Anonymous wrote:The only ones from that list I haven’t read are Frankenstein, The Count of Monte Cristo, The Picture of Dorian Gray, and The Brothers Karamazov (this one I started but haven’t finished).
My favorites from the list are probably War and Peace (seriously outstanding), Middlemarch, Vanity Fair, and Pride and Prejudice. I love 19th century fiction and would say that everything on the list is worth a read (plus some Trollope!).
Anonymous wrote:Tess of the D'Urbervilles, The Brothers Karamazov, Anna Karenina, and War and Peace were such significant books for me. I guess I like high drama in bad times in cold places.
But it's kind of sad this generation of kids is not going to read, much less be moved, by 19th Century literature. I think Gen X is the end for when literature mattered.
Anonymous wrote:Tess of the D'Urbervilles, The Brothers Karamazov, Anna Karenina, and War and Peace were such significant books for me. I guess I like high drama in bad times in cold places.
But it's kind of sad this generation of kids is not going to read, much less be moved, by 19th Century literature. I think Gen X is the end for when literature mattered.
Anonymous wrote:I've read 17 of them. What surprised me is that there is a book/author I've never heard of on there -- The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins. And I have a grad degree in English.
Anonymous wrote:I've read
Moby Dick
The Picture of Dorian Grey
The Counte of Monte Cristo
Frankenstein
Oliver Twist
David Copperfield
Dracula
I think reading one Dickens' novel is sufficient. They are mostly the same.
I don't see anything from Jules Verne