Borrowed from E. McPan. These are the top 106 books tagged "unread" at LibraryThing.
Bold the ones you’ve read, underline the ones you read for school (I didn't do this), and italicize the ones you started but didn’t finish.
I am a little shocked by how many of these I started but never finished. I guess the ones I didn't finish were ones I didn't really want to read in the first place -- with the exception of Ulysses, which I picked up after Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man rocked my teenage world, but found incomprehensible. I went back to it years later, with a college education under my belt, and got through about forty pages.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Anna Karenina
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Crime and Punishment
Wuthering Heights
Catch-22
The Silmarillion
Don Quixote
The Odyssey
The Brothers Karamazov
Ulysses
War and Peace
Madame Bovary
A Tale of Two Cities
Jane Eyre
The Name of the Rose
Moby Dick
Emma
The Iliad
Vanity Fair
Love in the Time of Cholera
The Blind Assassin
Pride and Prejudice
The Historian: A Novel
The Canterbury Tales
The Kite Runner
Great Expectations
Life of Pi
The Time Traveler's Wife
Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies
Atlas Shrugged
Foucault's Pendulum
Dracula
The Grapes of Wrath
Frankenstein
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Mrs. Dalloway
Sense and Sensibility
Middlemarch
Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Sound and The Fury
Memoirs of a Geisha
Brave New World
Quicksilver
American Gods
Middlesex
The Poisonwood Bible
Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West
The Picture of Dorian Gray
Dune
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
The Satanic Verses
Mansfield Park
Gulliver's Travels
The Three Musketeers
The Inferno
The Corrections
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
The Fountainhead
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Oliver Twist
To the Lighthouse
A Clockwork Orange
Robinson Crusoe
Persuasion
The Scarlet Letter
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
The Once and Future King
Anansi Boys
Atonement
The God of Small Things
A Short History of Nearly Everything
Cryptonomicon
Dubliners
Oryx and Crake
Angela's Ashes
Beloved
Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
In Cold Blood
Lady Chatterley's Lover
A Confederacy of Dunces
Les Misérables
The Amber Spyglass
The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli
Watership Down
Beowulf: A New Verse Translation
The Aeneid
A Farewell to Arms
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
Treasure Island
David Copperfield
Sons and Lovers
Possession
The Book Thief
The history of Tom Jones
The Road
Tender is the Night
The War of the Worlds
Seems like a good base for a reading list. I've been meaning to read Madame Bovary forever, and Tess of the D'Urbervilles sounds like a fun book for a certain mood. Watership Down has been on my to-read-someday list for decades. I wouldn't mind reading Wicked, and Cryptonomicon sounds intimidating but worth a read. I've read a bunch of these in Children's Classics versions (Robinson Crusoe, Treasure Island, The Odyssey), but I didn't count those.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
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3 comments:
Tess is a wonderful book but not at all "fun"- slightly less depressing than Jude the Obscure perhaps, but still pretty tragic.
I am rereading Catch 22 right now- that certainly does qualify as fun. Definitely the funniest thing I have ever read.
I just finished The Kite Runner this morning. I couldn't put it down.
madame bovary has always been one of my favorites. alongside anna karenina.
what can i say? i have a thing for the lovestricken and suicidal.
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