The Junk Drawer

A junkie runs on junk time. When his junk is cut off, the clock runs down and stops. [William Burroughs, Junkie]

What Is the Best Work of American Fiction of the Last 25 Years?

Filed under: Newspaper Clippings — dhalgren at 7:27 pm on Wednesday, May 17, 2006

I imagine that all of you saw this at the NYT site. It’s an interesting list in part because I had no idea that Roth was so highly thought of. I’ve read four, five of his novels. Portnoy’s Complaint, of course (because of you, Matt?) And what he calls the Zuckerman trilogy. I’ve also read the DeLillo novels, some McCarthy (not Blood Meridian), the Robinson novel (which I have blogged about), Updike’s Rabbit, and Ford’s Sportwriter (not the one listed here).
I’m ashamed that I have yet to read Beloved, though I have read Sula and the Bluest Eye. I’d like to comment on the list, but have not read enough of the novels to put forward an opinion. DeLillo’s Underworld is remarkable, but it does seem to repeat with less “grunge” the work of Pynchon. Similarly, Robinson’s Housekeeping deserves to be on this list. the rest…I simply do not know.

I’m hoping to do some fun reading this summer and would live to read Blood Meridian, Beloved, and/or a Roth novel with any of you. . .Right now, I am reading To the Lighthouse and a mind-blowing novel, House of Leaves, which is the most experimental novel I have come across in a long while.
While I am at it, check out this article on Borges in today’s NYT.–tc


By THE NEW YORK TIMES

Early this year, the Book Review’s editor, Sam Tanenhaus, sent out a short letter to a couple of hundred prominent writers, critics, editors and other literary sages, asking them to please identify “the single best work of American fiction published in the last 25 years.” [Read A. O. Scott's essay. See a list of the judges.] Following are the results.

THE WINNER:

Beloved

Toni Morrison
(1987)

THE RUNNERS-UP:

Underworld

Don DeLillo

(1997)

Blood Meridian

Cormac McCarthy

(1985)

Rabbit Angstrom: The Four Novels

John Updike

(1995)

(1990)

(1981)

(1971)

(1960)

American Pastoral

Philip Roth

(1997)

THE FOLLOWING BOOKS ALSO RECEIVED MULTIPLE VOTES:

A Confederacy of Dunces

John Kennedy Toole

(1980)

Housekeeping

Marilynne Robinson

(1980)

    (This book was not reviewed by The Times.)
Winter’s Tale

Mark Helprin

(1983)

White Noise

Don DeLillo

(1985)

The Counterlife

Philip Roth

(1986)

Libra

Don DeLillo

(1988)

Where I’m Calling From

Raymond Carver

(1988)

The Things They Carried

Tim O’Brien

(1990)

Mating

Norman Rush

(1991)

Jesus’ Son

Denis Johnson

(1992)

Operation Shylock

Philip Roth

(1993)

Independence Day

Richard Ford

(1995)

Sabbath’s Theater

Philip Roth

(1995)

Border Trilogy

Cormac McCarthy

(1999)

(1998)

(1994)

(1992)

The Human Stain

Philip Roth

(2000)

The Known World

Edward P. Jones

(2003)

The Plot Against America

Philip Roth

(2004)

2 Comments »

173

Comment by Matthew

May 23, 2006 @ 11:40 am

I’m planning on reading Roth’s new novel, “Everyman,” sometime this summer. I’m a slow, slow reader, however, so we should probably skip reading it together. You’d be finished with it before I read the first chapter. I also want to read “Underworld” and “Beloved,” now that they have been recalled to my attention. I read “White Noise” last summer.

I was most surprised by Updike’s inclusion. He has always seemed a minor figure, to me, mainly because his fiction is so traditional.

179

Comment by dhalgren

May 27, 2006 @ 8:06 am

There’s a discussion on the NYT site about the list that you might want to read. One of the comments is how very traditional the list is, so perhaps we should not be suprised that Updike is on it. It has been ages since I read Rabbitt, and I unwilling to voice much opinion on him for that reason.

I really ought to read Beloved this summer. That does seem to be THE novel at the moment (well, for the last ten years in the academy). Roth sounds like fun, too, especially that Lindbergh novel you were reading…How did that one end up being?

Underworld, bt, is very different than White Noise. Not as focused or personal and not as obsessed wit pop culture theory.

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