The American Novel
The core of any American Literature survey course, 1850–1926. Fifteen novels from Hawthorne’s Puritan guilt to Hemingway’s Lost Generation — the full arc of a distinctly American literary voice. Listen free on HearCandy.
The Scarlet Letter
Puritan New England, sin, and shame. Hawthorne’s 1850 novel invented the American tradition of moral ambiguity — a community that believes in righteousness and practices cruelty.
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Moby Dick
Captain Ahab hunts a whale and destroys everyone around him. Melville’s 1851 novel is simultaneously an adventure story, a philosophical treatise, and an obsessive masterpiece.
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Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Huck and Jim on the Mississippi. Twain wrote the novel Hemingway said all American literature comes from — and he wasn’t wrong.
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The Red Badge of Courage
A young soldier discovers courage is more complicated than he thought. Crane wrote this in 1895 without having been to war. It reads like he had.
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The Awakening
The novel American literature buried for fifty years and eventually had to reckon with. Chopin’s 1899 masterpiece about a woman’s self-discovery was too honest for its time.
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McTeague
A San Francisco dentist’s slow moral collapse. Norris’s 1899 naturalist novel is ugly, gripping, and completely merciless about human weakness.
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Sister Carrie
A small-town girl arrives in Chicago and rises. Dreiser’s 1900 novel was suppressed on publication — it showed ambition without punishment and success without moral instruction.
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The Call of the Wild
A domestic dog is stolen and turned into a sled dog in the Yukon. London’s 1903 novel is part adventure, part philosophy — about civilization, instinct, and what we give up for comfort.
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The House of Mirth
Lily Bart is brilliant, beautiful, and just poor enough to be destroyed by New York society. Wharton’s 1905 novel watches it happen with merciless precision.
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The Jungle
Sinclair spent seven weeks undercover in Chicago’s meatpacking plants. Published 1906, it caused such outrage that food safety laws were passed within months.
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Ethan Frome
A farmer trapped by duty, circumstance, and a single moment of terrible choice. Wharton’s 1911 novella is bleak, spare, and unforgettable — nothing like her New York novels.
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My Ántonia
Jim Burden remembers the Bohemian immigrant girl he grew up alongside on the Nebraska prairie. Cather’s 1918 novel is the definitive account of the frontier experience and the immigrant soul.
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Cane
A mosaic of prose, poetry, and drama set in Black life across the American South and North. Toomer’s 1923 Harlem Renaissance masterpiece is unlike anything else on this list.
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The Great Gatsby
The American Dream, the green light, the parties that mask emptiness. Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel is the most taught, most quoted, most argued-about book in American literature.
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The Sun Also Rises
Paris and Pamplona, the Lost Generation, bullfights and heartbreak. Hemingway’s 1926 debut novel changed American prose style permanently — everything unnecessary cut away.
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