Great Books, Intellectuals, Scientist of all time

11:27 AM | BY ZeroDivide EDIT

List of the 100 Best Books of All Time[edit]


TitleAuthorYearCountryLanguage
Epic of GilgameshUnknown18th – 17th century BCESumer and Akkadian EmpireAkkadian
MahabharataVyasa9th century BCE – 5th century BCEIndiaSanskrit
IliadHomer760–710 BCGreeceGreek
OdysseyHomer8th century BCEGreeceGreek
Book of JobUnknown6th – 4th century BCEAchaemenid EmpireHebrew
RamayanaValmiki5th century BCE - 4th century BCEIndiaSanskrit
MedeaEuripides431 BCEGreeceGreek
Oedipus the KingSophocles430 BCEGreeceGreek
AeneidVirgil29–19 BCERoman EmpireClassical Latin
ShakuntalaKālidāsa1st century BCE – 4th century CEIndiaSanskrit
MetamorphosesOvid1st century CERoman EmpireClassical Latin
One Thousand and One NightsUnknown700–1500India/Iran/Iraq/Egypt/TajikistanPersian
The Tale of GenjiMurasaki Shikibu11th centuryJapanJapanese
Njál's SagaUnknown13th centuryIcelandOld Norse
BostanSaadi1257PersiaPersian EmpirePersian
MasnaviRumi1258–73PersiaPersian EmpirePersian
The Divine ComedyDante Alighieri1265–1321ItalyItalian
The Canterbury TalesGeoffrey Chaucer14th centuryEnglandEnglish
The DecameronGiovanni Boccaccio1349–53RavennaItalian
The Life of Gargantua and of PantagruelFrançois Rabelais1532–34FranceFrench
EssaysMichel de Montaigne1595FranceFrench
HamletWilliam Shakespeare1603EnglandEnglish
Don QuixoteMiguel de Cervantes1605 (part 1), 1615 (part 2)SpainSpanish
King LearWilliam Shakespeare1608EnglandEnglish
OthelloWilliam Shakespeare1609EnglandEnglish
Gulliver's TravelsJonathan Swift1726IrelandEnglish
Tristram ShandyLaurence Sterne1760EnglandEnglish
Jacques the FatalistDenis Diderot1796FranceFrench
TalesEdgar Allan Poe19th centuryUnited StatesEnglish
Pride and PrejudiceJane Austen1813United KingdomEnglish
PoemsGiacomo Leopardi1818ItalyItalian
The Red and the BlackStendhal1830FranceFrench
FaustJohann Wolfgang von Goethe1832Saxe-WeimarGerman
Le Père GoriotHonoré de Balzac1835FranceFrench
Fairy talesHans Christian Andersen1835–37DenmarkDanish
Dead SoulsNikolai Gogol1842RussiaRussian
Wuthering HeightsEmily Brontë1847United KingdomEnglish
Moby-DickHerman Melville1851United StatesEnglish
Leaves of GrassWalt Whitman1855United StatesEnglish
Madame BovaryGustave Flaubert1857FranceFrench
Great ExpectationsCharles Dickens1861United KingdomEnglish
War and PeaceLeo Tolstoy1865–1869RussiaRussian
Crime and PunishmentFyodor Dostoevsky1866RussiaRussian
The IdiotFyodor Dostoevsky1869RussiaRussian
Sentimental EducationGustave Flaubert1869FranceFrench
MiddlemarchGeorge Eliot1871United KingdomEnglish
The PossessedFyodor Dostoevsky1872RussiaRussian
Anna KareninaLeo Tolstoy1877RussiaRussian
A Doll's HouseHenrik Ibsen1879NorwayNorwegian
The Brothers KaramazovFyodor Dostoevsky1880RussiaRussian
Adventures of Huckleberry FinnMark Twain1884United StatesEnglish
StoriesAnton Chekhov1886RussiaRussian
The Death of Ivan IlyichLeo Tolstoy1886RussiaRussian
HungerKnut Hamsun1890NorwayNorwegian
BuddenbrooksThomas Mann1901GermanyGerman
NostromoJoseph Conrad1904United KingdomEnglish
Sons and LoversD. H. Lawrence1913United KingdomEnglish
In Search of Lost TimeMarcel Proust1913–27FranceFrench
A Madman's DiaryLu Xun1918ChinaChinese
UlyssesJames Joyce1922Irish Free StateEnglish
Confessions of ZenoItalo Svevo1923ItalyItalian
StoriesFranz Kafka1924AustriaGerman
The Magic MountainThomas Mann1924GermanyGerman
The TrialFranz Kafka1925AustriaGerman
Mrs DallowayVirginia Woolf1925United KingdomEnglish
The CastleFranz Kafka1926AustriaGerman
To the LighthouseVirginia Woolf1927United KingdomEnglish
Gypsy BalladsFederico García Lorca1928SpainSpanish
The Book of DisquietFernando Pessoa1928PortugalPortuguese
Berlin AlexanderplatzAlfred Döblin1929GermanyGerman
The Sound and the FuryWilliam Faulkner1929United StatesEnglish
The Man Without QualitiesRobert Musil1930–32AustriaGerman
Journey to the End of the NightLouis-Ferdinand Céline1932FranceFrench
Independent PeopleHalldór Laxness1934–35IcelandIcelandic
Absalom, Absalom!William Faulkner1936United StatesEnglish
The StrangerAlbert Camus1942AlgeriaFrench EmpireFrench
FiccionesJorge Luis Borges1944–86ArgentinaSpanish
Pippi LongstockingAstrid Lindgren1945SwedenSwedish
Zorba the GreekNikos Kazantzakis1946GreeceGreek
Nineteen Eighty-FourGeorge Orwell1949United KingdomEnglish
Memoirs of HadrianMarguerite Yourcenar1951FranceFrench
MolloyMalone DiesThe Unnamable, a trilogySamuel Beckett1951–53Republic of IrelandFrench, English
PoemsPaul Celan1952RomaniaFranceGerman
Invisible ManRalph Ellison1952United StatesEnglish
The Old Man and the SeaErnest Hemingway1952United StatesEnglish
The Sound of the MountainYasunari Kawabata1954JapanJapanese
LolitaVladimir Nabokov1955Russia/United StatesEnglish
Pedro PáramoJuan Rulfo1955MexicoSpanish
The Devil to Pay in the BacklandsJoão Guimarães Rosa1956BrazilPortuguese
Things Fall ApartChinua Achebe1958NigeriaEnglish
The Tin DrumGünter Grass1959GermanyGerman
Children of GebelawiNaguib Mahfouz1959EgyptArabic
The Golden NotebookDoris Lessing1962United KingdomEnglish
Season of Migration to the NorthTayeb Salih1966SudanArabic
One Hundred Years of SolitudeGabriel García Márquez1967ColombiaSpanish
HistoryElsa Morante1974ItalyItalian
Midnight's ChildrenSalman Rushdie1981United Kingdom, IndiaEnglish
Love in the Time of CholeraGabriel García Márquez1985ColombiaSpanish
BelovedToni Morrison1987United StatesEnglish
BlindnessJosé Saramago1995PortugalPortuguese

Chronological list[edit]

The one hundred most influential books, according to Seymour-Smith, in the approximate chronological order he gives:

#Author or sourceTitleDatePublic domain?
1Chinese classic textsI Chingc. 11th century BCyes
2Jewish scriptureHebrew Biblec. 10th–5th century BCyes
3HomerIliad and Odysseyc. 8th – early 7th century BCyes
4Hindu scriptureUpanishadsc. 9th century BCyes
5Lao TsuTao Te Chingc. 4th century BCyes
6Zoroastrian scriptureAvestac. 600 BC – 3rd century ADyes
7ConfuciusAnalectsc. 5th–4th century BCyes
8ThucydidesHistory of the Peloponnesian Warc. 5th century BCyes
9HippocratesWorksc. 400 BCyes
10AristotleWorksc. 4th century BCyes
11HerodotusHistoriesc. 5th century BCyes
12PlatoThe Republicc. 380 BCyes
13EuclidElementsc. 280 BCyes
14Theravada Buddhist scriptureDhammapada (Path of the Dharma)c. 252 BCyes
15VirgilAeneidc. 19 BCyes
16LucretiusDe Rerum Naturac. 55 BCyes
17Philo of AlexandriaAllegorical Expositions of the Holy Lawsc. 1st century ADyes
18Christian scriptureNew Testamentc. 1st century ADyes
19PlutarchParallel Livesc. 120 ADyes
20Cornelius TacitusAnnals, From the Death of the Divine Augustusc. 120 ADyes
21ValentinusGospel of Truth (Gnostic text)c. 140 AD-180 ADyes
22Marcus AureliusMeditationsc. 167yes
23Sextus EmpiricusOutlines of Pyrrhonismc. 150–210 ADyes
24PlotinusEnneads3rd centuryyes
25Augustine of HippoConfessions400 ADyes
26Muslim scriptureQuran632 ADyes
27al-KhawarizmiThe Compendious Book on Calculation820 ADyes
28AvicennaThe Canon of Medicine1025yes
29Moses MaimonidesGuide for the Perplexed1190yes
29Text of Judaic mysticismKabbalah12th centuryyes
29Thomas AquinasSumma Theologiae1266–1273yes
30Dante AlighieriThe Divine Comedy1321yes
31Desiderius ErasmusIn Praise of Folly1509yes
32Niccolò MachiavelliThe Prince1532yes
33Martin LutherOn the Babylonian Captivity of the Church1520yes
34François RabelaisGargantua and Pantagruel1532 and 1534yes
35John CalvinInstitutes of the Christian Religion1536yes
36Nicolaus CopernicusOn the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres1543yes
37Michel de MontaigneEssays1580yes
38Miguel de CervantesDon Quixote1605 and 1615yes
39Johannes KeplerHarmony of the Worlds1619yes
40Francis BaconNovum Organum1620yes
41William ShakespeareFirst Folio1623yes
42Galileo GalileiDialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems1632yes
43René DescartesDiscourse on Method1637yes
44Thomas HobbesLeviathan1651yes
45Gottfried LeibnizWorks1663–1716yes
46Blaise PascalPensées1670yes
47Baruch de SpinozaEthics1677yes
48John BunyanPilgrim's Progress1678–1684yes
49Isaac NewtonMathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy1687yes
50John LockeEssay Concerning Human Understanding1689yes
51George BerkeleyTreatise Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge1710, revised 1734yes
52Giambattista VicoThe New Science1725, revised 1744yes
53David HumeA Treatise of Human Nature1739–1740yes
54Denis Diderot (ed.)Encyclopédie1751–1772yes
55Samuel JohnsonA Dictionary of the English Language1755yes
56VoltaireCandide1759yes
57Thomas PaineCommon Sense1776yes
58Adam SmithThe Wealth of Nations1776yes
59Edward GibbonThe History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire1776–1787yes
60Immanuel KantCritique of Pure Reason1781, revised 1787yes
61Jean-Jacques RousseauConfessions1781yes
62Edmund BurkeReflections on the Revolution in France1790yes
63Mary WollstonecraftA Vindication of the Rights of Woman1792yes
64William GodwinAn Enquiry Concerning Political Justice1793yes
65Thomas Robert MalthusAn Essay on the Principle of Population1798, revised 1803yes
66George Wilhelm Friedrich HegelPhenomenology of Spirit1807yes
67Arthur SchopenhauerThe World as Will and Idea1819yes
68Auguste ComteThe Course in Positive Philosophy1830–1842yes
69Carl von ClausewitzOn War1832yes
70Søren KierkegaardEither/Or1843yes
71Karl Marx and Friedrich EngelsCommunist Manifesto1848yes
72Henry David ThoreauCivil Disobedience1849yes
73Charles DarwinThe Origin of Species1859yes
74John Stuart MillOn Liberty1859yes
75Herbert SpencerFirst Principles1862yes
76Gregor MendelExperiments on Plant Hybridization1866yes
77Leo TolstoyWar and Peace1868–1869yes
78James Clerk MaxwellA Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism1873yes
79Friedrich NietzscheThus Spoke Zarathustra1883–1885yes
80Sigmund FreudThe Interpretation of Dreams1900yes
81William JamesPragmatism1908yes
82Albert EinsteinRelativity1916yes
83Vilfredo ParetoThe Mind and Society1916yes
84Carl JungPsychological Types1921
85Martin BuberI and Thou1923
86Franz KafkaThe Trial1925yes
87Karl PopperThe Logic of Scientific Discovery1934
88John Maynard KeynesGeneral Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money1936yes
89Jean-Paul SartreBeing and Nothingness1943
90Friedrich von HayekThe Road to Serfdom1944
91Simone de BeauvoirThe Second Sex1948
92Norbert WienerCybernetics1948, revised 1961
93George OrwellNineteen Eighty-Four1949
94George GurdjieffBeelzebub's Tales to His Grandson1950
95Ludwig WittgensteinPhilosophical Investigations1953
96Noam ChomskySyntactic Structures1957
97Thomas KuhnThe Structure of Scientific Revolutions1962, revised 1970
98Betty FriedanThe Feminine Mystique1963
99Mao Zedong
(attributed)
Quotations from Chairman Mao Zedong (Little Red Book)1966
100B. F. SkinnerBeyond Freedom and Dignity1971

