Top 5 books with English professor Dee Anna Phares
March 24, 2009
English professor Dee Anna Phares chooses five books.
“Asking me to list my five favorite novels is like asking me to choose which of my internal organs I like best,” Phares said. “I am attached to all of them. So, instead of undertaking the Herculean task of choosing a suitable quintet from all of literature, I will select my top five novels about literature [in no particular order].”
1. The Blind Assassin (2000) by Margaret Atwood – A literary mélange of memoir, mystery, sci-fi, history and the epistolary tradition.
2. Possession (1990) by A.S. Byatt – Literary detective story meets Victorian romance.
3. Pale Fire (1962) by Vladimir Nabokov – A weirdly wonderful exploration of authorship, narrative and sanity.
4. Haroun and the Sea of Stories (1990) by Salman Rushdie — It answers the question, “What’s the use of stories that aren’t even true?”
5. Orlando (1928) by Virginia Woolf – A great pseudo-biography touching on personal and artistic transformation.