February 2026
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    I recently got into classics and I've read Crime and Punishment (probably a bad start, but i loved it) and The Picture of Dorian Gray. I'd accept any recommendations, not necessarily similar to those two. I finished The Picture of Dorian Gray very recently and found it intriguing yet hard to get sometimes, especially Henry's character.

    by HistoricalRun2092

    15 Comments

    1. I’m reading The Count of Monte Cristo along with r/AReadingOfMonteCristo and it’s been surprising how easy it is to read and how modern it seems for a book that was written in the 1800s

    2. I’d recommend The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas if you want something easier to read, with a quicker pace and a longer book.
      However, if you prefer shorter books for now, I recommend Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev (and I think that it ties very nicely with Crime and Punishment, since it is the novel that began the “young man who becomes a nihilist after going to college” trope in russian literature, which Dostoyevsky uses for Raskolnikov), The Metamorphosis by Kafka and The Stranger by Albert Camus.

    3. triggerhappymidget on

      Steinbeck is very accessible imo. *Grapes of Wrath* and *East of Eden* are usually considered his best works, but *Of Mice and Men* is a good start if you want something shorter.

    4. dolphinbananas on

      I recently decided to start reading more classics instead of only recent publications, and To Kill a Mockingbird and Flowers for Algernon were both great.

      (Couldn’t get into Brave New World and didn’t finish it, and I just started Lord of the Flies, so the jury is still out on that one!)

    5. Fancy-Restaurant4136 on

      Death of Ivan Illych, Slaughterhouse Five, Franny and Zooey, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, Frankenstein,

    6. The Three Musketeers
      The Pit and The Pendulum
      Moby Dick
      Around the World in 80 Days
      The Killer Angels

    7. YouGotToMugatu on

      Perfume: Story of a Murderer by Patrick Suskind is one of my all-time favorites and one that I don’t get to recommend nearly often enough!

    8. I quite liked The Turn of The Screw. I mean, Pride and Prejudice is a classic and easy read.
      I really loved Madame Bovary, such detail! It is a longer read, not very light.

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