The 100 Greatest Science Books
The 100 Greatest Science Books list contains a mixture of classic and popular works, chosen for their accessibility and relevance. Most of the books selected are suitable for a well educated layman with only a few being for a more serious reader. The list covers the obvious subjects: biology, chemistry, and physics, as well as mathematics, the philosophy of science, and the history of science. It also includes several biographies.


The Origin of Species
1. The Origin of Species
Relativity: The Special and General Theory
2. Relativity: The Special and General Theory
QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter
3. QED: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter
On Growth and Form
4. On Growth and Form
Double Helix
5. Double Helix
A Brief History of Time
6. A Brief History of Time
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
7. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions
The Analysis of Matter
8. The Analysis of Matter
Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution
9. Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution
The Ants
10. The Ants
The Selfish Gene
11. The Selfish Gene
The Music of Life: Biology Beyond Genes
12. The Music of Life: Biology Beyond Genes
Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained
13. Six Easy Pieces: Essentials of Physics Explained
Matter and Motion
14. Matter and Motion
Lives of a Cell
15. Lives of a Cell
King Solomon's Ring
16. King Solomon's Ring
What is Life?
17. What is Life?
The Making of the Atomic Bomb
18. The Making of the Atomic Bomb
The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought
19. The Copernican Revolution: Planetary Astronomy in the Development of Western Thought
Godel, Escher, Bach
20. Godel, Escher, Bach
Science and the Modern World
21. Science and the Modern World
Against Method
22. Against Method
The Elegant Universe
23. The Elegant Universe
Digging Dinosaurs
24. Digging Dinosaurs
The Realm of the Nebulae
25. The Realm of the Nebulae
ABC of Relativity
26. ABC of Relativity
The Logic of Scientific Discovery
27. The Logic of Scientific Discovery
Coming of Age in the Milky Way
28. Coming of Age in the Milky Way
Physics and Philosophy: The Revolution in Modern Science
29. Physics and Philosophy: The Revolution in Modern Science
Genetics and the Origin of Species
30. Genetics and the Origin of Species
The Fractal Geometry of Nature
31. The Fractal Geometry of Nature
Atomic Theory and the Description of Nature
32. Atomic Theory and the Description of Nature
The Expanding Universe
33. The Expanding Universe
The Beginnings of Western Science
34. The Beginnings of Western Science
Silent Spring
35. Silent Spring
Sociobiology
36. Sociobiology
Reaching for the Sun: How Plants Work
37. Reaching for the Sun: How Plants Work
The Character of Physical Law
38. The Character of Physical Law
Symbiotic Planet: A New Look At Evolution
39. Symbiotic Planet: A New Look At Evolution
New Views on an Old Planet
40. New Views on an Old Planet
Microbe Hunters
41. Microbe Hunters
The Same and Not the Same
42. The Same and Not the Same
The Universe in a Nutshell
43. The Universe in a Nutshell
Wonderful Life
44. Wonderful Life
Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers
45. Scientific Autobiography and Other Papers
The Nature of the Chemical Bond
46. The Nature of the Chemical Bond
Pale Blue Dot
47. Pale Blue Dot
What Evolution Is
48. What Evolution Is
An Introduction to Mathematics
49. An Introduction to Mathematics
A Mathematician's Apology
50. A Mathematician's Apology
The Scientific Outlook
51. The Scientific Outlook
Great Physicists: The Life and Times of Leading Physicists from Galileo to Hawking
52. Great Physicists: The Life and Times of Leading Physicists from Galileo to Hawking
Why Chemical Reactions Happen
53. Why Chemical Reactions Happen
Molecular Biology of the Cell
54. Molecular Biology of the Cell
The Natural Philosophy of James Clerk Maxwell
55. The Natural Philosophy of James Clerk Maxwell
Global Warming: The Complete Briefing
56. Global Warming: The Complete Briefing
Microcosm: E. Coli and the New Science of Life
57. Microcosm: E. Coli and the New Science of Life
For Love of Insects
58. For Love of Insects
Number: The Language of Science
59. Number: The Language of Science
Ideas And Opinions
60. Ideas And Opinions
On the Rocks: Earth Science for Everyone
61. On the Rocks: Earth Science for Everyone
Inward Bound: Of Matter and Forces in the Physical World
62. Inward Bound: Of Matter and Forces in the Physical World
Life on a Young Planet: The First Three Billion Years of Evolution on Earth
63. Life on a Young Planet: The First Three Billion Years of Evolution on Earth
The New Quantum Universe
64. The New Quantum Universe
Cathedrals of Science: The Personalities and Rivalries That Made Modern Chemistry
65. Cathedrals of Science: The Personalities and Rivalries That Made Modern Chemistry
Evolution
66. Evolution
In the Shadow of the Bomb: Oppenheimer, Bethe, and the Moral Responsibility of the Scientist
67. In the Shadow of the Bomb: Oppenheimer, Bethe, and the Moral Responsibility of the Scientist
What Is Mathematics?
68. What Is Mathematics?
Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth
69. Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth
Emerging Viruses
70. Emerging Viruses
The Human Brain: A Guided Tour
71. The Human Brain: A Guided Tour
Obsessive Genius: The Inner World of Marie Curie
72. Obsessive Genius: The Inner World of Marie Curie
Advice To A Young Scientist
73. Advice To A Young Scientist
Nature's Building Blocks: An A-Z Guide to the Elements
74. Nature's Building Blocks: An A-Z Guide to the Elements
Magic Molecules: How Drugs Work
75. Magic Molecules: How Drugs Work
Chaos
76. Chaos
The Pleasures of Counting
77. The Pleasures of Counting
Atkins' Molecules
78. Atkins' Molecules
One Two Three ... Infinity
79. One Two Three ... Infinity
Through Our Eyes Only?: The Search for Animal Consciousness
80. Through Our Eyes Only?: The Search for Animal Consciousness
The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe without Design
81. The Blind Watchmaker: Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe without Design
The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal
82. The Third Chimpanzee: The Evolution and Future of the Human Animal
The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall through the Floor
83. The New Science of Strong Materials or Why You Don't Fall through the Floor
The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human
84. The Tell-Tale Brain: A Neuroscientist's Quest for What Makes Us Human
Between Genius and Genocide: The Tragedy of Fritz Haber
85. Between Genius and Genocide: The Tragedy of Fritz Haber
Diatoms to Dinosaurs: The Size and Scale of Living Things
86. Diatoms to Dinosaurs: The Size and Scale of Living Things
The Eighth Day of Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Biology
87. The Eighth Day of Creation: Makers of the Revolution in Biology
How We Live and Why We Die: The Secret Lives of Cells
88. How We Live and Why We Die: The Secret Lives of Cells
The Century of the Gene
89. The Century of the Gene
The Moral Animal: Why We Are, the Way We Are: The New Science of Evolutionary Psychology
90. The Moral Animal: Why We Are, the Way We Are: The New Science of Evolutionary Psychology
Supercontinent: Ten Billion Years in the Life of Our Planet
91. Supercontinent: Ten Billion Years in the Life of Our Planet
When Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time
92. When Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time
Made to Measure: New Materials for the 21st Century
93. Made to Measure: New Materials for the 21st Century
The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing
94. The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing
Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software
95. Code: The Hidden Language of Computer Hardware and Software
Elegance in Science
96. Elegance in Science
Bad Science
97. Bad Science
Pathologic Basis of Disease
98. Pathologic Basis of Disease
The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer
99. The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer
Making Modern Science: A Historical Survey
100. Making Modern Science: A Historical Survey
Astronomy, Cosmology and Space Travel
  1. Cosmos: Even after his death, Carl Sagan retains his reputation as an intelligent astronomer who brought the universe to the masses.
  1. Bad Astronomy: Philip Plait’s accessible book dispels many of the myths associated with humanity’s inquiries into the cosmos, including the belief that the moon landing was a hoax.
  1. Nightwatch: Terence Dickinson’s book is about more than just stargazing, but using a telescope to make note of celestial bodies makes for a great starting point.
  1. Lonely Hearts of the Cosmos: Walk through the corridors of academia with Dennis Overbye and meet with some of the top astronomical minds on the planet, learning about the personalities and the politics behind the science.
  1. Astronomy Today: Used in beginner astronomy classes, this bestselling textbook, on its 7th edition as of 2010, still appeals to interested readers not even enrolled in school!
  1. Black Holes and Time Warps: Einstein’s Outrageous Legacy: Featuring a foreword from Stephen Hawking, Kip S. Thorne’s book highlights the weird and wonderful theory of general relativity and its undeniable impact on the industry.
  1. A Brief History of Time: Stephen Hawking and Carl Sagan alone could probably fill up this section, so self-discipline limits them to only two appearances on this list. A Brief History of Time is one of the former’s most popular, accessible works.
  1. The Edge of PhysicsNew Scientist consulting editor Anil Ananthaswamy travels the globe in search of people, places, and developments that lead to humanity’s greater knowledge of the universe.
  1. The Black Hole War: Complicated astrophysics concepts get broken down into easy, but not condescending, explanations suitable for beginners by Leonard Susskind.
  1. The Backyard Astronomer’s Guide: Beginner astronomers yearning to take to the skies with telescopes and guidebooks in hand would probably find this well-received resource extremely valuable.
  1. Pale Blue Dot: An excellent read by Carl Sagan for space geeks at any level of comprehension, one of Sagan’s most beloved books on popular astronomy speculates on mankind’s future in space exploration and delves into its rich past.
  1. The Alchemy of the Heavens: Mostly emphasizing the Milky Way, Ken Croswell blends astronomy and chemistry together to discuss the composition of stars, planets and other celestial bodies using language most readers can understand.
  1. Turn Left at Orion: This highly-recommended stargazing guide by Guy Consolmagno and Dan M. Davis ends up on quite a few reading lists, and for good reason! Approachable and informative, it serves as an excellent introduction to astronomy.
  1. Starlight Nights: Few books so perfectly bottle the awe and wonder one experiences when looking towards the heavens as this stargazing memoir by Leslie C. Peltier, perfect for astronomers new and old.
  1. The Planets: With lush prose, Dava Sobel finds creative ways to merge science with pop culture and ancient perspectives as a means of conveying some truly intriguing stories about Solar System planets.
  1. The Right Stuff: Beloved of almost anyone who pines to learn more about space travel, Tom Wolfe’s The Right Stuff captures the imagination of anyone who has ever wanted to surge beyond the boundaries of the planet.
  1. The Universe in a Nutshell: The world-renowned Stephen Hawking condenses some of the more mindbending elements of astronomy into easily processed but no less educational chunks.
  1. Brother Astronomer: Science and religion publicly share an antagonistic relationship, but Jesuit Brother Guy Consolmagno an astronomer with the Vatican — points out that there really no reason they cannot peacefully coexist.
  1. An Introduction to Black Holes, Information and The String Theory Revolution: In spite of the title, this tome is more appropriate for advanced astronomers with at least some basic understanding of physics.
  1. 365 Starry Nights: Another book highly recommended for backyard and beginner astronomers, Chet Raymo’s fantastic resource contains 365 essays on the ever-shifting night sky.
  1. God’s Mechanics: A companion piece to Brother Astronomer, in God’s Mechanics, Brother Guy explains how scientists are able to balance religious belief with work in highly empirical fields.
  1. A More Perfect Heaven: In A More Perfect Heaven, the history and work of Copernicus are taken out of textbooks and into real life, sharing the personality, struggle, and extraordinary studies of the Copernican Revolution.
  1. Bang! The Complete History of the Universe: Take in the story of the universe’s explosion into existence in this new book that explores the formation of the first stars all the way to the future of Earth’s demise.
Biology and Natural History
  1. The Origin of the Species: Readers willing to maneuver Darwin’s dry Victorian prose will be met with some of the most influential and controversial scientific writings ever published. A must-read for anyone hoping to study biology in any depth.
  1. Silent World: The late, great Jacques Cousteau tantalized the imaginations of children and adults alike as he explored the world’s oceans and the delicate interplay between the animals, plants and their big blue environment.
  1. Wonderful Life: In this classic work of natural history, Stephen Jay Gould takes readers on a journey to the Burgess Shale for a valuable lesson on some of the oldest fossils in the world.
  1. Birds of America: When John James Audubon first made his legendary avian paintings available to the masses, he never realized that centuries later people would still praise his talent and ability to make biology an accessible science.
  1. Genome: One does not need an advanced degree in genetics to appreciate Matt Ridley’s awesome guide summarizing the findings of the Human Genome Project.
  1. The Selfish Gene: This book by Richard Dawkins is considered one of the most important books about evolutionary biology ever written, but fortunately its inversion of common approaches can appeal to a relatively broad audience.
  1. The Snoring Bird: My Family’s Journey Through a Century of Biology: This beautiful biography of Bernd Heinrich intimately analyzes the relationship between two generations of biologists, both on personal and scientific levels.
  1. The Botany of Desire: A highly accessible, well-received botanical inquiry, Michael Pollan’s divine The Botany of Desire analyzes the integral role humans play in the lives of plants, and vice versa.
  1. Gray’s Anatomy: First published in 1858, Henry Gray wrote one of the most in-depth and influential anatomy books of all time. Regardless of one’s familiarity with the physiology of the human body, the concise, detailed illustrations prove a valuable educational tool.
  1. DNA: The Secret of Life: Crisp, clean and concise, DNA: The Secret of Lifeby James D. Watson presents the history of and science behind DNA in a book as informative as it is entertaining.
  1. The Voyage of the Beagle: Charles Darwin’s travels on the H.M.S. Beagle resulted in some of the cornerstones of biology, and the journals he kept provide an intimate peek into what he observed throughout the experience.
  1. The Ocean World: With lush visuals perfectly capturing the colorful mysteries of the ocean’s depths, Jacques Cousteau provides readers with a generous resource cataloguing aquatic flora and fauna.
  1. The Structure of Evolutionary Theory: Natural history buffs wanting to look at evolutionary biology and natural selection in an entirely different light might appreciate this accessible volume by Steven Jay Gould.
  1. Our Inner Ape: Highly regarded primatologist Frans De Waal peers into the genetic and behavioral similarities between humans, bonobos, chimpanzees and other primates using language general audiences can easily process.
  1. The Extended Phenotype: The provocative, yet completely viable, thesis of Richard Dawkins’ The Extended Phenotype peers into how genetics can completely transcend a body to impact the environment around it.
  1. Darwin’s Ghost: Subtitled as “The Origin of Species Updated,” this book by Steve Jones seeks to bring Charles Darwin’s core teachings to contemporary audiences.
  1. Why We Run: For scientist and marathoner Bernd Heinrich, the act of running opens up some provocative questions about human biology and psychology.
  1. Cracking the Genome: By Kevin Davie, this book about the people and politics behind the cracking of the human genome is just as fascinating as the science with which they worked.
  1. The Ape and the Sushi Master: The popular primatologist Frans De Waal ruminates on his studies in cultural depictions of apes and the biological reasons why people find them so fascinating and frightening.
  1. The Ancestor’s Tale: Another astounding read from world-class evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, tracing the entirety of human evolution back through millions (not thousands) of years.
  1. In the Shadow of Man: Follow Jane Goodall in her adventurous life among the wild chimpanzees in her book, In the Shadow of Man.
  1. The Age of Empathy: Take a cue from nature in this book that highlights lessons for a kinder society found in the social behaviors of animals.
  1. The Omnivore’s Dilemma: Michael Pollan’s natural history of food aims to change the way Americans think about eating.
