Postwar British fiction: a reading list

1. A fifties’ novel, or a novel by Angus Wilson OR GEORGE ORWELL

George Orwell: Nineteen Eighty-Four

Kingsley Amis: Lucky Jim

John Wain: Hurry On Down

John Braine: Room at the Top

Alan Sillitoe: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning

Angus Wilson: Anglo-Saxon Attitudes or The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot or No Laughing Matter or As If by Magic

2. “Catholic” writers

Evelyn Waugh: Brideshead Revisited

Graham Greene: The Heart of the Matter or The Quiet American or The Comedians or Travels with My Aunt

Muriel Spark: Memento Mori or The Comforters or The Bachelors or The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

3. William Golding, Samuel beckett or Anthony Burgess

William Golding: Lord of the Flies or The Inheritors or The Spire or Rites of Passage

Samuel Beckett: Molloy

Anthony Burgess: The Malayan Trilogy (The Long Day Wanes) or Enderby or A Clockwork Orange or The Wanting Seed or Tremor of Intent or Earthly Powers or End of the World News

4. Iris Murdoch: The Bell or The Unicorn or The Black Prince or The Sea, the Sea or The Nice and the Good

5. A novel of manners or a novel of sensibility

Elizabeth Bowen: The Heat of the Day

L. P. Hartley: The Go-Between

Ivy Compton-Burnett: Manservant and Maidservant or A Heritage and Its History

Rosamond Lehmann: The Echoing Grove

Barbara Pym: A Glass of Blessings or Excellent Women

Elizabeth Taylor: A Wreath of Roses or Palladian

Margaret Drabble: Waterfall

Anita Brookner: Hotel du Lac

Kate Atkinson: Behind the Scenes at the Museum

6. FEMININE NOVELS AND FEMINIST NOVELISTS

Doris Lessing: The Golden Notebook or The Fifth Child

Jean Rhys: Wide Sargasso Sea

Jeanette Winterson: The Passion or Sexing the Cherry or Written on the Body

A. S. Byatt: Possession or Angels and Insects

Fay Weldon: The Life and Times of a She-Devil

Marina Warner: Indigo

Sarah Waters: Affinity

7. Angela Carter: The Magic Toyshop or Nights at the Circus or Wise Children

8. HISTORICAL FICTION AND HISTORIOGRAPHIC METAFICTION

J.G. Farrell: Troubles or The Siege of Krishnapur

John Fowles: The French Lieutenant's Woman

Graham Swift Waterland

Timothy Mo: An Insular Possession

Robert Nye: Falstaff or Merlin or Faust

Julian Barnes: The History of the World in 10 and ½ Chapters

V. S. Naipaul: The Mimic Men or In a Free State

Lawrence Norfolk: Lemprière’s Dictionary or The Pope’s Rhinoceros

D. M. Thomas: The White Hotel

9. THE NINETEEN-EIGHTIES

Martin Amis: Money or Success

Julian Barnes: Flaubert's Parrot

J.G. Ballard: Empire of the Sun

Peter Ackroyd: Hawksmoor or Chatterton or English Music

Ian McEwan: The Innocent

Kazuo Ishiguro: The Remains of the Day

Bruce Chatwin: On the Black Hill

10. Salman Rushdie: Midnight's Children or The Satanic Verses or Shame

11. A CONTEMPORARY NOVEL

Jim Crace: Being Dead or Quarantine or The Gift of Stones

Jonathan Coe: What a Carve Up!

Pat Barker: Regeneration

Hanif Kureishi: The Buddha of Suburbia

Zadie Smith: White Teeth

Timothy Mo: Sour Sweet

Julian Barnes: England, England

Helen Fielding: Bridget Jones’s Diary

Nick Hornby: High Fidelity

Meera Syal: Anita and Me

Salley Vickers: Miss Garnet’s Angel

Monica Ali: Brick Lane

Jane Rogers: Mr. Wroe’s Virgins

12. A SCOTTISH NOVEL

Iain Banks: The Wasp Factory or The Crow Road or Complicity

Alan Warner: Morvern Callar

Irvine Welsh: Trainspotting

James Kelman: How Late It Was, How Late

Alasdair Gray: Poor Things or Lanark

Janice Galloway: The Trick Is to Keep Breathing

Ali Smith: Hotel World

George Mackay Brown: Beside the Ocean of Time

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What follows after this point is NOT COMPULSORY; you do not have to read a novel from this category for the exam; this is simply a list of good writers and novels)

OTHER NOTABLE CONTEMPORARY WRITERS

(a fuller list would include a nuber of books by writers on the list above)

