not just about provocative comparisons. Styron is a writer’s writer, capable of setting a pastoral idyll in Brooklyn, and the traumas narrated occur alongside a classic American coming-of-age story.
Chris Ross
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Evelyn Waugh: Men at Arms (1952)

The fi rst of the Sword of Honour trilogy, which was followed by Officers and Gentlemen in 1955 and Unconditional Surrenderin 1961. Guy Crouchback is the last of an ancient English Catholic family — miserable, childless, divorced and forbidden by his religion to remarry. At 35, the outbreak of war seems to give meaning to his life: he is commissioned into the Royal Corps of Halberdiers, an outfit somewhere between a prep school and a gentleman’s club. In Waugh’s mordent satire on the wartime army, bungling is standard, idiots are greeted as heroes and fools are unfailingly promoted. “Unquestionably,” wrote Cyril Connolly, “the finest novels to have come out of the war.”
Charlotte Higgins
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HG Wells: The Island of Dr Moreau (1896)

The most morbid of Wells’s remarkable 1890s “scientific romances” and a classic fable of vivisection — a cause célèbre of the late Victorian period. The hero narrator, Prendick, is shipwrecked and finds himself on a Pacific island, where he discovers that Dr Moreau (earlier hounded out of England for torturing animals) has perfected surgical techniques by which he can accelerate evolution. Under his Darwinian scalpel, animals are raised to quasi-humanity. But once raised, these “monsters” need to be kept in check by the sadistic infliction of pain. Moreau is killed by a puma he is tormenting and rebellion breaks out. The animals revert to their natural animalism. Moreau’s last words are: “What a mess.” The novel revolted contemporary reviewers but hasfascinated posterity.
John Sutherland
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Robert Westall: The Machine-Gunners (1975)

Chas McGill’s collection of war souvenirs becomes more than a schoolboy pastime when he finds a crashed German bomber with its machine-gun still attached. After their school takes a hit during an air-raid, McGill and his friends make use of the free time to wage their own war against the enemy. The Machine Gunners, which was adapted into a BBC television serial in 1983, brilliantly evokes Tyneside in the second world war and the disruption to ordinary family life, while capturing the complicated relationships that exist between children and adults. It won the Carnegie medal in 1975, and in 2007 was selected by medal judges as one of the 10 most important children’s novels of the past 70 years.
James Smart
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Patrick White: Voss (1957)

Voss, a German explorer, sets out in 1845 to cross the uncharted Australian desert. Before leaving, he meets Laura Trevelyan, a young Englishwoman newly arrived in the colony, and they fall in love. The novel then intertwines Laura’s life in Sydney with the increasingly desperate travails of Voss’s doomed expedition. Though the couple never meet again, they appear to communicate through a series of heightened, dream-like visions that become more intense as Voss’s mind, beset by the sin of intellectual pride, fractures under the weight of the physical challenge he has undertaken. In 1985 White’s novel was adapted into an opera by Richard Meale, with a libretto by David Malouf.
Adam Newey
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Owen Wister: The Virginian (1902)

Not many writers get to invent a genre, but that’s what Wister did in 1902 with The Virginian, the Western novel that spawned a thousand books and even more films. All the future cliches are here, but new-minted: the tall handsome stranger who learns how to be a man among the wide open spaces of the unspoiled West, magnifi cent landscapes, violent villains — who get their comeuppance — and a lovely schoolmarm endeavouring to instil civilised values in an uncouth bunch of frontiersmen. This book has all the freshness of a literary pioneer.
Joanna Hines
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Herman Wouk: The Caine Mutiny (1951)

Soon after Willie Keith joins the US Navy in 1943, his dying father describes him as “much like our whole country – young, naive, spoiled and softened by abundance and good luck, but with an interior hardness that comes from your sound stock”. On board the Caine, an ageing minesweeper in the Pacific, Willie grows up fast, but it is his involvement in mutiny and its aftermath that finally turns him into the man his father never was. Wouk won a Pulitzer prize for this dramatic account of the realities of warfare in the Pacific.
Joanna Hines
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Émile Zola: The Debacle (1892)

The penultimate book in Zola’s monumental sequence about a French family during the Second Empire, The Debacle chronicles the disastrous war between France and Prussia in 1870 and the Paris Commune of the following year, through the moving friendship between two men. Jean Macquart, earthy and pragmatic, wins the respect of the intellectual and mercurial Maurice Levasseur. Initially comrades, they fight on opposite sides in 1871, with tragic consequences. Written only 20 years after the events it describes, Zola’s novel is a moving indictment of the waste and cruelty of war.
Joanna Hines

Science Fiction & Fantasy novels everyone must read (according to the guardian)

In Uncategorized on January 26, 2009 at 7:12 pm

Douglas Adams: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (1979)

Originating as a BBC radio series in 1978, Douglas Adams’s inspired melding of hippy-trail guidebook and sci-fi comedy turned its novelisations into a publishing phenomenon. Douglas wrote five parts from 1979 onwards (the first sold 250,000 in three months), introducing the world to Marvin the Paranoid Android, the computer Deep Thought, space guitarist Hotblack Desiato (named after Adams’s local estate agent) and the Guide itself, a remarkably prescient forerunner to the internet.
Andrew Pulver
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Brian W Aldiss: Non-Stop (1958)

Aldiss’s first novel is a tour-de-force of adventure, wonder and conceptual breakthrough. Set aboard a vast generation starship millennia after blast-off, the novel follows Roy Complain on a voyage of discovery from ignorance of his surroundings to some understanding of his small place in the universe. Complain is spiteful and small-minded but grows in humanity as his trek through the ship brings him into contact with giant humans, mutated rats and, ultimately, a wondrous view of space beyond the ship.
Eric Brown
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Isaac Asimov: Foundation (1951)

One of the first attempts to write a comprehensive “future history”, the trilogy – which also includes Foundation and Empire (1952) and Second Foundation (1953) – is Asimov’s version of Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, set on a galactic scale. Hari Seldon invents the science of psychohistory with which to combat the fall into barbarianism of the Human Empire, and sets up the Foundation to foster art, science and technology. Wish-fulfilment of the highest order, the novels are a landmark in the history of science fiction.
EB
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Margaret Atwood: The Blind Assassin (2000)

On planet Zycron, tyrannical Snilfards subjugate poor Ygnirods, providing intercoital entertainment for a radical socialist and his lover. We assume she is Laura Chase, daughter of an Ontario industrialist, who records their sex and sci-fi stories in a novel, The Blind Assassin. Published posthumously by Laura’s sister, Iris, the book outrages postwar sensibilities. Iris is 83 in the cantankerous present-day narrative, and ready to set the story straight about the suspicious deaths of her sister, husband and daughter. In this Booker prize-winning novel about novels, Atwood bends genre and traps time, toying brilliantly with the roles of writing and reading.
Natalie Cate
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Paul Auster: In the Country of Last Things (1987)

Anna Blume, 19, arrives in a city to look for her brother. She finds a ruin, where buildings collapse on scavenging citizens. All production has stopped. Nobody can leave, except as a corpse collected for fuel. Suicide clubs flourish. Anna buys a trolley and wanders the city, salvaging objects and information. She records horrific scenes, but also a deep capacity for love. This small hope flickers in a world where no apocalyptic event is specified. Instead, Auster creates his dystopia by magnifying familiar flaws and recycling historical detail: the novel’s working title was “Anna Blume Walks Through the 20th Century”.
NC
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Iain Banks: The Wasp Factory (1984)

A modern-gothic tale of mutilation, murder and medical experimentation, Banks’s first novel – described by the Irish Times as “a work of unparalleled depravity”- is set on a Scottish island inhabited by the ultimate dysfunctional family: a mad scientist and his unbalanced sons, older brother Eric, who has been locked up for everyone’s safety, and Frank, the 16-year-old narrator, tormented by a freak accident that cost him his genitals. Frank’s victims are mostly animals – but he has found time to kill a few children …
Phil Daoust
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Iain M Banks: Consider Phlebas (1987)

Space opera is unfashionable, but Banks couldn’t care less. “You get the opportunity to work on a proper canvas,” he says. “Big, big brushes, broad strokes.” The strokes have rarely been broader than in Banks’s Culture novels, about a galaxy-spanning society in which humans and artificial intelligences are united by a love of parties, adventure and a damn good fight. Consider Phlebas introduced the first of many misguided or untrustworthy heroes – Horza, who can change his body just by thinking about it – and a typically Banksian collision involving two giant trains in an subterranean station.
PD
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Clive Barker: Weaveworld (1987)

Life’s rich tapestry is just that in Clive Barker’s fantasy. A magic carpet is the last refuge of a people known as the Seerkind, who for centuries have been hunted by both humans and the Scourge, a mysterious being that seems determined to live up to its name. When it all starts to unravel, the carpet people’s best hope is a pigeon-fancying insurance clerk and his half-Seerkind companion. Yes, it sounds twee, but as Barker himself said, “the Seerkind fornicate, fart – they’re very far from pure”.
PD
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Nicola Barker: Darkmans (2007)

