What Do Women Want? (29 page)

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Authors: Erica Jong

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I have been the recipient of this sort of literary “criticism” for so many years that it makes me snort and laugh rather than smart and weep, but my heart goes out to the novice female writers who run this gauntlet with their first novels and are so wounded that they never show up for the second act. This is, of course, the point. Boo the women off the stage with catcalls and rotten tomatoes and get them back to their proper womanly duties—editing men’s books, feeding the egos of male writers, writing theses about James Joyce, William Faulkner, and Ernest Hemingway—as if we didn’t already have enough. Political correctness has rapped us on the knuckles for doing this to writers of color who are female. As a result, those artists are starting to be reviewed on their merits rather than their gender. This is a welcome change. Around 1970, Toni Morrison’s first novel,
The Bluest Eye,
initially was turned down by Random House (where she then worked as an editor) because at the time, it was assumed that African-Americans did not buy books and that nobody else would want to read novels about black people. The arrogance of those assumptions has long since been dispelled. But while it is clearly racist to attack writers of color, women writers who appear to occupy no minority niche are still fair game. Women are the scapegoats of the human race, and if scapegoats don’t exist in nature, they have to be invented. The Modern Library list contained only eight women because a ratio of 92 to 8 probably seems normal to literary folk. (Edith Wharton accounted for two of the nine titles.) Diversity has come to mean racial diversity rather than gender fairness. Wherever possible, the token women on a committee, a panel, a list, is apt to be endowed with melanin. This is a condescending way of including two “minorities” in one fell swoop. But women are not a minority; we are 52 percent of the population. We are, in fact, an oppressed majority. If we didn’t already know this the Modern Library list would have made it abundantly clear.
I’ve no particular wish to dump on the Modern Library. That venerable venture, started by legendary twenties publisher Horace Liveright and sold to Random House long before it was a vast agglomeration of formerly independent imprints, always has had a worthy mission: bring good books to the people inexpensively. The Modern Library was clever to devise the one hundred best list as a way of getting column inches for reading. It worked. Anything that gets people talking about books in a video culture is to be applauded. The composition of the original list was hard not to quarrel with.
1.
Ulysses
by James Joyce
2.
The Great Gatsby
by F. Scott Fitzgerald
3.
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
by James Joyce
4.
Lolita
by Vladimir Nabokov
5.
Brave New World
by Aldous Huxley
6.
The Sound and the Fury
by William Faulkner
7.
Catch-22
by Joseph Heller
8.
Darkness at Noon
by Arthur Koestler
9.
Sons and Lovers
by D. H. Lawrence
10.
The Grapes of Wrath
by John Steinbeck
11.
Under the Volcano
by Malcolm Lowry
12.
The Way of All Flesh
by Samuel Butler
13.
1984
by George Orwell
14.
I, Claudius
by Robert Graves
15.
To the Lighthouse
by Virginia Woolf
16.
An American Tragedy
by Theodore Dreiser
17.
The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter
by Carson McCullers
18.
Slaughterhouse-Five
by Kurt Vonnegut
19.
Invisible Man
by Ralph Ellison
20.
Native Son
by Richard Wright
21.
Henderson the Rain King
by Saul Bellow
22.
Appointment in Samarra
by John O’Hara
23.
U.S.A.
(trilogy) by John Dos Passos
24.
Winesburg, Ohio
by Sherwood Anderson
25.
A Passage to India
by E. M. Forster
26.
The Wings of the Dove
by Henry James
27.
The Ambassadors
by Henry James
28.
Tender Is the Night
by F. Scott Fitzgerald
29.
The Studs Lonigan Trilogy
by James T. Farrell
30.
The Good Soldier
by Ford Madox Ford
31.
Animal Farm
by George Orwell
32.
The Golden Bowl
by Henry James
33.
Sister Carrie
by Theodore Dreiser
34.
A Handful of Dust
by Evelyn Waugh
35.
As I Lay Dying
by William Faulkner
36.
All the King’s Men
by Robert Penn Warren
37.
The Bridge of San Luis Rey
by Thornton Wilder
38.
Howards End
by E. M. Forster
39.
Go Tell It on the Mountain
by James Baldwin
40.
The Heart of the Matter
by Graham Greene
41.
Lord of the Flies
by William Golding
42.
Deliverance
by James Dickey
43.
A Dance to the Music of Time
(series) by Anthony Powell
44.
Point Counter Point
by Aldous Huxley
45.
The Sun Also Rises
by Ernest Hemingway
46.
The Secret Agent
by Joseph Conrad
47.
Nostromo
by Joseph Conrad
48.
The Rainbow
by D. H. Lawrence
49.
Women in Love
by D. H. Lawrence
50.
Tropic of Cancer
by Henry Miller
51.
The Naked and the Dead
by Norman Mailer
52.
Portnoy’s Complaint
by Philip Roth
53.
Pale Fire
by Vladimir Nabokov
54.
Light in August
by William Faulkner
55.
On the Road
by Jack Kerouac
56.
The Maltese Falcon
by Dashiell Hammett
57.
Parade’s End
by Ford Madox Ford
58.
The Age of Innocence
by Edith Wharton
59.
Zuleika Dobson
by Max Beerbohm
60.
The Moviegoer
by Walker Percy
61.
Death Comes for the Archbishop
by Willa Cather
62.
From Here to Eternity
by James Jones
63.
The Wapshot Chronicle
by John Cheever
64.
The Catcher in the Rye
by J. D. Salinger
65.
A Clockwork Orange
by Anthony Burgess
66.
Of Human Bondage
by W. Somerset Maugham
67.
Heart of Darkness
by Joseph Conrad
68.
Main Street
by Sinclair Lewis
69.
The House of Mirth
by Edith Wharton
70.
The Alexandria Quartet
by Lawrence Durrell
71.
A High Wind in Jamaica
by Richard Hughes
72.
A House for Mr. Biswas
by V. S. Naipaul
73.
The Day of the Locust
by Nathanael West
74.
A Farewell to Arms
by Ernest Hemingway
75.
Scoop
by Evelyn Waugh
76.
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
by Muriel Spark
77.
Finnegans Wake
by James Joyce
78.
Kim
by Rudyard Kipling
79.
A Room with a View
by E. M. Forster
80.
Brideshead Revisited
by Evelyn Waugh
81.
The Adventures of Augie March
by Saul Bellow
82.
Angle of Repose
by Wallace Stegner
83.
A Bend in the River
by V. S. Naipaul
84.
The Death of the Heart
by Elizabeth Bowen
85.
Lord Jim
by Joseph Conrad
86.
Ragtime
by E. L. Doctorow
87.
The Old Wives’ Tale
by Arnold Bennett
88.
The Call of the Wild
by Jack London
89.
Loving
by Henry Green
90.
Midnight’s Children
by Salman Rushdie
91.
Tobacco Road
by Erskine Caldwell
92.
Ironweed
by William Kennedy
93.
The Magus
by John Fowles
94.
Wide Sargasso Sea
by Jean Rhys
95.
Under the Net
by Iris Murdoch
96.
Sophie’s Choice
by William Styron
97.
The Sheltering Sky
by Paul Bowles
98.
The Postman Always Rings Twice
by James M. Cain
99.
The Ginger Man
by J. P. Donleavy
100.
The Magnificent Ambersons
by Booth Tarkington
 
