Top 50 European Novels You Must Read

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • If you enjoy my content, feel free to support the channel on my Ko-fi page: ko-fi.com/fictionbeast
    In this video, I journey to 50 countries in Europe to choose the best novel or novels from each country and bring them to you. Whether you want to read for pleasure, academic purposes or travel, these amazing novels can give you a deeper insight to each one of these countries.
    Audio Podcast: redcircle.com/shows/c101a9a1-...
    Follow me on INstagram: / fiction_philosophy
    00:00 Intro
    01:10 Albania
    02:12 Andorra
    02:44 Armenia
    03:44 Azerbaijan
    04:54 Austria
    06:00 Belarus
    07:06 Belgium
    08:38 Bosnia & Herzigovina
    09:38 Bulgaria
    10:36 Croatia
    12:44 Europe a Tiny Continent
    13:08 Cyprus
    13:33 Czech Republic
    14:49 Denmark
    16:03 Finland
    17:40 Estonia
    19:23 France
    20:20 Georgia
    21:19 Germany
    23:00 Greece
    23:57 Hungary
    25:04 European Languages facts
    27:02 Iceland
    27:57 Ireland
    29:02 Italy
    30:55 Kazakhstan
    31:51 Latvia
    33:08 Liechtenstein
    33:39 Lithuania
    35:12 Luxembourg
    35:47 Malta
    36:20 Moldova
    37:26 Europe’s People facts
    38:47 Monaco
    39:14 Montenegro
    40:26 Netherlands
    41:26 North Macedonia
    42:29 Norway
    43:36 Poland
    45:41 Portugal
    47:25 Romania
    48:55 Russia
    50:17 San Marino
    51:06 Europe’s legacy
    52:28 Serbia
    54:13 Slovakia
    55:25 Slovenia
    57:00 Spain
    58:42 Sweden
    01:00:17 Switzerland
    01:01:42 Turkey
    01:03:22 Ukraine
    01:04:36 United Kingdom
    01:06:17 Vatican City
    Music:
    We Are Here by Declan DP / declandp
    Licensing Agreement: declandp.info/music-licensing
    Free Download / Stream: bit.ly/_we-are-here
    Music promoted by Audio Library • We Are Here - Declan D...
    #literature
    #europeanliterature
    #readtheworld

Komentáře • 75

  • @Fiction_Beast
    @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +3

    Top 40 novels from Asia: czcams.com/video/yFzll79hCxk/video.html
    Top 12 novels from South America: czcams.com/video/PsMBPMjWdNw/video.html

  • @okuryazarkitapkurdu
    @okuryazarkitapkurdu Před rokem +10

    As a Turkish reader, I will recommend you to read Ahmet Hamdi Tanpınar, Buket Uzuner, Sabahattin Ali and Fakir Baykurt also🙂 And in poetry Nazım Hikmet and Edip Cansever are my favourites.

  • @joebennet770
    @joebennet770 Před rokem +3

    I love this channel, one of my all time favs

  • @alb5760
    @alb5760 Před 5 měsíci +1

    No wayyy! I was not expecting my beautiful Albania to be the first one!! I have been watching your channel for ages! Thank you for talking about the great Kadare 😊

  • @ioanaluminitzamusceleanu565

    I am profoundly grateful for your channel. Watching your videos I discovered the greatness and depth of some universal creations of literature that I ignored or couldn't perceive. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your helpful and professional endeavour. You give me the chance to understand better the world and the human's torment.
    I am a little disappointed because you skipped some authors from the Romanian literature but may be I am not aware of your 'criteria'.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +1

      Appreciate it. the world is vast. Itthis video is only a scratch the surface.

