His works as author include
The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters (1969; revised 1991, winner of the
Duff Cooper Prize),
James Joyce (1970),
Shylock: Four Hundred Years in the Life of a Legend (1993), and his childhood memoir
A Double Thread (2001). His works as an editor and anthologist include
After Shakespeare: Writing inspired by the world’s greatest author (2002),
The Oxford Book of Aphorisms (1983),
The Oxford Book of Essays (1991),
The Oxford Book of Comic Verse (1994),
The New Oxford Book of English Prose (1998),
The New Oxford Book of Literary Anecdotes (2006),
The Modern Movement, Dickens and the Twentieth Century (reissued 2008), and
The Oxford Book of Parodies (2010). Several of his books won prizes. He also won praise from fellow writers. "The publication of John Gross's
The Rise and Fall of the Man of Letters, when I was a bookish teenager, undoubtedly determined for me the direction I wanted my life to take... It became my Bible," wrote
A.N. Wilson in
The Spectator magazine in 2006.
John Gielgud wrote "I read John Gross’s fascinating
Shylock book straight through twice and enjoyed it more than I can say."
John Updike called
The New Oxford Book of English Prose "a marvelous gem… I wonder if there has ever been an anthology quite like it – with so vast a field – the virtually infinite expanse of English-language prose – for the anthologist to roam… I have been rapturously rolling around in John Gross’s amazing book for days."
Harold Pinter, who grew up in the same working-class East End London neighbourhood as Gross, found Gross's childhood memoir,
A Double Thread, "a most rich, immensely readable and very moving book. I recognised so much." ==Journalism==