Nicola Barker has been accused of obscurity, but this Booker-shortlisted comic epic has a new lightness of touch and an almost soapy compulsiveness. Set in Ashford, Kent, the kind of everytown that has turned its back on history, the novel dips into the lives of a loosely connected cast of everyday eccentrics who find that history – in the persona of Edward IV’s jester – is fighting back. A jumble of voices and typefaces, mortal fear and sarky laughter, the novel is as true as it is truly odd, and beautifully written to boot.
Justine Jordan
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Stephen Baxter: The Time Ships (1995)

In his visionary sequel to Wells’s The Time Machine, Baxter continues the adventures of the Time-Traveller. He sends him back to the far future in an attempt to save the Eloi woman Weena, only to find himself in a future timeline diverging from the one he left. Baxter’s extraordinary continuation and expansion tackles the usual concerns of the time-travel story – paradox and causality – and goes on to explore many of the themes that taxed Wells: destiny, morality and the perfectibility of the human race.
EB
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Greg Bear: Darwin’s Radio (1999)

Bear combines intelligence, humour and the wonder of scientific discovery in a techno-thriller about a threat to the future of humanity. A retro-viral plague sweeps the world, infecting women via their sexual partners and aborting their embryos. But the plague is more than it seems … What might in other hands have been a mere end-of-the-world runaround is transformed by Bear’s scientific knowledge into something marvellous, as reason overcomes paranoia and fear.
EB
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Alfred Bester: The Stars My Destination (1956)

“Gully Foyle is my name / And Terra is my nation. / Deep space is my dwelling place / And death’s my destination …” Marooned in space after an attack on his ship, then ignored by a passing luxury liner, an illiterate mechanic plots revenge on those who left him to die. Somehow surviving, he swiftly gets down to it. Bester’s novel updates The Count of Monte Cristo with telepathy, nuclear weapons and interplanetary travel. Those who stumble across it are inevitably surprised to find it was written half a century ago.
PD
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Poppy Z Brite: Lost Souls (1992)

Brite’s first novel, a lush, decadent and refreshingly provocative take on vampirism told in rich, stylish prose, put her at the forefront of the 1990s horror scene. It’s the story of Nothing, an angst-filled teenager who runs away from his adoptive parents to seek out his favourite band. Along the way he joins up with a group of vampires, finds his true family and discovers what he really values, amid much blood, sex, drugs and drink.
Keith Brooke
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Algis Budrys: Rogue Moon (1960)

Al Barker is a thrillseeking adventurer recruited to investigate an alien labyrinth on the moon. Everyone who enters the maze dies, so Barker’s doppelganger is transmitted there while he remains in telepathic contact. Barker is the first person to survive the trauma of witnessing their own death, returning again and again to explore. Rogue Moon works as both thriller and character study, a classic novel mapping out a new and sophisticated SF, just as Barker maps the alien maze.
KB
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Mikhail Bulgakov: The Master and Margarita (1966)

When the Devil comes to 1930s Moscow, his victims are pillars of the Soviet establishment: a famous editor has his head cut off; another bureaucrat is made invisible. This is just a curtain-raiser for the main event, however: a magnificent ball for the damned and the diabolical. For his hostess, his satanic majesty chooses Margarita, a courageous young Russian whose lover is in a psychiatric hospital, traumatised by the banning of his novel. No prizes for guessing whom Bulgakov identified with; although Stalin admired his early work, by the 1930s he was personally banning it. This magisterial satire was not published until more than 20 years after the writer’s death.
PD
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Edward Bulwer-Lytton: The Coming Race (1871)

In this pioneering work of British science fiction, the hero is a bumptious American mining engineer who stumbles on a subterranean civilisation. The “Vril-ya” enjoy a utopian social organisation based on “vril”, a source of infinitely renewable electrical power (commerce promptly produced the beef essence drink, Bovril). Also present are ray guns, aerial travel and ESP. Ironically, the hero finds utopia too boring. He is rescued from death by the Princess Zee, who flies him to safety. The novel ends with the ominous prophecy that the superior race will invade the upper earth – “the Darwinian proposition”, as Bulwer-Lytton called it.
John Sutherland
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Anthony Burgess: A Clockwork Orange (1960)

One of a flurry of novels written by Burgess when he was under the mistaken belief that he had only a short time to live. Set in a dystopian socialist welfare state of the future, the novel fantasises a world without religion. Alex is a “droog” – a juvenile delinquent who lives for sex, violence and subcult high fashion. The narrative takes the form of a memoir, in Alex’s distinctive gang-slang. The state “programmes” Alex into virtue; later deprogrammed, he discovers what good and evil really are. The novel, internationally popularised by Stanley Kubrick’s 1970 film into what Burgess called “Clockwork Marmalade”, is Burgess’s tribute to his cradle Catholicism and, as a writer, to James Joyce.
JS
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Anthony Burgess: The End of the World News (1982)

In one of the first split-screen narratives, Burgess juxtaposes three key 20th-century themes: communism, psychoanalysis and the millennial fear of Armageddon. Trotsky’s 1917 visit to New York is presented as a Broadway musical; a mournful Freud looks back on his life as he prepares to flee the Nazis; and in the year 2000, as a rogue asteroid barrels towards the Earth, humanity argues over who will survive and what kind of society they will take to the stars.
JJ
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Edgar Rice Burroughs: A Princess of Mars (1912)

John Carter, a Confederate veteran turned gold prospector, is hiding from Indians in an Arizona cave when he is mysteriously transported to Mars, known to the locals as Barsoom. There, surrounded by four-armed, green-skinned warriors, ferocious white apes, eight-legged horse-substitutes, 10-legged “dogs”, and so on, he falls in love with Princess Dejah Thoris, who might almost be human if she didn’t lay eggs. She is, naturally, both beautiful and extremely scantily clad … Burroughs’s first novel, published in serial form, is the purest pulp, and its lack of pretension is its greatest charm.
PD
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William Burroughs: Naked Lunch (1959)

Disjointed, hallucinatory cut-ups form a collage of, as Burroughs explained of the title, “a frozen moment when everyone sees what is on the end of every fork”. A junkie’s picaresque adventures in both the real world and the fantastical “Interzone”, this is satire using the most savage of distorting mirrors: society as an obscene phantasmagoria of addiction, violence, sex and death. Only Cronenberg could have filmed it (in 1991), and even he recreated Burroughs’s biography rather than his interior world.
JJ
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Octavia Butler: Kindred (1979)

Butler’s fourth novel throws African American Dana Franklin back in time to the early 1800s, where she is pitched into the reality of slavery and the individual struggle to survive its horrors. Butler single-handedly brought to the SF genre the concerns of gender politics, racial conflict and slavery. Several of her novels are groundbreaking, but none is more compelling or shocking than Kindred. A brilliant work on many levels, it ingeniously uses the device of time travel to explore the iniquity of slavery through Dana’s modern sensibilities.
EB
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Samuel Butler: Erewhon (1872)

The wittiest of Victorian dystopias by the period’s arch anti-Victorian. The hero Higgs finds himself in New Zealand (as, for a while, did the chronic misfit Butler). Assisted by a native, Chowbok, he makes a perilous journey across a mountain range to Erewhon (say it backwards), an upside-down world in which crime is “cured” and illness “punished”, where universities are institutions of “Unreason” and technology is banned. The state religion is worship of the goddess Ydgrun (ie “Mrs Grundy” – bourgeois morality). Does it sound familiar? Higgs escapes by balloon, with the sweetheart he has found there.
JS
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Italo Calvino: The Baron in the Trees (1957)

It is 1767: a boy quarrels with his aristocratic parents and climbs a tree, swearing not to touch the earth again. He ends up keeping his promise, witnessing the French revolution and its Napoleonic aftermath from the perspective of the Italian treetops. Drafted soon after Calvino’s break with communism over the invasion of Hungary, the novel can be read as a fable about intellectual commitments. At the same time, it’s a perfectly turned fantasy, densely imagined but lightly written in a style modelled on Voltaire and Robert Louis Stevenson.
Chris Tayler
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Ramsey Campbell: The Influence (1988)

Campbell has long been one of the masters of psychological horror, proving again and again that what’s in our heads is far scarier than any monster lurking in the shadows. In this novel, the domineering old spinster Queenie dies – a relief to those around her. Her niece Alison inherits the house, but soon starts to suspect that the old woman is taking over her eight-year-old daughter Rowan. A paranoid, disturbing masterpiece.
KB
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Lewis Carroll: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865)

The intellectuals’ favourite children’s story began as an improvised tale told by an Oxford mathematics don to a colleague’s daughters; later readers have found absurdism, political satire and linguistic philosophy in a work that, 140 years on, remains fertile and fresh, crisp yet mysterious, and endlessly open to intepretation. Alice, while reading in a meadow, sees a white rabbit rush by, feverishly consulting a watch. She follows him down a hole (Freudian analysis, as elsewhere in the story, is all too easy), where she grows and shrinks in size and encounters creatures mythological, extinct and invented. Morbid jokes and gleeful subversion abound.
JS
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Lewis Carroll: Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There (1871)

