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The Great American Novel
The Great American Novel | Philip Roth
8 posts | 1 read | 2 to read
Gil Gamesh, the only pitcher who ever literally tried to kill the umpire. The ex-con first baseman, John Baal, "The Babe Ruth of the Big House," who never hit a home run sober. If you've never heard of them-or of the Ruppert Mundys, the only homeless big-league ball team in American history-it's because of the Communist plot, and the capitalist scandal, that expunged the entire Patriot League from baseball memory. In this ribald, richly imagined, and wickedly satiric novel, Roth turns baseball's status as national pastime and myth into an occasion for unfettered picaresque farce, replete with heroism and perfidy, ebullient wordplay and a cast of characters that includes the House Un-American Activities Committee.
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Leftcoastzen
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#DecemberDreams #WhiteStack it is always fun to revisit the shelves for these challenges. Cannot believe it‘s December!🎅🎄

Eggs IKR!?! Yesterday it was January‘23 🤔 11mo
54 likes1 comment
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Shannon_McKinney
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Snapped this at the library & thought I‘d share. #thegreatamericanread

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Samplergal
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I‘ve read 40/100. 2. I was interested in more than a couple id not heard of. I am, however, going to read Invisible Man and Their Eyes we‘re Watching God as I have these two on my TBR pile. For years. 3. To Kill a Mockingbird. #GARThoughts.

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ChrisBohjalian
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“Stop worrying about growing old. And think about growing up.” ― Philip Roth. #RIP -- and thank you. All of us who read and wonder will miss you. (I could have chosen from a lot of Roth in my library, but somehow this title seemed perfect for an image this morning.) #PhilipRoth

Samplergal He will be missed. 6y
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Leftcoastzen
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RIP Phillip Roth.

38 likes1 comment
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MrBook
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From the incredible @TheBookbabeblog84 : PBS will be airing a new series called The Great American Read in May....and I am always interested in what people believe is #TheGreatAmericanNovel?

It's really tough. Which best typifies excellent literature & the American experience?

Maybe it'll help if we break this down by time period. Which book is the best:

Pre-1800:
1800-1850:
1851-1900:
1901-1950:
1951-2000:
2001-Present:

#BookTalk

chuckstar158 My most recent favorite for the Great American Novel spans a few of those eras. The Son by Phillipp Meyer. It covered generations of a Southern Texas family. It felt like a realistic story that didn‘t rose colored glass the American success story. (edited) 7y
DGRachel I hate these “what is the great American novel” things because Literature is subjective. I had an American Literature professor who claimed Moby Dick was “THE Great American Novel” and said every literature student owed it to themselves to read that book. IT IS AN AWFUL NOVEL! It was so tedious, it took me an entire summer to get through, but I refuse to believe I‘m not a real Lit student because I hated MD. *end rant* (sorry) 😔 7y
MrBook @chuckstar158 That's a great one! 7y
See All 20 Comments
MrBook @DGRachel Ahhh, no need to be sorry 🤗. I didn't much care for MD either. I don't think it can be THE Great American Novel since it captures only one very narrow bit of Americana--coastal New England 19th-Century whaling. I'm thinking broader representation needs to be considered for TGAN. MD deserves its respected status, but it's too...I don't know...distant maybe? It doesn't transcend eras well. 7y
MrBook @Kimberlone You're definitely not alone with that choice 😁. 7y
Ubookquitous I can‘t imagine picking one- to diverse a nation to say any captures the American experience. I think many on the list wonderfully shows a part of it for some people 7y
Schlinkles I think it‘s less about what the “great American novel” is and more about what the most beloved novel of the majority of Americans is. 7y
tracy.m.ng Ohhh this is an interesting question. I do love Catcher in the Rye and Of nice and men 7y
DGRachel @Kimberlone I love me some Mark Twain. 😂😍 7y
MrBook Here's my choices per time-period:

Pre-1800:
Diary (Samuel Seward)

1800-1850:
The Last of the Mohicans
The Scarlet Letter

1851-1900:
The Adventures of Huck Finn

1901-1950:
The Great Gatsby
The Grapes of Wrath

1951-2000:
To Kill A Mockingbird
The Killer Angels

2001-Present:
MiddleSex
The Goldfinch
7y
azulaco I love your choices @MrBook 7y
dsfisher The Killer Angels surprised me but I totally agree and To Kill a Mockingbird definitely belongs. I am not a fan of either The Great Gatsby or The Grapes of Wrath. These lists are always so subjective @DGRachel 7y
MrBook @azulaco Thank you ☺️?! @dsfisher They are! I think that makes it fun though ☺️?! I don't know if there can be a "right" answer. Same thing with the "100 Greatest Films" lists, lol. But...the original "The Twilight Zone" is the best tv series of all time, without question ???. I wound up reading TKA 5 different times for pleasure and then classes, lol, and getting so in-depth with it, I've been persuaded it's one of the seminal works. (edited) 7y
Graywacke Love your choices. Maybe could break up 1951-2000. I might slip in Beloved. Maybe Suttree or Infinite Jest too, or maybe not. MD needs some love. Definitely not a mainstream American novel then or ever, but a special forwarded thinking subversive book that handles atheism and homosexuality addressed to 1840‘s hyper conservative New England!! (edited) 7y
Bourriquet76 I‘m bad at years, but To Kill a Mockingbird should be near the top. Kurt Vonnegut needs an entry too, though my favorite of his is not his most popular (Slapstick). 7y
TheBookbabeblog84 Thanks for sharing ♥️ 7y
britt_brooke I‘m currently rereading To Kill a Mockingbird. It‘s one of my favorites and such an amazing and timeless piece. It gets my vote. 💚 (edited) 7y
britt_brooke @Bourriquet76 I completely agree with To Kill a Mockingbird. Also a Vonnegut fan here. 💚 His books are so timely. 7y
britt_brooke @MrBook I‘ve read a few of your choices, but not all. Great list! I plan to (finally, at the urging of my husband) read Killer Angels this year., (edited) 7y
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Sharpeipup
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sprainedbrain Ooooooh! Thank you for sharing! 7y
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jveezer
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Great quote from an amazing novelist. Probably unrelated to Roth's book but...