The Best American Fiction of the Past 25 Years

Congrats to Beloved. It is, indeed, an amazing book, and well-deserving of this prize. I’m also glad to see that the runners-up and other nominees included three books by Don Delillo (including my favorite, White Noise), American Pastoral, and A Confederacy of Dunces. But interesting to see who’s making up the list of Best American Writers: of the 25 novels listed, two were written by women. Two (that I know of) are written by people of color. All the rest are by white men.

Author: Jill has written 4631 posts for this blog.

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28 Responses

  1. 1
    bejeebus 5.11.2006 at 2:30 pm |

    All the Pretty Horses? I read it in 10th grade and it was horrible.

  2. 2
    Mikey 5.11.2006 at 2:34 pm |

    Holy Philip Roth, Batman! I mean, the guy’s an excellent writer, but getting five different titles up there?

  3. 3
    Brooklynite 5.11.2006 at 2:55 pm |

    One of the best books of the last 25 years was written by a guy who died in 1969? Hmmm…

  4. 4
    a 5.11.2006 at 2:59 pm |

    bejeebus, try it again. all the pretty horses is one of my very favorite books. the writing is spectacular.

  5. 5
    Arianna 5.11.2006 at 3:37 pm |

    I’ve kind of noticed this about the representation of American Literature. For instance, it’s required for my degree that I take Introduction to American Literature, for which I purchase the Norton Anthology of American Literature. Our syllabus is purely white and male, but I don’t understand how I’m supposed to get a firm grasp of American Literature (and thereby Culture, I’m not American) without any women, or writers of colour, or even dealing with the legacy of slavery. I go through the Anthology and there are plenty of women authors, and authors of colour, but we’re not studying a single one of them. Mind you, my professor is really, truely horrid, and very very old, so it’s probably just him, because we studied alot of female writers for British Literature. I kind of question his priorities: we’re studying no less than four of Hawthorne’s works, yet he can’t seem to squeeze in any women or writers of colour? It borders on the absurd, really.

  6. 6
    randomliberal/Robert 5.11.2006 at 4:01 pm |

    Four from Hawthorne? I’m very, very sorry…

  7. 7
    randomliberal/Robert 5.11.2006 at 4:04 pm |

    Also, second Jill. I had to read Beloved for my African American history class last spring, and it was magnificent. It’s one of very few novels that i could actually read start to finish.

  8. 8
    prefer not to say 5.11.2006 at 6:11 pm |

    Well? Who’s going to start the buzz on the women authors if not right here right now? Who should be taking up one of the many slots occupied by Roth and Updike?

  9. 9
    Lauren 5.11.2006 at 6:41 pm |

    Ha Jin? Annie Proulx? Any Joyce Carol Oates (okay, not recently)? Kingsolver? T.C. Boyle? Admittedly, I have a non-canonical list of favorites, but don’t make me keep going.

  10. 10
    evil_fizz 5.11.2006 at 6:58 pm |

    Personally, I enjoyed Song of Solomon much better than Beloved.

    Other people to replace Roth: Sandra Cisneros, Sylvia Plath for The Bell Jar, Dorothy Allison for Bastard out of Carolina.

  11. 11
    piny 5.11.2006 at 7:04 pm |

    …Is it just me, or is this like trying to select the best food of all?

    Or Cynthia Ozick. I vote for Cynthia Ozick.

  12. 12
    Lauren 5.11.2006 at 7:26 pm |

    CISNEROS! Jeez, yes. And Sherman Alexie.

  13. 14
    zuzu 5.11.2006 at 8:34 pm |

    One of the best books of the last 25 years was written by a guy who died in 1969? Hmmm…

    Well, it did say it was for books published in the last 25 years.

    And I about died when I saw the Lucky Dog wagons around the French Quarter.

  14. 15
    Chuck 5.11.2006 at 9:08 pm |

    oh, I agree with Lauren on the Barbara Kingsolver, actually. I really liked The Bean Trees and wound up reading some more of hers — though not The Poisonwood Bible which is the one everyone recommends.

    And is anyone else surprised The Hours didn’t show up on that list? I was really delighted by that book. Maybe the world isn’t ready for Michael Cunningham. Or maybe he isn’t that good, but I thought it was downright amazing.

  15. 16
    Lauren 5.11.2006 at 9:39 pm |

    I loved Cunningham. Movie blew, but the book was amazing.

  16. 17
    blondie 5.12.2006 at 10:01 am |

    I know she’s Canadian, but … Alice Munro!

  17. 18
    Heliologue 5.12.2006 at 10:14 am |

    Beloved was indeed an excellent book, but I’m not sure I’d choose it as #1. Its social importance is of course obvious, but Morrison’s prose doesn’t do it for me. But maybe that’s just my biases talking.

  18. 19
    evil_fizz 5.12.2006 at 10:18 am |

    Her prose definitely takes some getting used to, but I find she’s a much, much better story teller than Roth.

  19. 20
    Jason 5.12.2006 at 11:28 am |

    I liked Beloved, but not that much. And it doesn’t surprise me Jill that you like both Marquez and Beloved. I can see a lot of people liking both books. I would put Jane Smiley in the list (if she’s not already there. I can’t get through the link).

  20. 21
    piny 5.12.2006 at 11:30 am |

    Then what about Juneteenth?

  21. 22
    Heliologue 5.12.2006 at 12:17 pm |

    Her prose definitely takes some getting used to, but I find she’s a much, much better story teller than Roth.

    That’s a difficult comparison to make, though. I, for instance, read Beloved and then Portnoy’s Complaint shortly after. Apples and oranges, to say the least.

  22. 23
    evil_fizz 5.12.2006 at 12:32 pm |

    Admittedly, it’s not a nuanced comparison, just a personal preference. It’s been a long time since I looked at Portnoy’s Complaint. Perhaps I should investigate again.

    I will say this about the list: it’s definitely generating a list of things to fetch from the library.

  23. 24
    Nymphalidae 5.12.2006 at 12:33 pm |

    I didn’t like Beloved, but I’m not a very good judge of fiction. I dislike most of the books that people who actually know about literature all seem to have a big hard-on for.

    As for women writers who should be on that list, I vote for Sherri S. Tepper.

  24. 25
    Marksman2000 5.12.2006 at 2:19 pm |

    It’s impossible to make compile a list like this. There are too many candidates, and it’s all just a matter of opinion.

    I’ll be studying under Molly Giles and Ellen Gilchrist next semester. I’ll make sure to ask them what they think.

  25. 27
    syfr 5.12.2006 at 3:03 pm |

    I’m with Nymphalidae, and I’d add Octavia Butler and Ursula LeGuin. They all three are placed in SciFi/Fantasy; they all three are fantastic storytellers who deserve a place in “literature.”

  26. 28
    Nobody 5.14.2006 at 3:11 am |

    The Dean’s Decemeber gets snubbed. The night after Saul Bellow died, Princess Grace’s husband got a three minute memorial on ABC Nightly News. Bellow got three paragraphs on their website.

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