The trippier sequel to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and, like its predecessor, illustrated by John Tenniel. More donnish in tone, this fantasy follows Alice into a mirror world in which everything is reversed. Her journey is based on chess moves, during the course of which she meets such figures as Humpty Dumpty and the riddling twins Tweedledum and Tweedledee. More challenging intellectually than the first instalment, it explores loneliness, language and the logic of dreams.
JS
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Angela Carter: Nights at the Circus (1984)

The year is 1899 – and other times. Fevvers, aerialiste, circus performer and a virgin, claims she was not born, but hatched out of an egg. She has two large and wonderful wings. In fact, she is large and wonderful in every way, from her false eyelashes to her ebullient and astonishing adventures. The journalist Jack Walser comes to interview her and stays to love and wonder, as will every reader of this entirely original extravaganza, which deftly and wittily questions every assumption we make about the lives of men and women on this planet.
Carmen Callil
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Michael Chabon: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay (2000)

The golden age of the American comic book coincided with the outbreak of the second world war and was spearheaded by first- and second-generation Jewish immigrants who installed square-jawed supermen as bulwarks against the forces of evil. Chabon’s Pulitzer prize-winning picaresque charts the rise of two young cartoonists, Klayman and Kavalier. It celebrates the transformative power of pop culture, and reveals the harsh truths behind the hyperreal fantasies.
XB
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Arthur C Clarke: Childhood’s End (1953)

Clarke’s third novel fuses science and mysticism in an optimistic treatise describing the transcendence of humankind from petty, warring beings to the guardians of utopia, and beyond. One of the first major works to present alien arrival as beneficent, it describes the slow process of social transformation when the Overlords come to Earth and guide us to the light. Humanity ultimately transcends the physical and joins a cosmic overmind, so ushering in the childhood’s end of the title
EB
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GK Chesterton: The Man Who Was Thursday (1908)

Chesterton’s “nightmare”, as he subtitled it, combines Edwardian delicacy with wonderfully melodramatic tub-thumping – beautiful sunsets and Armageddon – to create an Earth as strange as any far-distant planet. Secret policemen infiltrate an anarchist cabal bent on destruction, whose members are known only by the days of the week; but behind each one’s disguise, they discover only another policeman. At the centre of all is the terrifying Sunday, a superhuman force of mischief and pandemonium. Chesterton’s distorting mirror combines spinetingling terror with round farce to give a fascinating perspective on Edwardian fears of (and flirtations with) anarchism, nihilism and a world without god.
JJ
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Susanna Clarke: Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell (2004)

Clarke’s first novel is a vast, hugely satisfying alternative history, a decade in the writing, about the revival of magic – which had fallen into dusty, theoretical scholarship – in the early 19th century. Two rival magicians flex their new powers, pursuing military glory and power at court, striking a dangerous alliance with the Faerie King, and falling into passionate enmity over the use and meaning of the supernatural. The book is studded with footnotes both scholarly and comical, layered with literary pastiche, and invents a whole new strain of folklore: it’s dark, charming and very, very English.
JJ
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Michael G Coney: Hello Summer, Goodbye (1975)

This classic by an unjustly neglected writer tells the story of Drove and Pallahaxi-Browneyes on a far-flung alien world which undergoes long periods of summer and gruelling winters lasting some 40 years. It’s both a love story and a war story, and a deeply felt essay, ahead of its time, about how all living things are mutually dependant. This is just the kind of jargon-free, humane, character-driven novel to convert sceptical readers to science fiction.
EB
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Douglas Coupland: Girlfriend in a Coma (1998)

Coupland began Girlfriend in a Coma in “probably the darkest period of my life”, and it shows. Listening to the Smiths – whose single gave the book its title – can’t have helped. This is a story about the end of the world, and the general falling-off that precedes it, as 17-year-old Karen loses first her virginity, then consciousness. When she reawakens more than a decade later, the young people she knew and loved have died, become junkies or or simply lost that new-teenager smell. Wondering what the future holds? It’s wrinkles, disillusionment and the big sleep.
PD
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Mark Danielewski: House of Leaves (2000)

It’s not often you get to read a book vertically as well as horizontally, but there is much that is uncommon about House of Leaves. It’s ostensibly a horror story, but the multiple narrations and typographical tricks – including one chapter that cuts down through the middle of the book – make it as much a comment on metatextuality as a novel. That said, the creepiness stays with you, especially the house that keeps stealthily remodelling itself: surely that long, dark, endless corridor wasn’t there yesterday …
Carrie O’Grady
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Marie Darrieussecq: Pig Tales (1996)

It wasn’t a problem at first: to be more voluptuous, to have a firmer, more rounded bottom and breasts, to be pinker and more healthy-looking is far from a disadvantage to a girl working in a massage parlour in a sex-crazed dystopian society. But the changes don’t stop there: her hunger dominates (her preferred foods are now flowers and raw potatoes), her pleasant plumpness becomes rolls of fat, her glow turns ruddy. A curly tail, trotters and a snout are not far off. Darrieussecq’s modern philosophical tale is witty, telling and hearteningly feminist.
Joanna Biggs
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Samuel R Delaney: The Einstein Intersection (1967)

The setting is a post-apocalyptic future, long past the age of humans. Aliens have taken on the forms of human archetypes, in an attempt to come to some understanding of human civilisation and play out the myths of the planet’s far past. The novel follows Lobey, who as Orpheus embarks on a quest to bring his lover back from the dead. With lush, poetic imagery and the innovative use of mythic archetypes, Delaney brilliantly delineates the human condition.
EB
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Philip K Dick: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1968)

Dick’s novel became the basis for the film Blade Runner, which prompted a resurgence of interest in the man and his works, but similarities film and novel are slight. Here California is under-populated and most animals are extinct; citizens keep electric pets instead. In order to afford a real sheep and so affirm his empathy as a human being, Deckard hunts rogue androids, who lack empathy. As ever with Dick, pathos abounds and with it the inquiry into what is human and what is fake.
EB
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Philip K Dick: The Man in the High Castle (1962)

Much imitated “alternative universe” novel by the wayward genius of the genre. The Axis has won the second world war. Imperial Japan occupies the west coast of America; more tyrannically, Nazi Germany (under Martin Bormann, Hitler having died of syphilis) takes over the east coast. The Californian lifestyle adapts well to its oriental master. Germany, although on the brink of space travel and the possessor of vast tracts of Russia, is teetering on collapse. The novel is multi-plotted, its random progression determined, Dick tells us, by consultation with the Chinese I Ching.
JS
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Umberto Eco: Foucault’s Pendulum (1988)

Foucault’s Pendulum followed the massive success of Eco’s The Name of the Rose, and in complexity, intrigue, labyrinthine plotting and historical scope it is every bit as extravagant. Eco’s tale of three Milanese publishers, who feed occult and mystic knowledge into a computer to see what invented connections are created, tapped into the worldwide love of conspiracy theories, particularly those steeped in historical confusion. As “The Plan” takes over their lives and becomes reality, the novel turns into a brilliant historical thriller of its own that inspired a similar level of obsession among fans.
Nicola Barr
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Michel Faber: Under the Skin (2000)

A woman drives around the Scottish highlands, all cleavage and lipstick, picking up well-built male hitchhikers – but there’s something odd behind her thick pebble glasses … Faber’s first novel refreshes the elements of horror and SF in luminous, unearthly prose, building with masterly control into a page-turning existential thriller that can also be read as an allegory of animal rights. And in the character of Isserley – her curiosity, resignation, wonderment and pain – he paints an immensely affecting portrait of how it feels to be irreparably damaged and immeasurably far from home.
JJ
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John Fowles: The Magus (1966)

Determined to extricate himself from an increasingly serious relationship, graduate Nicholas Urfe takes a job as an English teacher on a small Greek island. Walking alone one day, he runs into a wealthy eccentric, Maurice Conchis, who draws him into a succession of elaborate psychological games that involve two beautiful young sisters in reenactments of Greek myths and the Nazi occupation. Appearing after The Collector, this was actually the first novel that Fowles wrote, and although it quickly became required reading for a generation, he continued to rework it for a decade after publication.
David Newnham
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Neil Gaiman: American Gods (2001)

“Nourishing to the soul” was Michael Chabon’s verdict on Gaiman’s novel, in which ex-con Shadow gets a job driving for a conman who turns out to be a Norse god. Before long, he is embroiled in a battle between ancient and modern deities: Odin, Anansi, Anubis and the Norns on one side, TV, the movies and technology on the other. A road trip through America’s sacred places is spiced up by some troublesome encounters with Shadow’s unfaithful wife, Laura. She’s dead, which always makes for awkward silences.
PD
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Alan Garner: Red Shift (1973)

