I think all these rankings are very biased (even the top 200 schools created by SMH). The criteria differ so widely that when putting a certain school into meticulous analysation, it seems to be too crap for that position.
The same for these novels. The author of the book I mentioned pamper Don Quixote to sky and he justifies his arguments but undeniably persuasive quotes, testimonials and comments made by a great number of pretigious and famous authors. According to this, War and Peace echoed somewhat a bit of Don Quixote and none of 'our' novels can escape the shadow of Don Quixote. In addition, even Tolstoy is influenced by Cervantes (what's his full name? st De Cervantes?). I was fascinated to read these 'combed' sentences used to polish Cervantes and his No 1 novel. I read Don Quixote before and I admit I didn't quite like him as I thought: Hell yeah! What a freak! After mediating (with the effect of The Novels 100), I think it's quite true.
'Huckberry Fin' is also in top 20 tho it's somewhat so last last last century. Great Expectation is too bad a top novel. Still it's too good a bottom trash. I liked it at first but then the same mood and mode of it bores me to dead but I tried (yes, I did try my best) to stick to it 'cuz I wanted to know its ending. What can I say? If I hadn't read other novels, I would have like that happy open ending. The truth is obnoxiously atrocious. In the current context, it's a pity for the noveltry. Such a cliched ending! No more. We need to stick to the status quo which requires any fair judgment and such thing demands us to put texts into their right contexts. I'd better say: Great Expectation is too lucky.
To bassisstx: in your case, I'd better HUNT DOWN SHAKESPEARES! Naah, I love him. lolz
Abruptly thinking of Skrzynecki: I detest youuuuuu! I swear I won't give him a room to breathe in my writings when I finish HSC.