Tuesday, June 9, 2026

My top 10 by Adam Thirlwell



My top 10
Adam Thirlwell
Author
 


1War and Peace (#7)
by Leo Tolstoy

2In Search of Lost Time (#5)
by Marcel Proust

3The Man Without Qualities (#67)
by Robert Musil

4The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman (#19)
by Laurence Sterne

5Orlando (#54)
by Virginia Woolf

6I Served the King of England
by Bohumil Hrabal

7The Trial (#27)
by Franz Kafka

8The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
by Gertrude Stein

9Life, a User's Manual
by Georges Perec

10Chéri
by Colette

My top 10 by Ian McEwan

 

Headshot of Ian McEwan

My top 10
Ian McEwan
Author

1Ulysses (#3)
by James Joyce
2Anna Karenina (#6)
by Leo Tolstoy
3Middlemarch (#1)
by George Eliot
4The Plague
by Albert Camus
5The Metamorphosis (#48)
by Franz Kafka
6Pride and Prejudice (#9)
by Jane Austen
7Madame Bovary (#10)
by Gustave Flaubert
8The Magic Mountain (#42)
by Thomas Mann
9Our Mutual Friend (#73)
by Charles Dickens
10Rabbit at Rest
by John Updike







My top by 10 Ian Rankin

 



My top 10
Ian Rankin
Author

1Bleak House (#12)
by Charles Dickens
"Charles Dickens' masterpiece. It has everything."
2The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
by Robert Louis Stevenson
"Robert Louis Stevenson's satisfying, creepy, succinct exploration of human nature and good and evil."
3The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (#31)
by Muriel Spark
"Muriel Spark dusts off Jekyll and Hyde and gives us a charismatic monster reimagined as a prim schoolteacher in Edinburgh. A real Tardis of a book, much bigger on the inside than the outside."
4The Big Sleep
by Raymond Chandler
"Chandler brought elegance and a sharp wit to the crime story and helped define the genre, as well as playing merry hell with the American dream."
5Crime and Punishment (#69)
by Fyodor Dostoevsky
"The most humane and challenging description of a common murderer whose guilt won't allow him a moment's peace."
6A Dance to the Music of Time
by Anthony Powell
"A single narrative constructed as twelve episodes. Brilliantly clever dissection of upper class life in England seen against the backdrop of the whole twentieth century. Witty and caustic and giving us Widmerpool, one of the most extraordinary characters in all literature."
7Song of Solomon (#40)
by Toni Morrison
"An electrifying novel about Black experience in America, told in the most luminous prose imaginable. A book I could read again and again and never tire of."
8Money
by Martin Amis
"An evisceration of greed and delusion and privilege. John Self is mesmeric, even as he descends into hell."
9Lanark
by Alasdair Gray
"An extraordinary narrative, unlike anything you will ever read. It sent jolts through contemporary Scottish writing and helped start many an author's career."
10Life After Life
by Kate Atkinson
"I marvelled at this book, even as I was reading it for the first time. Such a vivid imagination, a clarity of purpose, and perfect execution. It shouldn't work but it does. Atkinson is a genius."