  1. The Violinist’s Thumb: Bestselling author Sam Kean’s book reveals an incredible collection of stories of science, love, history, and language, as told by our DNA.
Chemistry
  1. The Disappearing Spoon: Take a journey through the periodic table with Sam Kean and learn some absolutely fascinating facts about different chemicals’ role in shaping the world.
  1. The Elements: This undeniably gorgeous book by Theodore Gray provides some stunning photos of Earth’s basic elements, as well as details on their characteristics and uses.
  1. The Joy of Chemistry: Understanding the chemistry of daily life makes for an excellent introduction to the extremely complex study.
  1. Illustrated Guide to Home Chemistry Experiments: These experiments don’t require a fancy lab and sophisticated equipment, so DIY types desiring hands-on chemistry lessons should pick up this book.
  1. Napoleon’s Buttons: Jay Burreson and Penny Lee Couteur’s amazing thesis revolves around showcasing 17 molecules that entirely changes the course of human history, a fascinating amalgamation of chemistry, politics and sociology.
  1. Principles of Chemistry: Appropriate for college freshmen, Principles of Chemistry by Michael Munowitz introduces readers to all the basics in the most straightforward way possible.
  1. Nature’s Building Blocks: Walking through the core elements that comprise all known matter in the universe with John Emsley makes for the best possible introduction to the wide, wonderful world of chemistry.
  1. Radar, Hula Hoops and Playful Pigs: Delve into the chemistry of all classifications of the mundane and the fantastic alike with this book and its sequel, Genie in a Bottle!.
  1. What Einstein Told His Cook: Anyone who enjoys participating or indulging in the culinary arts will likely adore better understanding chemistry through food by Robert L. Wolke.
  1. Culinary Reactions: Another great read for better understanding chemistry through food, Culinary Reactions presents edible learning experiences.
  1. Periodic TalesPeriodic Tales goes beyond the simple periodic table, offering a cultural history of the elements, how they came to be, and how they got their names.
Environmental Science and Geology
  1. The Complete Guide to Rocks & Minerals: Hobby and beginner geologists can certainly appreciate this field guide to the rocks and minerals they may encounter on their journey.
  1. Dirt: David R. Montgomery’s compelling thesis revolves around the role of soil in the establishment and evolution of human civilization.
  1. The Prize: Daniel Yergin earned a Pulitzer Prize for his thorough research on oil and the politics, history and technology that surround it.
  1. Salt: As one of the most vital minerals on the planet, salt boasts an incredibly fascinating natural, social, biological, cultural and political history.
  1. The World Without Us: Alan Weisman made waves in multiple circles with his ruminations on how humanity’s creations, and, of course, the planet itself would fare after its demise.
  1. Surviving Galeras: Volcanoes fascinate the populace, and this startling account of Stanley Williams’ doomed expedition up Colombia’s Galeras is a tragic but riveting read.
  1. Hack the Planet: Climatology is one of the most prominent earth sciences in the public’s consciousness, and Hack the Planet by Eli Kintisch makes an argument for how to fix the current issues.
  1. Krakatoa: The Day the World Exploded: Another excellent book by Simon Winchester about one of the world’s most famous volcanic explosions for general audiences fascinated by how the planet works.
  1. Silent Spring: Readers desiring to learn as much as they can about environmental science should add Silent Spring to their essential reading lists. Rachel Carson was one of the most important voices in the burgeoning green movement, and her clarion call to understand and protect the environment continues to ring true.
  1. Isaac’s Storm: In 1900, one of the deadliest hurricanes in history struck Galveston, Texas. Erik Larson’s work of creative nonfiction obtained widespread attention and accolades for bringing history and earth science to a broad audience.
  1. How to Cool the Planet: This Geoengineering book takes a look at what might happen if, in a climate emergency, we had to suddenly cool the planet in a hurry.
Physics
  1. Relativity: While not exactly the easiest read for non-physicists, without Albert Einstein’s findings the modern world as understood today simply would not exist.
  1. Six Easy Pieces: This compilation of six lectures by Nobel Prize winner Richard Feynman breaks complex physics concepts down into language that almost anyone can understand.
  1. The Cosmic Landscape: Perhaps a little more advanced than some of the other books on this list, The Cosmic Landscape by Leonard Susskinddelves into string theory and its role in all corners of the universe.
  1. The Elegant Universe: Superstring theory, general relativity and quantum mechanics converge into one resource that brings some of the basic physics findings to general audiences.
  1. E=mc2: A Biography of the World’s Most Famous Equation: Einstein’s iconic equation on the relationship between mass and energy boasts an incredible story and history, recounted here by David Bodanis. The writer certainly does not skimp on exploring how the earth-shattering finding interacted with the work of other physicists as well.
  1. Hyperspace: Even individuals with a tenuous grasp of physics still understand and appreciate the theories behind multiple and parallel universes, and this book by Michio Kaku explains how the concepts work in clear enough language.
  1. The Age of Entanglement: Louisa Gilder writes of the personalities and experimentalists what shaped quantum physics as it is understood and practiced today.
  1. Basic Physics: A Self-Teaching Guide: Anyone driven to teach themselves the basics of physics can appreciate this textbook by Karl F. Kuhn’s goals and exercises.
  1. The Dancing Wu Li Masters: This beautiful book draws parallels between dance, mysticism, culture and of course physics, presenting audiences with a provocative, philosophical read without any complex mathematics.
  1. The Five Ages of the Universe: Read about the history of the universe starting with the Big Bang and twisting and turning through until forever.
  1. Edge of the Universe: Explore the cosmic horizon and beyond this this book that accessible for experts and amateurs alike.
  1. The Theoretical Minimum: Learn about Physics 101 with a DIY twist inThe Theoretical Minimum, a book that can help you make up for not delving deeper into physics while you were in school.
Psychology and Sociology
  1. The Mismeasure of Man: Anyone interested in cognitive psychology and the measure of intelligence should check out this fascinating inquiry into IQ by Stephen Jay Gould.
  1. The Portable Jung: The influential works of Carl Jung could fill this entire list, but this hefty volume introduces readers to his fundamental teachings on psychology and psychoanalysis and works wonderfully as a useful primer.
  1. The Freud Reader: As with his student and eventual rival Carl Jung, Sigmund Freud altered the course of psychology forever. Given his extensive writings on the subject, a compilation makes for the best start.
  1. The Invisible Gorilla: People always seem to claim that they let their intuition guide them, but Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons point out the cognitive errors they will likely encounter that alter their perception.
  1. The Upside of Irrationality: In this intriguing work of “behavioral economics,” Dan Ariely engages general audiences by analyzing why humanity as a whole tends to self-sabotage.
  1. The Art of Choosing: Sheena Iyengar presents some fascinating psychological research on how humans react to having either too few, too many or too suspect choices.
  1. Man’s Search for Meaning: Victor Frankl wrote some of the most amazing psychological works of the 20th century, and most considerMan’s Search for Meaning his most essential inquiry into humanity’s attempts to make sense of itself.
  1. How Pleasure Works: Yale psychology professor Paul Bloom explores the scientific hows and whys behind why certain people so ardently desire certain things.
  1. Rules of Sociological Method: One of the most influential works of sociology ever penned, anyone hoping to learn as much as they can about the science should add this to their essential reading lists.
  1. Bowling Alone: Robert D. Putnam updated some of the concepts behind Reuel Denney, Nathan Glazer and David Reisman’s sublimeThe Lonely Crowd for contemporary audiences. Both books peer into the phenomenon of social isolation and how communities band together and fall apart as a result.
  1. Liespotting: Study the techniques of sniffing out lies in this psychology book for business and deal negotiation.
  1. The Paradox of Choice: Study the implications of living in a world of overwhelming choices in The Paradox of Choice.
  1. The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty: Author Dan Ariely insists that we lie to everyone, especially ourselves, in this book that pushes readers to challenge what they believe about dishonesty.
  1. Thinking, Fast and Slow: Daniel Kahneman explores our two systems of thinking, fast and slow, explaining the captabilities, faults, and biases of both in Thinking, Fast and Slow.
  1. OutliersOutliers delves into what makes high achievers different, the building blocks that make them the successful people that they are today.
For the Kids
  1. The Stars: A New Way to See Them: Penned by the same scribe as the iconic Curious George, this stargazing guide for children and young adults is considered a classic primer on very basic astronomy.
  1. The Story of Snow: Introduce very young children to how one of their favorite meteorological phenomena work with stunning photos and simple explanations.
  1. Koko’s Kitten: Even adults find the story of Koko the Gorilla and her tender love of the kittens she keeps as pets heartwarming and educational.
  1. A Place for Birds: Ecologically minded parents and teachers wanting to teach younger children the basics of protecting birds and other animals from harm may want to pick up this recommended read.
  1. Mistakes That Worked: John O’Brien illustrates Charlotte Jones’ stories about scientific hiccups that eventually led to amazing moments in human history.
  1. Almost Astronauts: Sociology, technology and astronomy converge in this tale of NASA’s discrimination against hopeful female astronauts.
  1. What is the World Made Of?: With this simple picture book appropriate for first through third graders, readers can pick up the basics on the states of matter that comprise the universe.
  1. Earth Heroes: Kids who love the environment and want to know more about the men and women behind historic conservation efforts will appreciate this informative read by Bruce Malnor and Carol Malnor.
  1. Charged Up: Delve into the fundamentals of electricity and its undeniably rich history through Jacqui Bailey and illustrator Matthew Lilly’s child-friendly book.
  1. The Periodic Table: Elements with Style!: Sixty-four elements receive quick, fun and thoroughly kid-friendly treatment in this acclaimed read on the fundamentals of chemistry.
  1. Microlife That Helps Us: With some images straight from microscopes, Steve Parker illustrates the beneficial microorganisms that make everyday life possible.
  1. Consider the Following: Pretty much any book by Bill Nye, the famous “Science Guy,” will appeal to scientifically-minded children. Consider the Following, though, covers a nicely broad range of subject matter.
  1. You Can with BeakmanBeakman’s World creator Jok Church brings the beloved children’s program to bookshelves worldwide, chock full of some DIY projects that illustrate basic scientific principles.
  1. The Ultimate Dinosaur Book: Most kids experience a “dinosaur phase,” and this book caters to their interest with some excellent, basic paleontology lessons.
  1. Rocks and Minerals: The Smithsonian provides an absolutely stellar, engaging field guide to identifying all types of rocks and minerals, appropriate for older children with an interest in geology.
  1. Our Patchwork PlanetOur Patchwork Planet serves as a nice little primer on plate tectonics for children new to the wide world of geography and geology.
  1. Bathtub Science: Another delightful book that encourages kids (and their parents!) to pick up some cool science lessons during bath time.
  1. The Berenstain Bears’ Big Book of Science and Nature: Kids can explore the natural world in this big book with an almanac of the seasons, science projects, and fun facts about animals, plants, and more.
  1. Candy Experiments: Turn candy into a learning resource with this book that turns sweets into scientific experiments, and kids into enthusiastic participants.
  1. Mythbusters Science Fair Book: Turn to this book to find fun experiments in mythbusting that kids can enjoy, both for pure The 100 Greatest Writers of All Time
    by WILL HUBBARD and ALEX CARNEVALE
    Other lists of this kind have been attempted, none very successfully. We would like to stress that there is a crucial difference between "an important writer" and "a great writer"; the latter is at this time our sole interest. We will account for some of the names that did not make this list in a later dispatch. There is nothing bad to say about anyone we list here, except in some cases that they were anti-Semitic or racist, hated women or hated men. Literary crimes are usually relative, the caveats of which we shall enumerate:
    100. Joseph Conrad
    Prose stylist nonpareil, he addressed the dichotomy of race, the loneliness of existence. Heart of Darkness became a paradigmatic work. It is hard to read today, but no less important. Conrad was born to a family of Polish nobles. He did quite a bit of gunrunning — see The Arrow of Gold. You've got to be batshit crazy to have an ambition, as a child, to visit Central Africa. Recommended reading: The Secret Agent.
    99. Honoré de Balzac
    The gestamtkunstwerk ('total work of art') was all the rage in Europe early in the last century, but Balzac was on the case almost a hundred years before. The man started writing just before midnight and worked until the sun went down the next day, eventually producing 100 novels and plays he called La Comedie Humaine. We've never really liked realism, but Le Pere Goriot is one of the mode's best. His mother came from a family of haberdashers. There had to be a realism before there could be anything else, probably. Recommended reading: "The Girl With The Golden Eye", "The Marriage Contract" from La Comedie Humaine.
    98. Czeslaw Milosz
    The greatest artist Poland would ever spawn, Milosz was still composing vital poetry until his death in 2004. He was constantly reinventing himself as a writer, but remained pretty much the same person after he took home the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1980. Born a Lithuanian, he became a U.S. citizen eventually, and dissected the intellectual attraction to communism in his masterpiece The Captive Mind.
    97. George Bernard Shaw
    When we speak of 'wit' in the theater we owe a debt to G. B. Shaw. In fact, his scripts are so funny there's hardly any reason to see them performed.Pygmalion's a great play, but his writing after WWI, most notably Heartbreak House, is darker and better. 
    96. Wallace Stevens
    Anti-semite? Sure. A little old-fashioned? No doubt. Was he one of the greatest poets of the twentienth century? No question. You might say that Stevens never quite seems like himself, which is a towering accomplishment, because he never quite sounds like anyone else either. Recommended Reading: 'Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird,' 'Anecdote of the Jar,' 'Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction'.
    95. Rumi
    We prefer to keep our religion, poetry, and booze in separate containers, but we know a lot of ex-hippie poets who swear by this guy. The Coleman Barks translations are the gold-standard. Born in modern-day Afghanistan, Rumi might as well have been a god.
    94. W.G. Sebald
    No writer so little acclaimed in the first part of his life lived a second one in literary style in the West. Sebald can reasonably contend to have invented much of this country's creative nonfiction, and that is simply a glint of his admirers. It is for good reason that he is taught in every graduate writing program in America: his novels of half-remembrance are brilliant interlocking art pieces; seen whole they completely explain the violence in the middle half of the 20th century. Recommended reading: The Rings of Saturn, The Emigrants.
    93. Robert Hayden
    Hayden's reputation is sure to be burnished by time. Sure, he had influence on an entire generation of African-American poets; but it is the sustained quality of his verses that we now have to contend with. His was an intellect of constant seriousness, mapping the tragedy of his own heart. His vision of language and life, in elegy or eulogy, is among the most impressive achievements in the arts. Recommended reading: "Those Winter Sundays", "October," Selected Poems.
    92. Henry Miller
    It's fun to talk about Henry Miller at parties, and it took us a long time to realize that those who denounce him first made their acquaintance with Miller's least representative work, Tropic of Cancer. It's an important book, but mainly for the history of American censorship. The correct way to fall in love with Miller is through his exquisite nonfiction, most notably The Collosus of Maroussi and Big Sur and the Oranges of Heironymous Bosch.
     
