American writers. Famous American writers. American classic writers. The most filmed American writers. Classics

The United States of America can rightfully be proud of literary heritage, which was left by the best American writers. Wonderful works continue to be created even now, however, for the most part they represent fiction and popular literature, which does not contain any food for thought.

The best recognized and unrecognized American writers

Critics still debate whether fiction is beneficial to humans. Some say that it develops imagination and a sense of grammar, and also broadens one’s horizons, and individual works may even change your worldview. Some people think that only scientific literature, containing practical or factual information that can be used in everyday life and develop not spiritually or morally, but materially and functionally. That's why American writers write in a huge number a variety of directions - the literary “market” of America is as large as its cinema and variety scene are diverse.

Howard Phillips Lovecraft: Master of the True Nightmare

Since the American people are greedy for everything bright and unusual, the literary world of Howard Phillips Lovecraft turned out to be just to their taste. It was Lovecraft who gave the world stories about the mythical deity Cthulhu, who fell asleep at the bottom of the ocean millions of years ago and will wake up only when the time of the apocalypse comes. Lovecraft has amassed a huge fan base around the world, with bands, songs, albums, books and films named in his honor. Incredible world, which the Master of Horror created in his works, never ceases to frighten even the most avid and experienced horror fans. Stephen King himself was inspired by Lovecraft's talent. Lovecraft created a whole pantheon of gods and scared the world terrible prophecies. Reading his works, the reader feels a completely inexplicable, incomprehensible and very powerful fear, although the author almost never directly describes what one should be afraid of. The writer makes the reader's imagination work in such a way that he himself imagines the most scary pictures, and this literally makes your blood run cold. Despite the highest writing skills and recognizable style, many American writers found themselves unrecognized during their lifetime, and Howard Lovecraft was one of them.

Master of Monstrous Descriptions - Stephen King

Inspired by the worlds created by Lovecraft, Stephen King created a lot of magnificent works, many of which were filmed. Such American writers as Douglas Clegg, Jeffrey Deaver and many others worshiped his skill. Stephen King is still creating, although he has repeatedly admitted that because of his works, unpleasant supernatural things often happened to him. One of his most famous books, with the short but loud title “It,” excited millions. Critics complain that it is almost impossible to convey the full horror of his works in film adaptations, but brave directors are trying to do this to this day. King’s books such as “The Dark Tower”, “Necessary Things”, “Carrie”, “Dreamcatcher” are very popular. Stephen King not only knows how to create a tense, tense atmosphere, but also offers the reader a lot of completely disgusting and detailed descriptions dismembered bodies and other not very pleasant things.

Classic fantasy from Harry Harrison

American science fiction writer Harry Harrison is still very popular in quite wide circles. His light style, and the language is straightforward and understandable, qualities of his works that make them suitable for readers of almost any age. Garrison's plots are extremely interesting, and the characters are original and interesting, so everyone can find a book to their liking. One of Harrison's most famous books, The Untamed Planet boasts a twisting plot, relatable characters, good humor and even a beautiful romance. This American science fiction writer made people think about the consequences of too much technological progress, and whether we really need space travel if we still cannot control ourselves and our own planet. Harrison showed how you can create science fiction, which will be understandable to both children and adults.

Max Barry and his books for the progressive consumer

Many modern American writers place their main emphasis on the consumer nature of man. On the shelves of bookstores today you can find a lot fiction, which tells about the adventures of fashionable and stylish heroes in the field of marketing, advertising and other big business. However, even among such books you can find real pearls. Max Barry's work sets the bar so high for modern authors that only truly original writers will be able to leapfrog it. His novel "Syrup" concentrates on history young man named Skat, who dreams of making brilliant career in advertising. The ironic style, apt use of strong words and stunning psychological pictures of the characters made the book a bestseller. “Syrup” got its own film adaptation, which did not become as popular as the book, but was almost as good in quality, since Max Barry himself helped the screenwriters work on the film.

