Novels by writers with a Ph.D. or other doctorate degree in any field. One book per author is sufficient. Books on this list should be works of fiction (not memoirs, etc.) intended for adult readers. If you do add a book to the list, it would be appreciated if you list the author’s degree in the comments (the “why you added this book”).
People Who Voted On This List (6)
Comments Showing 1-2 of 2 (2 new)
date
newest »
newest »
P.J. wrote: "Not a "well-known novel" but Dr. Leo Buscaglia wrote a book of fiction for children. He had a Ph.D. from the University of Southern California (1963). Novelist Booth Tarkington was offered an honor..."Thank you for inquiring! =) I removed the “well-known” qualifier as that was rather ambiguous but would prefer to keep the list to novels for adults. I would like to keep the list specific to doctorate degrees (Ph.D., M.D., J.D., etc.), not that there haven’t been different measures of academic achievement across time and cultures, but trying to determine what should be included or not seems especially thorny to me. No honorary degrees, only earned — which isn’t to take away anything from the recipients, but to my mind, there are much more appropriate and suitably prestigious awards for lifetime achievements, not least of which being the Nobel Prize in Literature which Seamus Heaney was also awarded.
Related News
At the beginning of each calendar month, Goodreads’ crack editorial squad assembles a list of the hottest and most popular new books...
Anyone can add books to this list.








Was a law license equivalent to a J.D. degree? According to an Internet source, a J.D. degree is a requirement for a law license today. Lew Wallace, author of "Ben Hur," had a law license. So did Owen Wister, author of "The Virginian," and novelist Jules Verne.