The author of such outstanding mythical fantasies as Elidor and The Owl Service, Garner has been called “too good for grown-ups”; but the preoccupations of this young adult novel (love and violence, madness and possession, the pain of relationships outgrown and the awkwardness of the outsider) are not only adolescent. The three
narrative strands – young lovers in the 1970s, the chaos of thebetweenalcoholics, English civil war and soldiers going native in a Vietnam-tinged Roman Britain – circle around Mow Cop in Cheshire and an ancient axehead found there. Dipping in and out of time, in blunt, raw dialogue, Garner creates a moving and singular novel.
JJ
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William Gibson: Neuromancer (1984)

“The sky above the port was the colour of television, tuned to a dead channel.” From the first line of Gibson’s first novel, it was clear that a major talent had arrived. This classic of cyberpunk won Nebula, Hugo and Philip K Dick awards, and popularised the term “cyberspace”, which the author described as “a consensual hallucination experienced daily by billions”. A fast-paced thriller starring a washed-up hacker, a cybernetically enhanced mercenary and an almost omnipotent artificial intelligence, it inspired and informed a slew of films and novels, not least the Matrix trilogy.
PD
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Charlotte Perkins Gilman: Herland (1915)

When three explorers learn of a country inhabited only by females, Terry, the lady’s man, looks forward to Glorious Girls, Van, the scientist, expects them to be uncivilised, and Jeff, the Southern gallant, hopes for clinging vines in need of rescue. The process by which their assumptions are overturned and their own beliefs challenged is told with humour and a light touch in Gilman’s brilliantly realised vision of a female Utopia where Mother Love is raised to its highest power. Many of Herland’s insights are as relevant today as when it was first published a hundred years ago.
Joanna Hines
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William Golding: Lord of the Flies (1954)

The shadow of the second world war looms over Golding’s debut, the classic tale of a group of English schoolboys struggling to recreate their society after surviving a plane crash and descending to murderous savagery. Fat, bespectacled Piggy is sacrificed; handsome, morally upstanding Ralph is victimised; and dangerous, bloodthirsty Jack is lionised, as the boys become “the Beast” they fear. When the adults finally arrive, childish tears on the beach hint less at relief than fear for the future.
NB

Joe Haldeman: The Forever War (1974)

When Haldeman returned from Vietnam, with a Purple Heart for the wounds he had suffered, he wrote a story about a pointless conflict that seems as if it will never end. It was set in space, and the enemies were aliens, but 18 publishers decided it was too close to home before St Martin’s Press took a gamble. The book that “nobody wants to read” went on to win many prizes. It’s not perfect – it’s hard to take seriously a future in which hetereosexuality is a perversion – but the anti-war message is as powerful as ever.
Phil Daoust
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M John Harrison: Light (2002)

Known for his intricate short stories and critically acclaimed mountaineering novel Climbers, Harrison cut his teeth on SF. In typical fashion, he writes space opera better than many who write only in the genre. For all its star travel and alien artefacts, scuzzy 25th-century spaceports and drop-out space pilots, Light is actually about twisting three plotlines as near as possible to snapping point. This is as close as SF gets to literary fiction, and literary fiction gets to SF.
Jon Courtenay Grimwood
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Robert A Heinlein: Stranger in a Strange Land (1961)

Amateur stonemason, waterbed designer, reformed socialist, nudist, militarist and McCarthyite, Heinlein is one of the most interesting and irritating figures in American science fiction. This swinging 60s bestseller (working title: The Heretic) is typically provocative, with a central character, Mike Smith, who is raised by Martians after the death of his parents and questions every human assumption – about sex, politics, society and spirituality – on his arrival on Earth. Smith’s religion, with its polyamory, communal living and ritual cannibalism, inspired the neo-pagan Church of All Worlds.
PD
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Frank Herbert: Dune (1965)

Set on the desert world of Arrakis, this complex novel combines politics, religion, ecology and evolution in the rise to power of Paul Atreides, who becomes a revolutionary leader and a prophet with the ability to foresee and shape the future. Epic in scope, Dune is primarily an adventure story, though Herbert was one of the first genre writers convincingly to tackle the subject of planetary ecology in his depiction of a drought-stricken world.
Eric Brown
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Hermann Hesse: The Glass Bead Game (1943)

Set in the fictional country of Castalia, Hesse’s last novel tells of a young man’s rise through the hierarchies of an elite boarding school. Step by step, young Josef Knecht is initiated into the mysteries of the “glass bead game” that forms the focal point of Castalian social and academic life – until he starts to question its rules and falls out with the order. That we never find out exactly how this game is meant to be played is part of Hesse’s plan: with its characteristic mix of the arcane and the esoteric, the novel sketches out a timeless allegory about the ivory-tower mentality of communities devoted to a single intellectual cause.
Philip Oltermann
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Russell Hoban: Riddley Walker (1980)

After the Bomb – long, long after – humanity is still huddled in medieval-style stockades, cold, ignorant, superstitious and speaking in degraded English, the patois in which this book is written. It takes some getting used to, but Riddley’s misspelt narrative is astonishingly rich and rewarding. As he circles burnt-out Kent, trying to make sense of the fragments of modern-day knowledge that have passed into folklore (a “saddelite” bird flies very high, the “Pry Mincer” is an authority figure), the mythical/religious/scientific allusions whirl so fast that we are left as gobsmacked as he is. Yet his story is still poignant. Will this be us in 2,500 years’ time?
Carrie O’Grady
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James Hogg: The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1824)

Suppose you discovered that you were one of the elect – predestined to an bookseternity in paradise not because of the goodness of your actions or the strength of your faith, but by God’s grace. This is what happens to Robert Wringhim, who is brought up in the Calvinist belief in predestination. When he encounters a devilish figure known as Gil-Martin, Wringhim is easily tempted into undertaking a campaign to purge the world of the Reprobate – those not selected for salvation. After a series of rapes and murders, and seemingly pursued by demons, Wringhim yields to the ultimate temptation of suicide. Hogg’s novel, an early example of unreliable narration, was a strong influence on Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
Adam Newey
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Michel Houellebecq: Atomised (1998)

Sexist, racist, snob, Islamophobe … Houellebecq has been called many things, with varying degrees of accuracy. The charge of misanthropy is hard to deny, given his repeated portrayal of humankind as something that has lost its way, perhaps even its right to exist. Atomised – set in the world we know but introduced by a member of the superior species that will supplant us – provides two more examples of our inadequacy in half-brothers Michel and Bruno, an introverted biologist and a sex-addict teacher. It is Michel’s work on cloning that will eventually free the world of the burden of humanity.
PD
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Aldous Huxley: Brave New World (1932)

Huxley’s dystopian vision of a “stabilised” world, based on the philosophies of Henry Ford and Sigmund Freud. Conflict has been eradicated with the aid of sexual hedonism and the drug Soma; babies are factory-bred in bottles to produce a strict class hierarchy, from alpha to epsilon. It is the year AF (After Ford) 632. “Alpha plus” Bernard Marx takes a “pneumatic” secretary on holiday to an Indian reservation in New Mexico, and brings back with him a native, John Savage. Savage is disgusted with the “civilisation” he finds, making an ultimately suicidal case for self-determining misery.
John Sutherland
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Kazuo Ishiguro: The Unconsoled (1995)

A man arrives in a central European city, where he is greeted as a VIP, though he’s not sure why. Eventually he recalls that he is an eminent concert pianist, scheduled to perform. Ishiguro’s most extraordinary novel gives us not only an unreliable narrator but an unreliable city and even unreliable laws of time and space. The man is shepherded through an expanding and contracting world, his own memories and moods changing like the weather. Yet the dream-logic is rooted in real, poignant, human dilemmas. One for readers who have grown out of Philip K Dick.
CO
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Shirley Jackson: The Haunting of Hill House (1959)

Hill House is haunted, but by what? The ghosts of the past or the people of the present? Here is a delicious, quietly unnerving essay in horror, an examination of what makes us jump. Jackson sets up an old dark house in the country, garnishes it with some creepy servants, and then adds a quartet of intrepid visitors. But her lead character – fragile, lonely Eleanor – is at once victim and villainess. By the end, the person she is scaring most is herself.
Xan Brooks
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Henry James: The Turn of the Screw (1898)

In this most suggestive of ghost stories, James set out “to catch those not easily caught” – and critics have argued over the meaning of his novella ever since. Are the ghosts that a new governess in a country house believes to be steadily corrupting her young charges apparitions, hallucinations or projections of her own dark urges? The Times called it on publication “the most hopelessly evil story that we have ever read in any literature, ancient or modern”, and it has lost none of its power to disturb.
Justine Jordan
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PD James: The Children of Men (1992)