Robert Heinlein: a fierce critic of public relations

There is still debate about which writers can be considered modern. Critics believe that they can also be included in their category, and after all, modern American writers should write in a language that would be understandable to today's people and would be interesting to them. Heinlein coped with this task one hundred percent. His satirical and philosophical novel “Passing through the Valley of the Shadow of Death” shows all the problems of our society using a very original plot device. Main character- an elderly man whose brain was transplanted into the body of his young and very beautiful secretary. A lot of time in the novel is devoted to the themes of free love, homosexuality and lawlessness in the name of money. We can say that the book “Passing through the Valley of the Shadow of Death” is a very tough, but at the same time extremely talented satire that exposes modern American society.

and food for hungry young minds

American classic writers concentrated most of all on philosophical, significant issues and directly on the design of their works, and they were almost not interested in further demand. In modern literature published after 2000, it is difficult to find something truly deep and original, since all the topics have already been brilliantly covered by the classics. This is observed in the books of the Hunger Games series, written by the young writer Suzanne Collins. Many thoughtful readers doubt that these books are worthy of any attention, since they are nothing more than a parody of real literature. The main attraction of The Hunger Games series, aimed at young readers, is the theme love triangle, shaded by the pre-war state of the country and the general atmosphere of brutal totalitarianism. Film adaptations of Suzanne Collins' novels hit the box office, and the actors who played the leading characters in them became famous throughout the world. Skeptics about this book say that it is better for young people to read at least this than not to read at all.

Frank Norris and his for ordinary people

Some famous American writers are practically unknown to anyone far from the classical literary world to the reader. This can be said, for example, about the work of Frank Norris, who did not stop him from creating the amazing work “Octopus”. The realities of this work are far from the interests of the Russian people, but Norris’s unique writing style invariably attracts lovers of good literature. When we think of American farmers, we always picture smiling, happy, tanned people with an expression of gratitude and humility on their faces. Frank Norris showed real life these people without embellishing it. In the novel "Octopus" there is not even a hint of the spirit of American chauvinism. Americans loved to talk about life ordinary people, and Norris was no exception. It seems like the question social injustice and insufficient remuneration for hard work will concern people of all nationalities at any time in history.

Francis Fitzgerald and his reprimand to unlucky Americans

The great American writer Francis gained a “second popularity” after the release of the recent film adaptation of his magnificent novel “The Great Gatsby.” The film made young people read the classics American literature, and to the performer leading role Leonardo DiCaprio was predicted to win an Oscar, but, as always, he did not receive it. "The Great Gatsby" is a very short novel that vividly illustrates the perverted American morality, masterfully showing the cheap human inside. The novel teaches that friends cannot be bought, just as love cannot be bought. Main character The novel's narrator, Nick Carraway, describes the whole situation from his point of view, which gives the whole plot piquancy and a little ambiguity. All the characters are very original and perfectly illustrate not only American society of that time, but also our present-day realities, since people will never stop hunting for material wealth, despising spiritual depth.

Both poet and prose writer

America's poets and writers have always been distinguished by their amazing versatility. If today authors can create only prose or only poetry, then previously such a preference was considered almost bad taste. For example, the aforementioned Howard Phillitt Lovecraft, in addition to amazingly creepy stories, also wrote poetry. What is especially interesting is that his poems were much lighter and more positive than prose, although they provided no less food for thought. Lovecraft's mastermind, Edgar Allan Poe, also wrote great poems. Unlike Lovecraft, Poe did this much more often and much better, which is why some of his poems are still heard today. Edgar Allan Poe's poems contained not only stunning metaphors and mystical allegories, but also had philosophical overtones. Who knows, perhaps the modern master of the horror genre Stephen King will also sooner or later turn to poetry, tired of complex sentences.

Theodore Dreiser and "An American Tragedy"

The life of ordinary people and the rich was described by many classical authors: Francis Scott Fitzgerald, Bernard Shaw, O'Henry. The American writer Theodore Dreiser also followed this path, placing more emphasis on the psychologism of the characters than directly on the description of everyday problems. His novel "An American Tragedy" brilliantly presented to the world shining example which collapses due to the wrong moral choices and vanity of the protagonist. The reader, oddly enough, is not at all imbued with sympathy for this character, because only a real scoundrel who causes nothing but contempt and hatred can violate all societies so indifferently. In this guy, Theodore Dreiser embodied those people who want to break out of the shackles of a society that is disgusting to them at any cost. However, is this high society really so good that one can kill an innocent person for its sake?

