writedreams's "Classics"

Add to my lists | Print this list

Books one should try to read at least once…that’s why they’re classics (in no particular order).

Pages: 1

  1. 2.
    Persuasion (Penguin Classics)
    by Jane Austen

    Drag me to re-order


  2. 4.
    Mansfield Park (Oxford World's Classics)
    by Jane Austen

    Drag me to re-order


  3. 5.
    Sense and Sensibility (Oxford World's Classics)
    by Jane Austen

    Drag me to re-order


  4. 6.
    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Penguin Classics)
    by Mark Twain

    Drag me to re-order


  5. 7.
    Pride and Prejudice (Modern Library Classics)
    by Jane Austen

    Drag me to re-order


  6. 8.
    Great Expectations (Dover Thrift Editions)
    by Charles Dickens

    Drag me to re-order


  7. 9.
    The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (Penguin Classics)
    by Mark Twain

    Drag me to re-order


  8. 10.
    Watership Down (Perennial Classics)
    by Richard Adams

    Drag me to re-order


  9. 11.
    Aesop's Fables (Puffin Classics)
    by Aesop

    Drag me to re-order


  10. 12.
    Anna Karenina (Penguin Classics)
    by Leo Tolstoy

    Drag me to re-order


  11. 13.
    The Age of Innocence (Barnes & Noble Classics)
    by Edith Wharton

    Drag me to re-order


  12. 17.
    The Ambassadors
    by Henry James

    Drag me to re-order


  13. 18.
    The Canterbury Tales (Penguin Classics)
    by Geoffrey Chaucer

    Drag me to re-order


  14. 19.
    A Christmas Carol
    by Charles Dickens

    Drag me to re-order


  15. 20.
    Fathers and Sons
    by Ivan Turgenev

    Drag me to re-order


  16. 22.

  17. 23.
    Heart of Darkness (Norton Critical Editions)
    by Joseph Conrad

    Drag me to re-order


  18. 25.
    A Moveable Feast
    by Ernest Hemingway

    Drag me to re-order


  19. 26.
    Jane Eyre (Penguin Classics)
    by Charlotte Brontë

    Drag me to re-order


  20. 27.
    Wuthering Heights (Norton Critical Editions)
    by Emily Bronte

    Drag me to re-order


  21. 28.
    Slaughterhouse-Five
    by Kurt Vonnegut

    Drag me to re-order


  22. 29.
    The Jungle (Modern Library Classics)
    by Upton Sinclair

    Drag me to re-order


  23. 30.
    The Great Gatsby
    by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    Drag me to re-order


  24. 31.
    Catch-22
    by Joseph Heller

    Drag me to re-order


  25. 32.
    A Farewell to Arms
    by Ernest Hemingway

    Drag me to re-order


  26. 33.

  27. 34.

  28. 35.
    The Bluest Eye
    by Toni Morrison

    Drag me to re-order


  29. 36.
    Beloved
    by Toni Morrison

    Drag me to re-order


  30. 37.
    Animal Farm: Centennial Edition
    by George Orwell

    Drag me to re-order


  31. 38.
    Nineteen Eighty-four
    by George Orwell

    Drag me to re-order


  32. 39.
    Atlas Shrugged
    by Ayn Rand

    Drag me to re-order


  33. 40.
    The Fountainhead (Centennial Edition Hardcover)
    by Ayn Rand

    Drag me to re-order


  34. 41.
    The Catcher in the Rye
    by J.D. Salinger

    Drag me to re-order


  35. 42.
    All Quiet on the Western Front
    by Erich Maria Remarque

    Drag me to re-order


  36. 43.
    A Tale of Two Cities (Penguin Classics)
    by Charles Dickens

    Drag me to re-order


  37. 44.
    The Grapes of Wrath (Penguin Classics)
    by John Steinbeck

    Drag me to re-order


  38. 45.
    East of Eden
    by John Steinbeck

    Drag me to re-order


  39. 46.
    Of Mice and Men: (Centennial Edition)
    by John Steinbeck

    Drag me to re-order


  40. 47.
    Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
    by Robert Louis Stevenson

    Drag me to re-order


  41. 48.
    The Joy Luck Club
    by Amy Tan

    Drag me to re-order


  42. 49.
    The Age of Innocence (Oxford World's Classics)
    by Edith Wharton

    Drag me to re-order


  43. 50.
    Their Eyes Were Watching God
    by Zora Neale Hurston

    Drag me to re-order


Pages: 1

This is a community list. You can contribute, edit, or help maintain it by adding it to your lists.
Created by salambander on Sep 22, 2006.
 

Comments

dt123
Canberra

Nice list — 2 years ago

It’s Far from the Madding Crowd not maddening—although I agree crowds can be maddening