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Home > Bibliographies > Minibibliographies > The Best of American Fiction: Early Period
Content last modified February 1995
Read the best books first, or you may not have a chance to
read them at all.
Henry David Thoreau
Thoreau's advice seems particularly applicable to today's world where the proliferation of all forms of literary material creates a dilemma for the person attempting to choose something to read. With this advice in mind, the Network Services Section has produced a series of three minibibliographies listing the best of American fiction.
This first minibibliography of the series lists fiction of America's early period, particularly of the mid-to-late- nineteenth century when the American novel came of age. American writers had finally freed themselves from imitating the themes and characterizations of the English and established their own literary form with two great masterpieces: Herman Melville's Moby Dick and Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter. From these novels, American literature moved on to the social and political satire of Mark Twain in Huckleberry Finn and the new realism of William Dean Howells, Henry James, Stephen Crane, and Frank Norris.
Books chosen for this minibibliography are based upon the recommendations offered in Good Reading, edited by J. Sherwood Weber; The Reader's Advisor, 12th edition, volume 1; "Darien's First 'Classics' Collection," from Library Journal, November 15, 1981; and American Novel, Brown to James, edited by Frank N. Magill.
Books in this list are arranged in alphabetical order by author and then, within author, by title. The dates following the annotations are the original dates of publication. All books are available from NLS network library collections.
Little Women
The author's home life in New England is the basis of this book, which has been popular for more than a century. The tale tells the story of the four March sisters--quick-tempered Jo, who is restless for freedom; Beth, who loves her home and family; Meg, who longs for pretty clothes; and self-absorbed Amy. A favorite of both children and adults. 1868
RC 18128
BR 1038
Looking Backward, 2000-1887
Julian West, a wealthy young Bostonian is mysteriously transported from the year 1887 forward to the year 2000. He is astonished and relieved to find himself in a world infinitely more just, comfortable, healthy, and moral than the time from which he has come. 1888
RC 19861
BRA 9837
Wieland; or, The Transformation, together with Memoirs of Carwin, the Biloquist: A Fragment
Considered the first American gothic novel. Wieland, whose fanatic father is killed by a mysterious flash of light, is commanded by an unearthly voice to sacrifice his wife and children as a sign of obedience to heaven. 1798
RC 12735
The Deerslayer
The adventures of Natty Bumppo, also known as Deerslayer, and his days as a young hunter among the Delaware Indians. A rousing story of warfare between the Indians and the white settlers around Lake Otsego before 1745. 1841
RC 22249
BRA 62
The Last of the Mohicans
During the seige of Fort William Henry on Lake George by the Fench and Iroquois, two daughters of the fort's commander set out from a neighboring fort to join their father. 1826
RC 19920
BR 4092
The Prairie
Portrays the last days of Leatherstocking, an exile whom civilization drives westward to the prairies beyond the Mississippi. Here the old scout becomes a trapper. 1827
RC 12233
BRA 1265
The Red Badge of Courage
A country boy enthusiastically enlists with the Union army during the Civil War. Wanting to prove himself a hero but experiencing shock and fear on the battlefront, he finally revives his courage and self-respect in a crucial war advance. 1895
RC 22405
BR 1449
The Damnation of Theron Ware
Concerns the downfall of a Methodist minister who is entangled in religious doubt by the new thinking in science, art, and sex. 1896
RC 16083
The Outcasts of Poker Flat
A group of exiles from a rough California mining camp are trapped by a blizzard. 1869
BRA 14156
Stories of the Early West: "The Luck of Roaring Camp" and Sixteen Other Exciting Tales of Mining and Frontier Days
The author tells tales of the rough lives of miners, gamblers, and adventurers in nineteenth-century California. In "The Luck of Roaring Camp" an orphaned boy is adopted by the men in a gold-rush-era mining camp. 1868
RC 21660
BRA 7431
The House of Seven Gables
Describes the fortunes of a decayed New England family, the Pyncheons. The interaction between family members is based on past mistakes and misdeeds, the consequences of which were incalculable, but which now dictate their lives. 1851
RC 17947
BR 1598
The Scarlet Letter
