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IrishEyes

(3,275 posts)
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 05:44 PM Oct 2022

What is your favorite classic novel?

I've been reading a lot of classic novels lately but I'm interested in reading more. I'm making a list of books to look out for when I go to the thrift store. I'm curious if anyone has any favorites that they can recommend. Some of the books that I have enjoyed include The Great Gatsby, Slaughterhouse-Five, Great Expectations and Dracula.

My to be read list includes 1984, Catch-22, Brave New World, Rebecca, Les Miserables, Of Human Bondage, Agnes Grey and The Count of Monte Cristo.

31 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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What is your favorite classic novel? (Original Post) IrishEyes Oct 2022 OP
Sci-fi Geek here yankee87 Oct 2022 #1
Thank you. I like Sci-Fi stuff. I will check it out. IrishEyes Oct 2022 #4
Interesting. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2022 #29
Depends on what theme and genre you're interested in Docreed2003 Oct 2022 #2
Thank you for the suggestion IrishEyes Oct 2022 #5
While Catch -22 may be the greatest novel ever written, cachukis Oct 2022 #3
I haven't read anything by Dostoevsky. IrishEyes Oct 2022 #7
"The Idiot," is a good start. cachukis Oct 2022 #8
Both are excellent! SheltieLover Oct 2022 #15
"Brothers Karamazov" is an incredible choice! Docreed2003 Oct 2022 #10
Which translation of "Brothers Karamazov" do you prefer? Docreed2003 Oct 2022 #11
I read the Garnett version while living in a hammock on cachukis Oct 2022 #12
Garrett's is fantastic as well Docreed2003 Oct 2022 #13
"A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens Glorfindel Oct 2022 #6
Can't go wrong with Somerset Maugham. OilemFirchen Oct 2022 #9
Depending on the timeframe you consider "classics," I have recently gone back to hlthe2b Oct 2022 #14
Cannery Row, Steinbeck SheltieLover Oct 2022 #16
Loved that book. applegrove Oct 2022 #19
Me too! SheltieLover Oct 2022 #20
Such characters. I've forgotten much of it. I should read it again. applegrove Oct 2022 #21
Theodore Dreiser, An American Tragedy LuckyLib Oct 2022 #17
Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, Polly Hennessey Oct 2022 #18
Harper Lee "To Kill a Mockingbird" is my all time favorite. brer cat Oct 2022 #22
Lots of good suggestions already, I'll try to avoid repeating anything already mentioned: RockRaven Oct 2022 #23
pride + prejudice, jane eyre, perdition. i also really enjoyed dracula. OH!! THE DECAMERON!!! pansypoo53219 Oct 2022 #24
Was leighbythesea2 Oct 2022 #27
book better than the movies. pansypoo53219 Oct 2022 #28
pride + prejudice, jane eyre, perdition. i also really enjoyed dracula. OH!! THE DECAMERON!!! pansypoo53219 Oct 2022 #25
One Day in the Life leighbythesea2 Oct 2022 #26
Uncle Tom's Cabin. PoindexterOglethorpe Nov 2022 #30
"Catcher in the Rye" bif Nov 2022 #31

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,899 posts)
29. Interesting.
Tue Nov 1, 2022, 09:39 PM
Nov 2022

I read that when it first came out, and really liked it.

A few years ago, my science fiction book club in Kansas read it along with Alas, Babylon by Pat Frank. If you haven't read it, please do. For one thing, it's never been out of print since it was published in 1959. What we all noticed, and were quite frankly appalled by, was the overt racism of Lucifer's Hammer. Yeah, there's racism in Alas, Babylon, but it's not the vicious version in the former book.

Docreed2003

(16,876 posts)
2. Depends on what theme and genre you're interested in
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 05:51 PM
Oct 2022

"Dracula" remains one of the best gothic horror novels ever.

"Count of Monte Cristo" is superb as is "Les Miserables" but both are rather long and it helps to have a bit of knowledge of French history when reading them.

You've listed some great ones...I think "East of Eden" is probably my favorite "classic" novel. It's themes are especially relevant today in a world where people are so willing to misconstrue the meaning of biblical verses in order to cause harm to their fellow humans.

cachukis

(2,272 posts)
3. While Catch -22 may be the greatest novel ever written,
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 05:51 PM
Oct 2022

Heller writes Catch -22 into each paragraph and almost ever sentence, in my estimation, the pinnacle of introspection is in Dostoevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov." The "Grand Inquisitor Chapter," alone, is worth the read.

