I love a long book that I can really get into, so I decided to compile a list of the longest novels ever written. As I did more research, I realized that there were many issues I had to take into consideration when deciding what to include on this list. This task ended up being much more complex than one would think a “list of longest books ever” should be. Here are the various parameters I decided on: 1. I included only published works (read: not self-published), 2. I used word count, not number of pages, as the measure of length, and 3. I included only books originally written in English, since it is easier to achieve a high word count in some languages than others, and English is the language I am most familiar with.
David Foster Wallace may have been the most critically acclaimed novelist of the modern era. His novels, The Broom of the System and Infinite Jest, were both well highly acclaimed by literary critics. Infinite Jest was even named one of the best 100 novels from 1923 through present day by Time Magazine. Wallace committed suicide in 2008 at the age of 46, leaving an incomplete novel behind. However, the publishing company responsible for his first two novels announced that it will release the unfinished manuscript sometime in 2010.
Summary: Set in an absurd yet uncanny near-future, with a cast of hundreds and close to 400 footnotes, Wallace’s story weaves between two surprisingly similar locales: Ennet House, a halfway-house in the Boston Suburbs, and the adjacent Enfield Tennis Academy. It is the ‘Year of the Depend Adult Undergarment’ (each calendar year is now subsidized by retail advertising); the U.S. and Canada have been subsumed by the Organization of North American Nations, unleashing a torrent of anti-O.N.A.N.ist terrorism by Quebecois separatists; drug problems are widespread; the Northeastern continent is a giant toxic waste dump; and CD-like “entertainment cartridges” are the prevalent leisure activity. The novel hinges on the dysfunctional family of E.T.A.’s founder, optical-scientist-turned-cult-filmmaker Dr. James Incandenza (aka Himself), who took his life shortly after producing a mysterious film called Infinite Jest, which is supposedly so addictively entertaining as to bring about a total neural meltdown in its viewer. As Himself’s estranged sons, professional football punter Orin, introverted tennis star Hal and deformed naif Mario, come to terms with his suicide and legacy, they and the residents of Ennet House become enmeshed in the machinations of the wheelchair-bound leader of a Quebecois separatist faction, who hopes to disseminate cartridges of Infinite Jest and thus shred the social fabric of O.N.A.N.
In addition to being a successful novelist, James Clavell was also an immensely talented screenwriter- he was the mind behind The Great Escape and To Sir, With Love. He only began to pen novels during a writer’s strike in Hollywood when his wife recommended that he spend his time recording his experiences as a prisoner of war in Japan during World War II. Clavell’s written memories became his first novel, King Rat. He continued to write about Japan and other areas of Asia in his subsequent novels, including Gai-Jin.
Summary: [Gai-Jin] takes place in 1862 Japan. The gai-jin (foreigners) have arrived, intent on doing business with the Japanese. With laws against the use of the wheel in carriages or carts, the Japanese, their tradition- bound Emperor and competing warlords detest the foreigners, who have ruined the Chinese with the Opium Wars. The mighty Struan shipping empire, Noble House, has built a base in Yokohama, but with the illness (fatal) of Culum Struan, tai-pan (head) of the business empire, 20-year-old Malcolm Struan stands ready to become tai-pan. In the first chapter, however, he’s attacked by samurai assassins on the Tokaido road and lies either bedridden or hobbles about for the rest of the novel. Young Angelique Richaud, 18, Parisienne daughter of a gambler who has lost what money the family had, sets her eye on Malcolm. Angelique is raped by a rogue samurai and now secretly carries his child, unbeknownst to the love- besotted Malcolm. Angelique’s syphilis-stricken fellow Frenchman Andre Poncin wends his way through the plot toward a glorious love- death with his Japanese mistress while Japanese warlords fight each other, samurai endlessly behead samurai, earthquakes shiver, and Yokohama burns.
Carl Sandburg won two Pulitzer Prizes during his lifetime, one for a biography of Abraham Lincoln, and the other for a book of poetry. Remembrance Rock was Sandburg’s only novel, and it clearly meant a lot to him personally. Upon his death in 1967, Sandburg’s ashes were placed beneath a red granite boulder named Remembrance Rock.
Summary: …Remembrance Rock follows the growth of the American dream through more than three centuries of our nation’s history. The narrative stretches from the founding of Plymouth Colony through the Revolution and Civil War to World War II, and includes a cast of characters as vast as the landscape itself – Puritans and heretics, revolutionaries and Tory loyalists, abolitionists and slaveholders, even a Supreme Court Justice. Thematic unity to this sprawling epic surfaces in the symbolic reappearance of a bronze plaque that bears an inscription of Roger Bacon’s ‘Four Stumbling Blocks to Truth,’ each of which is relevant to a particular period of our past.
In Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand presented her philosophy of Objectivism, which maintains that reason is the only way for man to gain knowledge. Rand was a champion of laissez-faire capitalism, likely in part due to her negative experience with communism in her homeland of Russia.
Summary: In Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged, heroine Dagny Taggart fights to save her transcontinental railroad from collapse. Dagny’s efforts prompt her to seek out the man who stopped the motor of the world and to hunt down the destroyer who’s leading a strike of the great minds. She finds both in the person of John Galt, who asserts that the first right of human beings is the freedom to think and act independently.
Vikram Seth was born in India and was educated in the United States, The United Kingdom, and China. His international life is reflected in his literary works, which are set in the United States, England, and India. He has also written a travel guide to China.
Summary: Set in the post-colonial India of the 1950s, this sprawling saga involves four families–the Mehras, the Kapoors, the Chatterjis and the Khans–whose domestic crises illuminate the historical and social events of the era…The multi-charactered plot pits mothers against daughters, fathers against sons, Hindus against Muslims and small farmers against greedy landowners facing government-ordered dispossession. The story revolves around independent-minded Lata Mehra: Will she defy the stern order of her widowed upper-caste Hindu mother by marrying the Muslim youth she loves? The search for Lata’s husband expands into a richly detailed and exotically vivid narrative that crisscrosses the fabric of India.
While Miss MacIntosh, My Darling met with some acclaim, Marguerite Young’s earlier work, Angel in the Forest: A Fairy Tale of Two Utopias, won multiple literary awards. It was a study of the foundation of New Harmony, Indiana, a utopian commune where Young lived for seven years.
Summary: … [A] young woman embarks on a dreamlike voyage through time and memory in search of her darling childhood nursemaid, Miss Macintosh from What Cheer, Iowa, who has disappeared into the ocean, never to be seen again. Finding herself adrift on a sea of delusion and fantasy, the young woman fervently searches for reality only to discover herself drowning in illusion.
This novel is also unfortunately out of print, although used copies seem to be available on amazon.com and eBay. Poor Fellow My Country is the only Australian novel to appear on this list. While Xavier Herbert was a controversial figure, both by today and his own time’s standards, he was known for being a champion for the Australian Aboriginal people; this commitment appears in Poor Fellow My Country.
Summary: Ranging over a period of some six years, the story is set during the late 1930s and early 1940s; but it is not so much a tale of this period as Herbert’s analysis (and indictment) of the steps by which we came to the Australia of today. Capturing the Spirit Of The Land, Herbert has paralleled an intimate personal narrative with a tale of approaching war. Prindy, the young quarter-caste Aborigine identifies with Bob Wirridirridi the witch-doctor and the Rainbow Snake Cult. He grows from adolescence to manhood through a series of events, some of which are hilariously comic and others tragically violent, but he does not lose sight of his final goal: that of initiation into full manhood in the Cult of the Rainbow Snake. His natural grandfather Jeremy Delacy, The Scrub Bull, infuriates people with his attitudes, especially that of his apparent lack of interest in influencing Prindy. At times he is harsh and brutal, but he is also shown to love with rare compassion. Rifkah, the Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany, who eventually identifies with the Aborigines and becomes Prindy’s tribal mother, is brought into conflict with Aelfreda Candlemas the reformer and writer who tries to make a superman of Jeremy and in her failure turns from scorching love to violent rejection.
The word count of 969,000 words is true for the first edition of Clarissa, but later editions seem to have climbed to above 1,000,000 words. However, it was not possible to find an estimate more accurate than “above 1,000,000 words” for these later editions. However, even when using the lower number of the first edition, Clarissa still easily comes in third on this list. Though Clarissa is well-known for its length, it is also noted for being an example of an epistolary narrative.
Summary: Richardson first presents the heroine, Clarissa Harlowe, when she is discovering the barely masked motives of her family, who wants to force her into a loveless marriage to improve its fortunes. When Lovelace, a romantic who holds the code of the Harlowes in contempt, offers her protection, she runs off with him. She is physically attracted by if not actually in love with Lovelace, but she is to discover that he wants her only on his own terms and she refuses to marry him. In Lovelace’s letters to his friend Belford, Richardson shows that what is driving [Lovelace] to conquest and finally to rape is really revenge for her family’s insults and his sense of Clarissa’s moral superiority. For Clarissa, however, accepting marriage as a convenience is no better than accepting the opportunistic moral code of her family. As the novel comes to its long-drawn-out close, she is removed from the world of both the Harlowes and the Lovelaces, and she dies true to herself to the end.