A blend of the literary mainstream (Oxford don going through unhappy divorce) and well-worn SF elements (human end times, advancing sterility, civilisation’s collapse and the rise of an authoritarian government), The Children of Men gained a fresh lease of life in 2006 with the bleak, compelling film staring Clive Owen and Julianne Moore. The book divides SF critics and puzzles fans of her crime novels, but remains one of the great British dystopias and a trenchant satire on our times and values.
JCG
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Richard Jefferies: After London; Or, Wild England (1885)

This environmental fable is set in the vague distant future (our “now”?). After a mysterious disaster (“the event”), society has relapsed into barbarism, and the countryside has reverted to idyllic wilderness. In the centre of England, a vast crystalline lake has formed. Felix Aquila sets out in a canoe on a voyage of discovery and finds London “utterly extinct”, surviving only as a pestilential swamp. The novel continues with him moving west – “ever towards the sunset” and his idealised dream-love, Aurora Thyma. A strong candidate for the most beautiful of all Victorian novels.
JS
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Gwyneth Jones: Bold as Love (2001)

A near-future, rock’n'roll retelling of the Arthurian myth featuring Ax, a paradigm of Englishness contained within a postmodern, bisexual, half-Sudanese guitarist, and Sage Prender, a bear-like technowizard. Owing debts to Jimi Hendrix and offering a decidedly 60s summer festival vibe, Bold as Love is the first in a series of novels that mix politics with myth, counterculture and dark age sensibilities. It deservedly won Jones the 2001 Arthur C Clarke award.
JCG
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Franz Kafka: The Trial (1925)

On the morning of his 30th birthday, Josef K is arrested by two sinister men in dapper suits. What for? K doesn’t know and can’t find out as he is sent on an increasingly absurd wild-goose chase through the labyrinthine sub-faculties of the legal system. A year later, he is executed – “Like a dog!” – for a crime he still cannot name. Incomplete and published posthumously, like all Kafka’s three big novels, The Trial captures the essence of moral guilt like no other novel in the 20th century. Watching Orson Welles’s film adaptation (with Anthony Perkins as K) is no substitute for experiencing what one critic memorably described as “not the literary presentation of a nightmare, but its literal transcription”.
PO
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Daniel Keyes: Flowers for Algernon (1966)

Begun as a short story, expanded to a novella, and finally published as a novel, Keyes’s science fiction fable has won numerous prizes and been successfully adapted into drama, film, and popular music. The story has two central characters. Algernon is a mouse, whose intelligence is surgically enhanced to the level of rodent genius. The same technique is applied to Charlie Gordon, a mentally subnormal fast-food kitchen hand. The narrative, told by Charlie as his IQ soars, traces the discontents of genius. Alas, the effects of the surgery are shortlived, and the end of the story finds Charlie back in the kitchen – mentally challenged but, in his way, happy. Being smart is not everything.
JS
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Stephen King: The Shining (1977)

The most powerful, and in places interestingly autobiographical,
of King’s horror stories is based, as are many in the genre, on Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House. Jack Torrance, a recovering alcoholic and failed schoolteacher, racked with remorse for breaking his son Danny’s arm while drunk, takes the position of winter caretaker at the Overlook Hotel in remote Colorado. The hotel is haunted by unexorcised demons from brutal murders committed there years ago. Torrance is possessed and turns, homicidally, on his wife and child. Danny, gifted with telepathic (“shining”) power, saves himself and his mother. Jack is beyond salvation. The film was brilliantly filmed by Stanley Kubrick in 1980.
JS
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Marghanita Laski: The Victorian Chaise-longue (1953)

A young married woman, Melanie, scours antiques shops to furnish her new home and comes back with an old chaise-longue, which is perfect apart from an unsightly reddish-brown stain. She falls asleep on it and wakes up in an unfamiliar house, an unfamiliar time – and an unfamiliar body. At first she assumes she must be dreaming. But gradually she starts to piece together the story of Milly, the young Victorian woman in the last stages of consumption whom she has apparently become, and the nature of the disgrace she has brought on the household run by her fearsomely stern elder sister. Why does the sight of the doctor make her pulse beat faster? And can she find a way back to her own life? Laski’s chilling little novel crackles with a darkly erotic electricity as Mel/Milly confronts the intimate connection between sexual ecstasy and death.
AN
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Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu: Uncle Silas (1864)

This is frequently judged the best ghost story of the Victorian period. On the sudden death of her father, Maud, an heiress, is left to the care of her Uncle Silas, until she comes of age. Sinister in appearance and villainous by nature, Silas first plans to marry Maud to his oafish son, Dudley (who is, it emerges, already married). When this fails, father and son, together with the French governess Madame de la Rougierre, conspire to murder their ward with a spiked hammer. Told by the ingenuous and largely unsuspecting Maud, the narrative builds an impending sense of doom.
JS
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Stanislaw Lem: Solaris (1961)

Popularised by Tarkovsky’s masterly film adaptation (and Soderberg’s rather more stolid second attempt), Solaris is by far Lem’s best-known novel – a humane, intriguing attempt to posit the nature of alien intelligence, and how contact with it might actually play out. Lem’s faraway world of Solaris is a sea of psychoactive imagery, making it an effective tool to plumb the contradictions of human consciousness as it reacts to those who would study it. Lem never liked Tarkovsky’s treatment of his story: not enough of the science made it to the screen.
Andrew Pulver
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Doris Lessing: Memoirs of a Survivor (1974)

Set in a near-future in a disintegrating city, where lawlessness prevails and citizens scratch a living from the debris, this dystopia is the journal of an unnamed middle-class narrator who fosters street-kid Emily and observes the decaying world from her window. Despite the pessimistic premise and the description of civilisation on the brink of collapse, with horror lurking at every turn, the novel is an insightful and humane meditation on the survivability of the species.
EB
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David Lindsay: A Voyage to Arcturus (1920)

A Voyage to Arcturus sold only a few hundred copies at the time of its first publication, but has subsequently been recognised as one of the most striking novels of imaginative fiction, Colin Wilson ranking it the “greatest novel of the 20th century”. On the surface it tells of Maskull’s travels on the planet Tormance, passing through exotic landscapes, finding love, murder and monsters, but through these themes Lindsay explores the meanings and origins of life and the universe.
Keith Brooke
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Ken MacLeod: The Night Sessions (2008)

The world has entered the Second Enlightenment after the Faith Wars. In the Republic of Scotland, Detective Inspector Adam Ferguson investigates the murders of religious leaders, suspecting atheists but uncovering a plot involving artificial intelligence. MacLeod’s police procedural is a wise indictment of fundamentalism of all kinds and a stark delineation of how belief systems can corrupt, as well as being an incisive character study of a man coming to terms with the brutalities of his past.
EB
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Hilary Mantel: Beyond Black (2005)

Mantel’s ninth novel is a beyond-black comedy about seedy, exhausted millennium-era Britain and an obese, traumatised medium called Alison who is cursed with the gift of second sight. Her familiars are the torturers – or projections – of her abusive childhood; they and the other lost souls of the spirit world clamour for Alison’s attention as she tries to record her life story. It’s a shocking, upsetting, often painful read; but Mantel’s rich capacity for amusement and the sheer power of the writing save it from unremitting bleakness.
JJ
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Michael Marshall Smith: Only Forward (1994)

Before his current incarnation as a thriller writer specialising in conspiracy theories and psychopathic gore, Marshall Smith wrote forward-thinking sci-fi which combined high-octane angst with humour both noir and surreal. His debut features a bizarre compartmentalised city with different postcodes for the insane, the overachievers, the debauched or simply those with unusual taste in interior design; as well as adventures in the realm of dreams, a deep love of cats and a killer twist.
JJ
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Richard Matheson: I Am Legend (1954)

Robert Neville is the last man standing, the lone survivor in a world overrun by night-crawling vampires. But if history is written by the winners, what does that make Neville: the hero or the monster? Matheson’s pacey fantasy charts its protagonist’s solitary war against Earth’s new inhabitants and his yearning, ongoing search for a fellow survivor. The ending upends the genre’s moral assumptions, forcing us to review the tale through different eyes. Clearly this was too much for the recent Will Smith movie adaptation, which ran scared of the very element that makes the book unique.
XB
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Charles Maturin: Melmoth the Wanderer (1820)

In Maturin’s extravaganza of transgression, beloved by authors from Byron and Balzac to Wilde and HP Lovecraft, the supernatural terrors of the Gothic novel begin to bleed into the psychological dread of Dostoevsky or Kafka. Melmoth ranges the earth, looking for some poor soul to take over the pact he’s made with the devil in exchange for extended life, as the narrative zips from London madhouse to Spanish dungeon to deserted Indian island. It’s a fascinating mix of wild ideas threatening to run away from the author, and a new realism that takes in poverty, social depredation and very human cruelties.
JJ
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Patrick McCabe: The Butcher Boy (1992)

Francie Brady is a rambunctious kid in 1950s Ireland. He likes his best mate, Joe, and he hates his neighbour, Mrs Nugent, and he’s always getting into trouble, and this is mainly because of Mrs Nugent. McCabe leads us on a freewheeling tour of a scattered, shattered consciousness, as Francie grows from wayward child to dangerous adult – nursing his grievances and plotting his revenge. Chances are that old Mrs Nugent has a surprise in store.
XB
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Cormac McCarthy: The Road (2006)

