Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 32

Thread: Help with my classics reading list?

  1. #1
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    3

    Help with my classics reading list?

    Hi guys I have compiled this list of 50 works of Literature for myself to read. I have read a few at school but not many but I hope to remedy that. Can any of you guys offer advice on whether I have missed important books out or not and what I could take away from the list.


    I'm worried I'm being to biased towards England at the expense of other places
    I would like to keep the number of works at 50 so if you suggest something suggest what should be taken away as well.

    Homer - The Iliad (Around 700BC)
    Homer - The Odyssey. (Around 700BC)
    Dante Alighieri - The Divine Comedy (1308)
    Geoffrey Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales (1400)
    William Shakespeare - Hamlet (1602)
    William Shakespeare - Othello (1603)
    William Shakespeare - King Lear (1606)
    William Shakespeare - Macbeth (1606)
    Daniel Defoe - Robinson Crusoe (1719)
    Jonathan Swift - Gulliver's Travels (1726)
    Jane Austen - Pride and Prejudice (1813)
    Jane Austen - Northanger Abbey (1818)
    Mary Shelley - Frankenstein (1818)
    Jane Austen - Persuasion (1818)
    Emily Bronte - Wuthering Heights (1847)
    Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre (1847)
    Charles Dickens - David Copperfield (1850)
    Herman Melville - Moby Dick (1851)
    Charles Dickens - Bleak House (1853)
    Charles Dickens - A Tale of Two Cities (1859)
    Charles Dickens - Great Expectations (1861)
    Victor Hugo - Les Miserables (1862)
    Fyodor Dostoyevsky - Crime and Punishment. (1866)
    Leo Tolstoy - War and Peace (1869)
    Jules Verne - Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1871)
    Jules Verne - Around the World in 80 Days (1873)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)
    Leo Tolstoy - Anna Karenina (1877)
    Robert Louis Stevenson - Treasure Island (1883)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)
    Fyodor Dostoyevsky - The Brothers Karamazov (1880)
    Oscar Wilde - The Picture of Dorian Grey (1891)
    H.G Wells - The Time Machine (1895)
    Bram Stoker - Dracula (1897)
    H.G Wells - The War of the Worlds (1898)
    D .H Lawrence - Sons and Lovers (1913)
    James Joyce - Ulysses (1922)
    Thomas Mann - The Magic Mountain (1924)
    F. Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby (1925)
    F. Scott Fitzgerald - Tender is the Night (1934)
    John Steinbeck - Of Mice and Men (1937)
    John Steinbeck - The Grapes of Wrath (1939)
    George Orwell - Animal Farm (1945)
    George Orwell - Nineteen Eighty Four (1989)
    J.D Salinger - The Catcher in the Rye (1951)
    John Steinbeck - East of Eden (1952)
    William Golding - Lord of the Flies (1954)
    Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita (1955)
    Harper Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird (1960)
    Joseph Heller - Catch 22 (1961)

  2. #2
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Posts
    3,093
    Good list! Maybe there are a few too many kids classics lurking on there, I'd replace them with a few heavyweights.

    I'd remove:

    Mary Shelley - Frankenstein (1818)
    Bram Stoker - Dracula (1897)
    Jules Verne - Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1871)
    Jules Verne - Around the World in 80 Days (1873)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)
    John Steinbeck - Of Mice and Men (1937)

    And replace them with:

    Plato - Dialogues
    Montaigne - Essays
    Cervantes - Don Quixote
    Goethe - Faust
    George Eliot - Middlemarch
    Flaubert - Madame Bovary

  3. #3
    Card-carrying Medievalist Lokasenna's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    In a lurid pink building...
    Posts
    2,769
    Blog Entries
    5
    Wonderful though Chaucer and Dante are, they're the only medieval writers on your list - perhaps you should have something to help span the nearly 2,000 year gap between Homer and Dante? Beowulf would be an obvious choice from Western European medievalism, but if that's too Anglo-centric you could might consider Egils saga or Njáls saga (Icelandic), the Mabinogi (Welsh), the Nibelungenlied (German), Chanson de Roland (French), or loads of other possibilities...