Nicola Barker: The Behindlings; Clear; The Badmans

William Boyd: An Ice-Cream War; The New Confessions

Jenny Diski: The Dream Mistress; Like Mother; Rainforest

Robert Edric: The Book of the Heathen; In Desolate Heaven; Peacetime; Elysium

Lucy Ellman: Varying Degrees of Hopelessness; Sweet Desserts; Doctors and Nurses

Tibor Fischer: Voyage to the End of the Room

James Flint: Habitus

Margaret Forster: The Lady’s Maid

Romesh Gunesekera: The Reef; The Sandglass

Abdulrazak Gurnah: Paradise

Victor Headley: Yardie; Excess

Tobias Hill: The Cryptographer; The Lover of Stones

Hari Kunzru: The Impressionist

A. L. Kennedy: Looking for a Possible Dance

Toby Litt: Deathkidsongs

Tim Lott: White City Blue; The Love Secrets of Don Juan

Duncan Maclean: The Bunker Man

Hilary Mantel: Beyond Black

James Meek: The People’s Act of Love

Martin Millar: The Good Fairies of New York; Ruby and the Stone Age Diet; Lux the Poet

David Mitchell: Ghostwritten; The Cloud Atlas; Black Swan Green

Julie Myerson: Laura Blundy; Something Might Happen

Andrew O’Hagan: Our Fathers

Tim Parks: Cara Massimina; Mimi’s Ghost

Iain Pears: In the Place of Fallen Leaves; In a Land of Plenty

Michele Roberts: The Secret Gospel of Mary Magdalene

Will Self: The Quantity Theory of Insanity; How the Dead Live; The Book of Dave

Rupert Thomson: The Insult; Divided Kingdom; Soft

Alan Wall: The Lightning Cage; China

RECOMMENDED “POPULAR FICTION”

Science fiction, fantasy, cyberpunk, steampunk

John Wyndham: The Midwich Cuckoos or The Chrysalids

J. G. Ballard: The Drowned World; Crash; Terminal Beach; The Atrocity Exhibition; The Concrete Island

Michael Moorcock: Mother London; the Jerry Cornelius novels

Brian Aldiss: Helliconia trilogy; The Hothouse; Arthur C. Clarke: Space Odyssey 2001

Robert Holdstock: Mythago Wood; The Hollowing

Ian Watson: Chekhov’s Journey

Douglas Adams: A Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

Iain M. Banks: Consider Phlebas; The Player of Games

J. R. R. Tolkien: The Lord of the Rings

Philip Pullman: His Dark Materials trilogy

Jon Courtenay Grimwood: the Arabesk novels

China Mieville: Perdido Street Station

Terry Pratchett: The Colour of Magic; Mort

Jeff Noon: Vurt ; Pollen

Richard Morgan: Altered Carbon

Neil Gaiman: the Sandman books

Gothic fiction

Mervyn Peake: the Gormenghast trilogy

Patrick McGrath: The Grotesque; Asylum

Crime fiction

Michael Dibdin: the Aurelio Zen novels (Ratking; Dead Lagoon; Cosi Fan Tutti; A Rich Full Death); The Last Sherlock Holmes Story

Ian Rankin: the Inspector Rebus novels (e.g. Black and Blue; Dead Souls; Knots and Crosses; Falls)

Colin Dexter: the Inspector Morse series (e.g. Last Bus to Woodstock)

Philip Kerr: Berlin Noir

P. D. James: The Skull Beneath the Skin; Original Sin; Devices and Desires

Ruth Rendell: e.g. The Kindness of Ravens

Ruth Rendell writing as Barbara Vine: King Solomon’s Carpet; The Minotaur

Louise Welsh: The Cutting Room

Elizabeth George: the Inspector Lynley novels

C. J. Sansom: the Matthew Shardlake series (e.g. Dissolution; The Sovereign)

Hugh Laurie: The Gun-Seller

Christopher Brookmyre: Boiling the Frog; Quite Ugly One Morning

Nicci French: Killing Me Softly

Spy fiction

Ian Fleming: Casino Royale; Dr. No; From Russia with Love

John LeCarré: The Man Who Came in from the Cold; the Smiley novels (esp. the Karla trilogy, esp. The Honourable Schoolboy)

Other

George Macdonald Fraser: the Flashman novels; Patrick O’Brien: the Aubrey/Maturin novels (Master and Commander)

Joanne Harris: Chocolat

Nick Hornby: High Fidelity; About a Boy

Alex Garland: The Beach

John King: The Football Factory; England Away; Kevin Sampson: Awaydays; Powder; Dougie Brimson: Billy’s Log; The Crew

Ben Elton: This Other Eden; Dead Famous

Mark Haddon: The Curious Case of the Dog in Night-Time