A decade in Books Fears and fantasies abound


Some representative books of the 2000s — about fear of the real world and dreams about other worlds, whether the historical past, the unreachable future or a supernatural present:

The “Harry Potter” series (1997-2009) by J.K. Rowling

The record-setting fantasy series defied and defined the times. It stunned cynics by unearthing millions of young readers who only needed the right book to get them started. It scorned the digital market by remaining unavailable in electronic form. And, with millions of “Potter” readers 21 or older, it revealed a generation that didn’t — and doesn’t — want to grow up.

“Twilight” series (2005-09) by Stephenie Meyer

After Rowling rested in 2007, the masses turned to romance and vampires. Most of the readers were girls, but by the end of the decade, women were caught up, too.

“The Da Vinci Code” (2003) by Dan Brown

A novel, and a metaphor — for escape and word of mouth, for history as conspiracy and wish fulfillment, for world travel and the monster under your bed, for success as a symbol of success.

“A Million Little Pieces” (2005) by James Frey

A memoir, and a metaphor — for real life not being strange enough; for the innocence of publishers and of Oprah Winfrey; for a need so undying to believe in redemption that the book kept on selling well after Frey’s fa ßade had been torn down.

“Founding Brothers” (2002) by Joseph Ellis

Released in 2000, a lively, evenhanded history book that helped set off a long run of popular works about the American Revolution, a quest intensified by the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Ellis’ book is about some key moments in the birth of the country, about the debate over the goals of the United States and the words used to achieve them.

“Threatening Storm” (2002) by Kenneth Pollack and “A Disorder Peculiar to the Country” (2006) by Ken Kalfus

The first a policy book, the second a novel. The first is a call for war in Iraq that found it “unimaginable that the United States would have to contribute hundreds of billions of dollars.” The second is a 9/11 novel that imagined what would have happened if the war had turned out the way Pollack and others thought it would. The first book is unintentional tragedy, the second intentional farce.

“The Audacity of Hope” (2006) by Barack Obama

A lively, evenhanded memoir/policy book by a senator who had ideas about running the United States and a notion that words might help him achieve them.

Associated Press