    91. Robert Heinlein
    Morality without end, purpose in the unreal. He got so much better as a writer you can imagine him as one of his humble characters, toiling endlessly at something larger than himself and maybe impossible. Is there any more fun you can have than Stranger in a Strange Land? To Sail Beyond Sunset? The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress? Starship Troopers? His juveniles are in some ways even more brilliant, bringing his dream of the stars to audience poised to inherit it. Recommended reading: Farmer in the Sky,Tunnel in the Sky, Between Planets, Citizen of the Galaxy
    90. Lorine Niedecker
    She was a recluse from Wisconsin who loved the Imagists. She wrote to Louis Zukofsky, she kept writing in her bizarre island home. Her nature poetry is better than anyone else's nature poetry, her confessional poetry is fresher and more accessible than Plath or Sexton. She was funny, and could be so sad. She is the marvelous product of a strange and relentless world. Recommended reading: "For Paul", Collected Poems.
     
    89. George Eliot
    Born Mary Anne Evans in 1819, she wrote Middlemarch, Daniel Deronda,and Silas Marner, a threesome that must rank with any of the finer achievements of realism in fiction. Yet her breadth of character and theme took on so much more. This is a writer that had common sense, verve and intricate knowledge about the unfolding of human events. Eliot's ouvre is astonishingly mature for its time, and remains readable today. 
     
    88. David Mamet
    The quintessentially Jewish-American dramatist, his conquests of poetry and fiction were minor. But he exploded the idea of the American play, creating an exciting new vernacular that brought crowds, excitement and controversy to the stage. Famous for shutting down an all-female production of his masterpiece Glengarry Glen Ross, Mamet is an able theoretician, and maybe the most important Chicago Jew of all time. Recommended reading: American Buffalo, The Duck Variations, Boston Marriage.
    87. Derek Walcott
    Born on the island of St. Lucia in 1930, Walcott is the most important poet of the Carribean, and an enduring voice in international letters. His epic poems, bringing classicism to new places and forms, are major, and his command of the short poem is as adept as Auden's, a man Walcott admired greatly. His "Eulogy to W.H. Auden" gets us every time. Also, Walcott's achievements in the theatrical realm are not to be overlooked. Recommended reading: Omeros, The Arkansas Testament.
     
