The 10 Best American Literature Books
Special Honors
First Edition of The Great Gatsby One of the most arresting novels of our time, The Great Gatsby was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald and published in 1925. This edition is in near fine condition with the original green cloth and a custom clamshell box. It's a first printing with "sick in tired" on page 205 and all other first-issue points and a faded owner ink inscription dated 1925. It features expert reinforcement to the inner paper hinges, a clean interior, fresh cloth, and bright gilt. baumanrarebooks.com
Project Gutenberg Whether you're looking for sci-fi, fantasy, or romance novels, Project Gutenberg is a library of over 60,000 free ebooks that can be downloaded or read online. Much of the world's great literature is there, with a focus on older works for which U.S. copyright has expired. Thousands of volunteers digitized and diligently proofread each work for enjoyment and education. gutenberg.org
Audible If listening to literature makes it easier for you to follow plotlines and imagine spectacular settings, then consider downloading a few audiobooks. Audible.com is one of the most popular online portals for purchasing, downloading, and listening to audiobooks and allows users to listen to novels on their website or the device of their choice. The company offers subscription plans devised to help customers save when they buy multiple books, with some free titles also included. audible.com
Editor's Notes
May 28, 2020:
Choosing ten works for a list like this feels like a Herculean task when a list of 100 seems more appropriate, but we curated a diverse and wide-spanning collection with an aim to appeal to a broad readership nonetheless. That was our main priority when updating this list, so to make room for a few titles we felt would punch things up, we said goodbye to Leaves Of Grass, The Sound And The Fury, and Blood Meridian. All three of these works are incontrovertible in their quality, however, each has its own inherent problems that we felt made them subject to exclusion during this latest round of updates.
In an effort to bring on a better range of perspectives we added To Kill a Mockingbird and Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God. While these novels offer different styles and have only a few overlapping themes, each is an excellent choice if you're looking to understand the world and human behavior through the eyes of women. They take on ideas of human value, self-worth, evolving identity, racism, and toxic social norms via electric storytelling, rich description, and excellent pacing. Mockingbird manages to hit on a variety of themes while still championing innocence and giving readers a coming-of-age tale to boot.
You'll also find Fahrenheit 451 joining the ranks, as they were lacking a classic dystopian novel. While it's a quick read at under 300 pages and accessible to those in their early teens, it's loaded with symbolism and boasts deep treatments of heavy themes. Published in the early 50s and set in a vague future time that seems a lot like the world today, it explores what life is like when technology begins to erase what it is to be human and the powers that be keep people ignorant of art and expression.