Unfortunately, this novel is out of print and rather difficult to come by. The novel’s setting, the town of Sironia, is based on the author’s hometown of Waco, Texas. The extent to which the book is autobiographical is not known, as Cooper had all of his files destroyed, though a few of the characters from his work have been identified with their likely counterparts in real life.
Summary: Sironia, Texas describes life in the titular town during the first twenty years of the 20th century. “…to judge from Sironia, Texas in those days must have been … wilder than even now. In the lives of Cooper’s 30-odd major characters, there occur a flood, several murders and suicides, and a castration party. One whorehouse burns down, one Negro is burned alive, one changeling is introduced into a childbed. Girls are seduced and others are beaten; at times it seems as though the streets of Sironia must be paved with female teeth. Crowbars are swung in labor strife, horsewhips in political campaigns. Sex-crazed old women corner fresh-faced youths in locked bedrooms. Blackmail is a commonplace, miscegenation comes almost as natural as breathing, and the highest ambition of mankind, it would seem, is to own a real, live, spangly N’awlins ‘hoah’.
Some people might argue that Mission Earth is in fact a series of novels and should be excluded from this list, but it appears that it was the author’s intent for the work to be a single novel published in ten volumes. Despite being authored by L. Ron Hubbard, this novel in fact has little to do with Scientologist beliefs, though like the Scientologist mythology, Mission Earth’s plot is based on an alien race coming to Earth and the chaos that ensues.
Summary: Mission Earth has an entire galaxy for its backdrop, though the main action occurs on Earth and the planet Voltar. The Voltarian Grand Council has become convinced that it must send a mission to prevent Earth from destroying itself–thus allowing the Voltar Confederacy to proceed on its long-standing invasion plan and timetable to conquer a planet they regard as an important future way-stop on the main invasion route toward the center of the galaxy. The mission is assigned to a clandestine agent, Fleet Combat Engineer Jettero Heller. Soon after arriving on Earth, he heads to New York City where he is determined to get to the bottom of what is causing Earth to self-destruct, unaware that his every move is being tracked and that powerful forces on Voltar want his mission to fail.























June 6th, 2009 at 4:32 am
I was going to comment on the ABBA list, but I must have time-warped somewhere. Hurley? Is that you?
June 6th, 2009 at 4:40 am
This is like the Top 10 gifts for a snoopy neighbour.
June 6th, 2009 at 5:04 am
Awesome list
June 6th, 2009 at 5:11 am
While I am very excited that my list actually got posted… what happened to the list of ABBA songs?
June 6th, 2009 at 5:34 am
I can’t believe that I’ve actually read two of these!
June 6th, 2009 at 6:02 am
As Lord of the Rings was intended to be 1 novel in 6 sections. I belive you skipped it with a word count of 561792.
June 6th, 2009 at 6:03 am
believe that is
June 6th, 2009 at 6:03 am
Great list, msulli22! I have only read one of these, but will add them to my book reading list.
Also want to know what happened to the ABBA list?
June 6th, 2009 at 6:05 am
Uni: that is a brilliantly astute comment.
I would personally love to have a crack at these but while I can read something like the 4 Hitchhiker’s compiled into one book quite easily, reading a single, seamless novel so vividly expansive and descriptive would probably and up giving me a headache; I can’t be sure though so if I ever happen to have some money and a small shopping cart outside my local bookstore, I’d grab one of these for sure because they all sound brilliant.
It makes me so sad to think that two of these magnum opus novels are almost completely lost to the world, the only physical things to show of incredible effort on the part of the writer are sadly more fragile than they would appear.
June 6th, 2009 at 6:05 am
I wish I knew the average word length of books so I could actually compare. -_-
Infinite Jest sounds awesome, though, I’ll definitely have to check that one out.
June 6th, 2009 at 6:24 am
According to Wikipedia -
Marienbad My Love is a free, electronic novel by Mark Leach. Placed online in 2008, it is 17 million words long.
June 6th, 2009 at 6:59 am
I read James Clavell’s “Shogun” in 7th grade don’t know the word count but it was 1200+ pages took me 6 months to read it, but was 13 at the time.
