Henry Oliver poses an interesting question: “What should be on a list of almost Great Books?” Consider it less a critical exercise than a parlor game. Think of the books you have admired and enjoyed, and perhaps reread, that lie beyond the canonical borders, the Dante/Shakespeare/Tolstoy axis. Oliver considers his own list “personal and partial,” as it should be. Here’s my Top Ten (+ two), listed as the titles occurred to me:
Henry Mayhew: London
Labour and the London Poor (1851)
Whittaker Chambers: Witness
(1952)
Anton Chekhov: Sakhalin
Island (1895)
Charles Montagu Doughty: Travels
in Arabia Deserta (1888)
A.J. Liebling: Between
Meals: An Appetite for Paris (1962)
Walter Savage Landor: Imaginary
Conversations (1824-29)
Ronald Knox: Enthusiasm:
A Chapter in the History of Religion (1950)
The Complete Essays of
J.V. Cunningham
(2024)
Guy Davenport: The
Geography of the Imagination (1981)
Jonathan Swift: A
Journal to Stella (1766)
Michael Oakeshott: Rationalism
in Politics (1962)
James Boswell: The
Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides (1785)
Walter de la Mare: Memoirs of a Midget (1921)
Cluny (a Roman Catholic reprint house) has recently reprinted Knox's "Enthusiasm," FYI.
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