    As for who to get rid of, well, that's more subjective - though you might want to weed out multiple works by the same author: are four novels by Dickens necessary, or three by Austen (wonderful though they are)? And then there's the matter of the length of some of them - the Canterbury Tales, for example, is on a word-for-word count probably not much short of the entire plays of Shakespeare, yet it occupies one slot whilst four individual plays are given seperate entries.
    "I should only believe in a God that would know how to dance. And when I saw my devil, I found him serious, thorough, profound, solemn: he was the spirit of gravity- through him all things fall. Not by wrath, but by laughter, do we slay. Come, let us slay the spirit of gravity!" - Nietzsche

  4. #4
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Posts
    3,093
    It's all looking a bit Western, why not add:

    • Epic of Gilgamesh
    • Bhagavad Gita
    • Tao te Ching
    • An Artist of the Floating World - Katzuo Ishiguro


    These are all quite short

    • Arabian Nights (quite long, try a selection of the best bits)


    Why not replace Shakespeare and Chaucer with The Oxford Book of English Verse?

    Other ideas to keep the size of works down:

    • Instead of Plato's complete dialogues, try just The Republic.
    • There is a good Penguin selection of Montaigne's essays.
    • Try Dante's Inferno, rather than the whole trilogy
    • Goethe's Faust part I may be sufficient.
    Last edited by mal4mac; 08-07-2014 at 10:20 AM.

  5. #5
    I just want to read. chrisvia's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    218
    Blog Entries
    1
    I think the KJV Bible is unavoidable for approaching the ilk of literature represented here (at least for those folks after Homer). Of course, the Bible shouldn't be the only religious text, but mal4mac has attributed the right works to expand your view--I might only add the Qur'an.

    The only other essential I can think of at present is Woolf. Either Mrs Dalloway or To the Lighthouse.
    "J'ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage."
    - Rimbaud

    "Il est l'heure de s'enivrer!
    Pour n'être pas les esclaves martyrisés du Temps,
    enivrez-vous;
    enivrez-vous sans cesse!
    De vin, de poésie ou de vertu, à votre guise."
    - Baudelaire

  6. #6
    Bohemian Marbles's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Location
    Hinterland
    Posts
    258
    Good list though I argue for the inclusion of, among other things, international modern classics in order to diversify your reading experience because, in my opinion, our international globalised age demands it. My suggestions would be:

    Chinua Achebe - Things Fall Apart
    Gabriel Garcia Marquez - One Hundred Years of Solitude
    Franz kafka - The Trial and The Metamorphoses
    Joseph Conrad - Heart of Darkness
    Milan Kundera - Unbearable Lightness of Being
    V.S. Naipaul - A House for Mr. Biswas
    Jorge Luis Borges - Collected Fictions
    Orhan Pamuk - My Name is Red
    Salman Rushdie - Midnight's Children
    Mo Yan - Red Sorghum

    Quote Originally Posted by mal4mac View Post
    Good list! Maybe there are a few too many kids classics lurking on there, I'd replace them with a few heavyweights.

    I'd remove:

    Mary Shelley - Frankenstein (1818)
    Bram Stoker - Dracula (1897)
    Jules Verne - Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1871)
    Jules Verne - Around the World in 80 Days (1873)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)
    John Steinbeck - Of Mice and Men (1937)
    I second the removal of the above. I'd perhaps retain Of Mice and Men but I'd cross out H.G. Wells' Time Machine

    Quote Originally Posted by mal4mac View Post
    It's all looking a bit Western, why not add:

    • Epic of Gilgamesh
    • Bhagavad Gita
    • Tao te Ching
    • An Artist of the Floating World - Katzuo Ishiguro
    Vishnu Sharma's Panchtantra [3rd BCE] would make for a better reading than the Gita, in my opinion.

    Quote Originally Posted by chrisvia View Post
    The only other essential I can think of at present is Woolf. Either Mrs Dalloway or To the Lighthouse.
    Yes, definitely include To the Lighthouse. It's also short.
    But you, cloudless girl, question of smoke, corn tassel
    You were what the wind was making with illuminated leaves.
    ah, I can say nothing! You were made of everything.

    _Pablo Neruda

  7. #7
    Quote Originally Posted by Silver96 View Post
    Homer - The Iliad (Around 700BC)
    Homer - The Odyssey. (Around 700BC)
    Dante Alighieri - The Divine Comedy (1308)
    Geoffrey Chaucer - The Canterbury Tales (1400)
    William Shakespeare - Hamlet (1602)
    William Shakespeare - Othello (1603)
    William Shakespeare - King Lear (1606)
    William Shakespeare - Macbeth (1606)
    Daniel Defoe - Robinson Crusoe (1719)
    Jonathan Swift - Gulliver's Travels (1726)
    Jane Austen - Pride and Prejudice (1813)
    Jane Austen - Northanger Abbey (1818)
    Mary Shelley - Frankenstein (1818)
    Jane Austen - Persuasion (1818)
    Emily Bronte - Wuthering Heights (1847)
    Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre (1847)
    Charles Dickens - David Copperfield (1850)
    Herman Melville - Moby Dick (1851)
    Charles Dickens - Bleak House (1853)
    Charles Dickens - A Tale of Two Cities (1859)
    Charles Dickens - Great Expectations (1861)
    Victor Hugo - Les Miserables (1862)
    Fyodor Dostoyevsky - Crime and Punishment. (1866)
    Leo Tolstoy - War and Peace (1869)
    Jules Verne - Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1871)
    Jules Verne - Around the World in 80 Days (1873)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)

