Introduction
A novel is a long prose (as opposed to verse) narrative, and it was once quite a controversial innovation in the world of literature. Before the novel came into being as a literary genre, the most common types of literature were poetry, often revolving around epic heroes, and plays that presented histories, tragedies, and comedies. Often acknowledged as the first novelist, Miguel Cervantes penned the first part of Don Quixote in 1604, but it took quite a while for the novel as a form to catch on. By 1750, Samuel Richardson still had to introduce his novel Pamela with a long explanation of its form and purpose. Today, the novel as a literary genre is so accepted and prevalent that it has become synonymous with the term “fiction.”Essential Facts
- The novel gained in popularity as literacy increased and the middle class expanded. Reading for pleasure, rather than for instruction or religious purposes, became a favorite pastime.
- Daniel Defoe (Robinson Crusoe) is often cited as the founder of the modern English novel. Defoe established principles for the genre that are still followed today. Those rules include a dominant, unifying theme, a strong thesis, and an attempt to depict reality.
- Henry Fielding (Tom Jones) was the first writer to call himself a novelist. Though many of his contemporaries considered the form “lowbrow” writing and shied away from the title of novelist, Fielding embraced it.
- Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice) is often characterized as the greatest novelist of manners. Her books deal exclusively with the minutiae of upper-class society and landed gentry.
- According to the Modern Library, the three best novels of all time are (1) Ulysses by James Joyce, (2) The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and (3) Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce.
Recommended Resources
All Resources by Category
- Alexandre Dumas (Dictionary of World Biography: The 19th Century)
- Charles Dickens (Dictionary of World Biography: The 19th Century)
- Charles Dickens (Magill’s Choice: Notable British Novelists)
- Daniel Defoe (Dictionary of World Biography: The 17th and 18th Centuries)
- Daniel Defoe (Magill’s Choice: Notable British Novelists)
- Ernest Hemingway (Dictionary of World Biography: The 20th Century)
- Gabriel García Márquez (Dictionary of World Biography: The 20th Century)
- Miguel de Cervantes (Cyclopedia of World Authors)
- Alexandre Dumas (Critical Survey of Long Fiction)
- Ernest Hemingway (Critical Survey of Long Fiction)
- F. Scott Fitzgerald (Critical Survey of Long Fiction)
- Gabriel García Márquez (Critical Survey of Long Fiction)
- Miguel de Cervantes (Critical Survey of Long Fiction)
- Origins and Development of the Novel Before 1740
- Origins and Development of the Novel, 1740-1890
- The American Novel
- The Epistolary Novel
- The Fantasy Novel
- The French New Novel
- The Influence of Ernest Hemingway (Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism)
- The Irish Novel
- The Sentimental Novel
- The Silver Fork Novel
- Alexandre Dumas
- Charles Dickens
- Daniel Defoe
- Ernest Hemingway
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez
- George Eliot
- Henry James
- Herman Melville
- James Joyce
- Jane Austen
- Leo Tolstoy
- Saul Bellow
- Sir Walter Scott
- William Faulkner
- A Farewell to Arms Study Guide (eNotes) - Ernest Hemingway
- A Tale of Two Cities Study Guide (eNotes) - Charles Dickens
- Don Quixote Study Guide (eNotes) - Miquel de Cervantes
- For Whom the Bell Tolls Study Guide (eNotes) - Ernest Hemingway
- Moby Dick Study Guide (eNotes) - Herman Melville
- One Hundred Years of Solitude Study Guide (eNotes) - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
- Robinson Crusoe Study Guide (eNotes) - Daniel Defoe
- The Count of Monte Cristo Study Guide (eNotes) - Alexandre Dumas
- The Great Gatsby Study Guide (eNotes) - F. Scott Fitzgerald
- The Three Musketeers Study Guide (eNotes) - Alexanfre Dumas
- Ulysses Study Guide (eNotes) - James Joyce
- War and Peace Study Guide (eNotes) - Leo Tolstoy
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