2015-05-25

Harold Bloom, if you haven’t heard of him, is a longtime literary scholar and professor, as well as the author of dozens of books of literary criticism. His latest offering to the world is called The Daemon Knows: Literary Greatness and the American Sublime, in which he lists 12 American authors whose influence has shaped the American “creative spirit.” Now, the “American Sublime” is something that many critics have taken a whack at, each applying the term to different writers, but I’m not going to go into all that here.

Anyway, many of us Rioters were disturbed by the news of Bloom’s book, mostly because he seems to be stuck in some sort of temporal trap, in which anyone writing after the mid-20th century doesn’t exist. Oh, and he doesn’t realize that there are some pretty brilliant American writers who aren’t white. Amazing.

Now, I haven’t read this book, I just read about it, but I have two claims: 1. if Bloom is arguing that these 12 white (and almost all male) writers represent the pinnacle of American literature, then he needs to return to planet Earth and look around. 2. if Bloom is simply trying to define the “American Sublime” in terms of “canonical” writers, then excuse me but snoooooooooooooooooooze because writing a book about Whitman and Melville and Dickinson and Emerson has been done and done and done and let’s move on, shall we? I mean, Melville is one of my favorite writers ever. But this new book of criticism that stops with Faulkner seems dated, like Bloom wrote this 30 years ago and just found the manuscript in his attic and decided to publish it. WHATEVER.

The great thing that came out of the announcement of Bloom’s book, though, is the wonderful discussion that it sparked in the BR back-channels. So we decided to write our own lists of “12 Greatest American Authors,” taking into consideration influence, stylistic brilliance, and many other factors that made us love particular writers. Unlike Bloom, we didn’t restrict “American” to the United States, but included all of North, South, and Central America. We invite you to check out our lists (which are much more diverse and timely than Bloom’s) and tell us who you would include on a list of “top 12.”

(Note that many of these lists follow no particular order because that would be impossible. It was already excruciatingly difficult to pick just 12!)



Rachel C.

Jorge Luis Borges

Ralph Ellison

Willa Cather

Richard Wright

Zora Neale Hurston

Toni Morrison

Herman Melville

Sherman Alexie

Mark Twain

Vladimir Nabokov

Anne Bradstreet

Donna Tartt

Danika Ellis

Alice Walker

Toni Morrison

Imogen Binnie

Thomas King

Malinda Lo

Octavia Butler

Sassafras Lowrey

Dorothy Allison

Audre Lorde

Tamora Pierce

Alison Bechdel

Ellis Avery

Liberty Hardy

Edward P. Jones

Charles Portis

Elizabeth McCracken

Kurt Vonnegut

Octavia Butler

Roberto Bolaño

Ursula K. Le Guin

Flannery O’Connor

Margaret Atwood

Russell Hoban

Shirley Jackson

John Steinbeck

Jeff O’Neal

Walt Whitman

Toni Morrison

Herman Melville

Emily Dickinson

Ralph Ellison

Ralph Waldo Emerson

William Faulkner

Kurt Vonnegut

Mark Twain

Zora Neale Hurston

John Steinbeck

Willa Cather

Amanda Nelson

Toni Morrison

Margaret Atwood

Louise Erdrich

Isabel Allende

John Steinbeck

Junot Díaz

Marilynne Robinson

Edith Wharton

Flannery O’Connor

Herman Melville

John Steinbeck

Sylvia Plath

Derek Attig

Gloria Anzaldúa

Anne Bradstreet

Gwendolyn Brooks

Octavia Butler

Aimé Césaire

Ta-Nehisi Coates

Frederick Douglass

Leslie Feinberg

Allen Ginsberg

R. Zamora Linmark

Henry David Thoreau

Walt Whitman

Cassandra Neace

Gabriel García Márquez

Sherman Alexie

Zora Neale Hurston

Margaret Atwood

Junot Diaz

Octavia Butler

Pablo Neruda

Amy Tan

Flannery O’Connor

Nathaniel Hawthorne

Octavio Paz

Willa Cather

Nikki Steele

Ray Bradbury

Toni Morrison

Cormac McCarthy

Sandra Cisneros

Gabriel García Márquez

Margaret Atwood

Jorge Luis Borges

Marilynne Robinson

John Steinbeck

Stan Lee

Ursula K. Le Guin

Edgar Allen Poe

Jessica Woodbury

Margaret Atwood

Ray Bradbury

Willa Cather

Junot Díaz

William Faulkner

Shirley Jackson

Gabriel García Márquez

Toni Morrison

John Steinbeck

Mark Twain

Kurt Vonnegut

Edith Wharton

Aram Mrjoian

James Baldwin

Ernest Hemingway

Toni Morrison

Junot Díaz

William Gaddis

Margaret Atwood

Anais Nin

Roberto Bolano

Ken Kesey

Sylvia Plath

Cormac McCarthy

Ralph Ellison

Karina Glaser

Betty Smith

Lucille Clifton

Emily Dickinson

John Steinbeck

Louisa May Alcott

Laura Ingalls Wilder

Maya Angelou

Amy Tan

Beverly Cleary

Langston Hughes

Elizabeth Enright

Eleanor Estes

Johann Thorsson

Toni Morrison

Ernest Hemingway

John Steinbeck

William Faulkner

Betty Smith

Shirley Jackson

Herman Melville

Mark Twain

Kurt Vonnegut

Stephen King (why not?)

Alice Walker

Truman Capote

Rah Carter

Maya Angelou

James Baldwin

Ray Bradbury

Emily Dickinson

Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Allen Ginsberg

Harper Lee

Sylvia Plath

Edgar Allan Poe

Jean Rhys

Mark Twain

Alice Walker

Alison Peters

Toni Morrison

Alice Walker

James Baldwin

Madeleine L’Engle

Isabel Allende

Gabriel García Márquez

Gloria Naylor

E.B. White

Annie Dillard

Rebecca Solnit

Louise Erdrich

Angela Johnson

Jessi Lewis

John Steinbeck

Toni Morrison

Gabriel García Márquez

Louise Erdrich

Herman Melville

Stephen King

James Baldwin

Sherman Alexie

Kurt Vonnegut

Amy Tan

Zora Neale Hurston

Ernest Hemingway

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