13 April, 2009

Project Filling in the Gaps: World Literature

Lo! Behold! It's a very long list! There are 100 books on it! I hereby declare my intention to read them all!

A few weeks ago, the fantabulous Moonrat of Editorial Ass (and also Andromeda Romano-Lax, whose novel The Spanish Bow I kinda want to read!) began an awesome trend involving making lists of 100 books that one hasn't read, and reading them all over the next 5(ish) years in order to fill the gaps in one's reading background. In other words, in order to approach one tiny baby step closer to acheiving divine Coleridge-ness, I'm pretty sure he once said he'd read everything ever. (And he was Coleridge, so who's going to argue.)

Which I think is a pretty keen idea! Except that I'm only one year out of the (great, excellent, wonderful, never to be criticised) English Honours program that forced me to take classes in things like 17th Century novels and Elizabethan plays (even if I did wiggle out of the Victorian requirement). While I'm still way behind the pack (especially all of those other English majors, I think most of them have lapped me a couple of times...) in the race to have read Everything that is English Canon... I don't really want to catch up! I had a nice big dose in university not-long-at-all ago. Also, I recently made a goal to read more books by people of colour, and one of my esteemed mother's remarks about it was to ask whether I was going to read such books in translation? And the answer was no, I was talking about books written in English, in North America and Britain where most of the books I read tend to have been written. And this is still the case. But it did make me think about how little world literature I have read. So when Project Fill In the Gaps waltzed along, I thought my world literature gaps could use some filling. My personal twist is Project Fill-in-the-Gaps: World Literature Edition!

The only problem is I don't really know much about world literature.

So this list has been compiled somewhat haphazardly by large geographical area, using things like Wikipedia articles and online reading lists, as well as some items from my usual to-read list. In some cases I've taken into account local book awards, and in some cases I've just picked books because the summary on Amazon made me want to read them. I've unwisely tackled canon, contemporary literary fiction, and genre fiction all at the same time. I've also included a few literary theory must-haves that uni made me curious to read, and some feminist and anti-racist theory, because my reading in that area is... argh, I haven't read anything! The "Last 10" are the extras, in cases where I found too many awesome things to fit into my neat little regional sets of 10. My list is pretty arbitrary, and I know there are big big gaps. It's just a start, really! Because once I knock this one back, if it goes well, in five years a savvier me will make another list, and the cycle will begin again. But if you are reading this and you spot something big I've missed, I'd be ever-so-grateful if you would take a moment to point out any glaring flaws, as I'm open to amendment!

I'm giving myself 25 books of leeway, because I know I've probably put some things on this list I won't actually be able to find.

Africa
1. Chinua Achebe - Things Fall Apart (Nigeria)
2. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - Half of a Yellow Sun (Nigeria)
3. Yvonne Vera - Butterfly Burning (Zimbabwe)
4. Margaret Ogola - The River and the Source (Kenya)
5. Sarah Ladipo Manyika - In Dependence (Nigeria)
6. Bessie Head - When Rain Clouds Gather (Botswana)
7. Ben Okri - The Famished Road (Nigeria)
8. J. M. Coetzee - Disgrace (South Africa)
9. M. G. Vassanji - The Book of Secrets (Kenya)
10. Zakes Mda - Ways of Dying (South Africa)

East Asia
11. Hwang Sok-Yong - The Guest (Korea)
12. Murasaki Shikibu - The Tale of Genji (Japan)
13. Murakami Haruki - Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World (Japan)
14. Yoshimoto Banana - Kitchen (Japan)

15. Louis Cha – The Deer and the Cauldron (China)
16. Eileen Chang – Love in a Fallen City (China)
17. Luo Guanzhong - Romance of the Three Kingdoms (China)
18. Qiu Xiaolong - Death of a Red Heroine (China)
19. Jose Rizal - Touch Me Not (Philippines)
20. Wilfrido D. Nolledo - But for the Lovers (Philippines)

South Asia
21. Kiran Desai - The Inheritance of Loss (India)
22. Arvind Adiga - The White Tiger (India)
23. Amitav Ghosh – The Calcutta Chromosome (India)
24. Anuja Chauhan – The Zoya Factor (India)
25. Arundhati Roy - The God of Small Things (India)
26. Mohsin Hamid – Moth Smoke (Pakistan)
27. Altaf Fatima - The One Who Did Not Ask (Pakistan)
28. Jean Arasanayagam - All is Burning (Sri Lanka)
29. Carl Muller - The Jam Fruit Tree (Sri Lanka)
30. Rajiva Wijesinha - Acts of Faith (Sri Lanka)
Kunzang Choden - The Circle of Karma

Middle East
31. Salim Matar - The Woman of the Flask (Iraq)
32. Orhan Pamuk – My Name is Red (Turkey)
33. Alaa Al Aswany - The Yacoubian Building (Egypt)
34. Bahaa Taher - Love in Exile (Egypt)
35. Emile Habiby - The Secret Life of Saeed: The Pessoptimist (Palestine)
36. Hanan al-Shaykh - Women of Sand and Myrrh (Lebanon)
37. Meir Shalev - The Blue Mountain (Israel)
38. Iraj Pezeshkzad - My Uncle Napoleon (Iran)
39. Simin Daneshvar - Savushun (Iran)
40. Hoda Barakat - The Stone of Laughter (Lebanon)