    86. Isak Dinesen
    Denmark's greatest writer, she was born Karen Dinesen, and she would write about the strangeness of her life in Kenya with her husband. Carson McCullers arranged for her to meet Marilyn Monroe; they danced on a tabletop together. She wrote "Out of Africa" about her time with her husband in Kenya; "Babette's Feast" was her finest story. She was more delicate with her prose than her storytelling, but both are worthy of a place here in this best of all possible lists.
    85. Maryse Conde
    She is to the novel what Walcott is to the long poem. Her intricate templates for Carribean novels are massively impactful reimaginings of Western themes, replete with other places and attitudes that she experienced. Better than John Irving or Richard Price, her chronicling of the French attitude towards its possessions is her very autobiography. Recommended reading:I, Tituba: Black Witch of Salem, Crossing the Mangrove, Segu.
     
    84. Joyce Cary
    Relentlessly funny, incredibly inventive, and one hell of a writer. His comic trilogy was the height of modernism at the time. A voice that comes from the future, born with knowledge of the past, buoyed by the good humor of the present. The much-traveled Irishman wrote the most sterling address to colonialism we ever had. But mainly, he loved being an artist, and he was one of the finest his country would ever produce. Recommended reading:The Horse's Mouth, To Be A Pilgrim, Mister Johnson.
     
    83. Frank O'Hara
    The gay American New York poet whose confessional and addictive personality made him funny and fast. He wrote some of his poems in a room with his friends; he fucked well and seriously; he redefined the modern by looking in the mirror. Sure he has a few misfires, but he's so fearless, never afraid to take chances, to say something more revealing of himself than is absolutely necessary. Recommended reading: "A Step Away From Them", "Autobiographia Literaria", the new Selected Poems.

    82. Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    His story A Very Old Man With Enormous Wings is a great relief to high school kids everywhere, its magic remedy to the stale fare of English authors overstuffing their textbooks. Not sure what his master fiction 100 Years of Solitude is meant to remedy, but every college kid from Los Angeles to Prague has a copy. Amazingly he is still alive, although he does not write anymore. He said his piece. Recommended reading: The Story of A Shipwrecked Sailor, An Evil Hour, The Autumn of the Patriarch.
    81. Ernest Hemingway
    He was a talented novelist and short-story writer who was larger than life. Like his less talented peer F. Scott Fitzgerald, his writing can occassionally seem dated and stale, but there is no denying his influence, and his finer work ranks with the supreme achievements of American fiction. "Hills Like White Elephants" is great the first time you read it, but only the first time. This remains true of much of his works. We find it strange to think he was made of flesh and bone, and not smelted parts of several decrepit Civil War era bronze statues. Recommended reading: A Moveable Feast, A Farewell to Arms. 
    80. Carson McCullers
    Her masterpiece The Heart is a Lonely Hunter was an immediate literary sensation. Rarely is an important work so quickly recognized as such. She wrote in a distinctly American idiom but her characters and themes were flawless and important. After World War II, she lived mostly in Paris. The Member of the Wedding is a slip of genius, a novel in which we can believe. 
    79. Flann O'Brien
    The Irish novel was never the same after this man conquered it. Between At Swim Two Birds and The Third Policeman, O'Brien wrote the road map for experimental fiction, pulling the language apart before putting it back together again. Born Brian O'Nolan, he married a typist. He is the mad master, and his influence and import reigns supreme today, where his novels are still among the funniest, most inventive things ever to appear in English. Recommended reading: Flann O'Brien At War: Myles na gCopaleen 1940-1945.
    78. Julio Cortazar
    Half-Belgian, half-Argentinian, he was the modern master of the experimental novel. Hopscotch is the most infuriating, the funniest, most inventive. His parents split up, he dropped out of school. He later died of leukemia. His titantic efforts in the short story genre have little competition in any era of history. Cortazar gives the lie to the idea that there are many different literatures by making one of them all.
    77. Saul Bellow
    The greatest novel of the 1950s begins, "I am an American, Chicago-born."The Adventures of Augie March makes The Catcher in the Rye look like a fucking children's book. He followed it up with a lively collection of novels that rank with the modern masters. A little less success might have challenged him better, but as it is, he's the greatest Jewish novelist of the 20th century, and that ain't bad.
    76. Jonathan Swift
    He survives among his satirist peers for distinctiveness of vision and the impact of his classic essay A Modest Proposal, and the wonderfully still-readable Gulliver's Travels, which basically foretold all of modernity better than anyone else ever would or could.
    Ezra Pound photographed by Richard Avedon75. Ezra Pound
    Somewhere between the worst person who was a great poet and the greatest poet who was an asshole sits Pound. After living with Yeats in Stone Cottage, Ezra Pound married an artist named Dorothy Shakespear. Previously, he had been engaged to Hilda Doolittle. In Paris, Hemingway taught him to box, but he decided to become a composer instead. He fell in love with the only violinist who could make sense of his compositions. Later, in Italy, the two would try (and fail) to write a detective novel in the manner of Agatha Chrystie. He then spent 25 days in a cage outside Pisa for hating the country of his birth. His poetic innovations and sense of the lyric are actually somewhat underrated, and The Cantos must be the great long poem of the 20th century. It will never be in Oprah's Book Club, but then again neither will any book of serious poetry. The first 50 copies were printed on lambskin.
    74. Philip K. Dick
    Oh Philip was the conjurer, the mad genius. The completely humane. In The Man in the High Castle he dismissed fascism with the cautious wave of a hand. Was he the greatest prose stylist on two feet? No, but he had his pathos—the lost, last moments of A Scanner Darkly, the incredible pull ofUbik. He was like a free object spinning in zero gravity: Radio Free Albemuth; his stories are so endlessly inventive it is like he was starting them from scratch. Paranoid fuck. 
    73. Percy Shelley
    Attended Oxford; read sixteen hours a day. It worked—he would write lively novels, and poems that were representative of the time and the place, and went beyond it. Seems to have survived his Wordsworth obsession, as many after him would not. He wasn't that popular during his lifetime, but his reputation lived on, and his work would remain a touchstone for poets and fiction writers in the two centuries after his death. Recommended reading: of the lyrics, we prefer "Ozymandias" and "Ode to the West Wind"; the long-form and dramatic verse reached their apices with Prometheus Unboundand The Cenci; the early Gothic novels, most notably, Zastrozzi, are a good companion on a stormy autumn night, but you'll never find a copy.

    72. James Agee
    The foremost journalist of his era, he also wrote a tremendous novel, A Death in the Family, and the bible of creative nonfiction, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men. Had an important side career as a screenwriter; but in the main he wrote many of Life magazine's most enduring pieces with Whittaker Chambers. One of those sad, great-looking literary demigods who died in a taxi cab before his 50th birthday.
    71. Stanley Elkin
    The greatest American comic novelist, Elkin was one of the smartest people ever to live. His stories are a blossoming achievement, a dramatic victory of non-realism in the dreary bog of American fiction. He is incredibly underappreciated and all of his novels deserve revisiting. It was in the stories that he really shined, always avoiding the easy resolution, always being more moral with other people than he would be with himself. He was a master critic, a polished prose stylist. Recommended reading: Mrs. Ted Bliss, Searches and Seizures, The Franchiser, A Bad Man.
    70. Walter Benjamin
    A German Jew who redefined how the essay should operate. Was killed by Germans in a hotel room running from the Nazis, or he could have just committed suicide. Translated Proust and Baudelaire. His ideas about art pretty much all came true, eventually. Skilled consumer of hashish, of bearing down on some truth you did not know was there but would have come to the surface eventually, probably, without him.
     
    69. Harold Pinter
    The greatest English dramatist of his time, we have taken so much from his clipped ways of saying, his extraordinary grasp of how the theater operates and how it ought to operate. His ideas have been stolen by Larry David and Quentin Tarantino and Wes Anderson, a testament to their timeliness. Married to Antonia Fraser, his political views weren't always to my taste, but he was a fierce proponent of freedom at home and abroad, and helped many writers on that account. Recommended reading: The Dumb Waiter, The Homecoming, The Birthday Party, his novel The Dwarfs.
    68. John Berryman
    The Dream Songs is one of the top 5 poetry manuscripts ever written, bringing character and voice to new hights in American verse. He was born in 1914, he committed suicide in 1972. The between years were drunk and hard, but the poetry came easy. His father killed himself when he was 12, from that he basically never recovered. Recommended reading: Dream Song 34.
    67. James Baldwin
    Born in Harlem, he was gay, black and brilliant. His novel Go Tell It On The Mountain is a work of incredible depth and sensitivity, probably the second-best novel of the 1950s and one of the ten greatest novels of all time. His short story "Sonny's Blues" might be best remembered. It holds up better than any short story you'll find in a rag like The New Yorker. He needs a renaissance more badly than most.
    66. Tu Fu
    The greatest of the Chinese poets, he is a master in any time. Chinese schoolchildren still recite his verses, as do their businessmen. Claimed to have lived in a "straw hut," but really it was just another one of those upper-middle class two story affairs on a whispering brook like they had in those days. Kenneth Rexroth's 100 Poems From the Chinese is pitch-perfect, and includes all of the memorable Tu Fu. 
    65. Jorge Luis Borges
    A blind, deep thinker. His stories are endlessly rewarding and entertaining. The genre of science fiction virtually does not exist without him. Astounding how often a gunshot or a stab wound ends these tales, but still, Comp Lit programs across the Northeast would be a lot poorer, and certainly a lot less sexy, were it not for this man.
    64. Malcolm Lowry
    He was a crazy and he was a drunk, but he managed to outwrite most of the non-crazies and non-drunks despite spending his days chronicly impoverished. Under the Volcano is up there with Ulysses, with Molloy, withLight in August. Its narration is unchallenged for veracity of human feeling and expression. He was never much good at living, but through his work he'll live on for centuries.
    63. Willa Cather
    An American lesbian. She was Episcopal, an American original. The glories can be found in The Song of the LarkO Pioneers!, The Professor's House.Her ways were sometimes new, sometimes old. She wrote about the people that existed, that she knew, that had never before made it to these pages. Recommended reading: Death Comes For the Archbishop, My Antonia.
    62. Edgar Allan Poe
    Horror we needed, craved. The short story was brought to entertain in his mode, the beating heart someplace you weren't sure was there, his inventiveness and sense of menace. An American simultaneously at its most base and most necessary. The poetry is repetitive but sublime, largely centered upon his 13 year old cousin, whom he married. Our kingdom by the sea, indeed. 
    61. Henrik Ibsen
    Torvald! He was a master of character, of menace. His drama was challenging, exciting, and his outlook was more shits and giggles than devotion and God. Extremely prolific, he managed so many excellent dramas, slamming Victorian morality, forging his own. Recommended reading: Hedda GablerGhosts, The Master Builder.
    60. W.H. Auden
    He was the most acclaimed poet in the world while he lived. He seems sort of old-fashioned now, but that doesn't dim his impossibly wide view of human existence, his innate knowledge of history, his incredible sense of the possibilities of the lyric. It is now assumed that he was gay, but how, really, could a poet of his time not be. Students of verse should be forced to transcribe, memorize, and possible have tatooed on their rib cage Mr. Auden's September 1, 1939. Just a tremendous poem, a model of unacknowledged legislation. 
    59. Thomas Pynchon
    An enterprising American fabulist whose self-imposed retreat from the public sphere probably venerates him more than it should. Mason & Dixoncould be praised or reviled; it was a massively courageous undertaking, a screaming across the sky. Worked at Boeing for a time. After publishing V.the greatest first novel ever by a human, he wrote to his agent. "If they come out on paper anything like they are inside my head then it will be the literary event of the millennium."
    58. Emily Brontë/Charlotte Brontë
    The first wrote Wuthering Heights, which has survived more splendidly than any story we can think of. She barely lived long enough to write anything else, but what else exactly did she need to write? She'd written Wuthering Heights: that was enough. The second discovered her sister's talents, and became the more prolific of the two. 

