This year marks the 300th anniversary of the publication of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, the work that is generally proclaimed as the first English novel. To mark this tricentenary, the BBC is launching a major new TV series exploring the phenomenon of the novel and the impact this art form has had, on our imaginative lives as individuals and on our development as a society. As part of its year-long celebrations, the BBC invited a panel of six well known writers and cultural commentators – Stig Abell, Syima Aslam, Juno Dawson, Kit de Waal, Mariella Frostrup and Alexander McCall Smith – to assemble a list of one hundred English-language novels they feel have exerted a major impact – both on them personally, and on our cultural life as a nation.
“We asked our prestigious panel to create a list of world-changing novels that would be provocative, spark debate and inspire curiosity,” explains Jonty Claypole, the director of BBC Arts. “It took months of enthusiastic debate and they have not disappointed. There are neglected masterpieces, irresistible romps as well as much-loved classics. It is a more diverse list than any I have seen before, recognising the extent to which the English language novel is an art form embraced way beyond British shores.”
A very conscious attempt to challenge the canon, then, which is much to be applauded. The list certainly encourages debate – there are titles here that almost everyone will agree on rubbing shoulders with titles that will leave some critics rolling their eyes and tutting about standards. This is all part of the fun of the thing, of course – and I’m greatly looking forward to all the upcoming documentaries, discussion programmes and author profiles the BBC is promising us.
The whole business has got me thinking, though, about the impossibility of assembling a list that will have meaning for everyone. The panellists have helpfully arranged their choices into ten broad categories: Coming of Age, Love and Romance, Crime and Conflict, Politics, Power and Protest, Identity, Adventure, Family and Friendship, Class and Society, Life, Death and Other Worlds and, tantalisingly, Rule-Breakers. It’s as good a way of organising one’s thoughts as any, but reading is, above all, personal, and so it is inevitable that everyone who encounters this list will respond with more enthusiasm to some categories than others.
There is also the perennially vexed question of how you choose, what criteria come into play when making selections. It would seem obvious that anyone compiling such a list as part of a curriculum for a course of study, say, or curating an anthology, or indeed setting down a framework for a BBC Arts series has a duty to be as wide-ranging and representative as possible. We would want such a list to encompass the novel across all periods in its development. We should also demand that such a list be inclusive – of women writers, LGBTQ+ writers, writers from diverse social, cultural and ethnic backgrounds. Lists that fail to be inclusive will – directly or indirectly – help to shore up existing boundaries and biases, leading to a lopsided, restrictive view of literature and the potential alienation of millions of new readers and writers.
If we are choosing just for ourselves, though, our choices will naturally reflect our personal biases, our life experiences as readers, and I would argue that this is a tendency that should not be stifled but actively celebrated. If I were to find myself perusing a list of Hilary Mantel’s favourite books, or Nicola Barker’s, or Will Self’s, I would want to get a genuine insight into their thought processes and working methods, their personal literary canon. The books that made them writers, in other words. I would not be nearly as interested in seeing a list of titles they believe might make them look politically acceptable, intellectually on trend, or – heaven forbid – a nice person. I want to get at the meat.
There is huge value in group discussions of what literature represents and who it is representing. When I look back at how my own reading might have been shaped by such discussions – or lack of them – within the British education system I find myself interested and disturbed in equal measure. But there is also value in individual response, in laying bare our personal proclivities and blind spots, the ragged and digressive path of our creative development. In examining our choices, we offer ourselves the opportunity for reflection, and, perhaps, change. In looking at what is important to us now, we begin to wonder what might be more important to us in ten years’ time.
So in celebrating the tricentenary of Robinson Crusoe, I’m suggesting we all get naked! Here below you will find my own list – not of novels that shaped our world necessarily, but of novels that irrevocably, unequivocally shaped MY world. My main criterion in assembling this list has been that anyone reading it should be able to tell a lot, maybe everything, about who I am as a writer, how my literary interests have developed and what makes me tick. The one rule I set for myself was that no author could be represented on the list more than once. My selection parameters differ slightly from those of the BBC panel in that I have included works in translation. Novels written in languages other than English have been so central to my life and to my thinking that a list that did not include them would be practically meaningless. In similarly cheating vein, I have also included two poetry collections, and three short fiction collections. In the case of the Eliot and the Plath, these works have been so central to my literary outlook that leaving them off would feel like a lie. In the case of Oyeyemi and Wood, I wanted both these authors to be on my list, and these happen to be my favourite works by them. In the case of the Williams, her debut novel isn’t out yet and her collection Attrib. is too important to me not to be included.
In the case of the four series I’ve included, it’s simple tit for tat: if the BBC can have the whole of Harry Potter, I can have the Tripods.
After careful thought, I decided that rather than arranging my list alphabetically I would list the books chronologically, that is, the order in which I personally first encountered them. I cannot be one-hundred percent accurate about this – I no longer remember if I read Picnic at Hanging Rock before The Turn of the Screw or vice versa – but it’s as close to the truth as I can get. There are also authors I read other works from before the one cited – I read Ian McEwan’s The Cement Garden when I was fourteen, for example, well over a decade before Enduring Love, but it’s the later novel that has left the most lasting impression, and so that’s the one I’ve chosen.