“Sinlessness” became a real sensation last year: it is called Franzen’s most scandalous and most Russian novel. Reasoning about acute social problems, the totalitarian nature of the Internet, feminism and politics are intertwined with the deep, very personal story of one family.

A young girl named Pip's life is a complete mess: she doesn't know her father, can't pay off her student debt, doesn't know how to build relationships, and has a boring job. But her life changes dramatically when she becomes an assistant to hacker Andreas Wulff, who loves nothing more than to publicly reveal other people's secrets.

2. The Secret History, Donna Tartt

Richard Papen remembers student years at a private college in Vermont: he and several of his comrades attended a private course by an eccentric teacher on ancient culture. One prank of an elite circle of students ended in a murder, which only at first glance remained unpunished.

After the incident, other secrets of the heroes are revealed, which lead to new tragedies in their lives.

3. American Psycho, Bret Easton Ellis

Most famous novel Ellis is already considered modern classics. The main character is Patrick Bateman, a handsome, rich and seemingly intelligent young man from Wall Street. But behind the good looks and expensive suits lies greed, hatred and rage. At night he tortures and kills people in the most in sophisticated ways, without a system and without a plan.

4. “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” by Jonathan Safran Foer

A touching story from the perspective of a 9-year-old boy Oscar. His father died in one of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. While examining his father's closet, Oscar finds a vase, and in it is a small envelope with the inscription "Black" and a key inside. Inspired and filled with curiosity, Oscar is ready to go around all the Blacks in New York to find the answer to the riddle. This is a story about overcoming bereavement, post-disaster New York, and human kindness.

5. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

“The Catcher in the Rye” about modern teenagers is how critics dubbed Stephen Chbosky’s book, which sold a million copies and was filmed by the author himself.

Charlie is a typical quiet, silent observer of what is happening, goes to high school. After a recent nervous breakdown, he withdrew into himself. To overcome inner experiences, he begins to write letters. Letters to a friend, unknown person- to the reader of this book. On the advice of his new comrade Pete, he tries to become “not a sponge, but a filter” - to live life to the fullest, and not watch her from the side.

6. The Hours, Michael Cunningham

The story of one day in three lives women from different eras from a Pulitzer Prize winner. The destinies of the British writer Virginia Woolf, the American housewife Laura from Los Angeles and the publishing editor Clarissa Vaughan, at first glance, are connected only by the book - the novel Mrs. Dalloway. But by the end it becomes clear that the lives and problems of the heroines, despite all the external differences, are the same.

7. Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn

Nick and Amazing Amy are the perfect couple. But on the day of the fifth anniversary, Amy disappears from the house - there are all traces of abduction. The whole city goes in search of the missing woman and sympathizes with Nick, until Amy's diary falls into the hands of the police, because of which her husband becomes the main suspect in the murder. The main intrigue of the novel is who was the real victim in this situation.

Flynn's novel attracts with its unconventional view of modern marriage: partners marry beautiful projections of each other and then are very surprised when behind the invented image a living person is discovered, whom they do not know at all.

8. Slaughterhouse-Five, or the Children's Crusade, Kurt Vonnegut

The writer's difficult war experience is reflected in this novel. Memories of the bombing in Dresden are shown through the eyes of the absurd, timid soldier Billy Pilgrim - one of those foolish children who were thrown into a terrible war. But Vonnegut would not be himself if he had not also introduced an element of fantasy into the novel: either due to post-traumatic syndrome, or due to alien intervention, Pilgrim learned to travel in time.

Despite the fantastic nature of what is happening, the message of the novel is quite real and clear: Vonnegut ridicules stereotypes about “real men” and demonstrates the pointlessness of wars.

9. “Beloved,” Toni Morrison

Toni Morrison got Nobel Prize in Literature for "bringing to life an important aspect of American reality in her dream-filled, poetry-filled novels." Time magazine named the novel “Beloved” one of the 100 best books in English.

The main character is the slave Sethe, who, along with her children, escaped from her cruel masters and remained free for only 28 days. When the chase overtakes Sethe, she kills her daughter with her own hands - so that she does not know slavery and does not experience the same thing as her mother. The memory of the past and this terrible choice haunts Sethe all her life.