Set in Puritan New England, this novels traces the effects of one particular sin on the lives of four people. Hester Prynne is forced to wear her sin openly in the form of a scarlet letter "A" for adultery. The other characters are Hester's child; her husband, who seeks vengeance; and the minister, who conceals his guilt. 1850
RC 13499
BR 907
The Best Short Stories of O. Henry
Thirty-eight tales, including such favorites as "The Gift of the Magi," "The Furnished Room," "The Last Leaf," and "The Ransom of the Red Chief." Collection published posthumously. 1945
RC 8921
FD 6797
BRA 15135
The Rise of Silas Lapham
A wealthy, self-made businessman attempts to win acceptance for his family in high society of nineteenth-century Boston. 1885
RC 17384
The Legend of Sleepy Hollow
Ichabod Crane, schoolmaster, disappointed in his wooing of the fair Katrina, is pursued late one night by a headless horseman. Originally published as part of The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1820
RC 16731
BR 8876
"Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow"
Two unforgetable stories of lore--the twenty-year sleep of Rip Van Winkle and the midnight ride of the Headless Horeseman of Sleepy Hollow. Originally published as part of The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon. 1820
RC 16731
BRA 9660
The American
A wealthy American in Paris falls in love with a French widow of noble family. Although the match is a good one, the social pressures of the exclusive aristocratic world separate the couple. 1877
RC 17612
BRA 4959
The Portrait of a Lady
Isabel Archer, an attractive, wealthy American in Europe, discovers both the beauty and the deception of European society and in the process gains self-knowledge. 1881
RC 12914
BR 200
BR 5515
The Turn of the Screw
A somewhat neurotic new governess is convinced her two beautiful young pupils are subject to the evil influence of two ghosts, a former steward of the estate and a former governess. She pits her will against the ghosts and is determined to exorcise the demons from her young charges. 1898
RC 18129
BR 6763
"The Country of the Pointed Firs" and Other Stories
The title story embodies the spirit and character of a Maine seaport town during its declining years. 1896
RC 16145
Billy Budd
A naive, innocent sailor, Billy Budd, is cruelly antagonized and unjustly accused by his evil master-at-arms. Speechless with rage over the accusation, Billy strikes and kills his petty officer, forcing their captain to order his execution. Published posthumously. 1924
RC 23332
BR 3614
BRA 15265
Moby Dick; or, The Whale
The sailor Ishmael tells the story of Captain Ahab's obsessive pursuit of the white whale in this novel which includes chapters on the natural history of the whale, the whole making an allegory of human potential and limitations. 1851
RC 34184
BR 1608
BRA 15785
McTeague: A Story of San Francisco
A murder mystery concerning a dentist who loses his practice when the authorities find out he lacks both license and diploma. He kills his avaricious but miserly wife in frustration and meets a terrible death himself. 1899
RC 12689
BRA 15453
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym
A horror tale, presented in journal form by Pym, a young man who is smuggled aboard the big Grampus in 1827. Mutiny, cannibalism, fantastic animals and natives of Antarctica, and supernatural happenings comprise a story of adventure in the South Seas. 1838
RC 12488
Tales of Mystery and Imagination
This collection includes several of Poe's most popular tales such as "The Gold Bug," "Premature Burial," and "The Cask of Amontillado." 1908
RC 21734
BR 509
BRA 18170
Uncle Tom's Cabin; or, Life among the Lowly
This tale of slavery recounts the hardships of Uncle Tom, who was sold to brutal Simon Legree, and of gentle Little Eva and her child, who escape from the bloodhounds. 1852
RC 9480
BR 1623
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Tom Sawyer's Comrade
Huck's adventures begin as he runs away from home and floats down the Mississippi on a raft with a runaway slave. He encounters a variety of characters on the river and in the towns and undergoes a difficult moral challenge. 1885
RC 16414
BR 3066
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
A mischievous boy growing up in a Mississippi river town in the nineteenth century impresses his friends and horrifies adults by associating with the son of the town drunk, running away from home, attending his own funeral, witnessing a murder, and finding lost treasure. 1876
RC 15223
BR 3045
Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ
Accused of attempting to assassinate the new Roman governor of Palestine, Judah Ben-Hur, an arisocratic Jew, is sentenced to life at the galleys. The novels tells of his escape, revenge, and conversion to Christianity. 1880
RC 32440
BRA 6723
Compiled by Ellie Friedman
Revised by Joyce Y. Carter
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Posted on 2006-02-24