June 6th, 2009 at 7:06 am
gremlinmiller- I did look up LOTR’s word count, but the figure I got from Amazon.com was only 467,662 words.
http://www.amazon.com/Lord-Rings-50th-Anniversary-Vol/dp/sitb-next/0618640150/ref=sbx_txt#textstats
I’ve only actually read one of these books (Infinite Jest); I have an incredibly large stack of books in my “to read” pile, but at some point I will get around to Atlas Shrugged, Clarissa, and Remembrance Rock.
June 6th, 2009 at 7:19 am
No the “Blah story?”
June 6th, 2009 at 7:27 am
Interesting list, I love book lists.
Perfect for me, the little bookworm. I’ll definitely have to read a few of these.
I’ve only read “Atlas Shrugged” out of these, but “Infinite Jest” has been recommended to me, I just haven’t been able to get a hold of it.
June 6th, 2009 at 7:31 am
Awesome list..Loved Clavell’s Noble House novels..L.Ron Hubbard and Ayn Rand..although unchecked capitalism has caused much hardship! Poor Fellow sounds interesting as just finished ‘The Sacred Earth’ by Brian Leigh Molyneaux who mentions the ‘Dreaming’ of Australian Aboriginies. A Suitable Boy I feel, I must peruse, as a close friend is a Mehra. Infinite Jest seems uncannily prescient of the problems facing us now in Canada, where the separatist movement is still alive and we dull our senses with ‘reality’ shows & etc.
June 6th, 2009 at 7:49 am
Nice list – only read 1 of them, also read ” Shogun “as mentioned in comment 12, that was a pretty thick, heavy book.
Thanks msulli22
June 6th, 2009 at 7:53 am
i have not read a single one of these(yet), but this list may very well entice me to….very nice
June 6th, 2009 at 8:13 am
Nice list, msulli. I always enjoy reading about books, but would never try to read such long ones. I read slow, and lose interest in books that take me forever to read. A couple look interesting, especially Atlas Shrugged and Sironia, Texas. I retired recently, so maybe I will give one a try.
June 6th, 2009 at 8:58 am
Remebrance Rock sounds good; I’d like to read that someday
June 6th, 2009 at 9:01 am
Isabella- “Blah” contains the longest sentence and longest word. Wether or not it’s a novel is up for grabs. I wonder if Tomm gives readings, um, I mean A reading. All in one stretch. It could be done in the german church where “As Slow As Possible” by Cage is being played.
June 6th, 2009 at 9:13 am
Hi. I expected to see War and Peace at no.1 (given the hype after all these years), but there seems to be some disagreement as to the actual word count: as low as 460,000 and as high as 560,000 in some cases. Worth a honorable mention?
The longest book I have ever read (and re-read many times) is the LOTR trilogy – but that’s just it – this is a one-volume trilogy. Imagine what a one-volume Harry Potter would look like – or a one-volume Sherlock Holmes!
Ever wondered what the longest (word count) non-fiction book of all time is… imagine a one-volume global telephone directory.
[made from recycled paper of course]
June 6th, 2009 at 9:17 am
I’m surprised nothing from Dickens (Dombey and Son) or Melville (Moby Dick) appear here. Of course, I haven’t done a word count on either, but they are quite lengthy. In fact, I’ve not heard of a single book on this list except “Atlas Shrugged” and only because I have seen it on a previous list on this website.
June 6th, 2009 at 9:24 am
War and Peace is only in the english language by way of translation.
June 6th, 2009 at 9:32 am
What about “The Stand”?
June 6th, 2009 at 10:19 am
Nice list msulli. “Top 10 Shortest Novels in the English Language” would make a good follow up list. My attention span is
June 6th, 2009 at 10:51 am
@Shifty: you couldn’t do that because you might have to include picture books, short stories etc. etc.
June 6th, 2009 at 10:59 am
I would have bet that Proust would have been on here. But I guess his novel is considered to be split into many parts. I am sure that combined they would be huge though. Ah well, great list, I am adding infinite jest to my reading list.
June 6th, 2009 at 11:02 am
msulli, are you from Iowa?
June 6th, 2009 at 11:04 am
Melanie, “The Stand” just feels like the longest novel in the English language. As does “Cryptonomicon”.
June 6th, 2009 at 11:48 am
bill09- no, I’m not from Iowa. Why?
ABrutalKind- Proust absolutely would have been on this list had he written in English. Your intuition was correct- his novel is considered to be one single continuous work.
