This year, PBS partnered with libraries and bookstores to identify America’s favorite novel. The 100 finalist novels were chosen in a national survey of 7,200 adult readers. The list was very eclectic and included some surprising contenders and some surprising absentees. For example, Margaret Mitchell made the top 100, but William Faulkner did not. There were high-brow and low-brow favorites; contemporary novels to classics; an international selection of authors; gender and ethnic diversity; and a variety of genres.
Book lovers (including me) will tell you that it is very difficult to select a single favorite novel, but Bill Gardner, vice president of programming and development at PBS said, “We’re not trying to tell people what the greatest novel is, and does it really matter who wins? We’re not doing a vote-you-off-the-island type of thing.” The mission of the Great American Read, said Gardner, was to promote a positive conversation about books.
The 100 finalist novels were highlighted and discussed in an eight-part series of programs on PBS beginning on May 22. The reveal of the top ten selections was made on October 23. I’ve read nine of them (not The Lord of the Rings) and my personal favorite (if I may choose only one) would be Gone with the Wind, followed closely by Little Women and To Kill a Mockingbird.