viernes, 25 de marzo de 2016

Los 80 libros que todo hombre debería leer - Según Esquire

Esta es la lista de los 80 libros que todo hombre debería leer a lo largo de su vida según Esquire:

1- “The Great Gatsby” (1925) – F. Scott Fitzgerald
2- Beloved” (1987) – Toni Morrison
3- 100 Años de Soledad” (1967) – Gabriel García Márquez
4- As I Lay Dying” (1930) – William Faulkner
5- Underworld” (1997) – Don DeLillo
6- Selected Stories” (1996) – Alice Munro
7- Mason & Dixon” (1997) – Thomas Pynchon
8- The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov” (1995) – Vladimir Nabokov
9- “The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao” (2007) – Junot Díaz
10- “A Wrinkle In Time” (1962) – Madeleine L’Engle
11- “Ceremony” (1977) – Leslie Marlon Silko
12- “The Collected Stories” (1994) – Grace Paley
13- “Middlemarch” (1874) – George Eliot
14- “Giovanni’s Room” (1956) – James Baldwin
15- “Autobiography of Red” (1988) – Anne Carson
16- “Anna Karenina” – Leo Tolstoy
17- “The Complete Poems” (1890) – Emily Dickinson
18- “Leaves of Grass” (1855) – Walt Whitman
19- “So Long, See You Tomorrow” (1979) – William Maxwell
20- “Tristam Shandy” (1759) – Laurence Stern
21- “Slouching Towards Betlehem” (1968) – Joan Didion
22- “Madame Bobary” (1856) – Gustave Flaubert
23- “Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage” (2001) – Alice Munro
24- “In Cold Blood” (1965) – Truman Capote
25- “The Collected Stories” (1911) – Katherine Mansfield
26- “The Group” (1963) – Mary McCarthy
27- “Birds of America” (1998) – Lorrie Moore
28- “The God of Small Things” (1997) – Arundhati Roy
29- “Things Fall Apart (1958) – Chinua Achebe
30- “Citizen” (2015) – Claudia Rankie
31- “Balm” (2015) – Dolen Perkins
32- “Frankenstein” (1818) – Mary Shelley
33- “NW” (2012) – Zadie Smith
34- “Forgotten Country” (2012) – Catherine Chug
35- “Play It as It Lays” (1970) – Joan Didion
36- “Stone Butch Blues” (1933) – Leslie Feinberg
37- “Possesing the Secret of Joy” (1922) – Alice Walker
38- “The Round House” (2012) – Louise Erdrich
39- “The Lover” (1984) – Marguerite Duras
40- “The Age of Innocence” (1920) – Edith Wharton
41- “The Neapolitan Novels” (1994) – Elena Ferrante
42- “The Leopard” (1958) – Giuseppe Tomasi
43- “Moby Dick” (1851) – Herman Melville
44- “Heartburn” (1983) – Nora Ephron
45- “The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” (1961) – Maruel Spark
46- “Pride and Predjudice” (1813) – Jane Austen
47- “Housekeeping” (1980) – Marilynne Robinson
48- “To Kill a Mockingbird” (1960) – Harper Lee
49- “Memoirs of Hadrian” (1951) – Marguerite Yourcenar
50- “The Handmaid’s Tale” (1985) – Margaret Atwood
51- “The Liars Club” (1995) – Mary Karr
52- “Song of Solomon” (1977) – Toni Morrison
53- “Parting the Waters” (1988) – Taylor Branch
54- “Ragtime” (1975) – E.L. Doctorow
55- “The White Album” (1979) – Joan Didion
56- “The Yellow Wallpapers” (1892) – Charlotte Perkins
57- “To the Lighthouse” (1927) – Virginia Woolf
58- “Sense and Sensibility” (1811) – Jane Austen
59- “The Warmth of Other Suns” (2010) – Isabel Wilkerson
60- “Harriet the Spy” (1964) – Louise Fitzhugh
61- “Just Kids” (2010) – Patti Smith
62- “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” (1852) – Harriet Beecher Stowe
63- “Jane Eyre” (1847) – Charlotte Brontë
64- “Their Eyes Were Watchin God” (1937) – Zola Neare Hurston
65- “A Thousand Years of Good Prayers” (2005) – Yiyun Li
66- “Bad Behaivor” (1988) – Mary Gaitskill
67- “Bastard Out of Carolina” (1992) – Dorothy Allison
68- “The Ballad of the Sad Café” (1951) – Carson McCullers
69- “The Best of Everything” (1958) – Rona Jaffe
70- “The Boys of my Youth” (1999) – Jo Ann Beard
71- “The Chronology of Water” (2011) – Lidia Yuknovitch
72- “Fun Home” (2006) – Alison Bechdel
73- “Little Women” (1868) – Louisa May Alcott
74- “Sula” (1973) – Toni Morrison
75- “An Untamed State” (2014) – Roxane Gay
76- “Redefining Realness” (2014) – Janet Mock
77- “Silver Sparrow” (2011) – Tayari Jones
78- “Shadowshaper” (2015) – Daniel José Older
79- “Walk Two Moons” (1994) – Sharon Creech
80- “The Color Purple” (1982) – Alice Walker

Aquí tenéis el enlace en donde aparece el artículo, realizado por Daniel Morales.


¡Muy buena lista para tener en cuenta!, ¿verdad?

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