    57. Flannery O'Connor
    She was a faithful practitioner of an emerging style, a slyness, an understanding, that exposed the depth of human character in her moral gaze. Redefined the American short story, repudiated the saccharrine elements that had defined it and gave fiction a seriousness of purpose that resonates decades after her passing. Recommended reading: "Everything That Rises Must Converge", Wise Blood, "A Good Man Is Hard To Find"
     
    56. Leo Tolstoy
    Born to the aristocracy of Russia. His cousin was Alexander Pushkin. Managed to pen Anna Karenina, the greatest novel ever written in Russian. Flaubert said, "What an artist and what a psychologist!" His endings were legend, his characterizations revolutionary. He was an accomplished political writer, and espoused nonviolent resistance. His autobiographers are very dated, but his correspondence has held up far better. Maxim Gorky's "Reminiscences of Tolstoy" is the only way to know this talented, magical novelist, this anchor for Russian literature as the world knows it. 
     
    55. Tennessee Williams
    The nature of his art was evident from the very first. You could walk into a performance of one of his plays and you would know instantly that it belonged to him. His characters were darts of light, flickering across the stage, surprising even themselves. His sister was a schizophrenic, his lover was a Sicilian navy man. He brought his tendrils of genius to wherever and whenever he was. He choked on cap from a bottle and perished in 1983, the year we were born. His short stories are surprisingly revealing, like a Rosetta Stone for the sheer madness of his plays. Love the one-acts.
    54. Nathaniel Hawthorne
    Why did America become the finest country the world had seen to that point? Its artists played a crucial role. In his incredibly perceptive stories and novels, Hawthorne achieved heights that were reserved for the European masters before he brought his insight to bear on them. We'll never forgive him for how he treated Melville late in their lives, but the penning of phantasmagorias like "Young Goodman Brown" are enough to forgive most of his other personal failings. We've always though that the crimson A in The Scarlet Letter stood not for Adultery but for American, and it makes sense—we would be living in a different country were it not for this book. 

    53. T.S. Eliot
    Terrible playwright. Also, it's probably about time for everybody to admit that The Waste Land is totally boring. Four Quartets, on the other hand, is enduring poetry. As are a handful of his other shorter lyrics, and probably the one about J. A. Prufrock. The twentieth century would have been more beautiful had he not lived, but still, the twentieth century happened the way it did, largely because of him. Oh wait, that was Hitler. Same difference.
    52. Sophocles
    Born a few years before the battle of Marathon, he would be the second of three playwrights to rock the ancient world to its core. Banged many young boys in his times, the greatest writer-pedophile who ever lived. The magic of the Theban plays; the lyricism of Oedipus, psychology's first tragic hero. In even dealing with myth strived towards naturalism, beginning the slow march towards the reality of things. Recommended reading: Antigone, Oedipus at Colonus.
    51. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    His drama Faust begins in Heaven, has a poodle turning into the devil. He was born in Frankfurt in 1749, and he'd live long, to the age of 82. He became an international celebrity at the age of 24 with the publication ofThe Sorrows of Young Werther, a fact he would live the rest of his life regretting.
    50. Toni Morrison
    Let's not let a couple clunkers haunt how clutch Morrison was in gems likeSong of Solomon, Beloved, and The Bluest Eye. Her explanation of the American midwest; her command of place rivals Faulkner in its better moments. Does she sometimes adhere too closely too symbols? Is she sometimes more complex than she ought to be? That is no blemish on the career of an immortal voice.
    49. Charles Olson
    America's Bard, the voice of New England. Incredibly tall, incredibly wacked. He is the father of much of the American verse that directly followed, but he would never know just how lasting his work would be. He is our poet of the future, a deep thinker who lacked empathy for everyone but himself. Self-involvement can became a kind of genius at this depth, or so we hope. Recommended reading: "The Post Office", The Maximus Poems, "The K".
    48. John Steinbeck
    Steinbeck never graduated from Stanford. For a time, he worked as a handyman. His shorter works are incredible forays in concentration on theme; his longer works are a pleasure to drift into like little worlds. As a journalist of war he has no peer except for Orwell, and he could be funny, and also so devastating with the world he left you in after you'd turned the last page. Recommended reading: Travels with CharleyEast of Eden, Of Mice And Men, Tortilla Flat.
    O'Neill with his second of three wives, Agnes, and their later disinherited son Shane on a beach on Cape Cod.47. Eugene O'Neill
    He wrote one comedy that made the stage — it happens to be one of the greatest stage comedies ever written, but he stopped there. His mind was occupied by the tragedy that could befall mankind, griefs personal and national. He believed the stage could depict this faithfully, and still more after that.
    46. Gustave Flaubert
    Madame Bovary was the real first novel, the first impulse in the form with intellectual heft, a plot with bite, a voice of reason. He wrote it from 1850-1855, and it appeared in serialized form, as the greatest novel that had ever been written at that point in time. Contracted syphilis in Lebanon. Never much of a playwright. He spawned the greatest European writer, Franz Kafka, and his evenhanded conception of the modern novel has lasted longer then his flavorful, romantic work. But without him, how were we to begin? Recommended reading: Bovary, Memoirs of a Madman, his letters
    45. Ivan Turgenev
    Tolstoy wrote of Turgenev: "His stories of peasant life will forever remain a valuable contribution to Russian literature. I have always valued them highly. And in this respect none of us can stand comparison with him. Take, for example, Living RelicLoner, and so on. All these are unique stories. And as for his nature descriptions, these are true pearls, beyond the reach of any other writer!" Tolstoy could be such an understated dick at times. Recommended reading: Fathers and Sons, The Diary of a Superfluous Man
    44. Charles Baudelaire
    He was the quintessential mama's boy. He went looking for his mother in almost every prostitute in Paris, contracting all manner of sexually transmitted diseases. Fortunately the only effect these STDs had on his literary talent was, if anything, to enhance it. Among his Parisians his reputation became pretty solid. Proust loved the guy. You can be a dandy and a genius, and one hell of a poet. He was. Recommended reading: The Flowers of EvilParis Spleen, Artificial Paradises
    43. Robert Lowell
    Of the New England poets, his achievements were the serious kind. He mentored many other greats, but his fidelity to his own vision, his moral look at the world he lived in, whatever it looked like to others, was firm. His sonnets are the greatest besides Shakespeare's. Recommended reading:For the Union Dead and Life Studies.
    42. Mark Twain
    Aphorisms and all, Twain was an American as great as Lincoln or Leadbelly. That is, deeply rooted in the land of his birth, yet unblemished by either bias or zealotry. Tom Sawyer is for kids, but Huck Finn stands up to any other novel in this bastard language of ours. He is evidence that this country should be.  
    41. Robert Creeley
    The German psychoanalyst/aphorist Bert Hellinger said that "rejection leads to resemblance," and it is this fact that best characterizes Creeley's career. He turned away from and overcame the sentimentalists, redefined what the country called sentiment, and broke free again, a man who could not die without knowing every version of love. The first three books are indispensable—The CharmFor Love, and Words—though there are later gems like Mirrors and Life & Death. The man is also our most imitable poet, which if the converse of Hellinger's words is also true, make Creeley a signal father of this country's next generation of original writers. 
    40. Iris Murdoch
    What an inspired philosophical novelist! She wrote things down that should have been already written down, with an inspired moral sense. She was born in Dublin and her husband and life partner John Bayley at Oxford. They made an irreplicable team. She would elevate discourse to a heavenly routine. Recommended reading: A Year of Birds, The Black Prince, The Sandcastle, The Sea, The Sea.
    39. Arthur Rimbaud
    The boy poet is a familiar role, but Rimbaud was the greatest of all boy poets. Died shortly after his 37th birthday. Wrote to and fucked Paul Verlaine. He was tall, thin and bony. Breton called him "a god of adolescence." He wrote poetry briefly when he was in his teens. One man's passing fancy is acknowledged as an titanic masterpiece by another man. It is best to read John Tranter's appreciation of him and see just what we mean.
    38. Mary Shelley
    Created the most important novel of its century, the Pygmalion-inspiredFrankenstein. It is still fabulous reading today, and inspired more than almost any other work of fiction. It is about man becoming the machine, and it identified the chief feature of life thereafter — technological innovation and how it would change humanity into something different than it was before. For this Shelley made the perfect story, one that is more than a metaphor, it is a koan to what has yet to occur.
    37. Virgil
    Born in France when it was Gaul, Virgil was the son of a farmer. Eventually he followed Octavian and became a part of the political scene. In the last ten years of his life, he composed The Aeneid. Its address to Homer is evident. He saw his father go blind, his two brothers die, one at childbirth, and one in a messy accident. He was the greatest writer of his time, and were he here today we could reasonably account for him as the inventor of what would become Western literature.

    36. Emily Dickinson
    Quietly, unobtrusively, she is the American poet, giving more to those that followed her than anyone else. She is in every poet we read, every word that is written. Even when she is not, she is there, in her lacks. She eschewed the long vision of some of the finest poets in English, but no one did more with less, and this was her genius, along with something of a bitter wit. A person can be alone in the universe, and yet as long as they have literature, they need never worry.
    35. Walt Whitman
    America's most delightful poet, Whitman has had a renaissance that many already saw coming. His verve and vision are so far ahead of any of his peers, it's a wonder he wasn't hailed earlier. He never drank. In his great letter to Emerson he imagined an America greater and more important than we could even conceive of today. He was born on Long Island. He hated slavery. He worked at nursing, journalism, homosexuality, teaching. Recommended reading: "O Captain! O Captain!", Leaves of Grasshis notebooks.
    34. D.H. Lawrence
    He died in France in 1930, but his final resting place is in Taos, New Mexico. It is a strange and wonderful journey for the English transplant. He called his life a savage pilgrimage, he was never given the right sort of attention in his lifetime. As he walked through the streets, they should have bowed. His criticism is above reproach, it is more a blog than any blog that has yet been created. His novels and stories are fresher today than the day they were written. He can be put down easily, but he is easy to love, too. Recommended reading: Lady Chatterly's Lover, Women in Love, essays.
    33. William Carlos Williams
    Why is the New Jersey native so important to the project of American poetry? Why is he more than just "The Red Wheelbarrow"? Why is his Spring and All one of the ten greatest poetry manuscripts of all time? Like Pound who he hated, Williams' aims were new and real. They were the everyday, they were the eternal. His ear is flawless, his grasp of both prose and poetry on the level of Shakespeare. He is the greatest poet this country produced from its small towns, where he served as a doctor. Recommended reading:Spring and All, "Danse Russe", "This Is Just To Say", Paterson
    32. Samuel Coleridge
    Addicted to opium, he was one of the great critics, and you then you get to his creative work. For their magical form and incantatory meter, Rime of the Ancient Mariner and Kubla Khan have no peer. Didn't have the best relationship with his mom. Was an innovator with blank verse, set the template for confessional poetry and much that came after. He wrote Rime,he could napped for the next hundred years and he'd still be at the top of his class. 
    31. Henry James
    Other than Charles Dickens, did the novel ever have a more devoted and able practitioner? Born in New York City, his highfaluting education took him across Europe. Gay as the day was long, he hit on Hans Christian Andersen when he was 56 and Andersen just 27. Whether it was dark comedy or darkest tragedy, he was at his efficient best. With "The Art of Fiction" he planted his flag in the territory of made-up people and places. They would never be the same after. Recommended reading: The Portrait of a LadyWings of the DoveThe Bostonians
    30. John Keats
    Before everything, he was the greatest letter writer ever, his collected correspondence only potentially exceeded by that of Franz Kafka. His dad died after falling from a horse. He moved to Italy because of his fear of succumbing to tuberculosis. He succumbed in 1821. His poem "Endymion" began "A thing of beauty is a joy forever," and went on from there. The advances he made, the heights he reached! Recommended reading: his Odes, "Sonnet to Solitude", Calidore: A Fragment

