What author have you read the most books from?

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Another for PKD, largely due to his prodigious output and being completist about it. Having said that, I haven't delved into the couple of really early non-genre novels that have been reissued in the last decade or so. Or the Exegesis lol.

the bournemouth supremacy (Matt #2), Saturday, 27 June 2020 14:49 (three years ago) link

I enjoyed his non-SF Mary and the Giant, written in the early 50s, published in the late 80s, and The Broken Bubble, written in mid-50s, also published in late 80s. Have all the other non-SF novels, I think, and hope to read some day. Confessions of a Crap Artist, finished in at or near the end of the 50s, was the only one published in his lifetime (1975? Think so.) Maybe the first he finished, before Mary..., was Voices From The Street, published in 2007, or thereabouts. Also have Puttering About In A Small Land and In Milton Lumky Territory. I know enough Exegesis stuff from "The Dark-Haired Girl" and so on.

dow, Sunday, 28 June 2020 03:09 (three years ago) link

Oh also have (not read) Gather Yourselves Together, written in early 50s, published 1994, I think.

dow, Sunday, 28 June 2020 03:11 (three years ago) link

I'm not even sure Shakespeare is worthy of such completest devotion.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Sunday, 28 June 2020 03:12 (three years ago) link

7 books, no biggie.

dow, Sunday, 28 June 2020 03:32 (three years ago) link

highsmith, westlake or leonard

jack (unobtrusive ambient poll participant), Sunday, 28 June 2020 04:26 (three years ago) link

Highsmith, Herge, Waugh, Greene

Zelda Zonk, Sunday, 28 June 2020 09:10 (three years ago) link

That's probably the order of greatness as well

Zelda Zonk, Sunday, 28 June 2020 09:11 (three years ago) link

stephen king is a good shout. everything up to delores clairbourne, all the dark tower, second talisman book and full dark, no stars

maybe dickens (all the novels, some of them twice, all the christmas editions, american notes, pictures of italy etc, halfway through 'reprinted pieces' (the longer american edition))

iain banks. all the sf, lots of it multiple times, the first 9 of the non-m books, some of them multiple times.

alastair reynolds, maybe. i count 17 from the official bibliography

ed mcbain, 87th precinct novels, first 18 of those and two more, they are short, especially compared to dickens.

koogs, Sunday, 28 June 2020 20:37 (three years ago) link

do issues of, say, swamp thing or sandman counts as books?

koogs, Sunday, 28 June 2020 20:39 (three years ago) link

No

calstars, Sunday, 28 June 2020 20:39 (three years ago) link

Just had a look through Roald Dahl's bibliography and I have read 18 of those books.

Anti-Cop Ponceortium (Camaraderie at Arms Length), Sunday, 28 June 2020 20:46 (three years ago) link