  • @soumiasoumia4330
    @soumiasoumia4330 Před rokem +1

    As always, very good job ❤ thank you for your time and effort 🙏

  • @user-re2em3zh2i
    @user-re2em3zh2i Před rokem +8

    Please make a video about Vladimir Nabokov

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. Před 4 měsíci +1

    _Pan Tadeusz_ is not actually set in modern-day Lithuania but in modern-day Belarus, which was part of the historical Grand Dutchy of Lithuania, and, in turn, of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Also, the main (titular) character - Tadeusz Soplica - is a young nobleman but not a count (as you said). I found this little mistake particularly weird because there is a character in _Pan Tadeusz_ who is a young count and is referred to simply as the Count (Hrabia). Speaking about Belarus, the name of the country does not mean "White Russia" but White Rus' (or "Ruthenia").
    Although Mickiewicz himself was Polish-speaking and wrote in Polish, he wrote some nice things about the Belarusian language:
    "The Belarusian language, which is also called Ruthenian or Lithuanian-Rusian [note the single 's' as it refers to Rus, not Russia], is spoken by about ten million people. It is a rich and pure dialect that originated a long time ago and is excellently developed. During the period of Lithuania's independence, the grand dukes used it for their correspondence. The Lithuanian Statute is written in this language, the least changed of all Slavic languages and the most harmonious."
    Source: Pisma Adama Mickiewicza, Paris, 1860. Vol. 10: Cours de littérature slave, IV
    As for modern Belarusian literature, I've heard good things about the works of Alhierd Bacharevič, particularly "Alindarka’s Children" which has an interesting English translation, utilising some Scottish English and Scots.

  • @izadjahanshahi6041
    @izadjahanshahi6041 Před rokem

    You are simply the best.
    Thank you so much for your hard work.

  • @dpd420
    @dpd420 Před rokem +1

    Amazing video! Greetings from Finland ❤️

  • @toomuchcandor3293
    @toomuchcandor3293 Před 4 měsíci

    The scope of your macroscopic analyses always impress me so much. Lovely to know its possible to have even read this much in one life time. What would your collective read time even be? Fiction beast really is an apt name. What kind of person does one even turn into after having read so much

  • @Nathan-ls4xt
    @Nathan-ls4xt Před rokem +1

    Liking and commenting for the sake of the algorithm.
    Also, as an English teacher, rest assured that I'm going to share your videos with my students.
    Thanks for all your hard work.

  • @plauzibilnekritike4282
    @plauzibilnekritike4282 Před rokem +4

    Great and educational channel :) What is your opinion on "The Return of Filip Latinovicz" and "Cyclops"? Maybe it would be interesting if you did more videos about the literature of "smaller nations". Greetings from Croatia!

    • @eldinsmajlovic1554
      @eldinsmajlovic1554 Před rokem

      Great books! Miroslav Krleža is a good writter. If he was born French, or English, the whol world would know about him.

  • @burke9497
    @burke9497 Před rokem +2

    Hey FB. Great video as always.
    Discussing Italy I thought you might mention The Leopard by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa. I read it a few years back and liked it a lot. For Italy I always think of it and Dante. And Pizza.

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +1

      Yes, Leopard is a great shout. I wonder if it was written after (1958) Calvino's Baron in the Trees (1957). the only connection I see that leopards are the only cat species that mostly live in trees. It's random, I know.

    • @albertorimoldi8713
      @albertorimoldi8713 Před 5 měsíci +1

      "The Betrothed" by Alessandro Manzoni, a XIX century historical novel set in the XVII century IS the national novel of Italy which every student must read at school.

  • @ascensionvaldes1412
    @ascensionvaldes1412 Před rokem

    Thanks very much!!

  • @chickencharlie1992
    @chickencharlie1992 Před rokem

    This is a brilliant idea

  • @satyajitacharya8798
    @satyajitacharya8798 Před rokem

    Can you please make a video on Charles Dickens ? I am a huge admirer of his works and would love to know your opinions on his literature. Thank you.

  • @Sachie465
    @Sachie465 Před rokem +1

    May I add Bohumil Hrabal for Czech Republic? He is somewhere between Celine and Kafka. (It’s just how I feel.)

  • @perlefisker
    @perlefisker Před rokem +2

    Any novel by Knut Hamsun will be rewarding to read, since there's not one novel in his authorship which isn't of the highest quality of literature.
    Being master of language he has no superfluous words. This mastery may of course be lost in translation, but since he's also the master of storytelling, a reader who isn't Norwegian/Danish will see this and appreciate it, I suppose.
    (By the way, I was surprised that you jumped from Gogol directly to the modern novelists without even mentioning Bulgakov, "The Heart of a Dog", or at least "The Master and Margarita".)

    • @skrieni
      @skrieni Před rokem

      Indeed. Knut Hamsun is one of my favs.

  • @nuno.6213
    @nuno.6213 Před rokem +3

    for belgium author check it out Marguerite Yourcenar memoirs of hadrian, one of the greatest european novels of the XXI century, deeply psychological and poetic.

  • @abhishekbhattacharjee4639

    Studying for engineering myself I find the premise for Lykke Per quite interesting I might give it a try

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem

      It's a brick of a book but you might enjoy it.