    29. William Wordsworth
    There was the motivation to write in the voice of the people. Coleridge tried to say that drugs were the better path. Bill refused, citing Caedmon, the stable-boy that initiated our poetry. He was the best when he walked the country-side with Dorothy. Emotion recalled in a moment of tranquility was a cute idea, but it really only worked in the case of the daffodils. No one tried harder, and no one failed as beautifully, as this master. 
    Eugene Delacroix's 'Ovid Among the Scythians'28. Ovid
    It is difficult to mark these Ancients. There is considerable import in coming 'first', but that is not what this list is measuring, we are saying who is best. Invented eroticism. He revealed himself in his many poems, creating an idea of art that would outlive him and every other member of his civilization. Born to an equestrian family, he married three times. Invented eroticism. 
    27. William Blake
    He was considered insane by his peers. Songs of Innocence and Experienceshowed off his maturity and a poet, and that he was an inspired illustrator. He did not hold with the doctrine of God as Lord. He taught his wife to read, write and to use a printing press. We are still waiting for the poet who can draw like this to come back to us again.
    26. Dr. Johnson
    His life basically invented the concept of autobiography, he had mild Tourette's, after college he went home and lived with his parents, his father ran out of money. He wrote the dictionary, he wrote columns. The breadth of his knowledge was spectacular to behold. Finally the 24-year old King George III granted him a pension of 300 pounds a year for basically civilizing some small part of humanity. Recommended reading: An Account of the Life of Richard Savage.
     
    25. Lord Byron
    Described by Caroline Lamb as "mad, bad, and dangerous to know." Did everything: ran a newspaper with Shelley, courted all the pertinent ass of the period, a hero to Greece, to the English speaking world. Don Juan was his fun epic: it lives and breathes today and should be more widely read than it is. Had a massive temper, suffered from depression, a hearty bisexual. Such ingenuity in the old forms was rare and special for a creature of his time. Recommended reading: The Island, Heaven and Earth, Manfred, Darkness.
    24. George Orwell
    He created the modern essay, he politicized it and de-politicized it; lambasted communism for the evil that it was, became property of the American right and American left in equal measure. He left behind novels that are widely read today for both their literary merit and virtues as stories. He was the bearer of bad news, the hearty messenger, for all that our current slate of modernity portends. He was in favor of what was right. Recommended reading: Animal Farm, his essays, 1984.
    23. Stendhal
    His heights were higher than almost any other. A vastly underappreciated genius. His memoirs, starting with The Life of Henry Brulard. It is the finest autobiography the West has generated, and if released today there would be no competition for the book of the year. Born Marie-Henrie Boyle, he was a womanizer and a pretty man, but when he set down to write, he was without peer. Recommended reading: The Red and the Black,
    22. Euripides
    Before him, Greek drama was Happy Days and Good Times. He brought everything else to the table: the undermining of the protagonist, the gross inequities of fate, the importance of satire to civilized beings. All theatre was archetype before this giant, and the original onslaught of realism that he brought to the floor was a revolution. His plays, and his alone, were about regular people going about in the guise of gods. His was a deeper grasp of human nature, one imperceptible to most. When he saw a slave, he saw more than a slave. When he saw a god, he saw us all. Recommended reading: The Trojan Women, Iphigenia in Aulis, Helen.

    21. Miguel Cervantes
    One work summed up the entirety of Spanish literature, but oh what a work he left us with! He had to practically redo an entire language to keep up with his inventiveness. He survived three gunshots in a massive sea battle to survive to write it at all. He never regained the use of his left hand. He died on the same day as Shakespeare.
    20. Laurence Sterne
    The finest experimentalist ever. Smash novels, insights of incomparable erudition, hilarious, so ahead of their time that they seem more modern than most things published today. Tristram Shandy has lasted longer than its detractors. Many of its jokes have still yet to be parsed from a text thick with meaning, with comedy and profound statements of humanity in a time where it was not so easy to recognize what exactly that meant. Recommended reading: A Sentimental Journey, Tristram Shandy.
     