IrishEyes

(3,275 posts)
7. I haven't read anything by Dostoevsky.
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 06:03 PM
Oct 2022

I have a copy of Crime and Punishment. I will check out The Brothers Karamazov. Thank you.

cachukis

(2,272 posts)
8. "The Idiot," is a good start.
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 06:14 PM
Oct 2022

Raskolnikov, is truly one of the most important characters in literature. When I read Crime and Punishment in high school I realized then, that the human mind could understand and display all personalities.
When I taught high school I emphasized that each student was every character in the book. They had to become empathetic to even the minor character's point of view.
Dostoevsky writes from the mind of a murderer, revealing a bit of all of us.

Docreed2003

(16,876 posts)
11. Which translation of "Brothers Karamazov" do you prefer?
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 06:34 PM
Oct 2022

I first read the Pevear/Volokhonsky translation and still think it's well done, but the Mcduff translation is my favorite.

cachukis

(2,272 posts)
12. I read the Garnett version while living in a hammock on
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 07:08 PM
Oct 2022

the beaches of Quintana Roo in 1978. Read and reread so many paragraphs. Intense experience.

hlthe2b

(102,376 posts)
14. Depending on the timeframe you consider "classics," I have recently gone back to
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 07:19 PM
Oct 2022

James Michener's historical novels. Fiction, yes, but his research of history for them is incredible and the one which he won the Pulitzer for, "Tales of the South Pacific" is among my favorites. Since this one was written about the same time as Orwell's "1984," I guess it meets the criteria.

brer cat

(24,606 posts)
22. Harper Lee "To Kill a Mockingbird" is my all time favorite.
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 09:24 PM
Oct 2022

I would also recommend Flannery O'Connor if you haven't read any of her books.

RockRaven

(15,003 posts)
23. Lots of good suggestions already, I'll try to avoid repeating anything already mentioned:
Mon Oct 17, 2022, 10:11 PM
Oct 2022

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer
Jane Austen -- Pride and Prejudice, Persuasion, Sense and Sensibility
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
The Divine Comedy, or just The Purgatorio, by Dante
Don Quixote by Cervantes
The Trial by Kafka
I, Claudius by Robert Graves

pansypoo53219

(20,997 posts)
24. pride + prejudice, jane eyre, perdition. i also really enjoyed dracula. OH!! THE DECAMERON!!!
Tue Oct 18, 2022, 03:54 AM
Oct 2022

i found a deco edition w/ awesome illustrations. then i found 2 diff editions. the 1st considered the best translation. a diff 1930 fancier illustrations.
i also got 4 free 1903 american edition encyclopedia britannica and while waiting i started reading F + it changed everything. history is way more fun than fiction. my goal from then on was to find a complete old EB set. i finally got a 1891 set. science + shit removed the best stuff.

pansypoo53219

(20,997 posts)
25. pride + prejudice, jane eyre, perdition. i also really enjoyed dracula. OH!! THE DECAMERON!!!
Tue Oct 18, 2022, 03:54 AM
Oct 2022

i found a deco edition w/ awesome illustrations. then i found 2 diff editions. the 1st considered the best translation. a diff 1930 fancier illustrations.
i also got 4 free 1903 american edition encyclopedia britannica and while waiting i started reading F + it changed everything. history is way more fun than fiction. my goal from then on was to find a complete old EB set. i finally got a 1891 set. science + shit removed the best stuff.

OOH! collier's fancies + goodnights from early 1900. and a AWESOME WW1book, floyd gibbon's and they said we wouldn't fight. i still have to read my Casanova's memoirs(i read 1 story + it was delightful.

leighbythesea2

(1,200 posts)
26. One Day in the Life
Wed Oct 19, 2022, 10:25 PM
Oct 2022

Of Ian Denisovich.

My top choice is Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton.

Anything by Pearl Buck also.



PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,899 posts)
30. Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Tue Nov 1, 2022, 09:46 PM
Nov 2022

I read it some time back when Talk of the Nation on NPR had a Book Club on the Air. One time they made Uncle Tom's Cabin the choice, and so I decided to read it, figuring it was about time. I assumed that it would be a slog, like any book assigned in high school Let me tell you, the first fifty pages were a bit slow, and after that it picked up and I simply could not put it down.

Early on there is a scene where a woman is asked to get clothes for some one, and this

And oh! mother that reads this, has there never been in your house a drawer, or a closet, the opening of which has been to you like the opening again of a little grave? Ah! happy mother that you are, if it has not been so.


just broke my heart. No, I don't have a drawer or closet like that, but what is so striking about that passage is that when Stowe wrote it, the loss of a child was universal.

Plus, later on, when one of the slaves is sold South, and you learn about what happens to him (I've really forgotten all the details) it reads like a description of the death camps during the Holocaust.
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