Thank you, n8an, for another list of books!

Dec 27, 2006 10:00

Books read are in bold:



1. "Little Women," Louisa May Alcott
2. "Fairy Tales," Hans Christian Andersen
3. "Peter Pan," J.M. Barrie
4. "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz," L. Frank Baum
5. "The Last Unicorn," Peter S. Beagle
6. "The Secret Garden," Frances Hodgson Burnett
7. "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson)
8. "Pinocchio," Carlo Collodi (Carlo Lorenzini)
9. "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory," Roald Dahl
10. "Sophie's World," Jostein Gaarder
11. "The Wierdstone of Brisingamen," Alan Garner
12. "The Wind in the Willows," Kenneth Grahame
13. "Children's and Household Tales," Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm
14. "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time," Mark Haddon
15. "Emil and the Detectives," Erich Kastner
16. "Just So Stories," Rudyard Kipling
17. "The Complete Nonsense Books," Edward Lear
18. "A Wrinkle in Time," Madeleine L'Engle
19. "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe," C.S. Lewis
20. "Pippi Longstocking," Astrid Lindgren
21. "Dr. Dolittle," Hugh Lofting
22. "At the Back of the North Wind," George MacDonald
23. "Nobody's Boy," Hector Malot
24. "Winnie-the-Pooh," A.A. Milne
25. "Anne of Green Gables," L.M. Montgomery
26. "Five Children and It," E. Nesbit
27. "Tom's Midnight Garden," Philippa Pearce
28. "The War of the Buttons," Louis Pergaud
29. "Fairy Tales," Charles Perrault
30. "The Tale of Peter Rabbit," Beatrix Potter
31. "The Colour of Magic," Terry Pratchett
32. "Northern Lights," Philip Pullman
33. "Swallows and Amazons," Arthur Ransome
34. "Jacob Two-Two Meets the Hooded Fang," Mordecai Richler
35. "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone," J.K. Rowling
36. "The King of the Golden River," John Ruskin
37. "The Little Prince," Antoine De Saint-Exupery
38. "The Human Comedy," William Saroyan
39. "The Misfortunes of Sophie," Comtesse de Segur
40. "Where the Wild Things Are," Maurice Sendak
41. "And To Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street," Dr. Seuss (Theodor Seuss Geisel)
42. "Black Beauty," Anna Sewell
43. "The Golem," Isaac Bashevis Singer
44. "Heidi," Johana Spyri
45. "Treasure Island," Robert Louis Stevenson
46. "The Fellowship of the Ring," J.R.R. Tolkien
47. "Mary Poppins," P.L. Travers
48. "Charlotte's Web," E.B. White
49. "The Sword in the Stone," T.H. White
50. "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm," Kate Douglas Wiggin
51. "The Happy Prince and Other Tales," Oscar Wilde



52. "The Epic of Gilgamesh," Anonymous
53. "The Thousand and One Nights," Anonymous
54. "Sense and Sensibility," Jane Austen
55. "Old Goriot," Honore De Balzac
56. "Vathek: an Arabian Tale," William Beckford
57. "Lady Audley's Secret," Mary Elizabeth Braddon
58. "Jane Eyre," Charlotte Bronte
59. "Wuthering Heights," Emily Bronte
60. "The Pilgrim's Progress," John Bunyan
61. "The Canterbury Tales," Geoffrey Chaucer
62. "The Collected Stories," Anton Chekhov
63. "The Man Who Was Thursday," G.K. Chesterton
64. "Fanny Hill, or Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure," John Cleland
65. "The Moonstone: a Romance," Wilkie Collins
66. "The Hound of the Baskervilles," Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
67. "Heart of Darkness," Joseph Conrad
68. "Robinson Crusoe," Daniel Defoe
69. "The Christmas Books," Charles Dickens (Christmas Carol only
70. "Our Mutual Friend," Charles Dickens
71. "Crime and Punishment," Fyodor Dostoyevsky
72. "Middlemarch: A Study in Provincial Life," George Eliot
73. "Tom Jones," Henry Fielding
74. "The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald
75. "Madame Bovary," Gustave Flaubert
76. "Howards End," E.M. Forster
77. "North and South," Elizabeth Gaskell
78. "The Sorrows of Young Werther," Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
79. "The Vicar of Wakefield," Oliver Goldsmith
80. "The Power and the Glory," Graham Greene
81. "King Solomon's Mines," H. Rider Haggard
82. "Jude the Obscure," Thomas Hardy
83. "The Scarlet Letter," Nathaniel Hawthorne
84. "Moby Dick," Herman Melville
85. "The Portrait of a Lady," Henry James
86. "The Iliad," Homer
87. "Les Miserables," Victor Hugo
88. "Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of The Dog)," Jerome K. Jerome
89. "Kim," Rudyard Kipling
90. "Bliss and Other Stories," Katherine Mansfield
91. "Utopia," Sir Thomas More
92. "Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque," Edgar Alan Poe
93. "In Search of Lost Time," Marcel Proust
94. "A Sicilian Romance," Ann Radcliffe
95. "Clarissa," Samuel Richardson
96. "Waverley," Walter Scott
97. "Frankenstein," Mary Shelley
98. "The Red and the Black," Stendhal (Marie-Henri Beyle)
99. "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde," Robert Louis Stevenson
100. "Dracula," Bram Stoker
101. "Gulliver's Travels," Jonathan Swift
102. "Vanity Fair," William Makepeace Thackeray
103. "War and Peace," Leo Tolstoy
104. "Barchester Towers," Anthony Trollope
105. "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," Mark Twain (Langhorne Clemens)
106. "Candide," Voltaire (Francois-Marie Arouet)
107. "The Castle of Otranto," Horace Walpole
108. "The House of Mirth," Edith Wharton
109. "The Picture of Dorian Gray," Oscar Wilde
110. "To the Lighthouse," Virginia Woolf
111. "La Bete Humaine," Emile Zola

Don't you wonder how they choose these? I mean, why Waverly and not Ivanhoe? Why Five Children and It and not The Railway Children?

memes, books

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