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The Fifty BEST Books of the Century
( see the Worst )
- 1. Henry Adams, The Education of Henry Adams (1907)
- Pessimism and nostalgia at the bright dawn of the twentieth century must have seemed bizarre to contemporaries. After a century of war, mass murder,
and fanaticism, we know that Adams's insight was keen indeed.
- 2. C. S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man (1947)
- Preferable to Lewis's other remarkable books simply because of the title, which reveals the true intent of liberalism.
- 3. Whittaker Chambers, Witness (1952)
- The haunting, lyrical testament to truth and humanity in a century of lies (and worse). Chambers achieves immortality recounting his spiritual
journey from the dark side (Soviet Communism) to the-in his eyes-doomed West. One of the great autobiographies of the millennium.
- 4. T.S. Eliot, Selected Essays, 1917-1932 (1932, 1950)
- Here, one of the century's foremost literary innovators insists that innovation is only possible through an intense engagement of tradition.
Every line of Eliot's prose bristles with intelligence and extreme deliberation.
- 5. Arnold Toynbee, A Study of History (1934-1961)
- Made the possibility of a divine role in history respectable among serious historians. Though ignored by academic careerists, Toynbee is
still read by those whose intellectual horizons extend beyond present fashions.
...and the rest of the best
- Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951)
- A very big brain and not without flaws. Still, her
account of the peculiarly modern phenomenon of "totalitarianism" forced
many liberals to consider the sins of communism in the same category
as those of fascism, and that is no small achievement.
- Jacques Barzun, Teacher in America (1945)
- Barzun fought a heroic struggle against the Germanization
of the American university.
- Walter Jackson Bate, Samuel Johnson (1975)
- The most psychologically astute biography of one of
the most psychologically astute writers who ever lived. In an age of
debunking and trivializing biographies, Bate's beautifully written book
stands out as a happy exception.
- Cleanth Brooks & Robert Penn Warren, Understanding
Poetry (1938)
- Interpreting literature in the style of the New Criticism
was the vehicle by which a half-century of Americans gained access to
the intellectual life. This textbook by two of the brightest lights
of the most important literary group in America this century-the Vanderbilt
agrarians-has never been out of print.
- Herbert Butterfield, The Whig Interpretation of
History (1931)
- Every day, in every way, things are getting better
and better? No, and Butterfield provides the intellectually mature antidote
to that premise of liberal historiography.
- G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy (1908)
- The master of paradox demonstrates that nothing is
more "original" and "new" than Christian tradition.
- Winston Churchill, The Second World War (1948-1953)
- A work comprehensive in scope and intimate in detail
by a master of English prose whose talents as an historian have been
vastly underrated. Indispensable for understanding the twentieth century.
- Frederick Copleston, S.J., A History of Philosophy
(1946-53)
- The most comprehensive, accurate, and readable history
of philosophy, written by a philosopher who believed that the purpose
of philosophy is the search for Truth.
- Christopher Dawson, Religion and the Rise of Western
Culture (1950)
- An essential work of European history that shows how
the rise of Christianity altered civilization in the West. Credits the
Roman Catholic Church with keeping civilization alive after the fall
of Rome and during the barbarian invasions.
- Eamon Duffy, The Stripping of the Altars (1992)
- Revisionist history as it was meant to be written:
as a correction to centuries of Whig historiography. Demonstrates that
the brute force of the state can destroy even the most beloved institutions.
What do you know...Belloc was right.
- Shelby Foote, The Civil War: A Narrative (1958-74)
- The American Iliad
- Douglas Southall Freeman, R. E. Lee (1934-35)
- The tragic life of a great Southern traditionalist
beautifully chronicled by a great Southern traditionalist.
- Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom (1962)
- They are connected, after all—a great anti-communist
book.
- Eugene Genovese, Roll, Jordan, Roll (1972)
- The finest analysis of slave life and culture, the
complexities of the master-slave relation, and the impact of slavery
on American history that we are likely ever to have.
- Frederick von Hayek, The Constitution of Liberty
(1960)
- Thoughtful reflections on the conditions and limitations
of liberty in the modern world, written by a deeply cultured Austrian
who found his home in the Anglo-Saxon world. The Summa of classical
political economy in our century.
- Will Herberg, Protestant, Catholic, Jew (1955)
- The first sociologist to take religion in America
seriously.
- Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American
Cities (1961)
- Jacobs was the first to see that modernist architects
and urban planners were creating not simply ugly buildings but entire
urban environments unsuited to human communities.
- Paul Johnson, Modern Times (1983)
- Somehow the most personal, yet the most objective,
history of our time.
- John Keegan, The Face of Battle (1976)
- A tour de force of military history that often explains
strategy and tactics in terms of culture.
- Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind (1953)
- Did the impossible: showed a self-satisfied liberalism
that conservatism in America could be intellectually respectable. A
book that named a major political movement.
- Arthur Lovejoy, The Great Chain of Being (1936)
- The classic historical narrative of the coherent and
complex worldview that lies at the foundation of the West.
- Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue (1981)
- Won a new hearing for virtue ethics after nearly two
centuries of intellectual domination by Kantian morals. We live today
in the time "After MacIntyre."
- Dumas Malone, Jefferson and His Time (1948-81)
- A masterpiece of monumental historical biography.
Malone's prose, narrative, and analysis are wonderfully eighteenth-century
in their balance and restraint.
- H. L. Mencken, Prejudices (1919-27)
- This century's greatest exhibition of satire in non-fiction,
demonstrating extraordinary aesthetic and literary taste. The author
had street smarts too. Ah, the glory that was Mencken.
- Thomas Merton, The Seven-Storey Mountain (1948)
- A Catholic convert and Trappist monk, Merton's natural
gifts as a writer enabled him to introduce tens of thousands of readers
to the spiritual fulfillment of contemplative life-a stunning achievement
for an American.
- Reinhold Niebuhr, The Nature and Destiny of Man
(1941)
- A biting critique of secular thought and a persuasive
and inspiring exposition of man's Christian destiny.
- Robert Nisbet, The Quest for Community (1953)
- Anticipated all the concerns of contemporary communitarians
and did so with the sophistication of the century's premier sociological
imagination.
- Flannery O'Connor, The Habit of Being (1978)
- The beautiful letters of America's most profound writer
this century. The best imaginable bedtime reading.
- George Orwell, Homage to Catalonia (1952)
- The savagely incisive song of a great writer's disillusionment
with the bloody inhumanity of the Left.
- Walker Percy, Lost in the Cosmos (1983)
- True therapy for the therapeutic age. Percy shows
that the best human life is being at home with our homelessness, not
to mention that modern science, properly understood, need not have atheistic
and materialist implications.
- Richard Rhodes, The Making of the Atomic Bomb
(1986)
- This magisterial, balanced account of the world's
most ambitious scientific project serves as a vigorous retort to those
who make much of American naiveté-or who would deny the American century.
- Philip Rieff, The Triumph of the Therapeutic
(1966)
- A neglected classic. Rieff shows that the real danger
to humanity in our time is not socialism but therapy.
- George Santayana, Persons and Places: Fragments
of Autobiography (1944)
- Like everything else from the pen of George Santayana,
Persons and Places is elegant, witty, perspicacious, and profound-a
distinguished autobiography relating the tangled transatlantic life
of one of the century's most original minds.
- Joseph Schumpeter, Capitalism, Socialism, and
Democracy (1942)
- A great economist presents a dark vision of politics
in a book which is accurately reasoned and brilliantly written.
- Leo Strauss, Natural Right and History (1953)
- Strauss revealed the philosophical nerve of the Modern
Project and retrieved the political dimension of classical philosophy.
- William Strunk & E.B. White, The Elements of Style
(1959)
- An extraordinary little book that explains with clarity
the use and misuse of the written word. In it the reader will not only
learn the difference between such words as "while" and "although," and
"which" and "that," but also find demonstrated beyond a doubt that language
and civilization are inextricably intertwined.
- Lionel Trilling, The Liberal Imagination (1950)
- Trilling shows that literature is relevant to politics
not because it affirms any political doctrine but because it provides
a corrective to any political ideology whatsoever.
- Frederick Jackson Turner, The Frontier in American
History (1920)
- Using as his primary sources beliefs that earlier
had been felt rather than thought, Turner made those most
American characteristics-optimism, grit, unflinching determination-central
to the study of American history. One of the few truly original works
of history this century.
- Eric Voegelin, The New Science of Politics
(1952)
- Here, one of this century's most learned political
philosophers powerfully critiques the modern quest for secular salvation.
- Booker T. Washington, Up From Slavery (1901)
- A classic of Southern autobiography describing one
man's heroic and successful efforts to overcome the legacy of slavery.
- James D. Watson, The Double Helix (1968)
- An eminently readable book about the unraveling of
DNA, one of the most important scientific discoveries of the century.
The book also offers an interesting look at English society after the
Second World War.
- Edmund Wilson, Patriotic Gore (1962)
- A careful reader of American literature works to restore
our past.
- Ludwig Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations
(1953)
- In a century littered with ill-considered arguments
about the linguistic "construction of reality," this landmark of the
later Wittgenstein stands in a wholly different category. At once ingenious,
humane, and humble, it puts philosophy on the right track after the
sins of Nietzsche, Heidegger, and others.
- Tom Wolfe, The Right Stuff (1979)
- The dazzling story of the test pilots and Mercury
astronauts is narrated by Wolfe as a compelling affirmation of the American
spirit and traditional values.
- Malcolm X (with the assistance of Alex Haley), The
Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965)
- The spiritual journey of a sensitive and intelligent
man who had to wrestle with his own demons and contradictions while
battling the condescension of paternalist liberals and the enervating
effects of the welfare state on his people.
( see the Worst )
( back to Introduction )
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