From PKD biblio (thanks, wiki!) *ones I've read

Written Published
1950 Gather Yourselves Together 1994
1952 Voices from the Street 2007
1953 Vulcan's Hammer 1960
1953 Dr. Futurity 1960
1953 The Cosmic Puppets 1957
1954 Solar Lottery 1955
1954 Mary and the Giant 1987*
1954 The World Jones Made 1956
1955 Eye in the Sky 1957
1955 The Man Who Japed 1956
1956 A Time for George Stavros Manuscript lost
1956 Pilgrim on the Hill Manuscript lost
1956 The Broken Bubble 1988*
1957 Puttering About in a Small Land 1985
1958 Nicholas and the Higs Manuscript lost
1958 Time Out of Joint 1959
1958 In Milton Lumky Territory 1985
1959 Confessions of a Crap Artist 1975
1960 The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike 1984
1960 Humpty Dumpty in Oakland 1986
1961 The Man in the High Castle 1962*
LOA1
1962 We Can Build You 1972 First published as A. Lincoln, Simulacrum as a serial in Amazing Stories issues for November 1969 and January 1970.
1962 Martian Time-Slip 1964
1963 Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb
1963 The Game-Players of Titan 1963
1963 The Simulacra 1964
1963 The Crack in Space 1966 as Cantata-140 (1966)
1963 Now Wait for Last Year 1966 LOA2
1964 Clans of the Alphane Moon 1964
1964 The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch 1965*
1964 The Zap Gun 1967*
1964 The Penultimate Truth 1964
1964 Deus Irae 1976 with Roger Zelazny
1964 The Unteleported Man 1966 as Lies, Inc. (1984)
1965 The Ganymede Takeover 1967 with Ray Nelson
1965 Counter-Clock World 1967
1966 Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 1968*
LOA1
1966 Nick and the Glimmung 1988 For children
1966 Ubik 1969*
1968 Galactic Pot-Healer* 1969
1968 A Maze of Death 1970*
1969 Our Friends from Frolix 8 1970
1970 Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said 1974
1973 A Scanner Darkly 1977*
1976 Radio Free Albemuth 1985*
1978 VALIS 1981*
1980 The Divine Invasion 1981*
1981 The Transmigration of Timothy Archer 1982*
1982 The Owl in Daylight Unfinished
So 14 out of 44 published, not that great a ratio, but may well be the most books by single author (runners-up, in terms of books published in their lifetimes and shortly after: Beckett, Orwell).

dow, Sunday, 28 June 2020 22:34 (three years ago) link

alice munro

― carin' (map), Friday, June 26, 2020 8:57 PM (two days ago) bookmarkflaglink

just sayin, Sunday, 28 June 2020 22:36 (three years ago) link

xpost More recently, it's more like reading one or two books by every author I'm interest in (enough to read a whole book, or maybe two).

dow, Sunday, 28 June 2020 22:38 (three years ago) link

I’ll count only those writers whose entire output I’ve read or what’s been translated into English:

Roberto Bolaño
Thomas Bernhard
JD Salinger
Amos Tutuola
Karl Ove Knausgaard
Robert Walser
Lydia Davis
Yukio Mishima
Michel Houellebecq

... (Yelploaf), Sunday, 28 June 2020 22:58 (three years ago) link

Ok why do yr genre authroids pump out so many books while their literary brethren/sistren produce relatively few?

n.b. I do not mean this as pejorative (in case it sounds that way). Just sayin. There are like a zillion times as many Dick/Asimov books as there are books by, say, Iris Murdoch (who was no slouch).

zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 29 June 2020 00:30 (three years ago) link

Good question, impressive answers.

I suspect that my answer is Jonathan Lethem. In front of me I have all the books written by him that I have read (including eg: collections of essays published in other places). The total is 22.

the pinefox, Monday, 29 June 2020 07:57 (three years ago) link

zola and hardy i think

buzza, Monday, 29 June 2020 08:02 (three years ago) link

bs johnson, thomas bernhard, yukio mishima

devvvine, Monday, 29 June 2020 08:53 (three years ago) link

I could give a lot of the same answers, see that Jim Thompson hasn't been listed once and he is one of mine.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 29 June 2020 11:37 (three years ago) link

Jack Vance

gnarled and turbid sinuses (Jon not Jon), Monday, 29 June 2020 12:22 (three years ago) link

Recently finished reading all 75 Maigret novels by Simenon

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Monday, 29 June 2020 12:30 (three years ago) link

Which ones did you like best/least? He kept going with them 'til he quit writing altogether, didn't he? How were the last ones?

dow, Monday, 29 June 2020 17:40 (three years ago) link

Yes, #75 was has last ever novel; after that he dictated 11 memoirs. The books remain very good indeed. Picking favourites is hard. One notable one was Maigret's Memoirs, which feature Simenon in the book as his ghost writer.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 12:57 (three years ago) link

For those who’ve read the entirety of an author’s output, how about ranking it? I’ll start with Houellebecq’s novels:

The Elementary Particles
Submission
Whatever
The Map and the Territory
Platform
Serotonin
The Possibility of an Island
Lanzarote

... (Yelploaf), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 14:30 (three years ago) link

Save comics and children's books like Goscinny & Uderzo, Alan Moore etc, I'm guessing Alasdair Gray

doorstep jetski (dog latin), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 14:36 (three years ago) link

Ok why do yr genre authroids pump out so many books while their literary brethren/sistren produce relatively few?

― zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, June 29, 2020 1:30 AM

I think that's what they had to do to make a living. I've seen some authors bristle about this and insist that early novelists used to publish multiple books a year and that one book a year is the most commercial route. I checked Balzac and Trollope's output and it's not as big as I imagined. I think for some it really just comes naturally to them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honor%C3%A9_de_Balzac
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Trollope_bibliography

Adam Roberts wrote a book about Wells and said he might not have taken the project on if he knew how many books Wells had written.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._G._Wells_bibliography

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prolific_writers

It recently dawned on me that I'll need to read much more than 2 books a year by some authors because I don't want it to take my whole life to read all their books.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 30 June 2020 19:03 (three years ago) link

I think that's what they had to do to make a living. I've seen some authors bristle about this and insist that early novelists used to publish multiple books a year and that one book a year is the most commercial route.

Interesting. I once read a jocular anecdote about a friend of Isaac Asimov calling him on the phone. His wife answered and said, "Sorry, he's just started writing a book," and the friend said, "Okay, I'll just wait till he's finished."

I recently read a biography of Somerset Maugham, who was very cagey about pacing releases to ensure just the right commercial flow - not too much and not too little. I also was interested that he was strategic about demanding large advances - not because he needed the money (he didn't), but because a publisher who has just paid out a large advance is more motivated to promote the book energetically.

zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 19:22 (three years ago) link

Maybe Trollope doesn't have as many books as you'd think because of how long 19th century novels had to be. By his own account he was like a machine: he'd write for a set period of time before going off to work for the postal service, and when he finished writing a book he'd start another one the same day. That's supposed to be a big reason why he didn't really make it into the canon; once his autobiography came out and people found out about his method, they dismissed him as a potboiler-writing hack.

Lily Dale, Tuesday, 30 June 2020 19:25 (three years ago) link

What kind of wealth writers came from might also have something to do with it? But a lot of the most prolific genre authors never slow down even after they become rich.

This from wikipedia
"Pierre Alexis, Viscount of Ponson du Terrail (8 July 1829 – 20 January 1871) was a French writer. He was a prolific novelist, producing in the space of twenty years some seventy-three volumes"

Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 30 June 2020 20:22 (three years ago) link

Yeah, there's definitely a thing, at least in 19th century literature, with writers having to turn out endless volumes just to make ends meet. Margaret Oliphant is the classic example; she wrote about 120 books, novels and histories and biographies, plus God knows how many works of semi-anonymous criticism. Virginia Woolf has a famous bit about how "Mrs. Oliphant sold her brain, her very admirable brain, prostituted her culture and enslaved her intellectual liberty in order that she might earn her living and educate her children."

Lily Dale, Tuesday, 30 June 2020 20:44 (three years ago) link

Mary Elizabeth Braddon wrote quite a lot too.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 30 June 2020 20:47 (three years ago) link

In talking about the 19th century you have to contend with serialization too.

We read Dickens (and a whole bunch of others) as discrete books, whereas their contemporaries would have read in installments, which is a totally different phenomenology of reading!

zombeekeeper (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 20:51 (three years ago) link

Right, and not everything that was serialized got collected and reprinted, and a lot of writers published anonymously, so there's this whole amorphous mass of relatively unknown literature floating around under the surface of The Victorian Novel.

Lily Dale, Tuesday, 30 June 2020 21:42 (three years ago) link

Are you guys not including children’s authors in your tallies, because I definitely read all of Roald Dahls books growing up

In no particular order. It think my top authors are probably

Roald Dahl
Terry Pratchett
John LeCarre
Patrick O’Brien

As in I've probably read every book those authors have written

With Dickens, Trollope and Victor Pelevin knocking around probably would take much to get Dumas on the list as well. Peter Carey and Hillary Mantel are definitely in a bubbling under category.

