August 2025
    M T W T F S S
     123
    45678910
    11121314151617
    18192021222324
    25262728293031

    I just got into reading classics this past school year because of a literature classic I’m taking. I didn’t realize how much I’d like them, but now I’m trying to read like every literary classic that exists. I’ve already read: Fahrenheit 451, Hamlet, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Sense and Sensibility, Candide, Emma, Beloved, The Color purple, The Handmaid’s Tale, Pride and Prejudice, Into the Wild, The Joy luck club, Frankenstein, Julius Caesar, A Doll’s House, The Outsiders, A Separate Peace, The A.B.C Murders, To kill a Mockingbird, and Anthem.

    by historicallypink16

    13 Comments

    1. Lysistrata_August on

      You have to read The Picture of Dorian Gray ITS SO GOOD!! and then read Oscars Wilde’s plays, specifically The Importance of Being Earnest.

      I haven’t read 1984 yet but I’ve read Animal Farm, one the best books to ever exist honestly. Should be mandatory reading in every school.

    2. obvsthrw4reasons on

      If you like or are interested in Shakespeare and like Margaret Atwood’s style a lot, you could read Hag-Seed. It’s her retelling of The Tempest. You could read The Tempest too, but if it’s your first Shakespeare you might enjoy tackling a well known story like Romeo and Juliet so you can focus more on the language and not language plus plot.

    3. AggravatingBee44 on

      I second The Picture of Dorian Gray! A few more I enjoyed: Anna Karenina, 1984, Anne of Green Gables, North and South, The Bell Jar

    4. Ealinguser on

      Jorge Amado: Captains of the Sands

      Mikhail Bulgakov: the Master and Margarita

      Stephen Crane: the Red Badge of Courage

      Daniel Defoe: A Jounal of the Plague Year

      George Eliot: Silas Marner

      EM Forster: a Passage to India

      Elizabeth Gaskell: Mary Barton

      Graham Greene: the Quiet American

      Ernest Hemingway: for whom the Bell Tolls

      Rudyard Kipling: Plain Tales from the Hills

      Chaderlos de Laclos: Dangerous Liaisons

      W Somerset Maugham: Of Human Bondage

      Vladimir Nabokov: Lolita

      Edgar Allan Poe: Tales of Mystery and Imagination

      Alexander Solzhenitsyn: One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich

      John Steinbeck: the Grapes of Wrath

      Leo Tolstoy: War and Peace

      Oscar Wilde: the Picture of Dorian Gray

      Tom Wolfe: the Right Stuff

    5. santangelos on

      E.M. Forster’s A Room with a View, James Joyce’s Dubliners, Jane Austen’s Persuasion, Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, Sheridan Le Fanu’s Carmilla, Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby…

    6. ImissmyBella on

      Tim Sawyer, Adventures of Huck Finn, Gone With the Wind, Wicked, there are 3 books,

    7. Ok-Thing-2222 on

      One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, The Good Earth, The Fat and the Thin; read some Charles Dickens? –there are so many oldies that are my favorites. The first is a russian prison, the second is starving in China–but so much more.

    8. NecessaryStation5 on

      David Copperfield, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, The Bell Jar, and East of Eden

    9. Present-Tadpole5226 on

      *Their Eyes Were Watching God*

      *A Tree Grows in Brooklyn*

      *The Parable of the Sower*

      *The Woman Warrior*

    10. TryMinimum5196 on

      Madam Bovary

      The Age of Innocence

      The Sound and the Fury(tricky)

      Another vote for Dorian Gray

      The Sun Also Rises

    Leave A Reply