{"id":1007604,"date":"2025-02-16T09:03:16","date_gmt":"2025-02-16T15:03:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/?p=1007604"},"modified":"2025-02-16T09:03:28","modified_gmt":"2025-02-16T15:03:28","slug":"10-short-novels-you-can-breeze-through-while-waiting-for-loading-screens","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jbsgame.com\/10-short-novels-you-can-breeze-through-while-waiting-for-loading-screens\/","title":{"rendered":"10 short novels you can breeze through while waiting for loading screens"},"content":{"rendered":"
Whether you’re into dense tomes or short novels, I truly believe there’s a book out there for everyone. Even if you don’t consider yourself much of a reader, there’ll be something that’ll appeal to your interests.<\/p>
But if you’re on this article, there’s a good chance you have at least a passing interest in literature. Of course, all this peaceful reading can get in the way of some meaty gaming. Which is why I’ve compiled a list of short novels you can pick up and put down in between levels. Hell, you might even finish some of these before you get to the closing credits.<\/p> Some housekeeping before we move on:<\/p> With that out the way, let’s take a look at 10 short novels you can power through while waiting at those pesky loadings screens<\/strong>. Let’s start with the “longest” on this list.<\/p> Before 1984<\/em>, George Orwell (real name: Eric Blair<\/a>) was already well-versed in holding a mirror up to the darkness of a politically charged society. Published in 1945, Animal Farm<\/em> is an allegorical takedown of totalitarianism, with the story being a biting satire aimed at life under Josef Stalin.<\/p> I’d wager a lot of you are already familiar with this one. It’s considered a classic of 20th-century literature, but it feels a bit overshadowed by Orwell’s magnum opus, which came a few years later. Still, if you haven’t read Animal Farm<\/em>, many would agree that it holds relevance, even to this day.<\/p> It’s thanks to the author that we have the term “Orwellian” when describing something systematically bureaucratic and fraught with cruel surveillance. You’ll definitely see notes of 1984<\/em> within Animal Farm<\/em>.<\/p> Those of you who follow the Booker Prize<\/a> may have heard Julian Barnes’ name before. He won in 2011 with his almost equally short novel The Sense of an Ending<\/em>, which was adapted into a film in 2017 that stars Jim Broadbent.<\/p> I’ve added The Porcupine<\/em> because it not only falls under the category of being less than 150 pages long, but is also what I’m currently reading at the moment. One might even say it’s what prompted me to come up with the idea for this article. I certainly would.<\/p> The novel is quite fascinating in that it oddly reminds me of Animal Farm<\/em>, which is a somewhat dark satire of the Russian Revolution.<\/p> This one may come as a surprise to some. It is a story with a lot of weight to it, so you may have imagined (as I did initially) that Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men<\/em> was much longer.<\/p> Published in 1937, Steinbeck’s novel tells the story of the Great Depression, which is said to take inspiration from the author’s own experiences working with migrant farmers. Given its status as an important novel that resonates with many readers, I am surprised to see it doesn’t appear on more lists of the 20th century’s greatest novels<\/a>. <\/p>
Animal Farm<\/em> – George Orwell (144 pages)<\/h2>
The Porcupine<\/em> – Julian Barnes (138 pages)<\/h2>
Of Mice and Men<\/em> – John Steinbeck (128 pages)<\/h2>