I like the Brontes as well, mostly Charlotte.
Oh dear and Fat B wears a kilt throughout most of those movies too...:lol:
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H.G. Wells
I've just now read Jane Eyre, and I'm tempted to see Charlotte as one of the true great. Comparing her to Emily, however, is, to me, as good as comparing an apple with a bird. Their novels are so unlike...!
William Shakespeare.
"To thine own self be true."
(Hamlet)
James Joyce. Yeah, he's Irish, but what do you want?
George Orwell, Shakespeare, Woolf
Niamh: "Many writer represent there countries culture and associating them with the wrong nation can bruise a small countries identity. Especially when that country was once under the power of the other. i know scotland and wales are apart of britain but they are their own countres at the same time and their writers should be recognised separately from that of England."
That's not easy, and is sometimes scarcely sensible, unless they are writing in Gaelic or Cymric. English literature is a melting pot of cultural influences, and it is not possible, for the most part to unravel the cultural strands that make the fabric of any writer's work.
A good example is Conan Doyle, whom you mentioned a few days ago as being Scottish. In fact, although he was born in Edinburgh, he was of an Irish family (and from the name and position of his family, I guess Norman-Irish, not Celtic-Irish.) Doyle went to school, and lived his adult life in England, but studied medicine in Scotland. So, the only valid national label to stick on him would be British (not confusing British with English, and remembering that, in his time, all of Ireland was part of Britain, and remembering too that his early influences included Poe and Bret Hart, and his writing career was boosted early on from the support that he had from America.)
Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontė
Thomas Hardy
Since Shakespeare is God, and I am making the assumption here that God is not of a particular nationality, I will have to exclude him...
Woolf, Conrad (Good to finally see some luv for this amazing writer), Austen and Lawrence, in that order.
"Woof is overated..." *harrumphs* maybe you could notify every college library on the planet to this affect. If they remove all their Woolf related books they would have a few spare ROWS of book shelves. It must have been sheer luck or coincidence that she caused that many humans to contemplate her writing over the years...