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Old 05-04-2011   #1
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Topic Winner My Favorite Novel

I am curious to see how diverse TLOers are as to their choice of favorite novels. I am going to start this thread off by cheating. I am going to name two: The Confidence Man: His Masquerade by Herman Melville and The Trial by Franz Kafka. Both of these books are considered "literature" but they are also considered (by some) to belong in the horror genre. Both are listed in the book Horror 100 Best Books edited by Stephen Jones & Kim Newman. The late Michael McDowell chose Melville's novel and The Trial by Kafka was chosen by Steve Rasnic Tem who is a big Kafka admirer. Tem has written at least two excellent Kafkaesque horror stories, "The Disease Artist" and "At the Bureau". More recently in The Book of Lists: Horror he chose Kafka's short story "A Country Doctor" as his most memorable short horror story. Ligotti's "The Last Feast of Harlequin" makes the list as well. He has good taste.



The Confidence Man: His Masquerade by Herman Melville


"The novel's title refers to its central character, an ambiguous figure (some think the Devil) who sneaks aboard a Mississippi steamboat on April Fool's Day. This stranger attempts to test the confidence of the passengers, whose varied reactions constitute the bulk of the text. In this work Melville is at his best illustrating the human masquerade. Each person including the reader is forced to confront that in which he places his trust."

"The novel is written as cultural satire, allegory, and metaphysical treatise, dealing with themes of sincerity, identity, morality, religiosity, economic materialism, irony, and cynicism. Many critics have placed The Confidence-Man alongside Melville's Moby-Dick and "Bartleby the Scrivener" as a precursor to 20th-century literary preoccupations with nihilism, existentialism, and absurdism."



"The Trial (German: Der Process) by Franz Kafka was first published in 1925, a year after Kafka's death from tuberculosis. It tells the story of a man arrested and prosecuted by a remote, inaccessible authority, with the nature of his crime revealed neither to him nor the reader."


What is your favorite novel?

Last edited by bendk; 02-23-2014 at 06:40 PM..
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Old 05-04-2011   #2
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Re: My Favorite Novel

I have a hard time naming a favorite anything, let alone a novel. I like different novels for different reasons, depending on my mood, where I am, and how much time I can dedicate to getting lost in another world. I count many favorite novels!

That said, I'll make what is probably a fairly banal choice for TLO... The novel I have read and re-read the most, and have the most editions of, would be "At The Mountains of Madness" (H.P. Lovecraft, as if anyone reading this didn't know). At just over 41,000 words, it barely squeaks past novella status, but I'll still claim it. I first read it at a relatively young age, and it had a huge impact on my developing world view. I most recently read S.T. Joshi's annotated version and loved it all over again.

Serious runners up include "Neuromancer" (William Gibson), "The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy" (Douglas Adams), "American Gods" (Neil Gaiman), and "Cugel the Clever" (Jack Vance). Nothing too weighty, but all extremely enjoyable books.

I've added some new authors to my looming To Read shelf based on what some fine people have said here at TLO, so it may very well be that Kafka, Borges, Ballard, and other more intellectual writers end up on my list some day. Until then, I am content to be the simple country cousin at your literary soiree.

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Old 05-04-2011   #3
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Re: My Favorite Novel

Only one? Roszak's FLICKER . . . But it's tied w/ Klien's The Ceremonies and Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird.Yes, that's cheating . . . The others that rate in my top 10 are all crime/noir/hardboiled, except DUNE . . .

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Old 05-04-2011   #4
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Re: My Favorite Novel

I've thought long and hard about this, and I'd have to nominate The Box of Delights by John Masefield. This is a 1930's kids book that my father read me aloud at bedtime. It features child-pleasing elements such as gangsters, pirates and witches, thrown together more or less at random, in a narrative based around a conflict between the immortal time-traveling occultist Cole Hawlings (surely the original of Dr. Who, and portrayed by Patrick Troughton in the BBC adaptation) and a Crowleyesque villain, Abner Brown, equipped with John Dee's brazen head

I've read pretty widely over the years, and though Fritz Leiber, Jack Vance and John Crowley have come pretty close, I've yet to find an adult novel - with adult-pleasing elements that I will forebear to specify - which pleases me half so much.
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Old 05-04-2011   #5
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Re: My Favorite Novel

Favorite novel? just one? I have different favorites for different reasons, so here we go...
For comedic value: American Psycho. there's a couple passages that made me laugh so much i nearly fell out of my seat. like my favorite novella, "My Work is Not Yet Done," it's a slasher movie in prose from the slasher's perspective.

For educational value: Hitch-hiker's guide to the galaxy. Don't panic and carry a towel. best advice ever.

as a cautionary tale: one flew over the cuckoo's nest. best thing to do around certain types of people is pretend to be a deaf-mute.

as a book I'd like to live in: Anathem, by Neal Stephenson. Science-monks that are carefully shielded to avoid any bias from the ever-shifting outside world, occasionally called upon to actually save it, but mostly left to their own devices.
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Old 05-04-2011   #6
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Re: My Favorite Novel

I've lost track of the number of times I've re-read Charles Stross's The Atrocity Archives. Yep, definitely my favorite novel (although it has been several years since I've read At the Mountains of Madness).
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Old 05-04-2011   #7
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Re: My Favorite Novel

Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon. Its sheer girth, intelligence, humor, and horror offer much for the reader who is up for a challenge. I read the novel (over a six week span!) around 1980. I wonder how long it would take me to reread this now without the luxury of elective stoned collegiate reading time.

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Old 05-04-2011   #8
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Re: My Favorite Novel

Like many others, I'm terrible at naming a favorite anything, but I do nurture a particular affection for and admiration of A.S. Byatt's Possession, which is at once a satisfying historical mystery, a sympathetic character study, a hilarious academic satire, and a profound meditation on the meaning of literary scholarship and appreciation. Rarely has a book been simultaneously so meaningful and so entertaining.

For something a bit closer to the horror genre, I might mention Glen Hirshberg's The Snowman's Children, a dark non-supernatural novel with the lovely prose and elegiac atmosphere of Hirshberg's ghost stories.

Noonday Stars: a blog about horror fiction. Recent content includes essay on the new edition of Ligotti's The Agonizing Resurrection of Victor Frankenstein and Other Gothic Tales.
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Old 05-04-2011   #9
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Re: My Favorite Novel

I've mentioned it before, but:

The Sea of Fertility

By Mishima Yukio.

I think I'm probably still waiting for a reading experience to top that.

Absolutely candid, carefree, but straightforward speech becomes possible for the first time when one speaks of the highest." - Friedrich Schlegel
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Old 05-04-2011   #10
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Re: My Favorite Novel

Strangely, The Confidence Man, Spring Snow and Flicker are all on my “to read” pile (the actual physical pile not the “to buy” list) which is only about 40 books now so this still strikes me as fairly coincidental (although I am working through Horror 100 - best books and its sequel so that partially explains it).

Flicker is at the top currently (just above the Circus of Dr Lao and Observatory Mansions if anyone cares).

Cugels Saga is a book I have read about three times also.

Some favourites of mine – which may well change (although the first two have not in over a decade), these are just the ones that spring quickly to mind – I don’t like to recommend though, as I really know nothing about your tastes…

– Bellefleur – by Joyce Carol Oates
– The Blood of Roses – Tanith Lee
– Young Blood – Brian Stableford
– The Cement Garden – McEwan
– The Tooth Fairy – Joyce

There are more , but I can’t choose between them……

This forum has certainly been key in highlighting potential future reading over the years…so thanks all!

"My imagination functions better if don't have to deal with people" - Patricia Highsmith
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