    Leo Tolstoy - Anna Karenina (1877)
    Robert Louis Stevenson - Treasure Island (1883)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)
    Fyodor Dostoyevsky - The Brothers Karamazov (1880)
    Oscar Wilde - The Picture of Dorian Grey (1891)
    H.G Wells - The Time Machine (1895)
    Bram Stoker - Dracula (1897)
    H.G Wells - The War of the Worlds (1898)
    D .H Lawrence - Sons and Lovers (1913)
    James Joyce - Ulysses (1922)
    Thomas Mann - The Magic Mountain (1924)
    F. Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby (1925)
    F. Scott Fitzgerald - Tender is the Night (1934)
    John Steinbeck - Of Mice and Men (1937)
    John Steinbeck - The Grapes of Wrath (1939)
    George Orwell - Animal Farm (1945)
    George Orwell - Nineteen Eighty Four (1989)
    J.D Salinger - The Catcher in the Rye (1951)
    John Steinbeck - East of Eden (1952)
    William Golding - Lord of the Flies (1954)
    Vladimir Nabokov - Lolita (1955)
    Harper Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird (1960)
    Joseph Heller - Catch 22 (1961)
    Question: Are you only interested in Western Literature? Because if not, I would recommend expanding the list to be more diverse. I would recommend Romance of the Three Kingdoms, The Story of the Stone and the Dao De Ching from Chinese literature alone. You are also lacking post-1960 classics. I would recommend stuff like Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace, Money by Martin Amis or American Pastoral by Philip Roth.

    I bolded the works that I don't really considering great "classics" (If you want to read Twain, Huck Finn is much better). I'm heavily (positively) biased towards European Modernists and I firmly believe that Proust's In Search of Lost Time (just read the first volume, Swann's Way if you don't want to read the whole thing), Kafka's The Trial/The Metamorphosis should be on there. I would also like to add Milton's Paradise Lost, Madame Bovary by Flaubert, Nabokov's Pale Fire , Albert Camus's The Stranger and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. Maybe some short stories by Chekhov, Borges, or O'Connor (Flannery) would be nice. Some non-fiction in the forms of Emerson's essays, or literary autobiographies like Richard Wright's Black Boy or Vladimir Nabokov's Speak, Memory would be good. Could also use some African-American literature like Frederick Douglass's slave narrative or Wright's Native Son.

    Last point I'm going to make is: do you really need four works by Dickens, three by Austen (one of which I don't think is particularly great)? Important authors no doubt, but 7 total works combined?

    EDIT: I lied. This is the last point I'll make. I applaud you for selecting 4 mammoth works by Tolstoy/Dostoevsky, but you could supplement 1 or 2 of them with much shorter novellas that are also great like The Death of Ivan Ilyich or Notes From the Underground.
    Last edited by R.F. Schiller; 08-07-2014 at 04:40 PM.

  8. #8
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Nov 2013
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    3
    Thanks everyone! I did want to be less Western centric but my knowledge of anything non-western is abysmal and that's why I asked for suggestions.

    People have mentioned lots of stuff I'd never heard of so thanks for broadening my horizons.

  9. #9
    Alea iacta est. mortalterror's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    LA
    Posts
    1,914
    Blog Entries
    39
    Quote Originally Posted by Lokasenna View Post
    the Canterbury Tales, for example, is on a word-for-word count probably not much short of the entire plays of Shakespeare,
    No way. Canterbury tales is maybe 1/3 as long as the complete 37 plays of Shakespeare.
    "So-Crates: The only true wisdom consists in knowing that you know nothing." "That's us, dude!"- Bill and Ted
    "This ain't over."- Charles Bronson
    Feed the Hungry!

  10. #10
    Inexplicably Undiscovered
    Join Date
    Jun 2007
    Location
    next door to the lady in the vinegar bottle
    Posts
    5,089
    Blog Entries
    72
    I wholeheartedly agree that the list includes The Canterbury Tales.

    No 17th century literature? Milton, Donne, et al.?

    Your 20th century offerings should include Samuel Beckett as well as O'Neill (Long Day's Journey into Night; The Iceman Cometh.)

    Also, it would be great if it had some examples of Black American literature; my choice would be Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man.

