Modern Library 100 Best Nonfiction
The Modern Library 100 Best Nonfiction was created in 1998 by the Modern Library. The list is what it considers to be the 100 best non-fiction books published since 1900.
The list includes memoirs, textbooks, polemics, and collections of essays. A separate list of the 100 best novels of the 20th century was created the same year.[1]
The following table shows the top ten books from the editors' list:[2]
# | Year | Title | Author |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1918 | The Education of Henry Adams | Henry Brooks Adams |
2 | 1902 | The Varieties of Religious Experience | William James |
3 | 1901 | Up From Slavery | Booker T. Washington |
4 | 1929 | A Room of One's Own | Virginia Woolf |
5 | 1962 | Silent Spring | Rachel Carson |
6 | 1932 | Selected Essays, 1917–1932 | T.S. Eliot |
7 | 1968 | The Double Helix | James D. Watson |
8 | 1951 | Speak, Memory | Vladimir Nabokov |
9 | 1919 | The American Language | H.L. Mencken |
10 | 1936 | The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money | John Maynard Keynes |
References
[edit]- ^ "Modern Library Top 100 - Penguin Random House". sites.prh.com.
- ^ "Modern Library Top 100 - Penguin Random House". sites.prh.com.