Here's one person's opinion:
Women:
1) Isabel Allende
Chilean-American author Isabel Allende wrote her debut novel, House of Spirits to great acclaim in 1982. The novel began as a letter to her dying grandfather and is a work of magical realism charting the history of Chile. Allende began writing House of Spirits on January 8th, and subsequently has begun all her books on that day.
2) Margaret Atwood
Canadian author Margaret Atwood has numerous critically-acclaimed novels to her credit, most recently Oryx and Crake and The Penelopiad (2005). She is known for her feminist themses, but her prolific output of work spans both form and genre.
3) Toni Morrison
Toni Morrison's Beloved (1987) was named best novel of the past 25 years in a 2006 New York Times Book Review survey. The novel won the Pulitzer Prize in 1988, and Toni Morrison, whose name has become synonymous with African American literature, won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1993.
4) Zadie Smith
Literary Critic James Wood coined the term "hysterical realism" in 2000 to describe Zadie Smith's hugely successful debut novel, White Teeth, which Smith agreed was a "painfully accurate term for the sort of overblown, manic prose to be found in novels like my own White Teeth." Her third novel, On Beauty, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and won the 2006 Orange Prize for Fiction.
Men:
5) Ian McEwan
British writer Ian McEwan started winning literary awards with his first book, First Love, Last Rites (1976) and never stopped. Atonement (2002) won several awards and is being made into a movie, and Saturday (2005) won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize.
6) David Mitchell
English novelist David Mitchell is known for his tendency toward experimental structure. In his first novel, Ghostwritten (1999), he uses nine narrators to tell the story and 2004's Cloud Atlas is a novel comprised of six interconnected stories. Mitchell won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize for Ghostwritten, was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for number9dream (2001) and Cloud Atlas, and is on the Booker longlist for Black Swan Green (2006).
7) Haruki Murakami
Son of a Buddhist priest, Japanese author Haruki Murakami first struck a chord with A Wild Sheep Chase in 1982, a novel steeped in the genre of magical realism which he would make his own over the coming decades. Murakami's most popular work among Westerners is The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle, though 2005's Kafka on the Shore met with success in this country, as well. The English version of Murakami's most recent novel, After Dark, is slated for release in 2007.
8) Philip Roth
Philip Roth seems to have won more book awards than any other American writer alive. Most recently he won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History for The Plot Against America (2005) and a PEN/Nabokov Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2006. In Everyman (2006), Roth's 27th novel, he sticks to one of his familiar themes: what it's like growing old Jewish in America.
9) John Updike
Terrorist (2006) is the most recent in the twenty-some novels John Updike has to his credit. His four Rabbit Angstrom novels were named in 2006 among the best novels of the past 25 years in a New York Times Book Review survey.
10) Jonathan Franzen
Winner of the National Book Award for his 2001 novel, The Corrections, and a frequent contributor to The New Yorker magazine, Jonathan Franzen is also the author of a 2002 books of essays entitled How to Be Alone and a 2006 memoir, The Discomfort Zone.
I'd include
Women: Joan Didion, Anne Proulx
Men: Kurt Vonnegut, Paul Theroux, V. S. Naipaul
E. L. Doctorow, J. M. Coetzee, Jose Saramago, Imre Kertesz. Peter Carey. Ahmed Salman Rushdie, Bruce Chatwin, Martin Amis, Peter Ackroyd, Kazuo Ishiguro, Roddy Doyle, Robert Stone, Robert Russo - darn, it's hard to stop.
2007-02-10 15:30:48
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answer #1
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answered by johnslat 7
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Unfortunately, schools are forced to teach a curriculum that is determined ahead of time in order to keep their funding and accreditation. History is taught as a subject so the individuals can learn what has shaped the community/nation in the past and why people act they way they do now. Ideally, you could look at what happened somewhere in the past and find similar situations happening today and predict some of the outcomes. If the outcome is negative, you would then try to figure out a different solution that has not been tried. Rarely is this done in school because it takes lots of work from the teacher and not everyone in the class is interested in the same topics. Those who aren't interested, undermine the teacher's efforts. As the old saying goes, "You can bring a horse to water, but you can't make them drink it."
2016-05-25 08:01:52
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Depends on how far off in the distance we're talking. If I were to pick an arbitrary date and say "Who among writers living in 2006 will be taught thirty years from now?", I'd go with Toni Morrison, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Philip Roth, and John Osborne. I like and read a number of the authors listed by other respondents (e.g., Martin Amis), but will they be taught 30 years from now? I don't think so.
2007-02-10 17:07:11
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answer #3
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answered by Tony 5
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