 
Ulysses
by James Joyce, a formerly banned book that is now safely verified as a masterpiece because nobody reads it in its entirety, was the safest of safe top choices. Vladimir Nabokov’s
Lolita
gave the list a bit of derring-do, circa 1955. Evelyn Waugh’s
Scoop,
a personal favorite of mine, is a wonderful satirical novel about how the press starts wars, then covers them, but it is in no way as large a portrait of the world as
The Golden Notebook
by Doris Lessing. The Modern Library did make an attempt to include writers of color—V. S. Naipaul, Ralph Ellison, Richard Wright, James Baldwin—though women were not among them. Of the women on the list, Edith Wharton’s
The Age of Innocence
and
The House of Mirth
are inevitable rather than courageous choices. (I would probably give a limb to have written
The House of Mirth,
but it hardly takes imagination to praise Wharton this long after her death—in 1937—and more recent transfiguration into film.) Of course all these books are worth reading and would enrich anyone’s life, but so would the ones below.
The Random House readers who posted their choices on the Web site wound up with a list that puts four Ayn Rand novels in place of
Ulysses, The Great Gatsby, Catch-22,
and
Darkness at Noon.
Since Ayn Rand is not my cup of tea, I must abstain, but the readers’ list is far more gender neutral than the original and doesn’t discriminate against sci-fi or horror authors. (Robert Heinlein and Stephen King figure prominently.) The attempt to create a women’s fiction list proved a fascinating exercise. I wrote the 250 or so distinguished women writers and critics whose correct addresses I have in my database. I posted a notice on the rather lively writers’ forum that used to be on my Web site (
www.ericajong.com
) until it was spammed out of existence, and then, for good measure, I wrote to about thirty male novelists, critics, and poets whose judgment I respect and whose addresses I happen to have. The results of this informal survey were instructive. Because I promised anonymity to my respondents, they were frank with me. They apologized for liking certain books that they deemed to be important in their own lives—
Gone With the Wind
and
Interview with the Vampire
are two examples—but that they suspected Helen Vendler and Harold Bloom might pooh-pooh. The scholars responded quickly—as if they had been list-making all their lives. The poets’ and novelists’ lists dribbled in more slowly. Pretty much everyone I wrote to tended to take the project seriously. They congratulated me on raising the question of a women’s list at all—whether or not they had seen the original Modern Library list. Sometimes they included lists from their best friends, members of reading groups or seminars.
Here are the books most frequently repeated (after 1. Margaret Mitchell’s
Gone With the Wind
and 2. Anne Rice’s
Interview with the Vampire
):
 
