There are various lists making the rounds lately, most notably the ten books that have stayed with me lists. I have one of those, but it occurred to me that some of my favorite authors are not on the list, because some of them wrote series where it is impossible to ferret out which book was the most influential. And of course, there are some stand-alone books out there too (To Kill a Mockingbird comes to mind) where the authors did not go on to write more.
But my favorite genres by far are fantasy and SF, and authors of these genres tend to write series or create universes that pull their readers back time and time again. So I decided to list my favorites. But then I got to thinking. Should I limit my selections to books that I've read as adults only, or only to adult books? Should I have only SFF books? Should I make an effort to include some classics that I didn't actually like very much, even though they've probably influenced me and everyone else who grew up when I did speaking English as their sole or primary language? I'm humbled by the prevalence of classics that are not remotely contemporary, or even SF or F on most of my writer friend's favorites lists. Makes me feel like an imposter.
But in the end, I have to be true to my own perceptions. I ended up with fifteen authors, not ten. And even so, there are some favorites I have left off.
One sobering thing for me is the lack of diversity on this list. Of my fifteen, only two are writers who are not white. Ten out of fifteen are women, which is rather biased towards one gender. But given the lean that most people's lists have towards men, I don't feel too bad there. I'm not sure about the sexual orientation of most of these writers. Five of these writers are/were British, Nine are/were American, and one was an American who adopted Ireland as her permanent home. I suppose this bias is understandable, given that I am white, English-speaking, heterosexual, cis-gendered, female, and American. I'm going to have easy access (and relate to) to more books by people who are like me in some ways at least. But still, I want to do a better job of reading books by people who come from different cultures than I do.
1. JRR Tolkien. I think this is the book that really made me
fall in love with fantasy. I don't seek to emulate Tolkien's style, but I've
probably re-read The Hobbit and LoTR more than any other novels.
2. C.J. Cherryh. One of the unsung SF greats in my opinion.
She was and is a master at weaving intricate worlds and cultures, and she is
one of the people who pioneered the use of a more "limited" point of
view in SF. When she started writing, many SFF writers felt you "had"
to lapse into telly omniscient from time to time, because the reader wouldn't
"get" the world building otherwise. She has a special talent for
immersing you in the perceptions of a character and for making their reality yours. I
think she's had a pretty strong influence on me stylistically.
3. Ursula K. Le Guin. She also had/has a flare for world
building and a simple, yet lyrical way with language. She proved to me that you
don't need purple prose to paint a clear picture of a world and character. And
she deserves kudos for writing fantasy where the default race wasn't white and
for exploring our assumptions about gender.
4. Alice Walker. She did such an amazing job of bringing me
inside the heads of characters who have lived very different lives than I have,
yet to whom I can relate so utterly and completely. She has a talent for
writing in a very colloquial voice without making it inaccessible or
distracting. I cared deeply for Celie and Shug in particular, but all of her characters were real people to me.
5. Robin Hobb. There's an uneven and somewhat bumpy ride
here (I liked her Shamen Trilogy, and Rain Wilds books, but they weren't as good to me as her earlier titles), but her Farseer and Tawny man books moved me deeply, and her latest Fitz and Fool book has pulled me back into that world with a vengeance. She doesn't get much credit for this, but her character of the Fool was definitely outside of the binary concept of gender. She just handled it much more subtly than some writers have. She made me fall in
love with modern fantasy and showed me that broken, flawed people make the
most compelling characters. There's probably a bit of Fitz in my current
protagonist, for all that he's a very different person in a very different
situation.
6. James Herriot. I just loved his books growing up, and
I've read and reread them over the years. He's one of those rare authors who
really felt like a friend, even though I'd never met him. Last time I was in
the UK, I was able to go to
the Herriot Museum, which is in the house where he
(real name Alf Wight) really practiced with Donald and Brian Sinclair (aka
Seigfried and Tristan Farnon) for many
years. It was just so cool to see the places I'd read about coming to life.
7. William Shakespeare. Regardless of how you feel about his
plays, he is probably the greatest and most versatile writer the English
Language has produced. His work resonates even today, and it's impossible not
to be influenced by it.
8. Judy Blume. I loved her books as a pre teen and teen. She
portrayed issues that I may or may not have been able to relate to initially,
but once I read about them, I couldn't help but do so. They made me into a more
empathetic human being, and her book Forever, which portrayed a teen aged girl
having her first sexual relationship as if it were not (gasp) a terrible thing
had a profound influence on my own attitude about sex in general and my own resolve to never have unprotected sex unless I wanted to become a parent.
9. K.M. Peyton. Another YA fiction writer from the 70s. Her
stories about the horse-crazy Ruth Hollis pulled me in, but she had a number of
other stories too, most notably about Pennington, a very troubled musical
prodigy, and her Flambards books (set around the time of WWI). She didn't talk
down to teens at all, but she also didn't sugar coat the consequences of bad
decisions or promise her readers that every good decision, personal victory,
(or love affair) would end in a happily ever after.
10. Micheal Moorcock. I don't know why his Elric stories
have stayed with me the way they have. I didn't especially like Elric, and his
whole situation was rather depressing. But darn it if some of his plight
doesn't carry over into my current work (though I really hope I can have a
happier ending).
11. Amy Tan. I love her books. Her characters are relatable,
even when I am angry at them for their flaws and foibles. I think my favorite
was The Hundred Secret Senses, but
they've all spoken to me in one way or another.
12. Connie Willis. Her stories set in the universe of her
time-travelling Oxford Historians are my favorite, but Passage and Bellwether
also pulled me in. She has a knack for making me laugh and cry at the same time,
for weaving everyday frustrations and absurdities into the darkest stories. And
she never fails to remind me that the biggest heroes often go unnoticed.
13. Margaret Atwood. Lovely writing, memorable characters,
fascinating, non-linear approaches to narrative that would be too unexpected
and unintuitive for me to like at the hands of anyone else. I don't think she's
ever written a dud. I don't think I'd ever in a million years try to write the
way she does. But I've been enriched by her prose.
14. Anne McCaffrey. Her work helped pull me into modern SF as well. She
gets dinged a lot for (possibly) flogging a successful series into the ground,
and in spite of her many awards and huge following, she doesn't seem to get
included on many lists of masters or all-time greats. And there was that stupid
"tent peg" comment that reminded me how someone can be admirable in
so many ways, yet hurtfully wrong in others. But I have read and re-read her Dragonrider
books over the years, and they've stuck with me in ways many other series have
not.
15. David Brin. I loved his Uplft books, and I have wished
so much that he would return to that universe. If I wrote SF, I'd probably be
shooting for something in between him and Cherryh in terms of style and
approach.
Interesting list. I must try Cherryh sometime - she's someone I've been aware of for a long time but never got around to.
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