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LITERARY HUB

The 20 Best Novels of the Decade

Yes, here it is.

By Emily Temple

December 23, 2019

Friends, it's true: the end of the decade approaches. It's been a difficult, anxiety-provoking, morally compromised decade, but at least it's been populated by some damn fine literature. We'll take our silver linings where we can.

So, as is our hallowed duty as a literary and culture website—though with full awareness of the potentially fruitless and endlessly contestable nature of the task—in the coming weeks, we'll be taking a look at the best and most important (these being not always the same) books of the decade that was. We will do this, of course, by means of a variety of lists. We began with the best debut novels, the best short story collections, the best poetry collections, the best memoirs, the best essay collections, the best (other) nonfiction, and the best translated novels of the decade. We have now reached the eighth and most difficult list in our series: the very best novels written and published in English between 2010 and 2019.

You may be shocked to learn that we had a hard time deciding on 10. So, being captains of our own destiny, we decided we were allowed to pick 20 . . . plus almost that many dissents. We did not allow reissues, otherwise you had better believe this list would include The Last Samurai, Speedboat, and Who Was Changed and Who Was Dead, among a robust host of others. We also, for this list, discounted novels in translation, as they got their very own list last week, and including them would have necessitated a list twice as long. (My beloved Sweet Days of Discipline, certainly in the top ten novels I personally read this decade, is doubly ineligible, but luckily I also write these introductions.)

Now, for the last time: the following books were chosen after much debate (and several rounds of voting) by the Literary Hub staff. Tears were spilled, feelings were hurt, books were re-read. As ever, free to add any of your own favorites that we've missed in the comments below.

VIDEO FROM LIT HUB:

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The Top Twenty

Jennifer Egan, A Visit From the Goon Squad JENNIFER EGAN, A VISIT FROM THE GOON SQUAD (2010)

There are some moments from A Visit From the Goon Squad that I won't forget. In one chapter, a former PR hotshot named Dolly is tasked with reviving the public image of an African dictator known as "The General" with the help of a B-list actress named Kitty Jackson. Kitty's job is to stand next to The General in a photo, but she ends up asking too many questions about a genocide and gets thrown into prison. Months later, it turns out, The General's government becomes a democracy, Kitty is freed, and Dolly opens a sandwich shop. This strand of Egan's polyphonic, funny, and often poignant book encapsulates some of her satire's recurring ideas. In Goon Squad, a book with a large cast of characters set in a period roughly spanning the late 1970s to the 2020s, shifts in time are always jarring—they can destroy the body, corrupt memory, and blur processes of change. Nominally centered on the American celebrity industrial complex (particularly rock'n'roll in the Bay Area), Goon Squad is also very much about media "spin," fragmented perspectives, illusory identities, and aimless materialism in a capitalist society. Though the premise may seem to indicate otherwise, the book is decidedly skeptical of nostalgic impulses. "Time is a goon," one of Egan's characters says. The past is nothing if not the foundation of contemporary disillusionment with its promises—promises of beauty, fame, family, and the attainment of other icons. Goon Squad earned Egan well-deserved plaudits, including the 2011 Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award, and cemented her status as one the 21st century's most insightful (and formally experimental) American writers. –Aaron Robertson, Assistant Editor

David Mitchell, The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de ZoetDAVID MITCHELL, THE THOUSAND AUTUMNS OF JACOB DE ZOET (2010)

It is easier to conjure the intellectual-literary atmosphere of an era when it is 30 years' past than when it is a mere decade ago. It is hard to see 2010 right now, as we wait for time and the canon to true the lens, but I have a very clear sense-memory of revelation and exhilaration as I sped through David Mitchell's epic-historical ghost story, The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, wondering if the spirit of Robert Louis Stevenson had momentarily taken possession of Haruki Murakami. Here was a reminder that the world of a novel—in this case, a very detailed rendering of an 18th-century Dutch trading post in the port of Nagasaki—can be fuller, more vivid, than our own, that it can exist as a hothouse for the reader's moral imagination.

It is difficult to say what another 25 years will make of The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zo

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