Editors Reads

Best Classic Literature Books

332 expert-reviewed books — page 9 of 14

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man book cover
4.4

Stephen Dedalus grows from infant to young artist through Dublin, school, religious crisis, and the discovery of aesthetic vocation. Joyce's first novel uses style itself as autobiography — the prose changes register as Stephen ages.

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Anne of the Island book cover

Anne of the Island

by L.M. Montgomery

4.4

Anne Shirley leaves Avonlea for Redmond College, where she discovers new friendships, navigates romantic confusion, and must finally decide between the persistent Roy Gardner and the friend she has always taken for granted.

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Breakfast at Tiffany's book cover

Breakfast at Tiffany's

by Truman Capote

4.4

Holly Golightly, a young woman from Texas who has reinvented herself as a New York socialite and escort, befriends the unnamed narrator in their brownstone. Capote's most beloved novella is a study of performance, identity, and the particular freedom available to women who refuse to be possessed by anyone.

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Consider the Lobster book cover

Consider the Lobster

by David Foster Wallace

4.4

Essay collection including 'Consider the Lobster' on the Maine Lobster Festival and animal pain, a 60-page essay on a usage dictionary, 'Up, Simba' on John McCain's 2000 presidential campaign, and 'Roger Federer as Religious Experience.'

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Crooked House book cover

Crooked House

by Agatha Christie

4.4

When Aristide Leonides, the wealthy patriarch of a three-generation household, is poisoned in his own home, his granddaughter Sophia asks her fiancé Charles Hayward to uncover which family member is responsible. Christie called this one of her personal favourites.

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Demons book cover

Demons

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.4

A novel based on a real 1869 political murder — a charismatic revolutionary named Stavrogin and the nihilist cell he inspires drive a provincial Russian town toward catastrophe.

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Emily of New Moon book cover

Emily of New Moon

by L.M. Montgomery

4.4

After her father's death, Emily Starr goes to live with her strict Murray aunts at New Moon Farm on Prince Edward Island, where she discovers her calling as a writer and resists every pressure to suppress it.

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Good Morning, Midnight book cover
4.4

Sasha Jensen, an aging Englishwoman alone in Paris on borrowed money, drinks and remembers and encounters a young man who may be a gigolo. Rhys's fourth novel is the most formally accomplished of her pre-Wide Sargasso Sea work — the stream-of-consciousness narration spirals inward toward a final scene that is simultaneously sexual, violent, and ambiguous. The title is from Emily Dickinson.

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Home book cover

Home

by Marilynne Robinson

4.4

The companion novel to Gilead retells the same events from the perspective of John Ames's friend Robert Boughton and his prodigal son Jack — who comes home after twenty years of absence bearing a secret that would destroy his father's world.

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Lord Jim book cover

Lord Jim

by Joseph Conrad

4.4

Jim, a first mate on a passenger ship, abandons eight hundred Muslim pilgrims during an apparent emergency — and must spend the rest of his life with the knowledge of what he did. Conrad's novel of cowardice, guilt, and the impossibility of redemption is narrated by Marlow, who reconstructs Jim's story from fragments.

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My Cousin Rachel book cover

My Cousin Rachel

by Daphne du Maurier

4.4

Philip Ashley becomes obsessed with Rachel — the widow who may have poisoned his cousin Ambrose in Italy and who may now be poisoning Philip. Du Maurier's most disturbing novel is an exercise in sustained ambiguity that never resolves.

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Nine Stories book cover

Nine Stories

by J.D. Salinger

4.4

Nine stories including 'A Perfect Day for Bananafish,' 'For Esmé — with Love and Squalor,' and 'The Laughing Man.' Salinger's story collection is the best American short fiction of the postwar period — each story structured as an epiphany that withholds its epiphanic content, leaving the reader in the resonant space of what is not quite said.

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Play It As It Lays book cover

Play It As It Lays

by Joan Didion

4.4

Joan Didion's second novel follows Maria Wyeth, a model and actress drifting through Los Angeles and the Nevada desert in a state of existential collapse — a portrait of a woman at the end of what she can endure.

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Sentimental Education book cover

Sentimental Education

by Gustave Flaubert

4.4

Frédéric Moreau arrives in Paris from the provinces and spends twenty years pursuing an idealized love, a political career, wealth, and artistic ambition — achieving none of them. Flaubert's most autobiographical novel is his most devastating account of an entire generation's failure.

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Sodom and Gomorrah book cover

Sodom and Gomorrah

by Marcel Proust

4.4

The fourth volume opens with the narrator's discovery that the Baron de Charlus is homosexual and follows the consequences through the upper echelons of French society — Proust's most extended treatment of same-sex desire and his most sociological.

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The Awakening book cover

The Awakening

by Kate Chopin

4.4

Edna Pontellier, a married woman in nineteenth-century New Orleans, awakens to her own desires — for independence, for art, for love — in a society that offers her no way to live them.

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The Idiot book cover

The Idiot

by Fyodor Dostoevsky

4.4

Prince Lev Myshkin returns to Russia after years of Swiss treatment for epilepsy — gentle, sincere, and incapable of the social calculus that governs everyone around him. Dostoevsky's attempt to portray a truly good man, and what happens when such a man meets the world.

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The Loved One book cover

The Loved One

by Evelyn Waugh

4.4

A British poet working in Hollywood attends a funeral at the Forest Lawn-inspired Whispering Glades and falls in love with the cosmetician for the corpses. Waugh's novella about the American funeral industry and Hollywood expatriate culture.

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The Martian Chronicles book cover

The Martian Chronicles

by Ray Bradbury

4.4

A series of linked stories following the colonisation of Mars by humans fleeing an increasingly troubled Earth — a work less concerned with the science of space travel than with what humanity brings with it, and what it destroys in the process.

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The Rainbow book cover

The Rainbow

by D.H. Lawrence

4.4

Three generations of the Brangwen family in the English Midlands — from the 1840s to the early twentieth century — each straining toward something beyond the agricultural life that made them. Seized and destroyed by police on publication for its frank treatment of sexuality.

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The Scarlet Letter book cover

The Scarlet Letter

by Nathaniel Hawthorne

4.4

Hester Prynne, condemned to wear the scarlet letter A for adultery in Puritan New England, lives with her illegitimate daughter Pearl while the father of her child — the revered minister Dimmesdale — declines into secret guilt.

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The Secret Garden book cover

The Secret Garden

by Frances Hodgson Burnett

4.4

A spoiled orphan comes to live on the Yorkshire moors and discovers a secret walled garden that transforms her — and everyone around her.

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The Valley of Fear book cover

The Valley of Fear

by Arthur Conan Doyle

4.4

A cipher message leads Holmes to Birlstone Manor and a suspicious death, before the novel pivots to the Pennsylvania coalfields and the brutal secret society known as the Scowrers. The fourth and final Holmes novel draws on the real Molly Maguires to give its American backstory genuine historical weight.

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Vile Bodies book cover

Vile Bodies

by Evelyn Waugh

4.4

The Bright Young Things of 1920s London party relentlessly while Adam Fenwick-Symes tries and fails to marry Nina. Waugh's second novel captures the feverish emptiness of the interwar generation with satirical accuracy that becomes, by the end, something closer to despair.

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