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» Managing Editor James Kelly talks about the list and shares his John Le Carre favorite (which didn't make
the cut).

» Richard Lacayo lays bare the process (and the pain) behind stacking up
100 novels.
  Reader's Choice
1:  
2:  Lolita
3:  A Passage to India
4:  A Death in the Family
5:  Ubik

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  Best Graphic Novels
TIME's Andrew Arnold picks Watchmen and nine other comix masterpieces

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  Talk Back
Why isn't the Harry Potter series on there!!?? It definitely should be on there!!
—Robin; Seattle, Wash.

Where is Ayn Rand and John Irving? I checked your list twice, I can't believe you did not list either author.
—Susan Sayfan; Longwood, Fla.

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  From the TIME Archive
Ernest Hemingway
"Make no mistake, Ernest Hemingway is somebody; a new, honest, un-'literary' transcriber of life...."
Writer 1/18/26

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Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937)
Author: Zora Neale Hurston
"There is no agony," Hurston once wrote, "like bearing an untold story inside you." Janie Crawford, forty-ish, with her "firm buttocks like she had grapefruits in her hip pockets," her "pugnacious breasts," and her imperial self-possession, has survived the most tempestuous years of her life, buried three husbands, and returned home to tell the story. Or at least to tell it to her best friend Pheoby, who Janie knows will relay it to the curious but envious town folk in the African-American enclave of Eatonville, in the Florida Everglades. (Hurston's actual hometown.) Quite a tale it is, of three men in succession who married and hurt her in different ways. The last of them she outlived only because she outshot him. This is the great tale of black female survival in a world beset by bad weather and bad men. Her succulent book has its stretches of overripe prose, but that's the price of taking the chances she takes with language, chances you have to take to arrive at the witchy places she gets to. (Sizing up her third husband, Tea Cake, she notices "his lashes curling sharply like drawn scimitars.") It's a short book, but you savor it. And after New Orleans, the climactic scene of hurricane and flood is more powerful than ever.—R.L.

From the TIME Archive:
To Northerners the Negro is not a social problem but a minor, hardly noticeable industrial phenomenon
—TIME Magazine, Sep. 20, 1937 (Read This Review)





Next: Things Fall Apart »


More From the Archive:
Great Books for Grown-Ups (6/10/46)
Dirty Book of the Month (4/22/66)
How and What to Read (10/2/72)
Dame Agatha: Queen of the Maze (1/26/76)
Rediscovering the Joy of Text (4/21/97)
Harry Potter Archive Collection
Writers in TIME Archive Collection





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