June 6th, 2009 at 11:56 am
I just asked my smart ass daughter “How many words do you think there are in Watership Down?” and she says “Two.”
June 6th, 2009 at 12:09 pm
I’m surprised that Helen Hooven Santmyer’s “…And Ladies of the Club” didn’t make the list. It’s got to be at least 500,000 words.
June 6th, 2009 at 2:52 pm
It doesn’t compare to these books for size – but a huge book which is incredibly easy to read and fantastic is Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett.
June 6th, 2009 at 3:15 pm
boring
June 6th, 2009 at 3:16 pm
Man, I hate onanists. They’re jackoffs.
June 6th, 2009 at 3:52 pm
I’ve been reading Infinite Jest for months–at first avidly and decidedly less so since p. 500. I never thought I could take long breaks from something so complex but I have, and have needed them. At the same time, I’m reading The Broom of the System. My conclusion is that they’re both too long–novels are more than frameworks to hang ideas from and after several hundred pages of authorial philosophizing, the reader just stops caring. Reading these books has become a second job. While I’ll finish both, I highly doubt I’ll reread either.
June 6th, 2009 at 4:54 pm
How did you came up with those numbers lol ?
June 6th, 2009 at 5:06 pm
38 Rui Manuel Quintino –Why add a lol to the end of your question.
I too wonder what the formula for converting page # to word count is.
I’m currently reading an 850+/- page book, and am curious what that would convert to.
Are these numbers of words on the list counted word for word, or are they an estimate?
June 6th, 2009 at 5:33 pm
#27 wired22: but I like pictures! Also if you counted each picture of a picture book as 1000 words they wouldn’t be that short.
June 6th, 2009 at 5:43 pm
looks like interesting… nice list, i will start with number 7
thanks
June 6th, 2009 at 5:44 pm
My fondness (both in reading and writing) tends towards the short story. But what a pleasure it must have been for these writers to be so consumed by an idea that they could just write and write…and not stop…wow.
Can we count the work by Henry Dargar “The Story of the Vivian Girls, in What is known as the Realms of the Unreal, of the Glandeco-Angelinnian War Storm, Caused by the Child Slave Rebellion”? That craziness was 15,000+ pages…
June 6th, 2009 at 5:59 pm
#39 deeziner – I dunno… Just felt like it… I also wonder how he calculated the number of words in those books… I’m sure he didn’t count them all… If those books were eBooks then it would be a piece of cake…
June 6th, 2009 at 6:41 pm
thank GOD none of these were prescribed readings in school!!
June 6th, 2009 at 7:16 pm
Thanks!
June 6th, 2009 at 7:23 pm
Jfrater, I love Pillars of The Earth, it is a great read. I am now reading the sequel World Without End. I think Ken Follett really did a good thing when he branched out of his usual genre.
June 6th, 2009 at 8:03 pm
good list, msulli22
well, i got these word counts from this site:
http://www.renlearn.com/store/quiz_home.asp#quicksearch
i couldn’t find word count over on amazon (i know it’s supposed to be “text stats” but i couldn’t find it), but it lists LOTR as higher individually (in you comment 13), so i’d assume that it’s bigger for all the relevant works.
word count is determined by a “average word/page” formula. not by a computer really counting the words, so it varies depending on what formula was used.
when you take into account that Tolkien wanted the LOTR “trilogy” published as one volume, and that he wanted The Silmarillion published simultaneously as the second volume of a single literary work shouldn’t it be on here? using these word counts, we get the “trilogy” alone = 455, 125
with The Silmarillion = 571, 521
The Silmarillion 116,396
The Fellowship of the Ring 177.227
The Two Towers 143,436
The Return of the King 134,462
okay, well his original intentions for The Silmarillion are hard to determine. i got the idea that he wanted it published as a part of LOTR from, wiki, and then a few other places confirmed that he submitted an early draft of it to his publisher prior to LOTR, but Tolkien’s real intent is hard to know.
so you were probably right to leave it off, but this info about is is interesting. maybe it deserved an “honorable mention”?
June 6th, 2009 at 9:10 pm
Holy cat hair! I’ve read one (The Invaders Plan)and one other sounds interesting (Infinite Jest). Maaaaybe …
Spidr
June 7th, 2009 at 12:38 am
Since it was never published, and some may argue about it as legitimate fiction, you should give a bonus cred to Henry Darger’s In the Realms of the Unreal, which had a total of 15,145 densely written pages (can’t find a word count)
Darger was a very tragic, fascinating person: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Darger
June 7th, 2009 at 12:45 am
I read Gai-Jin (I’m a big fan of Clavell) and it is indeed very long, but I never expected it to be in the top 10 longest novels!