  • @ginomazzei1076
    @ginomazzei1076 Před rokem +1

    “Open my heart
    And you will see
    Etched upon it
    Italy”

  • @leighfoulkes7297
    @leighfoulkes7297 Před rokem +1

    For me, the best German write is Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and no other German writer comes close. Either "The Sorrows of Young Werther" or Faust part 1 and Faust part 2.

  • @vanjadrljaca7779
    @vanjadrljaca7779 Před rokem

    I would recommend you checking Danilo Kiš and Miloš Crnjanski from Serbia.

  • @leighfoulkes7297
    @leighfoulkes7297 Před rokem

    The best Welsh novel I've read is "How Green was my Valley" by Richard Llewellyn which is about a mining village falling apart and it was turned into a classical movie too. For a classical Welsh novel go with "The History of the Kings of Britain" by Geoffrey of Monmouth which is the first major King Arthur book. "The Mabiogion" is less of a novel and more of a collection of ancient Welsh stories (a few King Arthur tails but not the major one).

  • @ruygranja
    @ruygranja Před 6 měsíci

    Thank You very much by mentioning Fernando Pessoa! He is in my opinion the greatest poet of all time and as Freud said: “everywhere I go, a poet was there before”.

  • @priscilladias8544
    @priscilladias8544 Před rokem

    Mauler and Questus by English writer Shawn Williamson. Indicated by histórian, writer and cinema director Andrew Sinclair.

  • @jeanmarieboucherit7376
    @jeanmarieboucherit7376 Před 4 měsíci

    PRICELESS

  • @eldinsmajlovic1554
    @eldinsmajlovic1554 Před rokem +1

    I recommend Meša Selimović "Death and the Dervish" from Bosnia.

  • @donaldkelly3983
    @donaldkelly3983 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this video!
    I would like to add the comeback player of Austrian literature Stefan Zweig, both for his fiction and nonfiction. Plus, the under appreciated Arthur Schnitzler.
    The Exemplary Stories by Cervantes are great warm up to meeting the Don.

  • @gracefitzgerald2227
    @gracefitzgerald2227 Před rokem +3

    I just finished Don Quixote and at first I was like WTF did I just read? Then I got into a fight with my husband and he blurted out”I don’t care about your stupid books.” Now I can’t stop thinking about it. Is our hero brilliant or not?
    Thanks for your videos, they always cheer me up❤

    • @kdot78
      @kdot78 Před rokem +1

      Grace, why did you get into the fight?

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +1

      Don Quixote is the greatest hero of all time. He represents what's great about humans.

    • @gracefitzgerald2227
      @gracefitzgerald2227 Před rokem

      @@Fiction_Beast thanks for that.😀

    • @gracefitzgerald2227
      @gracefitzgerald2227 Před rokem +1

      @@kdot78 20 years of marriage and sometimes hubby just wants to vent. I’ve read enough history, and philosophy to get a little too analytical. It worked itself out. Once he expressed his feelings then I expressed mine. “ then don’t complain.” 😊.
      I can’t put all the blame on him. Living with me is like living with Dale Carnegie ❤️

    • @kdot78
      @kdot78 Před rokem +2

      @@gracefitzgerald2227 thanks for the elaboration, I'm not married so I was curious. Thanks 🙂

  • @m.k.3197
    @m.k.3197 Před měsícem +1

    What has Azerbaijan to do with Europe?

  • @vicglez38
    @vicglez38 Před rokem +1

    the best spanish novel i¨ve ever read is "el arbol de la ciencia" by pio baroja

  • @soumiasoumia4330
    @soumiasoumia4330 Před rokem +1

    Can you do more videos about Russian literature?

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem +4

      Some people complained I focus too much on Russian literature. I think I got 15 videos (3-4 hours of content) on Russian literature. Any particular writer?

    • @soumiasoumia4330
      @soumiasoumia4330 Před rokem +1

      Nabokov maybe? Since there isn't a video about him :) thank you

  • @navjot5445
    @navjot5445 Před rokem

    Please do best novels of all time, keeping the geographical criterion aside

  • @HundreadD
    @HundreadD Před rokem

    Decent enough vid but you should have mentioned Karel Čapek or Bohumil Hrabal for Czechia. Way more interesting of a read for the modern reader than a generic novel that would be of no interest to anyone not Czech (and even for many people who are Czech) while Hrabal and Capek's books teem with interesting ideas and characters. It is amusing that you should mention The Man Without Qualities for Austria in the same vid because that book is wholly inaccessible compared with something like The Grandmother, and those not already predisposed to reading something like should never pick it up even for a lark. Perhaps you should have mentioned Stefan Zweig or Joseph Roth as well, all Austrians through and through and certainly more accessible