McCarthy’s most acclaimed novel is a tale from the near-future and a possible foretaste of things to come. In stark, bare-bones prose, it describes a father and son’s trudge across a nation devastated by an unspecified environmental calamity – an endless valley of ashes dotted with desperate, deadly survivors. These two figures are pushing south towards the sea, but the sea is poisoned and provides no comfort. In the end, all they have (and, by implication, all the rest of us have) is each other.
XB
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Jed Mercurio: Ascent (2007)

Mercurio’s first novel, Bodies, which he adapted for TV as Cardiac Arrest, lifted the lid off the NHS; his second makes a stellar leap to relate the adventures of Soviet flying ace turned cosmonaut Yefgenii Yeremin. During the Korean war and then the space programme, Yeremin closes down his emotions even as his horizons expand, from the Arctic skies to the moon itself. The prose is suitably chilly yet strangely beautiful, with Mercurio’s technical know-how lending the flight scenes a compulsive believability that lifts the reader, along with Yeremin, to the bounds of space and beyond.
JJ
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China Miéville: The Scar (2002)

Miéville was a near-miss for the Granta Best of Young British Novelists list in 2003, but his “weird fiction” transcends genre pigeonholing. The second of his sprawling steampunk fantasies detailing the alternate universe of Bas-Lag follows Armada, a floating pirate city, in its search for a rip in reality. Miéville relishes the magic, the monsters and the limitless possibilities of the genre – from the vast “avanc” towing Armada through uncharted waters to the surgically altered “Remade”, plus horrifying mosquito women and underwater ghouls – but his books are also stylishly written, politically engaged, daring and always surprising.
JJ
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Andrew Miller: Ingenious Pain (1997)

Miller breathes new life into the Gothic antihero with his beautifully written Impac-winning first novel. “Cold-blooded and apparently indestructible”, James Dyer is born into the Enlightenment dawn without the capacity to feel pain; he becomes first freak-show then fearless surgeon, as immune to human compassion as he is to bodily fear. Moving from rural England to Bedlam, Russia’s snowbound tundra to the surreal court of Catherine the Great, the novel is at once a glittering tour of medicine and madness, cruelty and art, science and magic; and a delicate fable about how strange we are to one another.
JJ
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Walter M Miller Jr: A Canticle for Leibowitz (1960)

The most influential SF novel of the cold war era, chronicling the rise and fall of human civilisation, Miller’s tripartite novel opens (“Fiat Homo”) with a post-atomic dark age. Dead Sea scroll-like fragments of Isaac Leibowitz’s shopping list have survived, around which a monastery cult forms amid the universal barbarism. The second section (“Fiat Lux”) chronicles a new Renaissance of learning, growing out of the Leibowitzian monasteries. Technology emerges. The third section (“Fiat Vountas Tuas”) foresees another cataclysmic atomic war terminating civilisation yet again. In an epilogue, a spaceship leaves Earth with a cargo of monks, children and the Leibowitzian relics. The Wandering Jew makes recurrent and enigmatic appearances.
JS
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David Mitchell: Cloud Atlas (2004)

A great palindrome of a novel, Mitchell’s third book begins with the unfinished journal of an 18th-century mariner and hops through time, space and genres right up to the distant post-apocalyptic future. Then it hops all the way back down again, resolving each story in turn. These include a camp Ealing-style misadventure, an American thriller and an interview with a clone, all connected by a mysterious comet-shaped tattoo. Cloud Atlas was shortlisted for the Booker prize, but it’s a lot more fun than the literary plaudits on the back cover might suggest.
CO
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Michael Moorcock: Mother London (1988)

Moorcock spills out such varied books that he often feels impossible to nail down, which is probably the point. Mother London, his most literary – it was shortlisted for the Whitbread – shows him at the height of his powers. Three mental patients as flawed as the city they inhabit tell their own and London’s recent history through the voices they hear in their heads. It’s a touching and humanistic novel in the best sense of those words.
JCG
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William Morris: News From Nowhere (1890)

Morris’s late-life vision of the future socialist utopia was strongly influenced by the American Edward Bellamy’s hugely popular Looking Backward (1888). Having gone to sleep on the London underground, the narrator awakes to find himself in 20th-century Hammersmith. He bathes in the now crystalline Thames and spends a day in what used to be the British Museum, airily discussing life and politics. He then travels up the river to Runnymede, where Magna Carta was signed, going on from there to some idyllic haymaking in Oxford. “Guest” (as he is called) returns to dingy present-day Hammersmith with the sense that what he has experienced is “a vision, not a dream”.
JS
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Toni Morrison: Beloved (1987)

Sweet Home is a deceptive name for the Kentucky plantation where horrific crimes have been committed, as Beloved is for this shocking and unforgettable account of the human consequences of slavery. Sethe lives in Ohio in the 1870s; she has escaped from slavery, but cannot escape the past, which quite literally haunts her. In the 20 years since publication, Nobel laureate Morrison’s novel has achieved classic status, and in 2006 the New York Times named it best American novel of the previous quarter-century.
Joanna Hines
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Haruki Murakami: The Wind-up Bird Chronicle (1995)

You could hardly call this a cult classic – it’s too popular for that – but you almost wish it was, so you could tell people about it. At the start of Murakami’s story, a young man receives a mysterious phone call. It sparks off a 600-page adventure that sees him trapped at the bottom of a well, marked with a strange blue stain and taken on many otherworldly adventures, all in search of his missing wife. Murakami has the Japanese trick of writing about surreal events in a matter-of-fact way, making them all the more disturbing.
CO
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Vladimir Nabokov: Ada or Ardor (1969)

How to sum up Nabokov’s last great novel? Ada or Ardor is part sci-fi romance, part Proustian memoir. It plays out on a fantasy planet, a marriage of contemporary America and pre-revolutionary Russia, and details the love affair of precocious Van Veen and his sister Ada, chasing them from lustful puberty to decrepit old age. It is a gorgeous display of narrative wizardry, at once opulent, erotic, playful and wise.
XB
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Audrey Niffenegger: The Time Traveler’s Wife (2003)

“I am a trick, an illusion of the highest order, so incredible that I am actually true,” explains Henry, who is afflicted with chrono-impairment and thus liable to vanish and reappear without warning to his wife Clare. As a device for thwarting the course of true love, unintentional time travel might wear thin, but Niffenegger’s humour and conviction keep the reader enthralled; and like all the best fantasy, it is grounded firmly in the details of everyday reality. A moving affirmation of the continuities of love against unusual odds.
JH
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Larry Niven: Ringworld (1970)

Niven’s later career has been dominated by bloated collaborations with lesser writers; you might almost say he has spread himself too fat. But this novel, which won Hugo and Nebula awards, reminds us he was once one of the most exciting names in hard sci-fi. Part of the Known Space series, it follows a group of humans and aliens as they explore a mysterious ring-shaped environment spinning around a star like a giant hula-hoop. Science fiction fans sometimes describe such structures as “big dumb objects”, but Niven has thought every detail through.
PD
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Jeff Noon: Vurt (1993)

Set in Manchester in the near-future and in a phantasmagorical virtual reality, Vurt is the story of Scribble, his gang the Stash Riders and his attempt to find his sister Desdemona, who is lost in a drug-induced VR. It’s a postmodern rollercoaster ride, nodding to film, literature and contemporary culture. Linguistically pyrotechnic and stunningly imaginative, it’s been described as the spawn of Alice in Wonderland and A Clockwork Orange. Noon’s first novel, it won the 1994 Arthur C Clarke award.
EB
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Flann O’Brien: The Third Policeman (1967)

O’Brien’s publisher rejected his 1940 follow up to At Swim-Two-Birds on the grounds that “[we] think that he should become less fantastic and in this new novel he is more so”. It was eventually published posthumously a quarter-century later, and this bizarre union of Dante’s Inferno and Father Ted – inspiration for the TV show Lost – is indeed fantastic in every sense. Set in a rural Ireland that is also a vision of hell, it features policemen turning into bicycles; that SF standby, the universal energy source; and any number of scientific and literary in-jokes. It’s also gleefully dark and properly creepy.
JJ
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Ben Okri: The Famished Road (1991)

According to Yoruba tradition, a spirit child is one who has made a pact with his fellows in their other, more beautiful world, to rejoin them as soon as possible. Azaro breaks the pact, choosing to remain in this place of suffering and poverty, but the African shanty town where he lives with his parents teems with phantoms, spirits and dreams. Okri’s masterpiece is a powerful novel of sustained brilliance and vision, which draws the reader into a vibrant world both claustrophobic and without limits.
JH

Chuck Palahniuk: Fight Club (1996)

