Reading List · Lisanne Swart
Best Books of 1957
1957 is a year that changed how prose sounded. Jack Kerouac typed On the Road onto a scroll of paper and published it — six years after he wrote it — and American fiction was suddenly moving at a different speed. The same year, Boris Pasternak finished Doctor Zhivago in secret and had it smuggled out of the Soviet Union, where it would be banned for decades. Camus published what is arguably his most psychologically demanding novel. Doris Lessing wrote about race in Southern Africa with an unsparing clarity that British publishers had tried to soften. It was not a quiet year. These seven books carry it.
By Lisanne Swart · 7 books · Fiction & Nonfiction · Updated May 2026
On the Road
Sal Paradise and Dean Moriarty drive back and forth across America — New York to Denver to San Francisco to Mexico City and back — in a state of perpetual forward motion. It was written in three weeks on a continuous scroll of paper, and it reads that way: urgent, digressive, alive to everything, incapable of stopping. It is not a plotted novel. It is a record of a way of being in the world.
Whatever you think of Kerouac — and there are reasonable objections — this book changed what American prose could sound like. It gave permission for a kind of energy that literary fiction had been suppressing. That matters whether or not the characters deserve your sympathy. Read it for the sentences, for the rhythm, for the specific texture of a country at a particular moment in time.
Doctor Zhivago
Yuri Zhivago is a doctor and poet living through the Russian Revolution, the civil war, and the early Stalinist years — a man whose interior life, whose love of beauty and private feeling, is completely at odds with the ideological world closing around him. Pasternak wrote it knowing it could not be published in Russia. It was smuggled to Italy, published in Milan, and won the Nobel Prize the following year. Pasternak was forced to decline it.
This is one of those novels that carries the full weight of the century it was written in. The love story between Zhivago and Lara is embedded in a historical panorama of extraordinary scope — and the novel is, underneath it, a defence of private life against ideology, written by someone who understood what that defence cost. The film is nothing like it. Read the book.
The Fall
Jean-Baptiste Clamence, a former Parisian lawyer, sits in a bar in Amsterdam and talks. He talks about his former life as a good man — respected, charitable, admired — and about the single moment that fractured it: a woman fell from a bridge, and he did not stop. What follows is one of the most uncomfortable monologues in modern literature: a man dismantling his own self-image with surgical precision and apparent pleasure.
Camus published this a year before his death, and it reads differently from his earlier work — darker, less certain, more corrosive. The narrator is an unreliable judge, and the novel’s real subject is the way self-knowledge can become a new form of self-regard. If you read The Stranger and found it cold, this one will disturb you in a completely different way.
The Grass Is Singing
Mary Turner is a white woman in Southern Rhodesia, married to an unsuccessful farmer, slowly losing her grip on the life she thought she was living. The novel opens with her murder — by her Black houseboy Moses — and works backwards to explain how it came to this. Lessing wrote it at 27, before she left Africa, and it is one of the most psychologically and politically precise novels about colonialism ever written in English.
This is the book on this list that most readers don’t know, and it may be the one that stays with you longest. It is not a comfortable read — it is not meant to be. Lessing does not offer resolution, only understanding. The power dynamic between Mary and Moses, and what each represents, is handled with an intelligence and restraint that most writers never achieve. It belongs on every serious reading list of this era.
Atlas Shrugged
In a near-future America, the most capable producers — engineers, industrialists, thinkers — begin to disappear. Railroad executive Dagny Taggart tries to understand why. The novel is enormous (over 1,000 pages), polemical, and structured around Rand’s philosophy of rational self-interest. It remains one of the most widely read and most argued-over American novels of the twentieth century.
You do not have to agree with Rand to read this. It is on this list because it is impossible to understand twentieth-century American intellectual life — particularly certain strands of libertarianism and capitalist ideology — without knowing what she argued and why it resonated. The novel is a philosophical position expressed through fiction. Read it as that, and it is more interesting than its reputation suggests. Argue with it, not with the people who love it.
Jealousy
A husband watches his wife. He watches her from the terrace, through the shutters, across the dinner table. He never speaks. The novel is narrated entirely through his observations — precise, repetitive, increasingly disturbed — and yet the husband himself never appears. There is no interiority. There are only surfaces, described with the cold attention of a man who is losing his mind and refuses to admit it. It is one of the founding texts of the French Nouveau Roman.
This is the strangest book on this list, and the shortest. If the idea of a narrator who describes what he sees without ever explaining what he feels sounds like tedium, you haven’t encountered Robbe-Grillet. The technique makes the jealousy visible through its obsessive repetitions in a way that direct psychological description never could. It is a formal experiment that fully justifies itself.
Homo Faber
Walter Faber is a UNESCO engineer — rational, efficient, contemptuous of sentiment, a man who trusts technology and distrusts chance. A series of improbable coincidences forces him to encounter his own past, including a woman he loved and abandoned twenty years ago and her daughter, with whom he falls in love. What follows is a reckoning with everything he has built his identity on. Frisch’s prose is clinical and exact, and the horror arrives very quietly.
Frisch is not read as widely as he deserves outside of German-speaking countries, and this is his finest novel. Faber is a recognisable type — the person who has decided that control and reason are sufficient — and what the novel does to him is devastating precisely because it never moralises. It simply shows you what happens when that worldview meets the actual texture of a life. One of the great European novels of the postwar period.
Where to start
If you want the book that most completely captures 1957 as a cultural moment
→ Start with On the Road. Whatever its limitations, it is the sound of that specific year — restless, American, refusing to stop.
If you want the novel with the deepest historical and emotional weight
→ Read Doctor Zhivago. It is long, and it rewards the time. The love story is inseparable from the history, and both are exceptional.
If you want the book that will disturb you most and that most readers have missed
→ Read The Grass Is Singing. Lessing wrote it at 27 and never surpassed it for concentrated force. It is exactly as uncomfortable as it should be.
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“The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved.” — Jack Kerouac, On the Road
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