![]() The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn1884
Justice and honor are celebrated in this story about
Huck’s adventures on the Mississippi River with the runaway slave
Jim.
All Quiet on the Western Front1929
Though the war he describes is World War I, Remarque
writes eloquently of all wars in this tale of a young German sent to fight in
the trenches.
Beloved1987
Morrison’s heart-breaking novel tells the story of a woman
who escapes from slavery to freedom in Cincinnati but remains haunted by her
daughter’s murder.
![]() The Best Short Stories1945
Short vignettes display irony and coincidence in everyday
life. O. Henry’s forte is the surprise ending.
Brave New World1932
Huxley brilliantly satirizes contemporary society’s
dehumanization in this grim novel of the future.
The Call of the Wild1903
When his beloved master is killed, the dog Buck flees to
the wild, where he becomes the leader of a wolf pack. Rousing adventure set in
Alaska’s Klondike country.
![]() Catch-221961
This black comedy about World War II Army Air Corps
aviators attempting to survive the absurdities of military bureaucracy has
become a part of the American collective consciousness.
The Catcher in the Rye1951
Fleeing his Pennsylvania prep school, Holden Caulfield
holes up in New York City and rails against adult phoniness while trying to lose
his innocence.
The Complete Sherlock Holmes1936
The Baker Street saga is chronicled in this collection
that includes “A Study in Scarlet,” the 1887 story that introduced the English
detective Sherlock Holmes, and his assistant Dr. Watson.
![]() Crime and Punishment1886
First published in Russian in 1866, this masterful
psychological novel shows the horror and remorse of Raskolnikoff, a student,
after he has killed an old woman for her money.
Cry, the Beloved Country1948
In lyrical language Paton relates the moving story of a
Zulu minister who searches for his children in Johannesburg, only to learn that
South African society has destroyed their lives.
Don Quixote1612
Originally published in Spanish in 1605, Cervantes’ satire
about a gentle visionary who becomes a knight after reading too many chivalric
romances is a universal tale of idealism versus practicality.
![]() Ethan Frome1911
An unhappy couple attempts suicide but find a far worse
fate in this tale of irony and retribution in rural New England.
Gone with the Wind1936
Set against the backdrop of Georgia during the Civil War,
Mitchell’s massive historical novel chronicles the tempestuous romance of Rhett
Butler and Scarlett O’Hara.
The Good Earth1931
This Pulitzer Prize winner follows Wang Lung’s family from
their early struggles to live off the land to their final disintegration as they
move to the city.
![]() The Grapes of Wrath1939
Proletarian fiction at its finest, Steinbeck’s portrait of
an Oklahoma family during the Depression spurred legislation to help stricken
migrant workers.
The Great Gatsby1925
Jay Gatsby has built an illegal empire to win the love of
Daisy Buchanan, but his sacrifices for her prove to be his downfall.
Heart of Darkness1902
Marlow relates the tale of Mr. Kurtz, successful in his
greedy quest for ivory in the African Congo but leaving in its place hunger,
death and slavery, for the natives.
![]() Invisible Man1952
A young African American man moves to New York City and
discovers he is “invisible,” seen only as a racial stereotype and never as
himself.
Jane Eyre 1847
Jane Eyre’s ill-fated love for the brooding Mr. Rochester
endures in this story of a strong-willed heroine who refuses to compromise
herself.
Lord of the Flies1954
A group of English schoolboys, marooned on a tropical
island during a time of atomic warfare, bring both civilization and savagery to
their community.
![]() Moby Dick1851
Captain Ahab’s obsessive struggle to defeat Moby Dick, the
great white whale who maimed him, is the focus of Melville’s
masterpiece.
My Antonia1918
In spite of a life of hard work, Bohemian immigrant
Antonia Shimerda is sustained by the healthy Nebraska soil and her warm-hearted
brood of children.
Native Son1940
The accidental death of his white boss’s daughter begins a
chain of events from which Bigger Thomas, a bitter young black man, cannot
escape.
![]() Nineteen Eighty Four1949
Ignorance is strength and peace is war in Orwell’s darkly
imaginative vision of a future controlled by Big Brother and the Thought
Police.
Of Human Bondage1915
Afflicted with a club foot, Philip Carey suffers through
his life, struggling to free himself from a destructive love affair and finally
finding contentment as a country doctor.
Of Mice and Men1937
George and Lenny, itinerant Depression-era farm laborers,
have their dream of attaining the good life shattered on a troubled ranch in the
the Salinas Valley in Steinbeck's monumental novella of social
realism.
The Old Man and the Sea1952
Santiago realizes the dream of catching a giant marlin,
but he must battle the sharks for two days to bring his prize home.
![]() Pride and Prejudice1813
A delightful comedy of marriage traces the courtship of
Elizabeth and Darcy as they overcome his pride and her prejudice and fall in
love.
The Red Badge of Courage1895
Through the eyes of Henry Fleming, a young Civil War
soldier, we see the fears of battle and the inexplicable courage that comes when
soldiers unite in a wartime machine.
Robinson Crusoe1719
Defoe’s novel about a castaway marooned for twenty-four
years on a deserted island is an engrossing story of survival, civilization, and
barbarism.
![]() The Scarlet Letter1850
Hawthorne’s novel is a study of sin, guilt, and revenge.
Adultress Hester Prynne must bear public humiliation but Roger Chillingsworth
and Arthur Dimmesdale suffer equally.
A Separate Peace1959
Fifteen years later, the narrator remembers his boarding
school roommate. The rivalry that tinged their friendship eventually leads to
tragedy.
Silas Marner1861
This classic story shows redemption for a lonely and
bitter man in the form of a child who brings him love and hope.
![]() The Sound and the Fury1929
The moral decay of the Old South is presented through the
eyes of four members of the once prominent Compson family of Jefferson,
Mississippi.
The Stranger1946
First published in French in 1942, the narrator of Albert
Camus’ existential masterpiece is an autobiographical figure who does not
conform to religious morality or social convention.
A Tale of Two Cities1859
This dramatic story of Paris and London during the Reign
of Terror contains some of Dickens’ most memorable characters—Madame Defarge
with her knitting and the self-sacrificing Sidney Carton.
![]() Tales1952
A collection of short stories by the nineteenth century
master of the macabre. Included are “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” and “The
Fall of the House of Usher.”
Tess of the D’Urbervilles1891
Tess is ruined when her father’s vanity forces her to seek
the favors of rich relations, and her life becomes a study in the grim reality
of her times.
Their Eyes Were Watching God1937
An African-American woman in 1930s rural Florida finds
freedom and self-knowledge through a personal journey encompassing three very
different marriages.
![]() To Kill a Mockingbird1960
Small town Alabama in the 1930s is the setting for this
fine novel of a child’s brutal introdution to racial prejudice and adult
injustice.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin1852
Stowe’s sentimental but realistic novel is often credited
with heightening public awareness about the evils of slavery, thus hastening the
Civil War.
War and Peace1889
An enormous cast of characters brings life to Tolstoy’s
panoramic chronicle of Napoleonic Russia. Originally published in the
1860s.
![]() Winesburg, Ohio1919
Twenty-three stories of small town America show the
characters’ spiritual dreams in conflict with society’s provincialism and
materialism.
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