An angry, impassioned fantasy of how to take down corporate America, and an ingenious modern version of the myth of the double. Palahniuk’s unnamed narrator, in revolt against the nesting instincts of modern consumerism, goes looking for the intensity of primal male experiences, and finds the maverick prankster Tyler Durden. It’s with Durden’s “Project Mayhem” and his army of “space monkeys” that Palahniuk’s visionary side takes flight; that there are white-collar “fight clubs” to this day is testament to his book’s impact.
Andrew Pulver
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Thomas Love Peacock: Nightmare Abbey (1818)

A series of amiable conversations are strung together on a flimsy but suitably romantic plot in the most literary of Peacock’s Right: Audrey Niffenegger. Below left: Scene from David Fincher’s film Fight Club “novels of ideas”, as he gently lampoons the fashionable gloom of his friends Shelley, Coleridge and Byron, and all manner of associated “romantic transcendentalists and transcendental romancers”. Thwarted in love, the hero Scythrop reads The Sorrows of Werther and considers suicide, but settles for the comforts of madeira instead.
Joanna Hines
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Mervyn Peake: Titus Groan (1946)

Sinister and sensual, overwrought and overwritten, Titus Groan is a guilty pleasure – a dank, dripping Gothic cathedral of a novel. Titus himself is a minor character – literally: he’s only a year old by the end. He inherits Gormenghast castle and its extraordinary household: emaciated Flay, with his whip-crack joints; the morbidly obese cook, Swelter; feverish, moody young Fuchsia; cackling Dr Prunesquallor, and many others. They are so exaggerated, and Peake’s imagery so super-saturated, that this may seem like a children’s book, or a joke. But at its heart is a chilling glimpse of the nature of evil.
Carrie O’Grady
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John Cowper Powys: A Glastonbury Romance (1932)

With this gargantuan novel, Powys set out to take a location he knew well from his boyhood and make it the real hero of the story. It tells the story of Glastonbury through a year of turmoil, setting mystic mayor John Geard against industrialist Philip Crow. Geard wants to turn the town into a centre for Grail worship, while Crow wants to exploit and develop the local tin mines. Complex and rich, this is a landmark fantasy novel.
Keith Brooke
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Christopher Priest: The Prestige (1995)

This is the story of the bitter feud between Victorian master-magicians Angier and Borden, who attempt mutual sabotage in the quest to learn the secret of each other’s ultimate stage act: both, by different means, can transport themselves through space. The novel is as much a study of their obsession as a brilliant examination of magic and rationalism. The winner of the World Fantasy Award, it’s been described as urban fantasy with a science fictional explanation.
Eric Brown
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François Rabelais: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532-34)

A Benedictine monk who gave it up to study medicine, Rabelais wrote this satirical tale of the giant Pantagruel and his even more monstrous and grotesque father Gargantua on the cusp between eras. In his portrayal of Gargantua, a belching, farting scholar given to urinating over the masses below his ivory tower, he satirises medieval learning as well as the emerging Renaissance thirst for knowledge. “Give me a drink! A drink! A drink!” he roars. Remind you of anything more contemporary?
Nicola Barr
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Ann Radcliffe: The Mysteries of Udolpho (1794)

Orphaned Emily St Aubert is imprisoned by her evil guardian, Count Montoni, in the castle of Udolpho, deep in the Apennines. So often is this novel cited as inspiration for de Sade and Poe, so well known is Jane Austen’s parody in Northanger Abbey, that it is good to be reminded that the reclusive Radcliffe created a brilliant and much-loved Gothic tale, full of terror, foreboding, emerging sexuality and complex destructive psychology.
NB
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Alastair Reynolds: Revelation Space (2000)

Fermi’s paradox asks: “If they’re out there, why aren’t they here?” Reynolds supplies answers that are plausible, entertaining, clever and occasionally just plain weird. This was the novel that brought the one-time astrophysicist to the attention of the SF mainstream. A huge space opera, with enough hard science and aliens to keep everyone happy, it sets up the framework for most of Reynolds’s later books. Spectacular.
Jon Courtenay Grimwood
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Kim Stanley Robinson: The Years of Rice and Salt (2002)

One of the best “what if” setups in alternate history. Robinson asks: what if the Black Death destroyed 14th-century European culture and the Mongols reached the Atlantic shores? What follows is a history of our world with Islam and Buddhism as the dominant religions and the major scientific discoveries and art movements we take for granted happening elsewhere. Necessarily schematic in places, but a stunning achievement all the same.
JCG
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JK Rowling: Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (1997)

Every now and then, a book comes along that is so influential you have to read it to be part of the modern world. Rowling’s Harry Potter series may have its faults – it’s a magpie’s nest of bits and bobs borrowed from more innovative writers – but it occupies that space. It’s the fantasy sequence that made readers of a generation of children; it’s the cliffhanger that united adults and children, creating a new crossover market with an unprecedented reach. It is also a truly global phenomenon, and a nice little earner for the tribe of British character actors who have had the good fortune to be cast in the films.
Claire Armitstead
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Salman Rushdie: The Satanic Verses (1988)

If Uncle Tom’s Cabin is, as Lincoln called it, the novel by a little lady which started a great war, Salman Rushdie’s masterpiece of magic realism added substantially to the clash of civilisations. In February 1989 the Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa (ie hunting licence for all devout Muslims) on the “apostate” author. Had he read the novel (which he didn’t) and its satirical vignette of his holy self, he might have issued two. The offensive core of the novel depicts, under thin disguise, the prophet Muhammad, and wittily if blasphemously questions the revealed truth of the Koran.
John Sutherland
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Antoine de Sainte-Exupéry: The Little Prince (1943)

Stranded in the Sahara, a pilot meets a boy. He claims to have come from an asteroid, which he shared with a talking flower, and to have visited many other worlds – one inhabited only by a king, another by a businessman, a third by a drunkard … On Earth, he has chatted with a snake and tamed a fox. Is The Little Prince a children’s book? The dreamlike tone and Sainte-Exupéry’s watercolours give that impression. But it’s not only kids who need to be told how, what and why to love.
Phil Daoust
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José Saramago: Blindness (1995)

Blindness is black, says an onlooker to the man who has suddenly ceased to see while sitting in his car at the traffic lights; but this blindness is white, a milky sea in the eye. Soon everyone is affected and the city descends into chaos. Like the city, Saramago’s characters are nameless, being known by some attribute – the first blind man, the girl with the dark glasses. His flowing, opaque style can be challenging, but this parable of wilful unseeing, which resists reductive interpretations, is full of insight and poetry.
JH
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Will Self: How the Dead Live (2000)

In Self’s irrepressible, motormouthed third novel, you take your emotional baggage with you into the next life – literally. When Lily Bloom dies, she simply moves house: to a basement flat in Dulston, north London borough for the deceased, which she shares with a calcified foetus and her surly, long-dead son. There’s the usual druggy underworld and dazzling wordplay – the book is worth reading for its linguistic fireworks alone – but it’s Lily who gives the novel its emotional resonance and profundity. She’s a wonderful creation: sarcastic, frightened, smart, infuriating and humane.
Justine Jordan
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Mary Shelley: Frankenstein (1818)

The classic Gothic tale of terror, Frankenstein is above all a novel of ideas. Shelley drew on her father William Godwin’s radical social philosophy, Milton’s Paradise Lost, Goethe’s Young Werther and the new science of “electricity” for her plot. Victor Frankenstein is a young Swiss student who resolves to assemble a body from dead parts and galvanise it into life. His “creature” is both superhuman and monstrous; shunned by humankind, it turns murderous and misanthropic. As well as an exploration of nature and nurture, the book can be read as a reaction to motherhood and a comment upon creativity. Astonishingly, it was written when Shelley was in her late teens; there has been dispute about her husband Percy’s input into the work.
JS
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Dan Simmons: Hyperion (1989)

High SF at its best. The world is gone, destroyed in an accident that gave humanity farcasters, controlled singularities that enable instant travel across galactic distances. (And houses with rooms in different worlds, if you’re really rich.) The internet is now a hive mind of advanced AIs that control the gates and keep a vast empire in existence. But someone or something is playing with time, and all is not as it seems. Hyperion won the 1990 Hugo award for best novel.
JCG
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Olaf Stapledon: Star Maker (1937)

Not so much a novel as a treatise on the nature and evolution of intelligence in the universe, Star Maker takes an unnamed Englishman on a tour of space and time as he observes human and alien civilisations rise and fall over a period of one hundred billion years. Considered Stapledon’s masterpiece, Star Maker embodies, among many other philosophical ideas, his belief in the need for a co-operative community to bring about a fulfilled individual. A short, dense book, it repays several readings.
EB
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Neal Stephenson: Snow Crash (1992)

Fast, furious and containing more ideas in a single sentence than most writers manage in an entire book, Snow Crash has been credited with helping to inspire online worlds such as Second Life and established Stephenson as a cult figure. Featuring SF’s most ironically named character, Hiro Protagonist, plus skateboards, mafia-employed pizza delivery men, weird drugs, computer hacking and a thousand other cyberpunk tropes, it showcases the raw talent that Stephenson was to refine for Cryptonomicon and his later, less frenetic books.
JCG
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Robert Louis Stevenson: The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886)