    19. Herman Melville
    Mythmaker, dreamer, anthropologist. Once born he took up the title of greatest writer in America and never relinquinshed it until he died in 1891. His posthumous novel, Billy Budd, was a prism of his genius. It wasn't long until the New York-born Melville was at sea. This would inspire the most exciting nautical novel in history, Moby Dick. He is admired by all those capable of admiration. Recommended reading: TypeeBilly BuddThe Confidence Man
    18. William Butler Yeats
    Everything was magical to this Irishman, who sympathized with the aristocracy and was never sure it was all going to work. Nominated to the Irish senate. Seminal to the creation of Irish theater in so many ways; his haunting, haunted plays that drew equally from Irish folklore and Japanese Noh plays. Every formalist poet of the 20th century owes a great debt to this man—only Hopkins can match his ear for the lyric. His obsessive drive (and eventual failure) to father an heir, combined with a keen interest in occult trance ceremonies, led Yeats to copulate with more girls less than half his age than perhaps any sextagenarian in history. His Nobel Prize in 1923 brought worldwide fame to his body of work and, perhaps more importantly, worldwide attention to the literature of the nascent Irish Free State. 
    17. Homer
    There was a generous discussion about whether or not we should have included Cynewulf on this list, to reference whatever human mind had the most integral role in creating Beowulf. But an entire oral tradition madeBeowulf, a truism that could just as easily be spoken about Homer. He lived before Christ, a time that is unimaginable to most of us. He winked into existence at about the time of the Trojan War, that much we do know. There was someone: he may not have been blind, but he saw more than anyone had up until that point, and arranged the tenuous first gasps of civilization upon homo sapiensThe rosy-fingered dawn will stick with us for eternity.
    16. Charles Dickens
    He did things with story in his serials that still have not been attempted as well, took formulas and reconstructed them to his purpose, he was the mad scientist of place and person, the address to the Industrial Revolution. There he was for the greatest change in human history and thank heavens we had him to stand there, backing into darkness, so we could see the light. Recommended reading: Great Expectations, Hard Times, Nicholas Nickleby
    15. John Ashbery
    Our modern magician, Ashbery has simply never written a bad poem, and his adventures with the epic in A Wave and Flow Chart elevated him above his peers. His command of the language is second to none, so much so that it appeared he was writing in a new language. Gay, lives in NY. His work is destined to tell the tale of this time better than any other writer alive today, and it is the words he made that tell it.
    14. Virginia Woolf
    Born in London in 1882, it was a very good year for a extraordinarily perceptive and sensitive woman. She saw the Godrevy lighthouse in Cornwall during her summers, and she did it: she wrote To the Lighthouse, one of the five greatest narratives ever constructed in English. Being depressed and unhappy is mere sport for the greats, Woolf had a chronic disposition: "One of my vile vices is jealousy, of other writers' fame," she said, and yet what could Virginia Woolf envy in another writer! Each of her novels begins as a small masterpiece, and then suddenly her stunning talent for voice creeps in and no matter the station or mask of the character, we feel ourselves shaken by her knowing. Recommended reading: The Waves, Jacob's Room, Mrs. Dalloway
    13. Geoffrey Chaucer
    Penned the relentlessly inventive and frequently hilarious Canterbury Tales,a foundation of English literature that badly deserves another 'translation' by a major voice. We'd elect Paul Muldoon, but he's too busy resuscitatingthe just plain awful New Yorker poetry section. 
    12. Dante
    Born in 1265, he was the smartest man who had ever lived up until then. Called the father of the Italian language. Master of theology, the Inferno is brilliant in both concept and execution. The Divine Comedy is the masterpiece of masterpieces.
    11. Fyodor Doestoyevsky
    In The Double and Notes from the Underground he penned the canonical texts for the modern novel, for modern experience in general. He dug the ditch for literature to explore themes and motifs, aspects of the human existence, that had never before been attempted. As Virginia Woolf wrote, "The novels of Dostoevsky are seething whirlpools, gyrating sandstorms, waterspouts which hiss and boil and suck us in. They are composed purely and wholly of the stuff of the soul. Against our wills we are drawn in, whirled round, blinded, suffocated, and at the same time filled with a giddy rapture. Out of Shakespeare there is no more exciting reading." For that reason, Bill Shakespeare ranked higher on this list.
    10. Marcel Proust
    Was he the most exciting writer you've ever read? No, but at his best, Proust achieved the kind of highs that fiction had never before approached. Really, it wasn't fiction; it was the kind of autobiography, the sort of scale that was new and fresh. Remembrance of Things Past is so difficult to translate that it probably has not even been expressed sufficiently in English. Despite this, he took the step forward that the novel needed, and he did it for his own sake.
    9. Anton Chekhov
    He practically invented the modern novel, the modern short story, and the modern play. A doctor like William Carlos Williams, his vision of the sentence was serene and beautiful, and his novella My Life remains the greatest achievement in that genre. His stories mattered quite a bit; they are acclaimed by many as the best ever done in that form, and his plays are beautiful and dramatic, and so, so sad. Recommended reading: My Life, The Cherry Orchard, Three Sisters, "The Bishop"
    8. Vladimir Nabokov
    The West's mad and zany master. Lolita is probably more important thanThe Odyssey. It is better written, at least. His stories are sublime pictures of the sane insane man behind the moving inventiveness of Pale Fire. Talked a good game: try his lectures. Recommended Reading: Ada, The Real Life of Sebastian Knight.
    7. Samuel Beckett
    Maybe the greatest prose stylist we ever had, and also the best playwright besides Bill? God never came, but he did, to read things over, survey the situation, and judge human behavior. Master of how we speak to one another, why we say the things we do. Recommended reading: Endgame,Krapp's Last Tape, Molloy, Malone Dies, the short prose works. 
    6. John Milton
    The king of all the poets, Milton attempted the essential story of man, beginning with his rise and chronicling his fall. He alone is the master of meter, of the telling phrase. He practically invented the use of the adjective. Before dying in 1674, he was born to a Puritan family and lived his life out as a Protestant. He planned to enter the ministry but was expelled. Penned some of the most cogent political writing of the time only helps his cause. He wrote Paradise Lost while blind, and sold its copyright for £10. The greatest poet of this time or any other.
    5. Gertrude Stein
    To know that you have picked up something she has written, perhaps casually, or it was given to you, and to open her little world of language, where nothing was explained, and the reader had to come the rest of the way herself. She mastered being famous or notorious. Delivered those magnificent deadpan lectures. Said more in three words than most did in whole books. Recommended reading: Tender Buttons, Everybody's Autobiography, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas.
    4. James Joyce
    We leave Finnegans Wake to the aliens to hope they can understand what we can't. But he wrote the beginnings of the short story we recognize today, the tragic and insane last moments of "The Dead." Ditto the ultimate line of "Evangeline" in Dubliners: "Her eyes gave him no sign of love or farewell or recognition." The most profound symbolist we have: the joy and fun of Ulysses, he gave more to the prose than you could, he forced you to be more, to cross to where he was standing, seeing as only he could. Recommended reading: Exiles, Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man.
    3. William Shakespeare
    There's a lot to say about Bill. His mercy, his ways of thinking! He admired everything he gave voice to, we can also hope he admired himself. He took the old stories, and he wrote them new. Romeo and Juliet is just tremendous. Hamlet was better. Who could do comedy and tragedy with equal aplomb? He was master of satire, of broad and physical comedy. He was easy with stage directions, easy with criminals, harder on saints. Recommended reading: The SonnetsKing Lear, Othello, The Tempest, Twelfth Night, The Merchant of Venice.
    2. Franz Kafka
    He was a genius, our brightest genius, our maker of myth and hater of self. Proof it can come from any place, even hate or fear. The Trial is forever his masterpiece. It can be read in any place, in any time, and it becomes about that place and time. It is man losing the primitive, acquiring a greater sense, changing into a monster, and growing no smarter about who he is or why he is there. All his novels are classics, even minor ones. His letter-writing! He is a code-maker, an analyst, a man of endless feeling, reserve, and talent. He wrote to God, addressed God, was God. As Whittaker Chambers put it about The Trial: "Beside that scene, against the cumulative background of that terrible story, most that has been written in our time about man's lot seems rather childlike. And beside Kafka's insatiable posing of the infinite question, most of his contemporaries' answers seem rather childish." Recommended reading: In The Penal Colony, The Castle, The Metamorphisis. 
    1. William Faulkner
    Racism is not the greatest crime an author can commit, telling the truth is. Somehow Faulkner avoided both, achieving that glistening thing beyond truth, the local. Perhaps only Charles Olson, among the Americans, gives us as real a sense of place as Faulkner's apocryphal Yoknapatawpha County. The man could string together four, five adjectives and make it sound real. His command of syntactical structures pushed the language forward at least seventy-five years, which is to say nothing of his mesmerizing use of dialogue. There is a mindset in Faulkner that is at worst delusion and at best clairvoyance that sings the intricacies of capitalistic suffering deeper than naturalism and more fruitfully its accuracies than any mere realist. The personages in his books live not according to how he wrote them, but with a further life, unaccountable to genius or other machinations of ego. If we can keep anything, we take his lexicon, the words that lie at the interstisice of our wanting and our wanting to be. Our master, for all time. 
    Alex Carnevale is the editor of This Recording. Will Hubbard is the executive editor of This Recording. Read the This Recording tumblr here. We appreciate your comments belowenjoyment, or for science fair resources.
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     9.41
     99.94
    23CR SUNSTEIN Author Network Linked Data
    law (520 scholars) 
     9.41
     99.93
    24K TANAKA Author Network Linked Data
    plant sciences (545 scholars) 
     9.29
     99.93
    25S SCHULTZ Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, electrical & electronic (1632 scholars) 
     9.14
     99.93
    26L WACQUANT Author Network Linked Data
    history (417 scholars) 
     9.13
     99.92
    27U BECK Author Network Linked Data
    sociology (1099 scholars) 
     9.13
     99.92
    28A RUBIO Author Network Linked Data
    forestry (144 scholars) 
     9.09
     99.92
    29M KRISHNAMURTHY Author Network Linked Data
    library and information science (106 scholars) 
     9.00
     99.92
    30SH SNYDER Author Network Linked Data
    biology (2137 scholars) 
     8.97
     99.91
    31LA LIOTTA Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, hardware & architecture (670 scholars) 
     8.91
     99.91
    32B VOGELSTEIN Author Network Linked Data
    medicine (282 scholars) 
     8.84
     99.91
    33RA WEINBERG Author Network Linked Data
    medicine, general & internal (599 scholars) 
     8.80
     99.90
    34KR POPPER Author Network Linked Data
    philosophy (721 scholars) 
     8.80
     99.90
    35L EDWARDS Author Network Linked Data
    nuclear science & technology (98 scholars) 
     8.77
     99.90
    36J MORRISON Author Network Linked Data
    computer science (1368 scholars) 
     8.60
     99.90
    37N ZHOU Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, mechanical (530 scholars) 
     8.42
     99.89
    38L CHEN Author Network Linked Data
    information technology (230 scholars) 
     8.31
     99.89
    39HA SIMON Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, theory & methods (798 scholars) 
     8.23
     99.89
    40M TWARDOWSKI Author Network Linked Data
    architecture (164 scholars) 
     8.18
     99.88
    41ZP BAZANT Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, civil (361 scholars) 
     8.08
     99.88
    42WF STEWART Author Network Linked Data
    economics (1588 scholars) 
     8.04
     99.88
    43L XIE Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, civil (361 scholars) 
     8.00
     99.88
    44J QIN Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, information systems (2360 scholars) 
     7.87
     99.87
    45J FOLKMAN Author Network Linked Data
    medical (97 scholars) 
     7.86
     99.87
    46JE STIGLITZ Author Network Linked Data
    economics (1588 scholars) 
     7.80
     99.87
    47LA ZADEH Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, artificial intelligence (2858 scholars) 
     7.78
     99.86
    48P KRUGMAN Author Network Linked Data
    economics (1588 scholars) 
     7.68
     99.86
    49RJ DOLAN Author Network Linked Data
    psychology (1397 scholars) 
     7.67
     99.86
    50H YU Author Network Linked Data
    business (571 scholars) 
     7.67
     99.85
    51R LANGER Author Network Linked Data
    biology (2137 scholars) 
     7.65
     99.85
    52J TRAPMAN Author Network Linked Data
    literature (173 scholars) 
     7.57
     99.85
    53L HOOD Author Network Linked Data
    biology (2137 scholars) 
     7.50
     99.85
    54JF SALLIS Author Network Linked Data
    psychology (1397 scholars) 
     7.46
     99.84
    55Y YANG Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, chemical (299 scholars) 
     7.45
     99.84
    56W SHAKESPEARE Author Network Linked Data
    literature (173 scholars) 
     7.45
     99.84
    57G DELEUZE Author Network Linked Data
    philosophy (721 scholars) 
     7.44
     99.83
    58DE KNUTH Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, software engineering (1154 scholars) 
     7.41
     99.83
    59TA SPRINGER Author Network Linked Data
    communication (538 scholars) 
     7.34
     99.83
    60HA QUIGLEY Author Network Linked Data
    machine learning (84 scholars) 
     7.21
     99.83
    61J BUTLER Author Network Linked Data
    philosophy (721 scholars) 
     7.16
     99.82
    62E OSTROM Author Network Linked Data
    economics (1588 scholars) 
     7.14
     99.82
    63A EINSTEIN Author Network Linked Data
    physics (568 scholars) 
     7.12
     99.82
    64YM KIM Author Network Linked Data
    education & educational research (640 scholars) 
     7.08
     99.81
    65JW HUTCHINSON Author Network Linked Data
    mechanics (133 scholars) 
     7.06
     99.81
    66SL KUNKEL Author Network Linked Data
    biochemistry & molecular biology (1401 scholars) 
     7.05
     99.81
    67B JONSSON Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, information systems (2360 scholars) 
     7.05
     99.81
    68AE KAZDIN Author Network Linked Data
    web of science® (72 scholars) 
     7.03
     99.80
    69R AMANN Author Network Linked Data
    biotechnology & applied microbiology (276 scholars) 
     7.00
     99.80
    70I KANT Author Network Linked Data
    philosophy (721 scholars) 
     6.94
     99.80
    71M KARIN Author Network Linked Data
    biochemistry & molecular biology (1401 scholars) 
     6.92
     99.79
    72P HEALEY Author Network Linked Data
    urban planning (124 scholars) 
     6.90
     99.79
    73AD SMITH Author Network Linked Data
    chemistry, organic (290 scholars) 
     6.89
     99.79
    74J MASSAGUE Author Network Linked Data
    biochemistry & molecular biology (1401 scholars) 
     6.88
     99.78
    75T BELYTSCHKO Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, mechanical (530 scholars) 
     6.86
     99.78
    76AG AYALA Author Network Linked Data
    computer science education (104 scholars) 
     6.86
     99.78
    77NH CHUA Author Network Linked Data
    plant sciences (545 scholars) 
     6.86
     99.78
    78C DARWIN Author Network Linked Data
    geology (382 scholars) 
     6.80
     99.77
    79M HEIDEGGER Author Network Linked Data
    philosophy (721 scholars) 
     6.80
     99.77
    80S THRUN Author Network Linked Data
    robotics (311 scholars) 
     6.77
     99.77
    81A SHLEIFER Author Network Linked Data
    economics (1588 scholars) 
     6.71
     99.76
    82E FERRANNINI Author Network Linked Data
    medicine, general & internal (599 scholars) 
     6.71
     99.76
    83WK LIU Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, mechanical (530 scholars) 
     6.70
     99.76
    84H GARCIA-MOLINA Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, information systems (2360 scholars) 
     6.67
     99.76
    85HF SCHAEFER III Author Network Linked Data
    chemistry, analytical (314 scholars) 
     6.67
     99.75
    86C RENFREW Author Network Linked Data
    archaeology (331 scholars) 
     6.64
     99.75
    87PR SCHLEYER Author Network Linked Data
    chemistry, organic (290 scholars) 
     6.61
     99.75
    88NA SALINGAROS Author Network Linked Data
    architecture (164 scholars) 
     6.61
     99.74
    89M LORETI Author Network Linked Data
    automation & control systems (302 scholars) 
     6.60
     99.74
    90MD MILLER Author Network Linked Data
    education & educational research (640 scholars) 
     6.57
     99.74
    91KE MCHUGH Author Network Linked Data
    urban planning (124 scholars) 
     6.55
     99.74
    92DE SUTHERLAND Author Network Linked Data
    criminology & penology (83 scholars) 
     6.55
     99.73
    93HS PARK Author Network Linked Data
    engineering, mechanical (530 scholars) 
     6.55
     99.73
    94D TOWSLEY Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, information systems (2360 scholars) 
     6.55
     99.73
    95HE STANLEY Author Network Linked Data
    physics, condensed matter (614 scholars) 
     6.54
     99.72
    96EF FAMA Author Network Linked Data
    business, finance (490 scholars) 
     6.53
     99.72
    97GB GIANNAKIS Author Network Linked Data
    telecommunications (475 scholars) 
     6.50
     99.72
    98JL HALL Author Network Linked Data
    information science & library science (666 scholars) 
     6.50
     99.72
    99M ABADI Author Network Linked Data
    computer science, information systems (2360 scholars) 
     6.48
     99.71
    100R RAMESH Author Network Linked Data
    materials science, coatings & films (57 scholars) 
     6.48
     99.71