American Fear of Scampos (Ed), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 22:11 (three years ago) link

Retreading the thread and acknowledging NV. I think I must have read all the Ian Feeling bond novels as a teenager as well. Should read again.

American Fear of Scampos (Ed), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 22:15 (three years ago) link

Harry Mathews

Yanni Xenakis (Hadrian VIII), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 22:19 (three years ago) link

Cool!

Two Spocks Clash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 22:51 (three years ago) link

he just kept on taking left turns, right up until the end...a real achievement considering how prolific he was

Yanni Xenakis (Hadrian VIII), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 22:57 (three years ago) link

Yes. I read a bunch but think I missed a few.

Two Spocks Clash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 23:35 (three years ago) link

Had to think about it, but my answer is P. G. Wodehouse, who I see has already been mentioned a few times.

Two Spocks Clash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 23:39 (three years ago) link

Wondering about Asimov though, even if I long ago stopped reading him and have only read a fraction of his output.

Two Spocks Clash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 30 June 2020 23:43 (three years ago) link

henning mankell

contorted filbert (harbl), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 00:01 (three years ago) link

def Roald Dahl for me. Non children's book author would be Vargas Llosa probably. Not my favourite but his highs are good and he has a more rewarding back catalogue than any of the other "boom"ers afaict

Rik Waller-Bridge (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 00:10 (three years ago) link

Ever read any of his collected stories for adults? I never did, though used to see Tales of the Unexpected, Some One Like You, and others (come to think of it, got an omnibus somewhere). Have watched some adapted for Alfred Hitchcock Presents

dow, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 03:44 (three years ago) link

I’d love to know more about Harry Mathews. I have an omnibus edition of all his novels but am intimidated. Also have his 20 Lines A Day book and that approachable and enjoyable. He was an Oulipo guy, right?

Yelploaf, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 14:48 (three years ago) link

Yes indeed. At one point the only American member, or the only name one, or something.

Two Spocks Clash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 14:53 (three years ago) link

yes he was in Oulipo but unlike most of those guys he didn't usually foreground whatever constraints he used...you can just sense there is something weird running in the background and fueling the mood and his choices

if you enjoyed Twenty Lines A Day I wld recommend Singular Pleasures, the collection of masturbation vignettes.

This too:

http://jean-claude-kuner.de/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/manuskript_farce_double_english.pdf

I think a good entry point w/ the novels is My Life In CIA, and maybe backward toward some of the thornier denser stuff, Tlooth and Sinking of the Odradek Stadium

Yanni Xenakis (Hadrian VIII), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 15:02 (three years ago) link

Thanks for the tips, Hadrian. I attempted Tlooth but couldn’t find my way in. My Life in CIA looks more my speed.

Yelploaf, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 16:43 (three years ago) link

Yeah, that, or wikipedia makes this look appealing too:
Mathews's next novel, Cigarettes, marked a change in his work. Less whimsical but no less technically sophisticated than his first three novels, it consists of an interlocking series of narratives revolving around a small group of interconnected characters. The book's approach to narrative is generally realistic, and Cigarettes is ultimately moving in a way that none of his previous books attempted to be.[14]

dow, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 17:38 (three years ago) link

Cigarettes is terrific

Yanni Xenakis (Hadrian VIII), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 18:01 (three years ago) link

Yup

Two Spocks Clash (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 1 July 2020 22:09 (three years ago) link

Updike probably. He churned them out.

fetter, Wednesday, 1 July 2020 22:52 (three years ago) link

probably RL stine lol. i collected tons of them because i liked the covers as a little kid then a couple years later a puritan streak in me made me commit to reading all of them. even at the time i knew they were thin gruel and i remember nothing about them now.

as an adult, probably DFW, in my early 20s

karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Wednesday, 1 July 2020 23:35 (three years ago) link


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