This classic novel of horrific possession is supposed to have come to the author in a nightmare. It takes the form of a posthumous confession by Dr Henry Jekyll, a successful London physician, who experiments privately with dual personality, devising a drug that releases his depraved other self, Edward Hyde. The murderous Hyde increasingly dominates the appalled Jekyll, who finally kills himself to escape his double. Stevenson’s novel is plausibly taken as a fictional parallel to Freud’s contemporary investigations into the unconscious. Others have seen it as a depiction of ineradicable dualisms in the Scottish character.
JS
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Bram Stoker: Dracula (1897)

Stoker claimed that the inspiration for this novel – which has spawned fiction’s most lucrative entertainment industry – arrived in a dream. A more plausible source is JS Le Fanu’s seminal 1872 tale of vampirism, Carmilla. Stoker’s undead hero is, historically, Vlad the Impaler, who tyrannised Wallachia in the 15th century. The solicitor Jonathan Harker is sent to Transylvania on property business with Count Dracula and is vampirised by his client (an interesting reversal of the normal estate agent-purchaser relationship). The count sails to England and embarks on a reign of bloodsucking terror, before being chased back to his lair by the Dutch vampirologist Dr van Helsing, and decapitated. He would, of course, rise again.
JS
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Rupert Thomson: The Insult (1996)

This unusual writer excels at the creation of skewed, dreamlike parallel worlds. In his fourth novel, the rootless, emotionally frozen Martin Blom is blinded by a stray bullet: his doctor warns of hallucinations of vision, and indeed he soon finds that he can see – but only in the dark. A new nocturnal existence and highly charged affair with a nightclub waitress follow, in a phantasmagorical meditation on repression and transgression, absence and invisibility. It’s one of those rare novels whose afterglow never entirely fades.
JJ
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Mark Twain: A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur’s Court (1889)

Hank Morgan, an engineer from 19th-century Connecticut, is knocked out in a crowbar fight and mysteriously transported to sixth-century England. “The Boss”, as he becomes known, sets about modernising its technology and culture, but finds himself struggling with the forces of conservatism, like a medieval Tony Blair. Thousands will die in his showdown with the church and feudalism … Twain’s satire was largely aimed at Walter Scott and his romanticising of battle and olde-worlde squalor. But you don’t need to know that to enjoy the thought of knights advertising soap, or riding bicycles instead of horses.
PD
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Kurt Vonnegut: Sirens of Titan (1959)

Vonnegut considered Sirens of Titan to be one of his best books, ranking it just below Slaughterhouse-Five. Featuring a dimension-swapping ultra-rich space explorer who can see the future, a robot messenger whose craft is powered by UVTW (the Universal Will to Become) and the newly established Church of God the Utterly Indifferent, Sirens of Titan manages to be classic 50s pulp, a literary sleight of hand, a cult novel of the 60s counterculture and unmistakably Vonnegut all at the same time.
JCG
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Robert Walser: Institute Benjamenta (1909)

Young Jakob von Gunten enrols in a sinister academy (that touchstone of Germanic fiction) in which students learn how to be good servants. In a series of diary entries, we read about the authoritarian leader of the institute; angelic Lisa Benjamenta; the monkey-like Kraus; and Jakob’s increasingly bizarre dreams. The chilling effect is heightened by the incongruous cheeriness of Jakob’s tone, conspiring to make this a cult classic. Kafka and Hesse were big fans of the Swiss writer; film-making duo the Brothers Quay turned the novel into a mesmerising stock-frame feature in 1995.
Philip Oltermann
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Sylvia Townsend Warner: Lolly Willowes (1926)

“Women have such vivid imaginations, and lead such dull lives.” It is to forge an adventure of her own, rather than the “existence doled out to you by others” as the lot of the spinster aunt, that Laura Willowes leaves her astounded London family for a country village and a pact with the devil. In this sly, charming commentary on women’s emancipation and the soul’s need for solitude, the supernatural is delicately handled – especially Satan, “a kind of black knight, wandering about and succouring decayed gentlewomen”.
JJ
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Sarah Waters: Affinity (1999)

Waters followed the rollicking Tipping the Velvet with this sombre, beautifully achieved meditation on love and loneliness set in the milieu of Victorian spiritualism. Her bored, unfulfilled heroine is introduced to a grim women’s prison as a nervous “lady visitor”, and to the world of seances, spirit guides and repressed passions bursting forth when she falls under the spell of one of the inmates. Waters exploits the conventions of the ghost story to moving, open-ended effect, recreating a world of fascinating detail and beguiling mystery.
JJ
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HG Wells: The Time Machine (1895)

Wells’s first title for this primal text of science fiction was The Chronic Argonauts. The Time Traveller (never named) outlines to friends his plan to explore the “fourth dimension”. On his return he reports that he has travelled to the year 802,701. Mankind has evolved into hyper-decadent Eloi and hyper-proletarian Morlocks, who live underground. The Eloi fritter, elegantly, by day. The Morlocks prey on the Eloi cannibalistically by night. Before returning to his own time, the Time Traveller goes forward to witness the heat death of the Solar System. At the end of the narrative, he embarks on a time journey from which he does not return.
JS
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HG Wells: The War of the Worlds (1898)

The most read, imitated and admired invasion fantasy of the 19th century. The Martians, a cold-bloodedly cerebral species, driven by the inhospitability of their dying planet and superior technology, invade Earth. Their first cylinders land at Horsell Common and are followed by an army of fighting machines equipped with death rays. Humanity and its civilisation crumple under the assault, which is witnessed by the narrator, a moral philosopher. Finally, in the wasteland of “dead London”, mankind’s salvation is found in the disease germ: “there are no bacteria on Mars”. The novel can be read as an allegory of imperialism. As the narrator muses: “The Tasmanians were entirely swept out of existence in a war of extermination waged by European immigrants, in the space of 50 years.”
JS
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TH White: The Sword in the Stone (1938)

The Sword in the Stone was initially published as a stand-alone work, but was subsequently rewritten to become the first part of a tetralogy, The Once and Future King. Conceived by White as “a preface to Malory”, it deals with the adventures of a young boy called Wart and his education at the hands of the magician Merlin. Only at the end of the book is it confirmed that the boy will grow up to be King Arthur. JK Rowling has described Wart as a “spiritual ancestor” of Harry Potter, and many have commented on the similarity between Albus Dumbledore and White’s Merlin.
Kathryn Hughes
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Gene Wolfe: The Book of the New Sun (1980-83)

Originally published in four volumes, this far-future story presents a powerfully evocative portrait of Earth as the sun dies. Using the baroque language of fantasy to tell a story that is solidly science fiction, Wolfe follows Severian, a professional torturer exiled to wander the ruined planet and discover his fate as leader and then messiah for his people. Complex and challenging, this is perhaps one of the most significant publications in the last three decades of sci-fi.
KB
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John Wyndham: Day of the Triffids (1951)

Wyndham’s first novel written under his own name posited a mobile plant so deadly that it seems set to wipe humanity out. Triffids are possibly escapees from a Soviet laboratory; their takeover begins when a meteor shower blinds everyone who witnesses it. Bill Masen owes his survival to the fact that he was in hospital with his eyes bandaged at the time. Wyndham crossed the post-apocalyptic tradition of HG Wells’s War of the Worlds with the emerging fiction of cold war paranoia to create a monster with a mythic power that far extends beyond the novel itself.
CA
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John Wyndham: The Midwich Cuckoos (1957)

A prime example of what the father of modern British SF, Brian Aldiss, has called “the cosy catastrophe”. In an inexplicable phenomenon, the village of Midwich is cut off from the rest of the world for a whole day, and its inhabitants rendered temporarily unconscious (an idea lifted from Conan Doyle’s classic novella, The Poison Belt). It emerges, six months later, that every fertile woman in the village is pregnant. Their offspring are extraterrestrial, clone-like, superhuman; “cuckoos” in the English nest. As they grow up with terrifying psychic powers, a perceptive Midwich citizen, Gordon Zellaby, contrives to blow them up and save humanity. The novel has been twice filmed as The Village of the Damned, Wyndham’s original title being deemed too “cosy”.
JS
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Yevgeny Zamyatin: We (1924)

Written in 1920, this dystopian satire shaped Huxley’s Brave New World and Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, but was not published in Zamyatin’s native Russia until 1988 (the first English translation was in 1924). What did the Soviet censors find so offensive? This “enemy of the working classes” imagined the world of the 26th century as a soulless place of straight lines and identical lives, a glass city ruled by an absolute dictator known as the Benefactor, whose subjects have security and comfort, but no liberty, privacy or dreams. Until, that is, the mathematician D-503 falls in love.
PD

novels on the State of the Nation that everyone must read (according to the guardian)

In Uncategorized on January 21, 2009 at 9:23 pm