Too bad it’s one of his weaker works. Which was a disappointment to me, since I’ve always thought of it as the long awaited sequel to the marvelous Shogun.
June 7th, 2009 at 4:05 am
42&49: Never heard of Darger..fascinating link..thanks.
June 7th, 2009 at 4:21 am
This list leaves off Gravity’s Rainbow, yet it’s featured elsewhere on Lisvers as one of the most important novel of the 20th centory. Not long enough? A mere 155,000 words.
I’d also like to suggest the Aubrey/Maturin novels by Patrick O’Brien, which stand up well when considered as a single serial novel.I’m guessing them at >1.2 million words.
–rick vosper
June 7th, 2009 at 6:35 am
Interesting list…time for me to pull “Atlas” off the shelf and read it!
June 7th, 2009 at 7:25 am
Hey all- I’m glad my list is giving people reading suggestions.
The word count for MOST of the novels came from Amazon.com’s text stats. Some editions have text stats listed, some don’t, so the easiest way to find them is to google “[name of book] text stats”.
Some of you have mentioned Marienbad, My Love, The Blah Story, and the Vivian Girls. These are indeed the longest novels ever if we are considering unpublished/self-published works. I decided not to include self-published works, because then anyone could just write a bunch of words and put them on the Internet and, voila, they have the longest novel ever. I took a look at the Blah Story myself- it is barely comprehensible, since it is being written simply with the goal of being the longest novel in mind.
chuchu353- Nice catch on “…And Ladies of the Club”. I looked it up, and it indeed should have been on the list. I spent days going through forums of people’s opinions of the longest novels and then googling word counts. “…And Ladies of the Club” never came up once! Amazon.com text stats give a word count of 581,317 words.
Also, I’m a “she”, not a “he”.
June 7th, 2009 at 7:37 am
cool
June 7th, 2009 at 7:41 am
whats the blah story?
June 7th, 2009 at 8:55 am
After reading this i wondered what the longest book ever was and so a quick search on google yielded a very old book writen in the Ming dynasty. Aparently 3000 scholers spent 4 year creating the book which comes in 11,095 volumes conatining 370 million chinese characters…
June 7th, 2009 at 9:03 am
though I didn’t read any of these novels,it was nice to read the summary.. thanks alot for your idea..
June 7th, 2009 at 10:16 am
A good list, how did you research it?
June 7th, 2009 at 10:33 am
Great list. Will try to read Infinite jest.
June 7th, 2009 at 11:32 am
#57, that was just their telephone directory.
June 7th, 2009 at 12:59 pm
Excellent book, I could not stop reading.
Highly recommended.
——————————————————
My favorite Task Management software http://www.InTaskPro.com
June 7th, 2009 at 1:11 pm
I’ve read several of the books on the list (don’t bother reading Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged”), but my first thought was (ding-a-ling) where is Marcel Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past? Then I ding-a-linged again and reread the list title. Longest Novels in the ENGLISH Language.
Whoops.
June 7th, 2009 at 1:44 pm
42 hunter4086 – “But what a pleasure it must have been for these writers to be so consumed by an idea that they could just write and write…and not stop…wow.”
That would be awesome, but like you, I can’t imagine writing over a MILLION WORDS. I’m almost up to 90,000 on my current work (probably close to 100 when it’s done). But a million? I don’t have that much to say!
June 7th, 2009 at 2:11 pm
What about “…And the Ladies of the Club”?
June 7th, 2009 at 2:36 pm
Glad to have read James Clavells books but not this one…now for the trip….
June 7th, 2009 at 3:33 pm
Numbers 8-10 sound like novels I’d like to read. With #8 and 9, I really love the historical stuff.
June 7th, 2009 at 9:27 pm
As a book person myself, I’ve just got to throw out there that there are *plenty* more sites than Amazon or Ebay to get used books. Half.com, abebooks.com and alibris.com are three that I use all the time, plus a couple of book swapping sites (paperbackswap.com and bookmooch.com).
I see quite a few copies of Sironia, Texas available on abebooks.com, for instance, making it relatively easy to find.
As for Clarissa (the only one on the list that is in the public domain. Maybe they knew how to edit books in the old days?), this was a 9-volume work originally, and is available for free download on gutenberg.org.
