Sorry to point this out, Steve, but Goethe's Faust is a duplicate (also at no. 47, I think). Enjoying the list very much, though - great to see Dostoyevsky in this one!
@Tolstoy1113 ай бұрын
Yeah it was at 47. Steve owes us another entry! I actually love Faust Part 2. So did Harold Bloom.
@katrinviires2553 ай бұрын
Just wanted to point that out too!
@garethreeves60903 ай бұрын
@@Tolstoy111 I'd say Don Quixote Part Two is better (richer, darker) than Part One but Steve says no! I forget whether Bloom thought both parts equal or if he preferred the second one.
@AlbertAlbertB.3 ай бұрын
Just enough room for The Sorrows of Young Werther (rolling on floor laughing)
@saintdonoghue3 ай бұрын
Gah! a duplicate! Guess this list is going to 200!
@Toggitryggva3 ай бұрын
Our Town. What a surprising and interesting choice. Excellent!
@kip3883 ай бұрын
It's such an under-rated work. I went into it blind and was floored by the third act which is so weird and sudden and poignant and surreal. But I think it's overlooked now as quaint or antiquated or something. This is my first exposure to Steve Donoghue's opinions but I'm going to trawl the rest of his videos and see what else he thinks worth exploring.
@andrewmacdonald36673 ай бұрын
The deluxe ‘Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe’ is going to be higher than I thought.
@saintdonoghue3 ай бұрын
Hee - do I have the strength of will to leave it off the list?
@capturedbyannamarieАй бұрын
I am one of those people who read Crime and Punishment in 2 days. It was fantastic. One of my favorites.
@bitsoflit3 ай бұрын
i've never laughed so hard as I have at Crime and Punishment. When he returns to the scene of the crime...amazing
@jimsbooksreadingandstuff3 ай бұрын
I'll have to get to Gulag Archipelago some time. I have read s few of Solzhenitsyn's eorks, I was impressed by First Circle.
@plotinusreadinggroup3 ай бұрын
Saving all of Houellebecq and Knausgaard for the top 10 I see… bold choice, Steve!
@VTownGregory3 ай бұрын
Almost through with the Henry Adams. It kept appearing on "best of" lists, so I took the bait. [It helped having inherited 50 volumes of The Library of America in which it's included]. It's marvelous. Jaw-dropping. Poetic. Advanced for its time. I expect to read it a couple more times. It was slow going for me because I purposely slowed down in many passages that were so beautiful that I didn't want to miss anything. I re-read entire pages. I'm happy that his 10 volume history of America (first 20 years of the 1800s) is part of the LOA I have. Thanks for the excellent reviews.
@barbaratarbell6063 ай бұрын
Oh yes, Walden Pond!! ❤
@simonagree40703 ай бұрын
I count one book that I have read, and three that I feel inspired to read thanks to you. Not bad, for a diffident reader of fiction (me).
@davidleemoveforlife63323 ай бұрын
I love Crime and Punishment and the influence it had on Raymond Chandler.
@PGChemistry-s2y3 ай бұрын
So he is saving Ulysses and Gravity's Rainbow for the ultimate GOD-TIER list. I can't wait for that video.
@stantonsullivan-readdelillo3 ай бұрын
Love the Paine on the list !
@JoeSpivey023 ай бұрын
Although it's nice to see you come out to bat for 'Crime and Punishment', I think you'll find that the trusted critic J.E Spivey gave it twelve strong lashes and left it for dead.
@saintdonoghue3 ай бұрын
All of this Spivey character's most ardent fans were BAFFLED by that particular verdict of his! Baffled!
@bigaldoesbooktube10973 ай бұрын
These are so good I wish you started at 1,000 😅
@Mnnwer3 ай бұрын
I knew Cormac McCarthy was gonna be on this list, but not in the top 10!
@pandittroublejr3 ай бұрын
👍🏾 😃
@juliemartin61013 ай бұрын
The result of the bombing of Hiroshima was horrific. John Hersey's book is an incredible telling of that story - and it's just as important today as it was 80 years ago.
@joelharris43993 ай бұрын
What's your position on Mario Puzo's novel "The Godfather"?
@PGChemistry-s2y3 ай бұрын
You know he sleeps with it beneath his pillow. It's too precious to be even included in a list.