10. A Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin

Fantasy epic about magical world The Seven Kingdoms, where the struggle for the Iron Throne continues, while a terrible winter approaches the entire continent. On at the moment Five novels out of a planned seven have been published. The remaining two parts are awaited by both fans of the writer’s work and fans of “”, a series based on the saga that is breaking all popularity records.

The Great Gatsby has been released - the long-awaited interpretation by Baz Luhrmann classic work American literature. Surely millions of hands will now reach out to bookshelves, to remove Fitzgerald's volume from there. Which American author is most often reread by directors?

Lyman Frank Baum

60 novels and stories (+ 4 that are lost)
68 stories (+ 3 lost)
5 poetic works
12 pieces (+ 4 lost)
Film adaptations: 105 (large - 31)

Baum was one of the most talented children's writers of his era. But he remained in history mainly as the “court historian of Oz” - that’s what he called himself. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of fantasies about this magical world, and a significant part of them have been embodied in cinema. Baum's most famous film adaptation can be considered "The Wizard of Oz" by Victor Fleming (in the same 1939 he filmed "Gone with the Wind") with Judy Garland in the role of Dorothy. And recently, the director of “Spider-Man” and “Evil Dead” Sam Raimi turned to the history of Oz, filming the film “Oz the Great and Powerful”, a kind of prequel to Fleming’s film.

Henry James

20 novels
112 stories
12 plays
Film adaptations: 72 (large - 29)

James lived in Europe from the age of 30, so it is impossible to consider him a purely American writer. And a year before his death, he generally accepted British citizenship. However, it was the inhabitants of the New World who most often became the heroes of his works. The film "The Wings of the Dove", filmed in 1997 by Ian Softley based on the novel by Henry James, was nominated for an Oscar four times.

Francis Scott Fitzgerald

About 70 stories
5 novels
1 piece
1 collection of journalism
Screen adaptations: 40 (large - 27)

The king of the "Jazz Age", Fitzgerald himself coined this term, uniting the period American history from the end of the First World War to the beginning of the Great Depression. Almost all of his heroes are representatives of the “lost generation”, people who believed in American dream, but did not find in it what they were looking for. So was Jay Gatsby, whose book was filmed five times. The last to do this was Baz Luhrmann, who cast Leonardo DiCaprio in the lead role. Before him, the most famous Gatsby can be considered Robert Redford. And in 2008, David Fincher filmed based on short story Fitzgerald's three-hour film The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, starring Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett.

James Fenimore Cooper

33 novels
5 stories
6 historical works and biographies
2 political essays
6 travel stories
1 memoirs
Film adaptations: 38 (large - 22)

This classic of American literature is famous for his adventure novels. According to legend, Cooper wrote his first work as a bet, promising his wife that he could outdo the book she was reading at that moment. In 1909, the first short film, Leather Stockings, was made based on his novels. And in 1992, Michael Mann directed the film “The Last of the Mohicans” starring Daniel Day-Lewis. The film received an Oscar for best sound.

Ernest Hemingway

10 collections of short stories
11 novels and stories
13 works of documentary prose
Film adaptations: 55 (large - 19)

Hemingway was famous for his short and succinct style, so it is very difficult to count the stories he wrote. Suffice it to remember that it was he who owned one of the most famous short works, which in the original consists of only six words (and when translated it can be shortened to three): “For sale: baby shoes, never worn.” The first time Hemingway's novel was filmed was in 1932 (“A Farewell to Arms”). And in 1999 Russian artist Alexander Petrov created a short film animated film“The Old Man and the Sea”, for which he received an Oscar.

William Faulkner

19 novels and stories
24 stories
1 poetry collection
Film adaptations: 43 (large - 13)

For a long time, Faulkner's works were considered quite difficult to understand and were valued more by critics than by readers. Universal fame came to the writer after he received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1949. In 1959, his most famous novel, The Sound and the Fury, was filmed. Faulkner himself wrote scripts that were not tied to his literary works. Thus, according to his script, director Howard Hawks shot the film “Deep Sleep” in 1946 with Humphrey Bogart in the title role.

Contemporaries

A living legend of 20th century science fiction. The films “The Shawshank Redemption” and “The Green Mile”, directed by Frank Darabont based on the works of King, invariably take the first two places in the top 250 of KinoPoisk. This fall, another film adaptation of “Carrie” is expected, called “Telekinesis” in Russian distribution. This novel was first brought to the screen by Brian De Palma in 1976. His co-stars, Sissy Spacek and Piper Laurie, were nominated for an Oscar for Best female role and Best Supporting Actress respectively.