The earliest book cited here forms one of very first reading memories and my heart still clenches every time I see the cover. The most recent, I haven’t quite finished yet but I know already that it’s a keeper. Are there books I feel sad not to have included? Dozens.
It’s been a fascinating list to compile. One of the things that pleases me most about it is that it includes only two books – the scintillating and important Wide Sargasso Sea, the seminal Nineteen Eighty-Four – that happen to coincide with those selected by the BBC panel. Which only goes to show how individual a passion reading is, how many game-chamging, groundbreaking masterpieces we have to choose from, and be inspired by.
100 NOVELS THAT SHAPED MY WORLD
Borka: the Adventures of a Goose with No
Feathers
by John Burningham
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl
Stig of the Dump by Clive King
Charlotte Sometimes by Penelope
Farmer
Thursday’s Child by Noel
Streatfield
‘Adventure’ series by Willard
Price
The Ogre Downstairs by Diana Wynne
Jones
Carrie’s War by Nina Bawden
Jane Eyre by Charlotte
Bronte
The Time Machine by H. G. Wells
‘UNEXA’ series by Hugh Walters
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
‘Changes’ trilogy by Peter
Dickinson
‘Tripods’ trilogy by John
Christopher
The Dolls’ House by Rumer Godden
The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
Watership Down by Richard
Adams
The Magician’s Nephew by C. S. Lewis
My Cousin Rachel by Daphne Du
Maurier
All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
A Passage to India by E. M. Forster
The Old Wives’ Tale by Arnold Bennett
Nineteen Eighty-Four by George
Orwell
Jude the Obscure by Thomas Hardy
Pavane by Keith Roberts
Roadside Picnic by Arkady and
Boris Strugatsky
The Waste Land by T. S. Eliot
Ariel by Sylvia Plath
The Grass is Singing by Doris
Lessing
Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
The Drought by J. G.
Ballard
Doctor Zhivago by Boris
Pasternak
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
The Search for Christa T. by Christa Wolf
The Idiot by Fyodor
Dostoevsky
Doktor Faustus by Thomas Mann
Ada by Vladimir Nabokov
The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay
The Book and the Brotherhood by Iris Murdoch
Strangers on a Train by Patricia
Highsmith
The Affirmation by Christopher
Priest
Midnight Sun by Ramsey
Campbell
Ghost Story by Peter Straub
The Brimstone Wedding by Barbara Vine
The Course of the Heart by M. John
Harrison
Enduring Love by Ian McEwan
The Blind Assassin by Margaret
Atwood
Personality by Andrew
O’Hagan
House of Leaves by Mark Z.
Danielewski
The Gunslinger by Stephen King
The Iron Dragon’s Daughter by Michael
Swanwick
The Fifth Head of Cerberus by Gene Wolfe
Shroud/Eclipse by John
Banville
My Tango with Barbara Strozzi by Russell
Hoban
The Green Man by Kingsley
Amis
The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles
Cloud Atlas by David
Mitchell
Beyond Black by Hilary Mantel
Shriek: an afterword by Jeff VanderMeer
Austerlitz by W. G. Sebald
Darkmans by Nicola
Barker
Glister by John
Burnside
The Good Soldier by Ford Madox
Ford
The Kills by Richard
House
A Russian Novel by Emmanuel
Carrère
The Third Reich by Roberto
Bolano
The Dry Salvages by Caitlin R.
Kiernan
In the Shape of a Boar by Lawrence
Norfolk
The Lazarus Project by Aleksandar
Hemon
The Accidental by Ali Smith
Happy Like Murderers by Gordon Burn
F by Daniel Kehlmann
Straggletaggle by J. M.
McDermott
The Lost Daughter by Elena
Ferrante
What is Not Yours is Not Yours by Helen Oyeyemi
The Loser by Thomas
Bernhard
The Peppered Moth by Margaret
Drabble
All Those Vanished Engines by Paul Park
Sorcerer of the Wildeeps by Kai Ashante
Wilson
The Infatuations by Javier
Marias
Outline by Rachel Cusk
A Separation by Katie
Kitamura
Satin Island by Tom McCarthy
Carthage by Joyce Carol
Oates
This is Memorial Device by David Keenan
The Sellout by Paul Beatty
Death of a Murderer by Rupert
Thomson
Lanark by Alasdair Gray
Falling Man by Don DeLillo
Dept of Speculation by Jenny Offill
Reservoir 13 by Jon McGregor
Attrib. by Eley
Williams
Berg by Ann Quin
When I Hit You by Meena Kandasamy
Munich Airport by Greg Baxter
Caroline’s Bikini by Kirsty Gunn
Die, My Love by Ariana
Harwicz
The Sing of the Shore by Lucy Wood
Flights by Olga
Tokarczuk