  • @chenyeming4977
    @chenyeming4977 Před 6 měsíci

    Don’t know why people always characterise Proust as a melancholic writer, a vast part of his novel is more social satire or observations. Guess the ‘melancholic parts’ are just used to connect the social scenes. À la recherche is actually a funny book, full of brilliant observations and dialogues, and Proust always bursted into laughter when reading it to his close friends. Also I don’t know if I have misunderstood the Crime and Punishment completely, but I don’t think the main character was redeemed in the end. I am still a beginner in Russian literature, don’t quite get it. For Austrian literature, Zweig, Schnitzler and Roth are far more accessible than Musil. I have not met many people who have finished der Mann ohne Eigenschaften, but those who have do praise it as a masterpiece. I definitely recommend Joseph Roth’s Radetzkymarsch, read it on two afternoons in Vienna and for me it really captures the now forever lost old Austria. Writers from Bohemia like Rilke and Stifter are also great. Old Austria’s favourite Grilleparzer is also brilliant, now almost nobody reads him. In fact Austrian literature is one of the greatest traditions in Europe, but largely forgotten because of the collapse of the Austrian Empire. I agree that Calvino is a great writer, but personally I prefer Manzoni, guess my taste is more classical. For the Vatican city, obviously the only things it produces now are encyclicals, but if you consider the historical Papal State then there are loads of great writers in Romanesque, Latin, and Tuscan, including Leopardi who comes from the Marche which were part of the Papal State. More closely related to the Papal court you may name perhaps Pietro Bembo, who writes in both Tuscan and Latin. And why not read some of the Papal encyclicals and letters? I personally find Pius IX’s writings where he laments the ‘fall of Rome’ (Breccia della Porta Pia, when the Italians took over Rome) and the closures of churches and monasteries quite interesting. The popes become interesting when they don’t talk about religion. Pope Pius II’s memoir, written in Latin, is also a unique piece of Renaissance literature. I have read like two volumes, but couldn’t find the modern edition for other volumes. It is written in a fairly simple language, less intimate and more structured than Augustine, where the pope discusses his political calculations, religious festivals, and his ideal Renaissance palace. For me it is definitely more exciting and diverse than any of your celebrated French authors of memoirs. It is also continuous prose (instead of diary or chronicle) like ancient historians. The pope has also written so many other things, and even a novel (though I don’t think it is very good). Definitely recommend if you can find modern bilingual editions (he’s hardly read by anyone nowadays except scholars of Renaissance history and literature).

  • @Ciskuss
    @Ciskuss Před rokem +6

    Great. It can be really better with timestamps

  • @sebbvell3426
    @sebbvell3426 Před rokem +1

    The Serbo-Croatian language and the Bosnian language are the same language by the way.

  • @alex-8206
    @alex-8206 Před rokem

    Gogol considered as a Russian author, but he has some stories about Ukraine, where's he came from.

  • @williamkauffman5745
    @williamkauffman5745 Před 3 měsíci

    I read the Lithuanian novel "the White Shroud" I thought it was excellent

  • @judiemueller2664
    @judiemueller2664 Před 6 měsíci

    Milorad pavic?

  • @downtherabbithole993
    @downtherabbithole993 Před 8 měsíci

    robert walser - german speaking but swiss. :)

  • @Waferdicing
    @Waferdicing Před rokem

    😎

  • @Tolstoy111
    @Tolstoy111 Před rokem

    Ulysses takes place in 1904!

    • @Fiction_Beast
      @Fiction_Beast  Před rokem

      I forgot what year I mentioned

    • @Tolstoy111
      @Tolstoy111 Před rokem

      @@Fiction_Beast 1922 :). The year the book was published.

  • @rabidhayalan
    @rabidhayalan Před rokem

    save this video

  • @HairyMidgetable
    @HairyMidgetable Před 10 měsíci

    No Northern Irish authors? 😮😮😮

  • @johnmanole4779
    @johnmanole4779 Před 2 měsíci

    48:16 you meant communism

  • @Billiethekid8
    @Billiethekid8 Před 7 měsíci

    I am from Georgia thank you for reading "Knight in panter's skin" In georgia we call that book Vepkhistkaosani 😅 I know its hard to pronounce