Ray Bradbury

About 400 stories
11 novels
21 plays
Film adaptations: 58 (large - 19)

When Bradbury passed away last year, his fans around the world could not come to terms with the passing of a writer whose books were so imbued with a love of life. Bradbury's worlds are limitless, everyone can find something of their own in them. And the directors saw them differently. In 1966, the Frenchman François Truffaut filmed the novel Fahrenheit 451, and the film was nominated for the Venetian Golden Lion. And Bradbury himself wrote the script for the 1983 American film adaptation of the novel Something Scary This Way Comes.

Donald Edwin Westlake

10 collections of stories
112 novels
2 documentary stories
Film adaptations: 31 (large - 25)

Westlake wrote many more novels than screenplays, but for one of them, for the film “Scammers,” he was even nominated for an Oscar. Westlake was made famous by the crime genre. His books have been filmed by Jean-Luc Godard (“Made in the USA”, 1966), Peter Yates (“Stolen Stone”, 1972) and Costa-Gavras (“Guillotine Knife”, 2004). Westlake is also known for the Parker series of novels, which he published under the pseudonym Richard Stark. Most recently, the thief Parker was played by Jason Statham in the action film by Taylor Hackford.

Tennessee Williams

20 stories
2 stories
2 poetic works
38 plays (+ 70 one-acts)
Film adaptations: 59 (large - 22)

Scripts based on plays by Tennessee Williams were twice nominated for Oscars: A Streetcar Named Desire in 1952 and Baby Doll in 1957. The first of these films, by the way, won four statuettes. One of them was received by the leading actress Vivien Leigh. Another iconic Williams adaptation is Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, directed by Richard Brooks and starring Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman.

Elmore Leonard

4 stories
48 novels
Film adaptations: 41 (large - 21)

Leonard's calling card is armed heroes and heartfelt dialogues. Directors love this master of the western and detective story. In 2007, James Mangold directed his story into the film Train to Yuma, starring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale. In 1997, Leonard's novel Rum Punch became the basis for the Quentin Tarantino film Jackie Brown. Also film adaptations of the writer’s novels are the 1995 crime comedy “Get Shorty” and its sequel “Be Cool! » 2005. Both films starring John Travolta.

Michael Crichton

10 stories
27 novels
4 documentaries
Film adaptations: 26 (large - 18)

The first novel that Crichton signed with his name was The Andromeda Strain. It was first filmed in 1971 by Robert Wise, and the writer played in the film cameo role. But real fame came to Crichton thanks to the novel Jurassic Park. Steven Spielberg made a cult adventure film based on it, for which Crichton himself wrote the script. In 1997 they released

September 24 is the 120th anniversary of the birth of one of the most famous American writers, Francis Scott Fitzgerald. It is also one of the most difficult to understand, although at first the reader's eyes and mind are blinded by the glamor of the parties described, deep moral and social problems lie behind it. The editors of YUGA.ru, together with the “Read-Gorod” bookstore chain, have selected six more iconic works for this date that will help you look at America and Americans with different eyes.

"The Great Gatsby" - great novel, but there is no greatness either in the life or in the soul of his main character, there are only sparkling illusions, “which give the world such color that, having experienced this magic, a person becomes indifferent to the concept of true and false.” The wealthy millionaire Jay Gatsby had already lost them and, along with them, lost the opportunity to again feel the taste of life and love - and yet all their treasures were at his feet.

The reader is presented with the America of Prohibition, gangsters, playmakers and brilliant parties to the music of Duke Ellington. That very “jazz age,” a magnificent age when it still seemed that all desires would come true, and you could get a star from the sky without even standing on your tiptoes.

The portrait of the main character of the "Trilogy of Desire" series, Frank Cowperwood, is largely based on a real-life person, millionaire Charles Yerkes, and in the last few years, viewers around the world have been following the life central figure series "House of Cards", Frank Underwood. It can be assumed that the president even borrowed the name “great and terrible” from the character created by Dreiser. His whole life revolves around success, he is a shrewd financier and builds his empire, using everything and everyone for his own purposes. That’s exactly what “The Financier” is called, the first novel of the trilogy, where we see how the personality of a prudent businessman was formed, who is ready, without hesitation, to step over the law and moral principles, if they become an obstacle on his way.