VIRGINIA WOOLF
3.
To the Lighthouse
4.
Mrs. Dalloway
5.
The Waves
6.
Orlando
 
DJUNA BARNES
7.
Nightwood
 
EDITH WHARTON
8.
The House of Mirth
9.
The Age of Innocence
10.
Ethan Frome
 
RADCLYFFE HALL
11.
The Well of Loneliness
 
NADINE GORDIMER
12.
Burger’s Daughter
 
HARRIETTE SIMPSON ARNOW
13.
The Dollmaker
 
MARGARET ATWOOD
14.
The Handmaid’s Tale
 
WILLA CATHER
15.
My Ántonia
 
ERICA JONG
16.
Fear of Flying
17.
Fanny
 
JOY KOGAWA
18.
Obasan
 
DORIS LESSING
19.
The Golden Notebook
20.
The Fifth Child
21.
The Grass Is Singing
 
HARPER LEE
22.
To Kill a Mockingbird
 
MARGE PIERCY
23.
Woman on the Edge of Time
 
JANE SMILEY
24.
A Thousand Acres
 
LORE SEGAL
25.
Her First American
 
ALICE WALKER
26.
The Color Purple
27.
The Third Life of Grange Copeland
 
MARION ZIMMER BRADLEY
28.
The Mists of Avalon
 
MURIEL SPARK
29.
Memento Mori
30.
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
 
