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200 Books That Shaped 200 Years of Literature

 
 
 

When The Center for Fiction opened its doors in 1821 as the Mercantile Library of New York, Percy Bysshe Shelley mourned his friend John Keats in his poem, “Adonais,” William Hazlitt released his collection of essays, Table Talk, Lord Byron finished his play, Sardanapalus, and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe published his fourth novel, Wilhelm Meister's Journeyman Years. As an organization whose mission is to both reflect and advance the art of fiction, we’re honoring our 200th anniversary by looking back on how storytelling has evolved since then. We set forth to create a list of the 200 works of fiction that had the most impact on American readers, writers, and culture over these past two centuries. 

It was a daunting task. Thankfully, we had the help of a panel of writers associated with The Center: Mahogany L. Browne, Amina Cain, Alexander Chee, Kia Corthron, Michael Cunningham, Alvaro Enrigue, Neil Gaiman, Rigoberto Gonzalez, Kaitlyn Greenidge, Stephen King, Maaza Mengiste, Claire Messud, Jason Reynolds, Salman Rushdie, Esmeralda Santiago, Jonathan Santlofer, V. E. Schwab, Gary Shteyngart, Jane Smiley, Monique Truong, and De'Shawn Charles Winslow. Each author contributed five titles they wanted to be included, which you can find here, and The Center’s staff set to work on completing the list.

There were many questions to consider. How do we balance the classics and books that, as Alvaro Enrigue put it, “make the world a great place for a reader” even though they are not the most read? How do we choose between the many impactful greats of prolific writers? How much do we consider the character of an author, and how do we contend with books whose impact is undeniable but perhaps not for the best? How do we draw the line between “influential” and “popular”?

The resulting 200 books shifted what types of fiction got read and written, launched or served as turning points for particular genres, opened the doors for whose work could be published, changed the rules of what we could write about and how we could write about it, inspired feverish searches for “the next” of their kind, or affected societal change far beyond the world of literature. As with any list, there are dozens of incredible books that didn’t make the final cut for each title named here, but after much anguish and debate, we present the 200 Books That Shaped 200 Years of Literature.

 
 

1821 - 1899

 
 
 

1900 - 1929

 
 
 

1930 - 1949

 
 
 

1950 - 1959

 
 
 

1960 - 1969

 
 
 

1970 - 1979

 
 
 

1980 - 1989

 
 
 

1990 - 1999

 
 
 

2000 - 2009

 
 
 

2010 - 2021

 
 

Author Picks

 

Mahogany L. Browne


Amina Cain


Alexander Chee


Kia Corthron


Michael Cunningham


Alvaro Enrigue


Neil Gaiman


Rigoberto González


Kaitlyn Greenidge


Stephen King


Maaza Mengiste


Claire Messud


Jason Reynolds


Salman Rushdie


Esmeralda Santiago


Jonathan Santlofer


V. E. Schwab


Gary Shteyngart


Jane Smiley


Monique Truong


De'Shawn Charles Winslow