The most acutely social and accusatory book ever written in the USA and about the USA, “The Grapes of Wrath” affects the reader, perhaps, no less than Solzhenitsyn’s texts. The cult novel was first published in 1939, won the Pulitzer Prize, and the author himself was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1962. A portrait of a nation during one of the most difficult periods in history, the Great Depression, is painted through the story of a farming family that, after going bankrupt, is forced to uproot and search for food on a grueling journey across the country on that very "Route 66". Like thousands, hundreds of thousands of other people, they go for illusory hope to sunny California, but even greater difficulties, hunger and death await them.

451° Fahrenheit is the temperature at which paper ignites. Bradbury's philosophical dystopia paints a picture of a post-industrial society: this is a future world in which all written publications are mercilessly destroyed by a special squad of firefighters, the possession of books is prosecuted by law, interactive television successfully serves to fool everyone, punitive psychiatry decisively deals with rare dissidents, and incorrigible dissidents are hunted down the electric dog comes out. Today, in Russia in 2016, the relevance of the novel, published in 1953 (already 63 years ago!) is greater than ever - in different parts of the country, home-grown censors are raising their heads who seek to limit freedom of speech precisely by destroying and banning books.

Jack London's life was as romantic - at least when viewed through some lyrical lens - and eventful as his novels, and Martin Eden is considered the pinnacle of his work. This work is about a man who achieved recognition of his talent by society, but was deeply disappointed in the respectable bourgeois stratum that finally accepted him. In the words of the writer himself, this is “the tragedy of a loner trying to instill the truth in the world.” A truly timeless work and a hero whose feelings are understandable to readers on any continent and in any era.

One of the most difficult to understand, but at the same time incredibly interesting and multifaceted authors, Kurt Vonnegut wrote, mixing genres and always leaving the reader with uncertainty - what exactly did he just read, was it an appeal to himself through the pages of a book and What are we even talking about here? In “Breakfast for Champions,” the author surprisingly subtly and accurately destroys stereotypes of perception, showing us man and life on Earth with a detached look, looking as if from another planet, where they don’t know what an apple or a weapon is. The main character, writer Kilgore Trout, is both the author’s alter ego and his interlocutor, he is going to get literary prize. At the same time, someone who reads his novel (the character, Dwayne Hoover, was played by Bruce Willis in the 1999 film adaptation) slowly goes crazy, taking everything written in it at face value and losing touch with reality - as he begins to doubt the reader is also in it.

In John Updike's first novel in the Rabbit series, Harry Engstrom - and this is precisely his nickname - is a young man who has already been crushed by an inexorable reality. rose-colored glasses youth. He went from being the star of his high school basketball team to becoming a husband and father, forced to work in a supermarket to provide for his family. He is unable to come to terms with this and goes on the run. Updike and Kerouac seem to be talking about the same people, but in different tones - so those who have read the latter’s work “On the Road” will be interested in moving from beatnik literature to complex psychological prose, and those who haven’t read it will undoubtedly have a lot of fun switching their attention and diving even deeper into the same topic.

At all recent years 5 I don’t read much. You could even say I don’t read at all. I still haven’t gotten used to electronic versions of books, much less reading from a smartphone, but there’s simply no time for paper ones, and when I have a little time I don’t have a book at hand. This is an Internet infection, everything is because of it.

As a result of all this, I completely got lost in my favorite topic - science fiction and fantasy. But in principle, maybe I would even read something else.

Without being tied to a genre, I met a small list of currently popular American writers. Who read what?

1. "Sinlessness" by Jonathan Franzen


“Sinlessness” became a real sensation last year: it is called Franzen’s most scandalous and most Russian novel. Discussions about pressing social issues, the totalitarian nature of the Internet, feminism and politics are intertwined with the deep, very personal story of one family.

A young girl named Pip's life is a complete mess: she doesn't know her father, can't pay off her student debt, doesn't know how to build relationships, and has a boring job. But her life changes dramatically when she becomes an assistant to hacker Andreas Wulff, who loves nothing more than to publicly reveal other people's secrets.

