This week’s topic for Top Ten Tuesday (hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl) is: “Top Ten Tuesday:  Novels with a High Page Count.”

There are plenty of these fat, chunky novels lying unread on my bookshelves. When it comes to choosing what to read next I usually skip over them, reasoning that I just don’t have the bandwidth to do them justice right then. Yet when I do read them, I tend to relish the opportunity to get very familiar with a set of characters, their predicaments and the worlds they inhabit.

These are ten that I’ve really enjoyed over the decades/years. The number of pages reflects the book’s listing on Goodreads though these are approximations since I can’t remember exactly which edition I read. Most of these choices were read long before this blog started so only a few contain links to reviews.

Let me know what you think of my recommendations. Anything I’ve missed?

A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth (1474 pages)

I think this might have been the first novel I read by an author from India. It’s a novel on a grand scale that is both a story of families and of a country in a state of flux.

Middlemarch by George Eliot (912 pages).

If I were ever to be a guest on Desert Island Discs, Middlemarch is the book I’d hope would be rescued from any shipwreck. It’s a novel that can be read in many different ways. As an exploration of marriage; as a commentary on ambition and unfulfilled hopes or simply as a form of soap opera entertainment.


The Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope (890 pages)

Trollope considered that this book, the last in his Barsetshire Chronicles series, was “the best novel I have written.” It’s certainly a strong end to the series. Retribution awaits the Bishop’s wife Mrs Proudie who has meddled once to often in diocesan affairs and the ex warden Septimus Harding goes gentle into that good night.


The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel (883 pages)

Mantel surpassed all expectations with this final book in her Cromwell series. Though we know, because it’s a matter of historical record, that Cromwell loses all his hard won honours and status, Mantel still makes the ending shocking. A superb piece of historical fiction.

The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins (672 pages)

This was the first book by Collins i read and it remains a favourite. It’s cleverly plotted, reading almost as testimony by witnesses in a prosecution, and contains a magnificent anti hero in the form of Count Fosco.

Tombland by C J Sansom (865 pages)

This sadly was the last novel published by Sansom, bringing a premature end to a fascinating crime fiction series set in 16th century England. They’re entertaining to read but also informative — this book focuses on a rebellion by thousands of peasants in East Anglia who feel unfairly treated.


The Blind Assassin by Margaret Attwood (637 pages)

This is a complicated novel with three plot strands and multiple time frames. It purports to be the memoir of a woman who wants to put the record straight about her sister’s death. Interposed with these reminiscences are passages from the sister’s novel in which a would-be author writes a science fiction novel.

The Old Wives’ Tale by Arnold Bennett (615 pages)

My first experience of Bennett’s fiction didn’t start well because the novel opens with a long description of the precise geographical location of his setting. Eventually iIrealised he was using a technique much favoured by film producers – of starting with a wide shot and then going in closer and closer, right into a family draper’s shop on the market square. The novel follows two women from their teenage years within the family, to their separate lives in adulthood and through to their reunion in old age.

A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry (614 pages)

Another fantastic novel set in India showing four characters trying to navigate political turmoil and human rights violations in the 1970s.

Germinal by Emile Zola (592 pages)

Germinal set me off on a mission to read all of the novels in Zola’s masterful Rougon-Macquet series. He doesn’t pull punches in this hard-hitting narrative about a strike in a French mining community. Zola depicts abject poverty among the people who depend on the coal mines to put food on the table yet put their lives at risk every day they go underground

24 responses to “Top Ten Tuesday: 10 Epic Reads”

  1. Looooooove Middlemarch and A Fine Balance. Added A Suitable Boy and The Old Wives Tale, but for Zola I want to start with The Ladies’ Paradise about a Department store…well, not about a Department store but you get what I mean…and then I will circle back to Germinal. Thanks for introducing me to some new-to-me authors!

    1. Good idea to start with Ladies Paradise – it’s not as complicated as the others.

  2. I’ve read four of these. The Woman in White. The Zola was memorably depressing. Middlemarch I always think of as dry as dust rather like Casuabon. But I loved the Margaret Atwood. For me it was one of her best.

  3. GReat list! I have read 4 here, Mantel’s trilogy is brilliant.
    I had already done this several years ago, so I didn’t post for today.
    https://wordsandpeace.com/2018/10/09/top-ten-longest-books-ive-ever-read/
    Though I coul;d have added Les Trois Mousquetaires – 896 pages

    1. We’re in complete agreement about Mantel’s brilliance 🙂

  4. Of these, I’ve only attempted Middlemarch, and on this my third try I’m happy to report that I’m nearly a third through!

    1. Delighted to hear this !

  5. Middlemarch is superb, isn’t it. Of the others, I’ve read Germinal, The Blind Assassin, and A Fine Balance which I loved. I’ve about given up hoping for anything new from Mistry.

    1. It’s been quite a while since he published anything hasn’t it. 2002 I think was his last published novel so I guess he’s found other things to do with his time

  6. Oh lord, I really *must* get on with Middlemarch. But you make me want to revisit The Blind Assassin and also get going with Zola! Not enough time!!

    1. It’s a shame there won’t be any more

  7. I loved Middlemarch that I read several yrs ago. I think it needs a reread.

    1. There are so many themes and ideas in the book that it rewards re-reading to understand them all

  8. Middlemarch was actually the first book that I read in 2015 on my new year’s resolution to read the top 100 of the world literature and I almost abandoned the project because I hadn’t realized what a Moloch it was. There were a couple of monsters like this: In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust, was another one (not to mention that the narrator is an awfully pedant creature who struggled with his sexual identity). And then you have War and Peace by Tolstoy. This is actually one of the few Russian writers that I enjoy, but again: 1,225 pages. Dostoevsky’s Idiot: 784 pages of people building air castles to fall on their face when they try to live into them (the same can be said about Middlemarch). Useless to say that I didn’t manage to read all that in one year: had to spread it over two years or my wife would have abandoned me.

    1. Completing the list within two years is an astonishing achievement considering how many pages that involved. I admire your patience – I think I would have given up on a number of these

  9. So many of these are so good! Middlemarch, The Last Chronicle of Barset, The Mirror and the Light, The Woman in White, and Germinal have all stayed with me in very different ways. I did read The Blind Assassin at fourteen but haven’t retained much. The two Indian novels, but particularly A Suitable Boy, and the Arnold Bennett are ones I’d really like to get to.

    1. Indeed, these are the books that have stayed in my mind over the years. Blind Assassin is the one I remember least about

  10. Some hefty titles here! 🙌

    1. I’m glad I don’t have to carry them anywhere. These are books entirely for reading at home

  11. Gosh, I’ve read most of these and agree wholeheartedly about them being good to read. Especially Middlemarch, I looooove Middlemarch.
    I’ve got some more recent ones on my blog that I’d recommend, with a (mostly) WITmonth flavour: The Remembered Soldier (2025) by Anjet Dannje, translated by David McKay; Darkenbloom (2021), English 2024), by Eva Menasse, translated by Charlotte Collins; the whole Cazalet series by Elizabeth Jane Howard; The Postcard (2021), by Anne Berest, translated by Tina Kover and The Art of Losing (2017), by Alice Zeniter, translated by Frank Wynne.
    (My definition of a good doorstopper is that it’s a book where you forget about how long it is, and just read it).

    1. I didn’t know you were a Middlemarch fan. Now I love you even more!!
      The first Cazalet would have been next on my list if I had to do a top 11 list. The other titles you mention are not ones I know at all.

      1. I read Middlemarch at university, and I’ve read it twice since then as well as all her other ones. Just love it.

        1. It’s so rich in ideas and yet very readable as entertainment

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