Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Classic Books You Should Have Read By Now


In case you are new to the club, then worry not. It's never too late to begin reading.
In fact,
this list might help you pick some of the best novels ever written, and you may
finish them up by Book Lovers Day on your best mattress, next year!


Vintage Books To Read This Book Lovers Day


Last Year Toni Morrison passed away. And we think, one of the greatest
methods to remember this literary giant, is to read the classic novel, Beloved.


Wuthering Heights by Emile Bronte


Emily Bronte wrote only one book in her lifetime, and boy, what a marvelous
job she did with it!


Wuthering Heights was printed by Bronte in 1847, under the pseudonym
"Ellis Bell'. The novel covers the doomed love story of Catherine Earnshaw
and Heathcliff. Their ardent but unfulfilled love finally destroys them in
addition to the individuals near them.


In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust


In Search of Lost Time, also known as Remembrance of Things Past, is a
publication in seven volumes.


In accordance with literature fans, this is Proust's most prominent work.
The volumes deal with the subject of involuntary memory, together
with"episode of Madeleine" (First volume) as among the most well-known
and most often-cited examples.


A novel by one of the greatest Russian writers to have ever walked on the
planet, War and Peace chronicles Russia's invasion by France.


Through the tales of five Russian aristocratic families, the book examines
the influence of the Napoleonic age on Tsarist society. If the plot has blown
your mind, then why don't you get started immediately!


The Great Gatsby by F. Scott


A 1925 book by American writer, F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, is
the story of a young millionaire Jay Gatsby and his love and obsession with
beautiful Daisy Buchanan.


The book looks at themes of idealism, corruption, excesses of all kinds, and is frequently
described as a cautionary tale of the American Dream.


Moby Dick by Hermann Melville


Moby Dick, or The Whale, by Herman Melville, is a 1851 novel of an
obsessive quest.
After having his leg bit off in the knee with a giant white sperm whale
(Moby Dick), Ahab, captain of the whaling ship Pequod, seeks revenge
on the former.


Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen


An 1813 romantic novel that people are still gushing about, Pride and
Prejudice by Jane Austen is a story of Elizabeth Bennet, who, at the
publication, learns about the way hasty judgments can have consequences,
and by the end of it, comes to appreciate the actual goodness over
superficial niceness. Also, Mr. Darcy!


To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf


The book's themes include loss, subjectivity, the issue of perception,
and the character of artwork.


Great Expectations by Charles Dickens


The last publication on the listing (obviously not exhaustive, duh!) Is
Charles Dickens's 13th book, Great Expectations.


In this novel, a bildungsroman, personal development, and evolution of
Pip (an orphan) is depicted. The imagery used in the publication is extreme,
from prison and literary ships to fights to death, the book is a feast for the reader.


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