June 7th, 2009 at 9:28 pm
i was surprised to not see Les miserables until i went back up to the top of the list and saw that translated books weren’t included. Les miserables is one huge book.
June 7th, 2009 at 9:30 pm
@Jfrater:
Pillars of the Earth is indeed and excellent book.
Mission Earth series was extremely tedious. I only got through like 5 of the novels and I considered that a heroic feat.
Battlefield Earth on the other hand is a pretty damn entertaining piece of Sci-Fi pulp. Also by Hubbard and also long as crap.
I haven’t read Gai-Jin, but I have read King Rat and Shogun.
Atlas Shrugged bored me before I got to a couple-hundred pages. It seemed intent upon battering me with the same ideas on every page as if I was a 3 year old.
June 8th, 2009 at 12:16 am
Mahabaratha, the India epic has 1.8 million words. I wonder if there is any other epic (in any language) that has more words than this master piece?
June 8th, 2009 at 1:34 am
Gai-Jin is the worst Clavell book I have read. Although it seemed long, it was mostly because almost nothing happened. Cullum was sick, and suffering, and many words were expended on that. We never met the Hag, whom we had been wondering about since she figured so prominently in the memories of the Struans in Noble House. (She was introduced in Tai-Pan, but was not yet the Hag, so having her offshore for the whole of Gai-Jin was quite frustrating. Whirlwind was published in two volumes, unlike Gai-Jin, so I’m surprised that it’s not longer. It’s also way better. Well worth both full reads I’ve given it. Gai-Jin was a severe disappointment.
June 8th, 2009 at 6:36 am
I agree…Shogun was much better than Gaijin and longer I thought. And The Fountainhead was much better than Atlas Shrugged and longer I thought. Some of those others sound pretty good…i love a good long story (-:
June 8th, 2009 at 6:49 am
Re No 5. Was gifted with Ms. Young’s instruction in poetry in college. A gifted teacher who taught you to look everywhere, describe every detail precisely and deeply.
June 8th, 2009 at 7:17 am
Crumbs. And I’ve been worrying whether my novel is too long at 150,000 words….
June 8th, 2009 at 9:21 am
Thomas Wolfe You Can’t Go Home Again and several later novels such as Of Time and the River are VERY long, and wonderful reads!
June 8th, 2009 at 11:01 am
I wonder how many words Imajica by Clive Barker has, that is one of the longest book’s I’ve ever read and also one of my favorites.
June 8th, 2009 at 11:23 am
Mission Earth…. I made it through the first 4 or 5 volumes before losing interest – and I’m a Sci-Fi geek.
Hubbard could certainly come up with some amazing scenarios (in both the Sci-Fi and religion arenas), but the guy could NOT be concise. He HAD to write in 4k words that which could be said in 1k. Check out Battlefield Earth – set aside a long time to read it as it’s huge, too.
Another Sci-Fi writer who seems to take too long is Stephen Donaldson. His “Thomas Covenant” series (there are 3 now… I’ve only trudged through series 1&2) take forever to get through, but are pretty good.
June 8th, 2009 at 9:40 pm
Man, I *hated* the Thomas Covenant books. Or, should I say, “book” since after one there was no way I was going to continue to read about such an unlikable self-centered jerk as the title character. A man so self-centered that he failed to notice, in his musings about his surroundings and his disease, that he was raping a girl.
Robert Jordan was another long-winded guy, who once spent more than 400 pages moving his Wheel of Time series along one day.
June 9th, 2009 at 12:55 am
Stephen King considers his Dark Tower Saga comprised of seven lengthy books to be one novel. It could have made the list.
June 9th, 2009 at 7:03 am
Great list but I’ll wait until the movies come out
June 9th, 2009 at 7:10 am
American Tragedy by Theodore Dreiser?
June 9th, 2009 at 4:37 pm
I absolutely LOVE David Foster Wallace and bought Infinite Jest a few years ago… but the damn thing is so intimidating that it’s just been sitting on my bookshelf, mocking me.
i guess it’s time to tackle the beast.
I really am partial to his short stories and essays though… I’ve found that as of late, full novels tend to lose me halfway through..
June 10th, 2009 at 3:53 am
I don’t get why Stephen King’s Dark Tower isn’t on the list.
King stated that he consider the series to be one big book.