2. The Secret History, Donna Tartt


Richard Papen recalls his student days at a private college in Vermont: he and several of his friends attended a private course on ancient culture from an eccentric teacher. One prank of an elite circle of students ended in a murder, which only at first glance remained unpunished.

After the incident, other secrets of the heroes are revealed, which lead to new tragedies in their lives.

3. American Psycho, Bret Easton Ellis


Ellis's best-known novel is already considered a modern classic. The main character is Patrick Bateman, a handsome, rich and seemingly intelligent young man from Wall Street. But behind the good looks and expensive suits lies greed, hatred and rage. At night, he tortures and kills people in the most sophisticated ways, without a system and without a plan.

4. “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” by Jonathan Safran Foer


A touching story from the perspective of a 9-year-old boy Oscar. His father died in one of the Twin Towers on September 11, 2001. While examining his father's closet, Oscar finds a vase, and in it is a small envelope with the inscription "Black" and a key inside. Inspired and filled with curiosity, Oscar is ready to go around all the Blacks in New York to find the answer to the riddle. This is a story about overcoming bereavement, post-disaster New York, and human kindness.

5. The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky


“The Catcher in the Rye,” about modern teenagers, is what critics dubbed Stephen Chbosky’s book, which sold a million copies and was filmed by the author himself.

Charlie is a typical quiet, silent observer of what is happening, goes to high school. After a recent nervous breakdown, he withdrew into himself. To overcome his inner feelings, he begins to write letters. Letters to a friend, an unknown person - the reader of this book. On the advice of his new friend Pete, he tries to become “not a sponge, but a filter” - to live life to the fullest, and not watch it from the sidelines.

6. The Hours, Michael Cunningham


The story of a day in the life three women from different eras from a Pulitzer Prize winner. At first glance, the destinies of the British writer Virginia Woolf, the American housewife Laura from Los Angeles and the publishing editor Clarissa Vaughan are connected only by a book - the novel Mrs. Dalloway. But by the end it becomes clear that the lives and problems of the heroines, despite all the external differences, are the same.

7. Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn


Nick and Amazing Amy are the perfect couple. But on the day of the fifth anniversary, Amy disappears from the house - there are all traces of abduction. The whole city goes in search of the missing woman and sympathizes with Nick, until Amy's diary falls into the hands of the police, because of which her husband becomes the main suspect in the murder. The main intrigue of the novel is who was the real victim in this situation.

Flynn's novel attracts with its unconventional view of modern marriage: partners marry beautiful projections of each other and then are very surprised when behind the invented image a living person is discovered, whom they do not know at all.

8. Slaughterhouse-Five, or the Children's Crusade, Kurt Vonnegut


The writer's difficult war experience is reflected in this novel. Memories of the bombing in Dresden are shown through the eyes of the absurd, timid soldier Billy Pilgrim - one of those foolish children who were thrown into a terrible war. But Vonnegut would not be himself if he had not also introduced an element of fantasy into the novel: either due to post-traumatic syndrome, or due to alien intervention, Pilgrim learned to travel in time.

Despite the fantastic nature of what is happening, the message of the novel is quite real and clear: Vonnegut ridicules stereotypes about “real men” and demonstrates the pointlessness of wars.

9. “Beloved,” Toni Morrison


Toni Morrison received the Nobel Prize in Literature for "bringing to life an important aspect of American reality in her dreamy, poetic novels." And Time magazine named the novel “Beloved” one of the 100 best books in English.


The main character is the slave Sethe, who, along with her children, escaped from her cruel masters and remained free for only 28 days. When the chase overtakes Sethe, she kills her daughter with her own hands - so that she does not know slavery and does not experience the same thing as her mother. The memory of the past and this terrible choice haunts Sethe all her life.

10. A Song of Ice and Fire, George R.R. Martin


A fantasy epic about the magical world of the Seven Kingdoms, where the struggle for the Iron Throne continues, while a terrible winter approaches the entire continent. So far, five novels out of a planned seven have been published. The remaining two parts are awaited by both fans of the writer’s work and fans of “Game of Thrones,” a series based on the saga that is breaking all popularity records.

What are you doing anyway? lately Did you read anything interesting?


sources