Europe
41. Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita (Russia)
42. Milan Kundera - The Unbearable Lightness of Being (Czechoslovakia)
43. Carlos Ruiz Zafón - The Angel's Game (Spain)
44. James Joyce - Ulysses (Ireland)
45. Miguel de Cervantes - Don Quixote (Spain)
46. Jeanette Winterson - Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (Britain)
47. Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre (Britain)
48. Marcel Proust - In Search of Lost Time (France)
49. Julia Kristeva - The Old Man and the Wolves (France)
50. Umberto Eco - The Name of the Rose (Italy)

Oceania
51. Kate Grenville - The Secret River (Australia)
52. Mudrooroo - Wild Cat Falling (Australia)

53. Thomas Keneally - Schindler's List (Australia)
54. Pramoedya Ananta Toer - This Earth of Mankind (Indonesia)
55. Elizabeth Knox - The Vintner's Luck (New Zealand)


Carribean
56. V S Naipul – A House for Mr Biswas (Trinidad and Tobago)
57. Wide Sargasso Sea - Jean Rhys (Dominica)
58. Shani Mootoo - Cereus Blooms at Night (Trinidad)
59. Geoffrey Philp - Benjamin, My Son (Jamaica)
60. Marcia Douglas - Madam Fate (Jamaica)

North America
61. David Foster Wallace - Infine Jest (USA)
62. Leonard Cohen - Beautiful Losers (Canada)
63. Jhumpa Lahiri - Unaccustomed Earth (USA)
64. Shyam Selvadurai - Funny Boy (Canada)
65. Maya Angelou – I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (USA)
66. Toni Morrison - The Bluest Eye (USA)
67. Alice Walker - The Colour Purple (USA)
68. Harper Lee - To Kill a Mockingbird (USA)
69. William Faulkner - The Sound and the Fury (USA)
70. Eden Robinson - Blood Sports (Canada)

South America
71. Gabriel Garcia Marquez - One Hundred Years of Solitude (Colombia)
72. Laura Esquivel - Like Water for Chocolate (Mexico)
73. Isabel Allende - House of Spirits (Chile)
74. Paul Coelho - The Alchemist (Brazil)
75. Luisa Valenzuela - He Who Searches (Argentina)
76. Carlos Fuentes - Terra Nostra (Mexico)
77. Jorge Luis Borges - Collected Stories (Argentina)
78. Roberto Bolaño - 2666 (Chile)
79. Reinaldo Arenas - The Palace of the White Skunks (Cuba)
80. Juan José Saer - The Event (Argentina)

Literary, Feminist, and Antiracist Theory
81. bell hooks - Feminist Theory: From Margin to Centre
82. Simone DeBeauvoir - The Second Sex
83. Luce Irigaray – This Sex Which Is Not One
84. Helene Cixous – The Laugh of the Medusa
85. Homi Bhabha – The Location of Culture
86. Michel Foucault – History of Sexulity
87. Sherene Razack - Looking White People in the Eye
88. Dr. Beverly Daniel Tatum - Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?
89. Anne Bishop – Becoming an Ally: Breaking the Cycle of Oppression
90. Paul Kivel - Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice

The Last Ten Books on the List
91. Hsien-Yung Pai - Wandering in the Garden, Waking from a Dream: Tales of Taipei Characters (Taipei)
92. Ye Zhaoyan - Nanjing 1937: A Love Story (China)
93. Salman Rushdie - Midnight's Children (Britain)
94. Michael Winter - This All Happened (Canada)
95. Nalo Hopkinson - Brown Girl in the Ring (Canada)
96. Hiromi Goto - Chorus of Mushrooms (Canada)
97. Octavia E. Butler - Fledgling (USA)
98. Romesh Gunesekera - Reef (Sri Lanka)
99. ed. Makeda Silvera - Piece of My Heart: A Lesbian of Colour Anthology
100. Thomas Bernhard - The Loser (Germany)

Bolded are the books that have been read! Hurrah!

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Things Fall Apart is pretty good.

I would also recommend:
Abeng (Michelle Cliff; Jamacia [not because it is good, per ce, it is very heavy handed in its metaphors but it is assuredly post-colonial])
Disgrace (JM Coetzee; south africa [colonial])
The God of Small things (arahundi Roy; India [this is my favourite please read this])
The Lover (Margurite Duras; France [setting: end of french colonies, vietnam])
Mr Pip (by someone whom I can't remember; New Zealand)

If you only read one of those, make it God of Small Things. :D

-- joel

Alyssa said...

Aw man, I totes meant to include The God of Small Things. I've edited it in there! I'll maybe check out those others too.

Lauren Hunter said...

! Have you already found an English translation of Hsien-Yung Pai's book? None of my libraries have it and I'd given up hope.

Have you read Dream of the Red Chamber, by Cao Xueqin? Another famous piece of Chinese canon.

The only thing on this list I've read is Funny Boy, which was great. :D

Unknown said...
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Unknown said...

It is because I love you and care about you that I discourage you from reading Milan Kundera's "The Unbearable Lightness of Being". It seriously was a tediously boring book. I've found that a LOT of people who liked it like it because they felt it made them feel intelligent/worldly and/or they really did relate to the character on his notions of love (which I personally found to be insultingly black/white and too simplistic and naive). But you read it and let me know your verdict and we'll compare notes!

Alyssa said...

Lina: My friend Inky recommended it to me... I'm pretty sure I found a copy on amahomophobiczon.com, or I wouldn't have included it in the list, but I don't have a physical copy.

Arleen: I think you've mentioned that before! To be honest, I want to read it mostly because of its bangin' title. I'll let you know what I think.