    I'd dump Lord of the Flies. It's over-rated.
    Last edited by AuntShecky; 08-07-2014 at 09:11 PM.

  11. #11
    Alea iacta est. mortalterror's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    LA
    Posts
    1,914
    Blog Entries
    39
    Drop Jules Vern, HG Wells, Bram Stoker, Tender is the Night. Pick one Austen, Dickens, Steinbeck, and Dostoyevski. Add Ovid's Metamorphosis, Virgil's Aeneid, Beowulf, Cervantes' Don Quixote, Milton's Paradise Lost, Goethe's Faust, Flaubert's Madame Bovary, Balzac's Old Goriot, Baudelaire's Flowers of Evil, Hemmingway's The Old Man and the Sea.
    "So-Crates: The only true wisdom consists in knowing that you know nothing." "That's us, dude!"- Bill and Ted
    "This ain't over."- Charles Bronson
    Feed the Hungry!

  12. #12
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Posts
    30
    Quote Originally Posted by Silver96 View Post
    Jules Verne - Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (1871)
    Jules Verne - Around the World in 80 Days (1873)
    Robert Louis Stevenson - Treasure Island (1883)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)
    Mark Twain - The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)

    Daniel Defoe - Robinson Crusoe (1719)
    Jonathan Swift - Gulliver's Travels (1726)
    Mary Shelley - Frankenstein (1818)
    H.G Wells - The Time Machine (1895)
    Bram Stoker - Dracula (1897)
    H.G Wells - The War of the Worlds (1898)
    John Steinbeck - Of Mice and Men (1937)
    George Orwell - Animal Farm (1945)
    J.D Salinger - The Catcher in the Rye (1951)
    William Golding - Lord of the Flies (1954)
    Harper Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird (1960)
    Joseph Heller - Catch 22 (1961)
    I know a lot of posters have recommended to remove some of the above entries from your list, but I would recommend reading these first. They are simple, easy reads and really good books. Start with Around the World in 80 Days and Treasure Island, since they are the easiest. In your first post you mentioned that you haven't read many of these, so I'm going to assume you haven't read a lot of books. Start with something easy...

  13. #13
    TobeFrank Paulclem's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Coventry, West Midlands
    Posts
    6,363
    Blog Entries
    36
    I wonder how many have read all the list?

    Just pick a few and read what you like and get some modern stuff smattered in there. The list will take years to complete anyway. And don't worry about ditching the boring stuff. Literature - unless you're tracing the history and development of it - is a very subjective term.

  14. #14
    Card-carrying Medievalist Lokasenna's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    In a lurid pink building...
    Posts
    2,769
    Blog Entries
    5
    Quote Originally Posted by mortalterror View Post
    No way. Canterbury tales is maybe 1/3 as long as the complete 37 plays of Shakespeare.
    Well, alright, I was exaggerating a bit - but the basic point about the disparity in length between certain texts still stands!
    "I should only believe in a God that would know how to dance. And when I saw my devil, I found him serious, thorough, profound, solemn: he was the spirit of gravity- through him all things fall. Not by wrath, but by laughter, do we slay. Come, let us slay the spirit of gravity!" - Nietzsche

  15. #15
    Banned
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Posts
    1,780
    Blog Entries
    7
    I agree with pulling out the books other people mentioned. They aren't terrible for the most part, but neither are they particularly interesting or well written. Just my two cents of course.

    I've put a list together that I've been working on for a few years now. I realize it's anglocentric as well, but it does have a good deal of breadth to it.