@willieluncheonette58433 ай бұрын
"In America, a very rare thinker by the name of Henry Thoreau existed. When he was close to death an old aunt of his, a religious old lady, who thought Thoreau was not religious because he never went to church or read the Bible, she came to him and asked compassionately, “Henry, have you made your peace with God?” Lying on his death-bed, Thoreau opened his eyes and said, “I didn’t know we’d ever quarreled. What is there to make peace about?” Henry Thoreau was not the type of man to quarrel with God. He never went to church because it wasn’t necessary. If there is no quarrel, then what is the point of going to court? He never made a mantra of God’s name; he never said a rosary. None of this was necessary because a continuous hymn to God was being sung within him. Henry Thoreau was an incomparable flower among men. He was always calm and unperturbed and never quarreled with God. So how could he pray? Whom would he worship? Whom would he adore? The quarrel between you and God disappears when you are at peace. Otherwise, you would be in conflict twenty-four hours a day. And the more you are in conflict, the more agitated you will become. How can a tree that quarrels with the earth remain calm and tranquil? Its roots are in the earth! Its roots are buried in the earth! Are you fighting with the earth? Are you fighting with your own roots? If you are, uneasiness will become your natural state. Then you will be disturbed; you will be perplexed and confused. If they fought with the earth the trees would go mad. The earth is the womb… No sooner does God come to your door than everything is suffused with calm. A new kind of intoxication pervades your body, your soul, your every heartbeat. The beauty of that intoxication is that it is a thousand times more intoxicating than wine, and yet there is no trace whatsoever of the unconsciousness caused by wine. This is its beauty."
@willieluncheonette58433 ай бұрын
If one were to choose the 10 greatest novels of all time, five would have to be Russian, leaving only five for the rest of the world. "Just a single man, Fyodor Dostoevsky, is enough to defeat all the creative novelists of the world. If one has to decide on 10 great novels in all the languages of the world, one will have to choose at least 3 novels of Dostoevsky in those 10. Dostoevsky’s insight into human beings and their problems is greater than your so-called psychoanalysts, and there are moments where he reaches the heights of great mystics. His book BROTHERS KARAMAZOV is so great in its insights that no BIBLE or KORAN or GITA comes close. In another masterpiece of Dostoevsky, THE IDIOT, the main character is called ‘idiot’ by the people because they can’t understand his simplicity, his humbleness, his purity, his trust, his love. You can cheat him, you can deceive him, and he will still trust you. He is really one of the most beautiful characters ever created by any novelist. The idiot is a sage. The novel could just as well have been called THE SAGE. Dostoevsky’s idiot is not an idiot; he is one of the sanest men amongst an insane humanity. If you can become the idiot of Fyodor Dostoevsky, it is perfectly beautiful. It is better than being cunning priest or politician. Humbleness has such a blessing. Simplicity has such benediction."
@anthonysuppa11183 ай бұрын
I've been hoping, in vain, for a Broadway revival of Our Town starring Tom Hanks as the Stage Manager. Could you imagine a more perfect pairing of an actor and a role?
@saintdonoghue3 ай бұрын
I hadn't thought of that, but it would be pretty darn good -
@stretmediq3 ай бұрын
My guess the top spot will go to Anna Karenina
@DuaneJasper3 ай бұрын
Holy cow you're speeding up again!
@stretmediq3 ай бұрын
I've read all the books on your list except Hiroshima I guess I need to find a copy
@davidskelton82313 ай бұрын
I wonder which book by John Barth will be in the top 10?
@guild63433 ай бұрын
Steve arranging videos in a playlist? Absurd. Unprecedented.
@Manfred-nj8vz3 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/nYDWlJx8nKhpbtU
@tommonk76513 ай бұрын
I'm about 2/3 of the way through "Crime and Punishment." "Brothers Karamazov" will come soon. Everyone in the US certainly should read "The Age of Reason". I own and will tackle "Gulag Archipelago" in the future. In your discussion of "Hiroshima", you mentioned that the scientists didn't know what the extent of the devastation would be and that there had only been explosions on atolls for testing. That is inaccurate. There had only been 1 bomb tested - in New Mexico - before the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima. Nuclear testing on the Pacific atolls would occur years later. And many scientists had witnessed the test in New Mexico; they had a pretty darn good idea about the damage it would cause....
@saintdonoghue3 ай бұрын
Yes indeed, I should have said New Mexico rather than the Pacific, good catch! And no indeed, the scientists involved weren't completely certain of what the dropped bombs would actually do!
@taylorr.15892 ай бұрын
The Gulag Archipelago being on this list is highly disappointing, and frankly disgusting. Solzhenitsyn was jailed for trying to overthrow the government, was treated for his cancer while there, and released upon serving his time. He was an ardent anti-Semite, and once said it was a pity that Hitler's army had not liberated Russia. His wife has said many times that the work is fiction, composed of folktales. Disappointed in you, Steve. Stop believing everything the State Department puts in front of you.
@saintdonoghue2 ай бұрын
If you’re disgusted by my eight-year-old naïveté, best not to watch my videos.