1. DT1-The revised Gunslinger: 67174 words
2. DT2-The Drawing of the Three : 127120 words
3. DT3-The Waste Lands : 175665 words
4. DT4-Wizard and Glass : 258930 words
5. DT5-Wolves of the Calla : 244524 words
6. DT6-Song of Susannah : 129631 words
7. DT7-The Dark Tower : 275044 words
Total Count Word: 1.278,088 Million
June 10th, 2009 at 7:13 am
First, I agree with Fred about Robert Jordan being long-winded. I tend to like his characters anyway, although I faded when faced with book 11 (and then 12, with 13-14 yet to be published).
The longest book I have ever read was “The Far Pavilions” by M.M. Kaye. Amazon has it as 492,151 words. The author is an India-raised Briton, so this should count as native English novel. While it has been over 20 years since I read it and plot details have faded from memory, I recall enjoying both it and the mini-series created from it.
June 10th, 2009 at 10:39 am
This list made me think about the length of religious books. How many words does the Bible or the Qur´an has?
Then I thought about The Urantia Book:
http://www.urantia.org/about.html
It was written in english and maybe deserves to be here.
June 10th, 2009 at 6:43 pm
Where is Anthony Trollope’s The Way We Live Now?
June 10th, 2009 at 11:25 pm
Interesting!
June 11th, 2009 at 10:27 am
Ive never read any of these books!!!! Im so illiterate!!!
June 11th, 2009 at 2:17 pm
Where is Anthony Powell’s Dance to the Music of Time? I thought that was the longest novel in the English language.
June 12th, 2009 at 5:06 pm
Hunger’s Brides by Paul Anderson
June 13th, 2009 at 10:19 pm
isn’t the book war and peace longer than atlas shrugged? shouldn’t that be on here.
June 13th, 2009 at 10:25 pm
sorry about the above comment, i realized that it was written in russian…
June 22nd, 2009 at 12:44 pm
I am not saying that Tom Clancy is a great author, but his books do top the bestseller’s list. He has a few very long books. Some the books with over a million words seem more like gimmicks than books I would like to read. Clancy is more a genre writer than gimmick.
Here are the numbers for word counts as posted by amazon.com under the text stats. Without Remorse has 247,551 words. Rainbow Six has 297,304 words. The Bear and The Dragon (2001) with 375,229 words. Debt of Honor clocks in with 329,339 words. Executive Orders (1997) totals at 448,614 words.
Debt of Honor and Executive Orders can almost be considered one book since the action jumps from one book to the other. 778,053 words would be the total.
July 8th, 2009 at 3:14 pm
I thought a book called
Marienbad my Love
was #1
perhaps this is more like “best books over or near 500,000 words”
July 23rd, 2009 at 11:21 pm
Not to complain too much, but this list is laughably lacking!
Marienbad My Love clocks in at something like 17 million and even if you don’t think it (and a few others!) are legit, The Wheel of Time is certainly legit and is 3,430,682 words long!
August 8th, 2009 at 9:09 pm
i was hoping to know pages, not words, but millions of words? thats a long book.
August 16th, 2009 at 3:08 am
You might consider Henry Darger’s work, which at 15,145 single-spaced pages easily eclipses all of the above works. It was also illustrated with hundreds of pictures, many of which were mural sized. Of course, publishing a work of this scope is impossible, so if publication is a requisite for making the list then sorry Henry. The story of Darger’s life and work are incredible for anyone interested in the psychology of creativity, outsider art, and/or little girls with penises fighting a war against evil men with the assistance of extra-terrestrials (I am not making that up).
More info here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Darger
October 27th, 2009 at 2:19 am
AWESOME,DOOD! I HAVE TO READ ALL OF THESE BOOKS…THINK THEY’LL BE BETTER THAN HISTORY LESSONS…SERIOUSLY!!!
October 27th, 2009 at 2:21 am
i was serious…eventhoe i’m 13
November 1st, 2009 at 1:20 pm
Richard Adams’ “Maia” is over 500,000 words long (I don’t have the exact word count), and it fit all your parameters.
December 4th, 2009 at 7:39 pm
You didn’t say how amny pages they were!!
January 7th, 2010 at 2:58 am
Those of you who think that Atlas Shrugged is boring or reptitive, or that the central theory doesn’t work are small minded fools.
Darger work should be an honorable #1. Someone should print it, or more practically scan it on to a computer like google is bent on doing with all books. That would be some accomplishment to finish.
January 24th, 2010 at 1:58 am
The Night’s Dawn Trilogy – Peter F. Hamilton
The Reality Dysfunction: 385k
The Neutronium Alchemist: 393k
The Naked God: 469k
Total: 1M 247k
and probably ilium/olympos dualogy from Dan Simmons
but i cant find a word count anywhere