Discussion about this post

User's avatar
David Rothberg's avatar

I was surprised to have read thirty two of the books. None, except perhaps the Ernaux book were in my top xx. Those would have included Flights by Olga T, the Details by Ia Genberg, The Rabbit Hutch by Tess Gundy, a book I suspect I may not like as much now as I did when I first read it but which I love so much when I first read it, I gotta put it on my list, Checkout Nineteen, a marvelous book about much including reading itself, by Claire Louise Bennet, last year's Kairos by Jenny Erpenbeck, the Topeka School by Ben Lerner, and an Immense World, by Ed Yong, a book about how other creatures sense and cognize that makes the reader feel a part of something so much larger than themselves.

Expand full comment
Martha's avatar

I agree with every single omission you have pointed out - the lack of translated books while unsurprising, was still shocking. What I also thought is so may of the books are american centric in topic! While an element of this is to be expected as it is the NYT, all of the non fic (bar the troubles book) and memoir is about American events/culture and society. As a reader from the UK I just really noticed this, I hardly recognised many of the books and I can't help but wonder if this is because they are so American orientated in nature? I think the list is reading like a reflection of a certain age demographic of Americans and the books that have been available to them in their lifetime - I think it reflects super interesting trends in publishing in America and how this dominates what is available to be read/purchased/consumed in the country - perhaps a tell that publishing houses in the US deem books about the US the most 'important' - (this is an unrefined thought but one I have really been thinking about since the list)

Rooney one of THE 21st century writers - I think her exclusion might be related to the age of the voters asked? No Rooney, Olga Tokarczuk, Yaa Gyasi, S A Cosby, Douglas Stuart or Alejandro Zambra is shocking to me. I also think having no trans Japanese lit on there is absolute insanity.

While good I agree that Never Let Me Go and Exist West don't feel worthy of that list! I have only read one Ferrante novel (days of abandonment) but was shocked to see her as no1! I am going to have to read it out of curiosity, but I didn't think DOA deserved a place on that list. The only books I have read that I did think deserved a place were 'Demon Copperhead' and 'Station Eleven' because they were very very good.

Expand full comment
53 more comments...