DOROTHY ALLISON
31.
Bastard Out of Carolina
 
JEAN RHYS
32.
Wide Sargasso Sea
 
SUSAN FROMBERG SHAEFFER
33.
Anya
 
CYNTHIA OZICK
34.
Trust
 
AMY TAN
35.
The Joy Luck Club
36.
The Kitchen God’s Wife
 
ANN BEATTIE
37.
Chilly Scenes of Winter
 
ZORA NEALE HURSTON
38.
Their Eyes Were Watching God
 
JOAN DIDION
39.
A Book of Common Prayer
40.
Play It as It Lays
 
MARY MCCARTHY
41.
The Group
42.
The Company She Keeps
 
GRACE PALEY
43.
The Little Disturbances of Man
 
SYLVIA PLATH
44.
The Bell Jar
 
CARSON MCCULLERS
45.
The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter
 
ELIZABETH BOWEN
46.
The Death of the Heart
 
FLANNERY O’CONNOR
47.
Wise Blood
 
MONA SIMPSON
48.
Anywhere But Here
 
TONI MORRISON
49.
Song of Solomon
50.
Beloved
 
STELLA GIBBONS
51.
Cold Comfort Farm
 
SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER
52.
Mr. Fortune’s Maggot
 
KATHERINE ANNE PORTER
53.
Ship of Fools
 
LAURA RIDING
54.
Progress of Stories
 
RUTH PRAWER JHABVALA
55.
Heat and Dust
 
PENELOPE FITZGERALD
56.
The Blue Flower
 
ISABEL ALLENDE
57.
The House of the Spirits
 
A. S. BYATT
58.
Possession
 
PAT BARKER
59.
The Ghost Road
 
RITA MAE BROWN
60.
Rubyfruit Jungle
 
ANITA BROOKNER
61.
Hotel du Lac
 
ANGELA CARTER
62.
Nights at the Circus
 
DAPHNE DU MAURIER
63.
Rebecca
 
KATHERINE DUNN
64.
Geek Love
 
SHIRLEY JACKSON
65.
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
 
BARBARA PYM
66.
Excellent Women
 
LESLIE MARMON SILKO
67.
Ceremony
 
ANNE TYLER
68.
Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
69.
The Accidental Tourist
 
NANCY WILLARD
70.
Things Invisible to See
 
JEANETTE WINTERSON
71.
Sexing the Cherry
 
LYNNE SHARON SCHWARTZ
72.
Disturbances in the Field
 
ROSELLEN BROWN
73.
Civil Wars
 
HARRIET DOERR
74.
Stones for Ibarra
 
JEAN STAFFORD
75.
The Mountain Lion
 
STEVIE SMITH
76.
Novel on Yellow Paper
 
E. ANNIE PROULX
77.
The Shipping News
 
REBECCA GOLDSTEIN
78.
The Mind-Body Problem
 
P. D. JAMES
79.
The Children of Men
 
URSULA HEGI
80.
Stones From the River
 
FAY WELDON
81.
The Life and Loves of a She-Devil
 
KATHERINE MANSFIELD
82.
Collected Stories
 
REBECCA HARDING DAVIS
83.
Life in the Iron Mills
 
LOUISE ERDRICH
84.
The Beet Queen
 
URSULA K. LE GUIN
85.
The Left Hand of Darkness
 
EDNA O’BRIEN
86.
The Country Girls Trilogy
 
MARGARET DRABBLE
87.
Realms of Gold
88.
The Waterfall
 
DAWN POWELL
89.
The Locusts Have No King
 
MARILYN FRENCH
90.
The Women’s Room
 
EUDORA WELTY
91.
The Optimist’s Daughter
 
CAROL SHIELDS
92.
The Stone Diaries
 
JAMAICA KINCAID
93.
Annie John
 
TILLIE OLSEN
94.
Tell Me a Riddle
 
GERTRUDE STEIN
95.
The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas
 
IRIS MURDOCH
96.
A Severed Head
 
ANITA DESAI
97.
Clear Light of Day
 
ALICE HOFFMAN
98.
The Drowning Season
 
SUE TOWNSEND
99.
The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole
 
PENELOPE MORTIMER
100.
The Pumpkin Eater

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