    Tale of Genji
    Moby Dick
    Ulysses
    War and Peace
    Pride and Prejudice/Emma/Sense and Sensibility
    Lord Jim
    Tess of the D'urbervilles
    Middlemarch
    Pygmalion
    Atonement
    Brideshead Revisited
    Waiting for Godot
    The Homecoming
    Jane Eyre/Wuthering Heights
    A Tale of Two Cities
    The Good Soldier
    Paradise Lost
    The Importance of Being Earnest
    Gulliver's Travels
    The Fountain Overflows
    Mrs. Dalloway/To The Lighthouse
    Tom Jones
    Tristram Shandy
    The End of the Affair
    The Way We Live Now
    The Golden Notebook
    Lady Chatterley's Lover
    Of Human Bondage
    A Passage to India
    Ivanhoe
    Complete Shakespeare
    Oresteia
    Theban Plays
    Medea
    Lysistrata
    The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle
    Heike Monogatari (Tyler)
    Kokoro
    Snow Country
    The Makioka Sisters
    Oku No Hosomichi
    The Story of the Stone (Hawkes)
    Romance of the Three Kingdoms (Roberts)
    The Plum in the Golden Vase (Roy)
    La Princesse de Cleves
    A la Recherche du Temps Perdue
    Pere Goriot/Cousin Bette
    Madame Bovary
    Therese Raquin
    La Malade Imaginaire
    Phedre
    The Count of Monte Cristo
    The Red and the Black
    Les Miserable
    The Plague
    Candide
    Blindness
    The book of disquiet (Zenith)
    The Lusiads (Oxford)
    The devil to pay in the backlands
    Don Quixote
    Fuenteovejuna
    Life is a Dream
    Blood Wedding/Yerma/The House of Bernarda Alba
    One Hundred Years of Solitude/Love in the Time of Cholera
    Hopscotch
    The Old Gringo
    Ficciones
    Conversations in the Cathedral
    Pedro paramo
    Faust
    Wallenstein Trilogy
    The Tin Drum
    The Trial/The Metamorphosis
    The Magic Mountain
    Berlin Alexanderplatz
    Darkness at Noon
    Hunger
    Miss Julie
    My Struggle (Knausgaard)
    Hedda Gabbler
    The Threepenny Opera
    The Man Without Qualities
    The Unbearable Lightness of Being
    The Divine Comedy (Hollander?)
    The Decameron
    The Name of the Rose
    If on a Winter's Night a Traveller
    I Promessi Sposi
    Eugene Oenegin
    Hadji Murad
    Petersburg
    Crime and Punishment
    One Day in the Life Of Ivan Denisovich
    The Nose
    Anna Karenina
    Chekhov: Complete Plays/Stories (Pevear/Volokhonsky)
    The Master and Margarita
    Oblomov
    Life and Fate
    Oryx and Crake
    Who Do You Think You Are
    Red Doc>
    Catch-22
    On The Road
    Atonement
    Ada, or Ardor
    U.S.A. Trilogy
    Franny and Zooey
    Beloved
    Gravity's Rainbow
    The Age of Innocence
    The Sun Also Rises/A Farewell to Arms/Old Man and the Sea/For Whom the Bell Tolls
    Portrait of A Lady/The Wings of the Dove/Turn of the Screw
    The Scarlet Letter
    Infinite Jest
    Invisible Man
    The Sound and the Fury/As I Lay Dying
    My Antonia
    Their Eyes Were Watching God
    Long days Journey into Night
    The Red Badge of Courage
    The Awakening
    Glengarry Glen Ross
    The Last of the Mohicans
    The Bridge of San Luis Rey/Our Town
    Rabbit Angstrom novels
    Blood Meridian
    Underworld
    Death of a Salesman
    A Streetcar Named Desire
    In Cold Blood
    Cathedral
    Tender is the Night/A Winter Dream/The Great Gatsby
    American Pastoral
    Revolutionary Road
    All The King's Men
    The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
    Stoner
    Aeneid
    Metamorphoses
    Hans Christian Andersen
    The Brothers Grimm
    One Thousand and One Nights (Burton)
    The Canterbury Tales
    Iliad and Odyssey (Fagles)
    Nibelunglied
    Chanson de Roland
    El Cid
    Baghavad Gita
    Beowulf
    Njals Saga
    Sinuhe
    Epic of Gilgamesh


    Selected poems of (I just did english-language poets here because of the translation problem):
    Spenser
    Donne
    Pope
    Milton
    Gray (Elegy)
    Burns
    Blake
    Wordsworth
    Coleridge
    Shelley
    Keats
    Byron
    Tennyson
    Brownings
    Hopkins
    Yeats
    Hardy
    Pound
    Eliot
    Auden
    Thomas
    Crane
    Whitman
    Dickinson
    Frost
    Williams
    Stevens
    Bishop
    Plath
    Sexton
    Louise Gluck
    Merrill
    Geoffrey Hill
    Ashbery (Self-Portrait)
    Heaney (Opened Ground)

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Reading Classics - Where Do I Start?
    By wishesjake in forum General Literature
    Replies: 39
    Last Post: 12-01-2010, 10:53 AM
  2. List of best modern domesticating translations of classics?
    By mal4mac in forum General Literature
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 10-23-2009, 09:09 AM
  3. Minor classics not on any list ....
    By dfloyd in forum General Literature
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 09-27-2009, 06:14 AM
  4. I don't feel like reading classics any more!!
    By R.Emerson in forum General Literature
    Replies: 18
    Last Post: 06-04-2007, 09:31 AM
  5. A list of Classics
    By Adolescent09 in forum General Literature
    Replies: 21
    Last Post: 04-19-2007, 01:33 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •