1:23 The Great Expectations 3:24 Emma 4:58 Les Miserables 8:32 Tess of the d'Urbervilles 10:31 Jane Eyre 12:37 Rebecca 15:05 Little Women 18:37 The Princess Bride 21:06 A Farewell to Arms 25:44 Anne of Green Gables 27:53 Don Quixote 32:40 War and Peace 33:43 Anna Karenina Done, for my own safekeeping in future 😀
She said she read the entire series of Anne of Green Gables in a month. Good grief she reads fast 🥴. This is why I stopped trying to keep up with BookTubers lol.
I was AMAZED at how breezy and effortless and compelling Monte Christo was, considering its iconic literary reputation and its hugeness! Will surely be heading back to that brilliantly drawn world and crazy exciting story again... And again?
@@sew_gal7340I’m not sure a book that was published by 1846 and is one of the most read classical novels (by everyone and their mothers) would be considered ‘overrated’ especially if you loved the book and still do. Perhaps ‘resilient’? Overrated would mean a disappointment and if you loved the book, I’d be curious what made it disappointing? Or since everybody read it does that make it somehow less or even too popular and therefore overrated? Just curious
@Bigheartoneggshells I never said that i was trying to be distinguish, If I were I wouldnt be reading any of the books on this list. I just said Count was overrated, which means that its got more praise than it deserves. Which is of course my opinion, it doesnt mean i am right it means i dont agree with most individuals, and what is wrong with that?
Just finished mine last week. At first, in mid chapters you'll feel that "are these scenes necessary?" because of new character introductions each chapter but later on you can't stop reading it. Fantastic story
As I’ve grown older I don’t pick up a book unless 450+ pages or more. When I turned 70 years old I determined to read nothing but classics I haven’t read. My list is still long at this age. Some favorites I read every year, especially Little Women. I wasn’t required reading classic literature in my school days until my senior year. I chose Gone With The Wind. It was my first reread at 70 and I’m having a good time. War and Peace is an excellent history, philosophy of life read to think on. Thanks for sharing.
I like your attitude, but I wouldn't battle through a large classic unless you really enjoy it. I just finished Moby-Dick and love it. But Rob Roy was just too wordy, and I gave up after ten pages. I've settled into a routine of reading a classic, then an easy novel, then a non-fiction (usually a World War 2 book).
Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky is an amazing book (my favorite)! It's is very deep and psychological but also the character development and plot are really great.
I can absolutely recommend Dostoevsky as well. I think I found "Demons" to be his best, but it is also probably the hardest. Crime and Punishment is very good as well and probably the best one to start with.
I started Crime and Punishment on a Friday night in college and stayed up until dawn finishing it. Probably the most thrilling reading ride I've ever had. Reread it few times.
I've read 420 pages, and so far it's overrated, dated, predictable... No humour, a lot of madness and psycho babble bit precious little action. But I'll read the last 130 as it seems to be getting more interesting. So far it's been a tremendous waste of time.
I loved Moby-Dick, unabridged. Read it in high school. Reread it at age 60. Still brings me joy, memories, laughs, thoughtfulness on the human condition and the consequences of our actions.
Anna Karenina and Don Quixote are in my top 3 books of all time together with The Brothers Karamazov. I'm currently reading War and Peace and it's been a joy, each passage is so impactful especially the very personal thoughts of the soldiers during the war.
I am reading the Idiot now. It is interesting once you know what it is really about. Same as Emma. I thought its mainly a romance. No. It is about Christian virtue. That is what Jane Austen was all about.
hi caroline i need to say this, you need to record an audiobook your voice is so soothing and rich that I could listen to it for hours plus the way you read with so much feeling actually makes me wanna read it right away so I would love it if you start your own audiobook podcast 🥰
My absolute #1 favorite book is East of Eden by John Steinbeck. I read it in high school and I read it again now (in my late twenties) and it hit home even more. Absolutely incredible.
I'm reading it and myaan it's so good thats I'm afraid that there won't be anything else good than this. Let me know what to read similar or anything good after this
Hello Caroline. I love how you give us the frame of a book and just enough hints to how it might be furnished with characters. You don’t give too much away, but just enough to get us in the front door. Thank-you for your introductions and your enthusiasm.
When I was 13, I read "Les Misérables." (Unabridged.) Never read a book much longer than 200 pgs. Knew nothing except I was intrigued with the cover. Reading such a large work in its entirety gave me an unparalleled & thrilling experience. One I worry many people miss out on when they avoid lengthy works of fiction: the utter, total immersion in another world. Even the longest Harry Potter novel had positively *nothing* on the scope & range of Hugo's generational saga. Its vivid reality, its seasonal progressions, its gritty details, its epic tone, its humans that change (or don't) over a long timespan, in lots of different geographical locations, and in history-defining moments. At their best, novels can offer this unique experience. It can be ""Les Misérables," or something else. I only urge the timid to get gutsy & dive into a novel that will do this for them. Nothing else can do it. No, not even television. And no, not even audiobooks! (Sidenote: I dislike the musical, but like the 1998 film adaptation. Also: when I read it was the early 2000s, just before you could search wikipedia about the Battle of Waterloo or the Paris sewage system. In a way, this perhaps put me closer to the pre-internet audience of the novel!)
Bravo. I read the translated version by Isabel Hapgood. She immortalizes Hugo's poetic brilliance from its native French in a way I am unable to describe, suffice it to say: simply sublime.
Agreed! I read War and Peace as well as The Count of Monte Cristo, and while those two were MUCH easier to get through (esp The Count, I was flying through that book), Les Miserables was the one that stuck with me the most despite being the most difficult of the 3 for me. There were some digressions that were just so hard to get through, but I’m glad I did, because now I can make the Homeric parallels to the soldiers at Waterloo and the Greeks, as well as Hugo’s ultimate verdict on Revolution and Progress and what it means despite its failures, and how Waterloo serves as almost foreshadowing for what will happen at The Barricade, and what the Amis’ sacrifices ended up meaning, how Grantaire and Enjolras’ deaths connected with Cambronne’s (the true winner of Waterloo) end. To me, books are most special when they are more than the plot. So personally I enjoyed when Hugo decided to go into depth to tell us about cheese and the Parisian sewer systems. Hugo has a humor that really lands if you can catch it, which is a bit harder to do in English than it is in French, but makes his rambling so much more enjoyable. It truly takes you back in time to him sitting down and telling you about all this and you have no choice but to listen because getting up and leaving would be rude. I’ve read and fully annotated the unabridged FMA version, just read the Donougher’s version, and also read Wilbour’s abridged version. I can see why some people will choose the abridged version (as it literally cuts the entire book down in half to 700 pages or so) but the experience just isn’t the same. Valjean and Javert obviously gets a lot cut down for them, but The Les Amis de l'ABC get the brunt of it and they were some of the highlights in the entire book for me. I remember reading The Count of Monte Cristo directly after Les Mis (I finished War and Peace some time ago) and because of how I was zooming through the book, I was certain that the former would’ve been my new favorite. But after a few weeks of resonating after I finished both, I realized how much closer to my heart Les Mis was. That’s not to say I didn’t adore The Count, it’s still one of my favorite books all time and the one I will probably reread over and over again, but Les Mis just feels so personal and makes me so emotional in a way no other book ever has
I’m not a huge fan of les misérables but I’m tempted to try it in French. I find reading in my second language slows me down and I pay more attention to the language. I have put it on my second language pile for future reading.
Very nice, thank you for this. Rebecca is my favorite of all time. A few years ago, I found myself in Liverpool. I went into a beautiful building near the waterfront to see the architecture and in the lobby there was a cafe called "Mrs Danvers Cafe", with a picture of her with flames all around. I was so excited!
I love the way you talk about books and can't wait for you to read Count of Monte Cristo! It is 1200+ pages but flies by so fast because the plot and characters are so interesting
@@deletedacctc Actually, i learned this from french tandem app partners. I've told them how much i love french classic literature like Count of Monte Cristo but both persons haven't read and weren't interested of the book
i am à homeschooling mom of 7. my 12 year old is an avid reader. she read The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe in kindergarten, and had read half of the wonderful books on this list. the great thing about classic literature is that even a child can read them, without encountering much inappropriate content (except for hemingway, at times). she and i LOVE watching your channel together, you share our same enthusiasm for classic literature. God bless
Years ago a coworker stated how he read Anna Karinina every year. I got a paperback copy online for a couple of bucks and was astounded how good it is. For a book that is so long it is a real page-turner.
thank you so much for reading the first sentences of classic books! english isn’t my native language even though i prefer reading in english. so i’ve always been scared to pick up classics because i’m afraid i won’t understand the art & messages behind the words. thanks to your samples i can visualize the english level needed & decide if i should read either in english or french! 🤗🌷
Hi, Carolyn. Thanks for another great reading vlog. Since you are talking about long classics, I must recommend The Count of Monte Cristo. When I read this book I could not put it down. I think you will enjoy it.
To polecam jeszcze w takim " klimacie " Ponson du Terail cykl Rocambole ok 30 tomów ....powala na kolana nawet najtwardszych czytelników ....perełka powieści przygodowo- romansowo- - łotrzykowskiej .Dumas klęknął przed twórcą Rocambole - 📚📖🦉👋👋👋Regi from Poland ..." Szaleniec na tle literatury XIX w francuskiej " 👍😯😯👋👋👋👋
Thanks for a brilliant and informative presentation. Tolstoy is also my favourite author and Anna Karenina and War and Peace are my favourite novels and it is wonderful to hear you speak of them so fondly.
Love this video so much. You have such a passion and I am going to start Anna Karenina after watching this. Many have already suggested it but I would wholeheartedly recommend Count of Monte Cristo, along with Wilkie Collins’ Woman in White, Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, and the two other great Dickens novels; David Copperfield and Bleak House.
Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath" is on the longer end (between 500 and 550 pages) and definitely worth it. It's probably my favourite novel. Also, I love this channel.
OMG!! I am 50 pages into Anna Karenina. As you said, the rambling in Leo Tolstoy books is absolutely amazing. Never have I ever felt so intrigued and involved by someone rambling. Great recommendations Caroline!
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë and David Copperfield by Charles Dickens are absolutely worth your time!!! These are two of my favourite books of all time 💜
I absolutely agree with what you said about Levin! I would heartly recommend you read 'The Idiot' by Dostoevsky if you haven't. Lev Nikolayevich Myshkin is probably my all time favourite character, I love him with all my soul.
@@betep8618 I always find people's 'choice' of the brother interesting as I am still, some 10 years after first reading the book, incapable of deciding which one of the three I prefer. I love them all immensely, but in very different ways.
@@betep8618 Thank you, Емил Синклер and BETEP. One of the most beautiful passages I've ever read comes from the end of Book 2, Chapter 5 (Dostoevsky's, "The Idiot") when Prince Myshkin describes his surreal, episodic lapses into an altered state of consciousness: "These moments, short as they are, when I feel such extreme consciousness of myself, and consequently more of life than at other times, are due only to the disease-to the sudden rupture of normal conditions. Therefore they are not really a higher kindof life, but a lower.’ This reasoning, however, seemed to end in a paradox, and lead to the further consideration:-‘What matter though it be only disease, an abnormal tension of the brain, if when I recall and analyze the moment, it seems to have been one of harmony and beauty in the highest degree- an instant of deepest sensation, overflowing with unbounded joy and rapture, ecstatic devotion, and completest life?’ Vague though this sounds, it was perfectly comprehensible to Myshkin, though he knew that it was but a feeble expression of his sensations. That there was, indeed, beauty and harmony in those abnormal moments, that they really contained the highest synthesis of life, he could not doubt, nor even admit the … ‘I would give my whole life for this one instant,’ ..."
I just finished an Emma reread and JUST started Tess of the D'Urbervilles 😆. I'm also going to read my first Gaskell, North and South War and Peace is a favorite, and really jump-started and rekindled my love of reading. If you want a LONG classic we can read Proust together 🙇 I've read the first book and adored it. I also highly recommend Portrait of a Lady.
You've never seen the Anne of Green Gables mini series with Megan Followes?!!! That is one of my all time favorites! I watch it every year during Spring Break. All the characters are so perfectly cast, ESPECIALLY Anne. I highly recommend it. It's easy more faithful than the Netflix series.
i'm shocked not a single george eliot made this list! middlemarch is such a cozy, romantic, character-driven book, has taken me a month but is sooo worth it!! i have become somewhat of an evangelist for it because i want everyone to have the pleasure of reading it!
"Middlemarch" is considered by many to be one of the most seamless novels written. This, together with Thackeray's "Vanity Fair" and Dickens's "Little Dorrit" are blockbusters which encapsulate the Victorian age in fiction.
Good call. I've only read Middlemarch once, thirty years ago, but am looking forward to one day reading it again. Of all the novels that distribute just desserts, this did it for me - in the most edifying and gratifying way.
Thank you for this video, which I enjoyed very much. At the moment I'm reading the epilog of "War and Peace" in German. It is a fantastic read, not quite as good as Anna Karenina, but still a more than wonderful book. But my all time favourite writer is and will always be Dostoevsky. Have a nice day and enjoy whatever you are reading📚
I read Great Expectations in high school about 45 years ago and I still remember the opening of the book (an many other parts!). A fabulous book that I do want to re-read! Victor Hugo really loved to go off on tangents. It is as if he knew change was afoot in Paris and he had to capture all the details in so sort of historical record. I've read Anne Karenina twice and certainly worth reading again. Great selection! I think all of them have been adapted for the film. Your passion for books certainly comes across the screen and inspires me to read.
When my teacher in high school read to us that memorable opening scene from "Great Expectations", I (at 15 years) was hooked for life. I pledged to read each of his novels and have done so. "Great Expectations" is special to me. It is my landmark novel - the gateway that ushered me into the wonderful universe of the great classics.
Hi Caroline, just came across your channel and this is the first video I have gone through. Like you, Jane Eyre was the first book that made me fall in love with classics. But past couple of years I just didn't pick up any classics. Don't know why so . And, now I am back into it. Thanks for the recommendations. I have to definately read some from the list. I have to say this, you give out such a soothing vibe. And your voice 💕 just wow. Lots of love.
this video encouraged me to pick up Don Quixote. I always liked the idea of it but it always intimidated me, but this was enough to get me on board. thanks Carolyn!
I love how you didn't edited out the parts where you realized you forgot to read the first page of some books 🤣. Also, you answered the question I was going to ask: "Should I read Anna Karenina before War and Peace or not?" Thank you!!
It took me almost two months to read Anna Karenina and there were times where I wanted to stop reading it and start another book but it always called me back … when i finished it i immediately missed the characters now it’s one of my all time favorite books !
I'm in the middle of Les Miserables right now for my first time. It's so so good. If you can manage it, I recommend the unabridged for your first read, but to each their own. The Count of Monte Cristo is my favorite book of all time so far. I really enjoyed Great Expectations a lot as well as The Princess Bride. Need to read a number of these.
I’m thinking about reading In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust and using it for a book review in school. My teacher said I’m free to pick it, but he doubted whether I’d be able to finish it in time. It seems like a great story well worth my time. I calculated that if I read 30 pages a day (just about doable, I reckon), it’ll take me roughly 4 months which is not too bad. Some other long books which I am fond of are The Brothers Karamazov and War and Peace-my 2 favourite books.
Love that you included The Princess Bride! Such a good book (and movie)! Also, the original Anne of Green Gables adaptation is amazing! Although I might be biased because that was the version I watched as a kid. 😄
I love this list so much! I’ve read basically all these books and they’re my favorites! ❤ I’m so glad you mentioned Tess! Tess of the D’Urbervilles is one of my favorite books of all time! So tragic! Thomas Hardy is such an amazing writer. I’m working on Anna Karenina and am enjoying it so much. ❤️
I love your insight about Les Miserables, and it is something I hear quite a lot! But wow, that wasn’t at all the case for me. I loved every page of this book, and I think everything is so necessary for the construction of the story and its background. But yeah, I like boring readings 😂
I think the translation also makes it quite boring to read. In French, I had the impression that it read quickly (the style of VH is not complicated).... And if they don’t translate/explain words like « dioceses » (word that probably 1 French out of 2 can't define correctly), good luck 🤣
@@CarolynMarieReads I am reading War and Peace now and I can agree that Tolstoy rambles on more beautifully 😂 but yeah, I love both, they are my favourite writers, for sure
I read Anna Karenina during the first lockdown. I cried and screamed and threw the book and then picked it up again. It is nothing short of a masterpiece.
Hii Carolyn, I love the time and effort you put in all of your video's. Thank you so much for the book idea's. I absolutely agree that Tolstoy is the best writer of all time, no doubt.
An abridged version of Les Mis is a great idea -- that said, I love it, and Victor Hugo's inability to ignore the full humanity of every character, no matter how minor, is an intrinsic part of his charm.
Hi Caroline. Wow, I'm blown away by hearing you rave about these longer classics. I have Anna K. but haven't read it yet. I'm reading "Mercury Pictures Presents" for a book club meeting next week and trying to finish "The Sun also Rises" by Hemingway. Then, "100 Years of Solitude" based on Emma's rec and then Anna K!!! These poor books have to take a ticket and wait in line! Thanks for your utube videos. They are so fun!
I LOVE this! Thank you! But for anyone watching, PLEASE don't read an abridged Les Miserables. Then entire novel is perfect and Carolyn is correct, readers are MUCH happier with the original Hugo novel 😍 Tess deserves everyone to read her. Wonderful book and I fell in love with her the way Carolyn, you fell in love with Levin!! Plus, her Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition is wonderous! And the BBC makes the best version of Les Miserables Also, I 1million% agree about the best main character of Anna Karinina! I totally agree with you there Carolyn!
One more that I would add Carolyn is Jonathon Strange and Mr Norell. It has such an unfortunate title but it's historical fantasy and it's by the same person who wrote Piranesi and honestly that's all you need to know. It's about 800 or 900 pages long but it is ABSOLUTELY well worth your time. It will stay with you loooong after you've read it. Such a masterpiece. You can watch the TV adaptation but the book is by far superior
i read Rebecca last week and i loved it so much, i picked it up not knowing anything about it, i didn't even know it was a classic. i absolutely Loved it!! it was amazing and very captivating it became an instant favorite. (English isn't my first language but i still found it easy to read-that's probably why i never suspected it was a classic-)
It was said that London did not know what fog really was until Dickens described it. Glad you made this list (and you should know that Tolstoy had a photo of Dickens in his study).
Yeeeees, some Anna Karenina love. You've literally made my evening. I have a special edition of War and Peace coming in the mail which is split in 4 volumes, and I can't wait to start reading it. The short story, The Death of Ivan Ilych, is also fantastic.
So nice to sit and watch someone speak to camera about books who doesn't use 4 jumpcuts a second or per sentence. Not to mention a beautiful voice to listen to. 👍🏆
I was with an old friend in a bookshop recently and for some reason we started to talk about Tolstoy and I think I've managed to convince him to read War And Peace.When you translate my friend's name into French it's Pierre.😁✨
I am a mathematician and computer scientist. My wife said I needed to read some good classic literature. I DO like literature and without doubt it is extremely important in our world. I will try a few of your suggestions. You did a nice job BTW.
Hi Caroline I Just start reading Anna Karenina and I am about a 100 pages in and I am loving it. I watched a little parts of your Anna Karenina videos so as not to get spoilers anyways to to thank you for talking about this book so much it's amazing I don't want it to end.
Hi, I loved your selection. If you have not read them yet, may I recommend The Moonstone and The Woman in white by Wilky Collins. I keep coming back again and again, because they are so fascinating and Collins knows how to keep the reader turning pages on those two real classics, IMHO. Thanks for a great video,
Great Expectations is my favorite Dickens, with David Copperfield a close second. My recommends: The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray Cousin Bette by Honore Balzac Middlemarch by George Eliot The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë Portrait of a Lady by Henry James Happy reading!
I agree with you on so many things, but one I don't: I'd rather read Hugo's ramblings that Tolstoi's! Ahahah, please don't kill me! xD If you love Daphne du Maurier, House on the Strand is my favourite. People don't talk too much about it but it's really great. I won't say too much not to spoil it, just two words: time travel! If you've never read Dumas and are hesitant to start with Count of Monte Cristo, which is huge, but also very easy to read as Dumas, contrary to authors like Hugo, Dickens or Tolstoi, doesn't love too much rambling, read The Three Musketeers. Is so good, it's got everything, friendship, love, adventure, suspense, tragedy, comedy... it's my most favourite book ever! And finally, if you love Jane Eyre and Tess, try also Au Bonheur des Dames by Emile Zola. It's a very good book about the industralization and how it affected commerce, about a house that sells acessories, fabrics and other stuff for women, and about Denise, the main character, a poor orphan girl who has to support herself and her little siblings, who works there. She's strong and dignified like Jane and she two fights for her dignity and independence. And Zola writes beautifully. I loved it and I think you will love it too!
Hi Caroline, I would recommend you read The Ladies' Paradise by Emile Zola. I am currently reading it and it is absolutely amazing. It is also very educational as the author discusses the effects capitalism and consumerism have on people and society as a whole. By the way, I love your videos and your book recommendations! 🥰
IIRC that is the novel based on the opening of the first gigantic department store in Paris? Of course, modern readers comfortable with on-line shopping may not get the full force of the story. I know that for me, visiting Macy's in NY, or spending afternoons in the brand new malls was exciting, but it would be hard to believe Zola's Realism on this point can easily reach today's readers.
The Anne of Green Gables mini series starring Megan Follows from the 80’s is wonderfully casted. I would suggest the book, Christy, by Catherine Marshall. They made it into a short lived t.v. series starring Kellie Martin, who narrates the audiobook. I think any fan of Anne would like Christy. If you can get a hold of the t.v. series as well you’re all good to go. It has a wonderful cast as well.
As someone who started reading many of the classics as a hobby after college, I'm blown away by Tolstoy's ability to create such real, immersive worlds. His talent is awesome. Levin is one of my favorite characters in any book.
Your video was amazing ,... you really express the love of reading great books and remind us to keep reading them , and connect a part of our soul to these great ''personnages'' in these stories, Merci!
I don't think of classics as being restricted to fiction. Some of my favourite classics are: "Decline of the West" by Oswald Spengler, "Aesthetic Theory" by Theodor Adorno, and "Truth and Method" by Hans Gadamer.
Oh such great recommendations. And you’ve convinced me War and Peace, it’s time. I would love to see you do a review on The Count Of Monte Cristo. I think you’ll fall in love with it. I love Anna Karenina, and I never thought I would find a classic that would capture my heart as much. And it so very nearly did.
Just thinking about Anna Karenina makes me choke up, it's so sad and beautiful. I share the passage on the coming of spring with my friends every year.
stumbled upon this video because I'm currently reading Anna Karenina and I'm loving it so far and was hoping to find some other great classics to read. loved the video and very excited to read some more classics!
During a particularly depressing part of my early 20s, I read Don Quixote. I credit it with the decision not to kill myself that summer. So yeah, stories matter. Literature matters. ❤
My favourite book is The Odessey of Homer. I can't find the translation that I read many years ago. I love how it keeps repeating the attributes of each of the gods as it mentions them time after time. Even though it is a translation the repeating of the attibutes make it feel like the poetry that the book is. Of course another great book to read is simply the Bible. Our whole culture in the West is built on it. It is full of insights into what people and what God is like.
A classic I really love is The Phantom of the Opera. Like Les Mis, its predominantly known for the musical adaptation but honestly the novel is really beautiful in its own ways. Christine is far stronger, Raoul is much more complex (he isn't exactly the perfect partner but he's got backstory which makes him more interesting to follow), and Daroga is basically the best friend everyone wants. For those who know the musical but not the book, Daroga is a cop who originally saved Erik from the circus and hid him in the theatre and is essentially Erik's only friend. He was cut out from the musical and his part was sort of morphed into Madame Giry.
Rebecca is my favorite book of all time! So eerie and tense and just a profound exploration of power in women and the way it upsets the status quo when women refuse to apologize for the upper hand (assuming you can even trust the narrator’s perception!). You have excellent taste in books!
I LOVE long classics! Totally agree on your list--the books I've read, at least. I still need to get to Tolstoy and Hemingway! The others I'd add are The Count of Monte Cristo and Crime and Punishment. Both were really daunting, but so worth it! :) Thanks for the video!
I honestly haven’t read too many long classics but a couple that I have enjoyed (that you didn’t mention) have been The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo and Moby Dick by Herman Melville
I agree that Anna Karenina and war and peace are great . In fact I read war and peace so many times that I wrote a letter to a friend with an analysis . I still think Victor Hugo is worth your time . Regarding Dickens I read all his books as a child . I suspect in a simplified version. I have all his novels in a “original “ version with the great illustrations. There’s a lot of great 1800 early 1900 classics . I hope that they get some visibility in this age of fast entertainment. Great vlog !
Hi Caroline! Thanks for the video! I totally agree with you, I love Tolstoy's rambling as well!! My book recommendation for you is The Odyssey. It looks more daunting than it really is. The story is very catchy and you will end up hooked on Ulysses' tricks over the journey! I also read the Iliad but didn't like it as much, so my tip is to read directly The Odyssey, as you don't lose much as greek mythology is very widespread. I did that, and because I loved it so much I decided to give The Iliad a chance later.
The sewers and Waterloo chapters in Les Miserables are a beautiful example of descriptive writing, as I recall. Don't forget, many books of this period were serialised in newspapers, so perhaps best to read them as instalments, rather than in long sittings. I would never read an abridged version of any book. If it's not enjoyable to read, I would put it aside until I was in the mood.
I love watching Anne growing up and facing some challenges, while I read, I think I'm also facing those challenges. The moment I finished the book I felt warm but at the same time, upset, for I suddenly realized that Anne is just a fictional character, all the wonderful things in the book are just fictional, how I wish it all was real!!!
Love this list. Adding them all to my list to read, because I want to read all the classics. Anne of green gables is my favorite fiction book series ever.
Thank you for this wonderful introduction to so many classics. Your choices are excellent. I'll turn 72 in a month and have chosen to read classic books for 2023 along with a few others. Starting on War and Peace first!
You are brilliant. I love the entire video. Anna Karenina is better than War & Peace. Try Waterland by Graham Swift. Not a lot of people know that War and Peace was the follow up to Watership Down! (Warren Peace - get it...I'll get my coat)
1:23 The Great Expectations
3:24 Emma
4:58 Les Miserables
8:32 Tess of the d'Urbervilles
10:31 Jane Eyre
12:37 Rebecca
15:05 Little Women
18:37 The Princess Bride
21:06 A Farewell to Arms
25:44 Anne of Green Gables
27:53 Don Quixote
32:40 War and Peace
33:43 Anna Karenina
Done, for my own safekeeping in future 😀
Never met Warren Pease. The movie AK was good w/ Garbo, but I had no sympathy for the character.
She said she read the entire series of Anne of Green Gables in a month. Good grief she reads fast 🥴. This is why I stopped trying to keep up with BookTubers lol.
Your fingers have betrayed you. The title by Hemingway is "A Farewell to Arms."
@@jchinckley tq
@@rufust.firefly4890 Warren Pease? He was in Deliverance with a bownarra
I would add the Count of Monte Cristo, and Crime and Punishment. They are both highly readable and beautifully written.
I was AMAZED at how breezy and effortless and compelling Monte Christo was, considering its iconic literary reputation and its hugeness! Will surely be heading back to that brilliantly drawn world and crazy exciting story again... And again?
Count is super over rated....i read it as a kid and loved it, as an adult it was still good but everyone and their mothers read this book
@@sew_gal7340I’m not sure a book that was published by 1846 and is one of the most read classical novels (by everyone and their mothers) would be considered ‘overrated’ especially if you loved the book and still do. Perhaps ‘resilient’? Overrated would mean a disappointment and if you loved the book, I’d be curious what made it disappointing? Or since everybody read it does that make it somehow less or even too popular and therefore overrated? Just curious
@Bigheartoneggshells I never said that i was trying to be distinguish, If I were I wouldnt be reading any of the books on this list. I just said Count was overrated, which means that its got more praise than it deserves. Which is of course my opinion, it doesnt mean i am right it means i dont agree with most individuals, and what is wrong with that?
Yeeeh,Monte Cristo was just great
The Count of Monte Cristo is so worth it, it’s my favourite book ever. It’s a revenge plot that’s so intricate and satisfying
Just finished mine last week. At first, in mid chapters you'll feel that "are these scenes necessary?" because of new character introductions each chapter but later on you can't stop reading it. Fantastic story
@@Dann-md9eq Exactly!
One of my favorite books of all time.
Isn't that a bit dark for Carolyn?
Great book. One of the best ever definitely.
As I’ve grown older I don’t pick up a book unless 450+ pages or more. When I turned 70 years old I determined to read nothing but classics I haven’t read. My list is still long at this age. Some favorites I read every year, especially Little Women. I wasn’t required reading classic literature in my school days until my senior year. I chose Gone With The Wind. It was my first reread at 70 and I’m having a good time. War and Peace is an excellent history, philosophy of life read to think on. Thanks for sharing.
I like your attitude, but I wouldn't battle through a large classic unless you really enjoy it. I just finished Moby-Dick and love it. But Rob Roy was just too wordy, and I gave up after ten pages. I've settled into a routine of reading a classic, then an easy novel, then a non-fiction (usually a World War 2 book).
I think it is important to reread a selection every decade or two. Always a different experience. A different understanding.
Oh yeah, Walter Scott’s are beasts
I tried reading Ivanhoe 🫠
If you write a book about you, somehow I feel I will really enjoy it ❤
Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky is an amazing book (my favorite)! It's is very deep and psychological but also the character development and plot are really great.
I can absolutely recommend Dostoevsky as well. I think I found "Demons" to be his best, but it is also probably the hardest. Crime and Punishment is very good as well and probably the best one to start with.
I've got three different copies on my shelf. It's amazing how different some of the translations are.
I started Crime and Punishment on a Friday night in college and stayed up until dawn finishing it. Probably the most thrilling reading ride I've ever had. Reread it few times.
I've read 420 pages, and so far it's overrated, dated, predictable... No humour, a lot of madness and psycho babble bit precious little action.
But I'll read the last 130 as it seems to be getting more interesting. So far it's been a tremendous waste of time.
@@JLar-bb5hl C&P, overrated? Yeah, okay, dear.
I loved Moby-Dick, unabridged. Read it in high school. Reread it at age 60. Still brings me joy, memories, laughs, thoughtfulness on the human condition and the consequences of our actions.
Anna Karenina and Don Quixote are in my top 3 books of all time together with The Brothers Karamazov. I'm currently reading War and Peace and it's been a joy, each passage is so impactful especially the very personal thoughts of the soldiers during the war.
Brother from another mother!
I am reading the Idiot now. It is interesting once you know what it is really about. Same as Emma. I thought its mainly a romance. No. It is about Christian virtue. That is what Jane Austen was all about.
Shouldn't you be finishing symphony no 10?
@@polishscores good one! :)
War and Peace is a category of its own.
hi caroline i need to say this, you need to record an audiobook your voice is so soothing and rich that I could listen to it for hours plus the way you read with so much feeling actually makes me wanna read it right away so I would love it if you start your own audiobook podcast 🥰
omg!!! i was totally thinking the same thing!!!
An Anna Karenina audiobook 😀
Oh yes I totally agree, Carolyn's voice is so calming and nice to listen to!
100%
100%
My absolute #1 favorite book is East of Eden by John Steinbeck. I read it in high school and I read it again now (in my late twenties) and it hit home even more. Absolutely incredible.
Mine, too! Steinbeck is my favorite.
+1, Cal and Tom Hamilton remain some of my favorite literary characters
I'm reading it and myaan it's so good thats I'm afraid that there won't be anything else good than this. Let me know what to read similar or anything good after this
Hello Caroline. I love how you give us the frame of a book and just enough hints to how it might be furnished with characters. You don’t give too much away, but just enough to get us in the front door. Thank-you for your introductions and your enthusiasm.
I’m so glad to hear this, but I’m always worried about giving too much of the story away! Thank you for being so kind and supportive :)
When I was 13, I read "Les Misérables." (Unabridged.) Never read a book much longer than 200 pgs. Knew nothing except I was intrigued with the cover.
Reading such a large work in its entirety gave me an unparalleled & thrilling experience. One I worry many people miss out on when they avoid lengthy works of fiction: the utter, total immersion in another world. Even the longest Harry Potter novel had positively *nothing* on the scope & range of Hugo's generational saga. Its vivid reality, its seasonal progressions, its gritty details, its epic tone, its humans that change (or don't) over a long timespan, in lots of different geographical locations, and in history-defining moments.
At their best, novels can offer this unique experience. It can be ""Les Misérables," or something else. I only urge the timid to get gutsy & dive into a novel that will do this for them. Nothing else can do it. No, not even television. And no, not even audiobooks!
(Sidenote: I dislike the musical, but like the 1998 film adaptation. Also: when I read it was the early 2000s, just before you could search wikipedia about the Battle of Waterloo or the Paris sewage system. In a way, this perhaps put me closer to the pre-internet audience of the novel!)
Bravo. I read the translated version by Isabel Hapgood. She immortalizes Hugo's poetic brilliance from its native French in a way I am unable to describe, suffice it to say: simply sublime.
totally agree on all points. It's the monastery bit that slows me down, but one of, if not the greatest novel of all time.
I also read it when I was 13, and I've never loved a book as much as I loved it back then.
Agreed! I read War and Peace as well as The Count of Monte Cristo, and while those two were MUCH easier to get through (esp The Count, I was flying through that book), Les Miserables was the one that stuck with me the most despite being the most difficult of the 3 for me. There were some digressions that were just so hard to get through, but I’m glad I did, because now I can make the Homeric parallels to the soldiers at Waterloo and the Greeks, as well as Hugo’s ultimate verdict on Revolution and Progress and what it means despite its failures, and how Waterloo serves as almost foreshadowing for what will happen at The Barricade, and what the Amis’ sacrifices ended up meaning, how Grantaire and Enjolras’ deaths connected with Cambronne’s (the true winner of Waterloo) end. To me, books are most special when they are more than the plot. So personally I enjoyed when Hugo decided to go into depth to tell us about cheese and the Parisian sewer systems. Hugo has a humor that really lands if you can catch it, which is a bit harder to do in English than it is in French, but makes his rambling so much more enjoyable. It truly takes you back in time to him sitting down and telling you about all this and you have no choice but to listen because getting up and leaving would be rude. I’ve read and fully annotated the unabridged FMA version, just read the Donougher’s version, and also read Wilbour’s abridged version. I can see why some people will choose the abridged version (as it literally cuts the entire book down in half to 700 pages or so) but the experience just isn’t the same. Valjean and Javert obviously gets a lot cut down for them, but The Les Amis de l'ABC get the brunt of it and they were some of the highlights in the entire book for me. I remember reading The Count of Monte Cristo directly after Les Mis (I finished War and Peace some time ago) and because of how I was zooming through the book, I was certain that the former would’ve been my new favorite. But after a few weeks of resonating after I finished both, I realized how much closer to my heart Les Mis was. That’s not to say I didn’t adore The Count, it’s still one of my favorite books all time and the one I will probably reread over and over again, but Les Mis just feels so personal and makes me so emotional in a way no other book ever has
I’m not a huge fan of les misérables but I’m tempted to try it in French. I find reading in my second language slows me down and I pay more attention to the language. I have put it on my second language pile for future reading.
This is the best Classic book review I've ever seen! You have a passion for the Classic and it shows. Thank you for this video.
Thank you!!!
Very nice, thank you for this. Rebecca is my favorite of all time. A few years ago, I found myself in Liverpool. I went into a beautiful building near the waterfront to see the architecture and in the lobby there was a cafe called "Mrs Danvers Cafe", with a picture of her with flames all around. I was so excited!
I love the way you talk about books and can't wait for you to read Count of Monte Cristo! It is 1200+ pages but flies by so fast because the plot and characters are so interesting
It's funny that this book is so popular in other countries! In France, it isnt so successful. Many forget it... (im french)
@@deletedacctc Actually, i learned this from french tandem app partners. I've told them how much i love french classic literature like Count of Monte Cristo but both persons haven't read and weren't interested of the book
I'm about to start reading this book. I'm scared.
Dumas’s Monte Cristo is a fabulously extravagant tale of revenge. I recommend Penguin’s Robin Buss translation.
@@StvRdhll robin buss' translation is the gold standard for Monte Cristo. Nothing else at the moment.
i am à homeschooling mom of 7. my 12 year old is an avid reader. she read The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe in kindergarten, and had read half of the wonderful books on this list. the great thing about classic literature is that even a child can read them, without encountering much inappropriate content (except for hemingway, at times). she and i LOVE watching your channel together, you share our same enthusiasm for classic literature. God bless
Great video! Don Quixote is my favorite big book. So funny, charming, and full of grand spirit.
Thank you :)
It’s such a wonderful story!
Years ago a coworker stated how he read Anna Karinina every year. I got a paperback copy online for a couple of bucks and was astounded how good it is. For a book that is so long it is a real page-turner.
thank you so much for reading the first sentences of classic books! english isn’t my native language even though i prefer reading in english. so i’ve always been scared to pick up classics because i’m afraid i won’t understand the art & messages behind the words. thanks to your samples i can visualize the english level needed & decide if i should read either in english or french! 🤗🌷
I love your videos. You have such enthusiasm toward the classics, not dry and professorial, but energetic and fresh. Thank you for your videos. ❤️
Hi, Carolyn. Thanks for another great reading vlog. Since you are talking about long classics, I must recommend The Count of Monte Cristo. When I read this book I could not put it down. I think you will enjoy it.
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Thanks for a brilliant and informative presentation. Tolstoy is also my favourite author and Anna Karenina and War and Peace are my favourite novels and it is wonderful to hear you speak of them so fondly.
Love this video so much. You have such a passion and I am going to start Anna Karenina after watching this. Many have already suggested it but I would wholeheartedly recommend Count of Monte Cristo, along with Wilkie Collins’ Woman in White, Thackeray’s Vanity Fair, and the two other great Dickens novels; David Copperfield and Bleak House.
Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath" is on the longer end (between 500 and 550 pages) and definitely worth it. It's probably my favourite novel. Also, I love this channel.
I have read that three times. Also read McTeague three times. It was later made into the silent movie Greed.
I read the grapes of wrath, and it was a great book,I was in tears when I finished it
@@jeanbrown8295 Steinbeck won the Pulitzer Prize. See the movie .
I've not really read any Steinbeck other than Of Mice And Men.
Steinbeck is indeed a great but overwhelmingly depressing writer to me. Grapes of Wrath is a masterpiece of human misery that I will never read again.
I am reading Anna Karenina for the first time right now! I am absolutely obsessed with Levin 💕 thank you for your long book tips and encouragement! ✨📚
i can’t wait for you to read count of monte cristo and david copperfield!!! some of my favorites 🥰
I can’t wait either!!!!!
@@CarolynMarieReads just finished count of Monte Cristo. Writing is brilliant and most chapters are cliff hangers
I tried twice to get through DC.
@@rufust.firefly4890 is it worth it?
@@Dann-md9eq What I read I liked. I saw the movie. 1935. Very good.
OMG!! I am 50 pages into Anna Karenina. As you said, the rambling in Leo Tolstoy books is absolutely amazing. Never have I ever felt so intrigued and involved by someone rambling. Great recommendations Caroline!
as others have mentioned, count of monte cristo is so good and flies by despite its length! definitely worth the read
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë and David Copperfield by Charles Dickens are absolutely worth your time!!! These are two of my favourite books of all time 💜
Carolyn, when you talk about classics/Russian classics, that is MY happy place.
I absolutely agree with what you said about Levin! I would heartly recommend you read 'The Idiot' by Dostoevsky if you haven't. Lev Nikolayevich Myshkin is probably my all time favourite character, I love him with all my soul.
@@betep8618 I always find people's 'choice' of the brother interesting as I am still, some 10 years after first reading the book, incapable of deciding which one of the three I prefer. I love them all immensely, but in very different ways.
@@betep8618
Thank you, Емил Синклер and BETEP. One of the most beautiful passages I've ever read comes from the end of Book 2, Chapter 5 (Dostoevsky's, "The Idiot") when Prince Myshkin describes his surreal, episodic lapses into an altered state of consciousness:
"These moments, short as they are, when I feel such extreme consciousness of myself, and consequently more of life than at other times, are due only to the disease-to the sudden rupture of normal conditions. Therefore they are not really a higher kindof life, but a lower.’ This reasoning, however, seemed to end in a paradox, and lead to the further consideration:-‘What matter though it be only disease, an abnormal tension of the brain, if when I recall and analyze the moment, it seems to have been one of harmony and beauty in the highest degree- an instant of deepest sensation, overflowing with unbounded joy and rapture, ecstatic devotion, and completest life?’
Vague though this sounds, it was perfectly comprehensible to Myshkin, though he knew that it was but a feeble expression of his sensations. That there was, indeed, beauty and harmony in those abnormal moments, that they really contained the highest synthesis of life, he could not doubt, nor even admit the … ‘I would give my whole life for this one instant,’ ..."
Wow, I'm truly impressed about your embroidered book cover project! My grannie taught me 50 years ago and I'm grateful to her forever.
I just finished an Emma reread and JUST started Tess of the D'Urbervilles 😆. I'm also going to read my first Gaskell, North and South
War and Peace is a favorite, and really jump-started and rekindled my love of reading.
If you want a LONG classic we can read Proust together 🙇 I've read the first book and adored it. I also highly recommend Portrait of a Lady.
You've never seen the Anne of Green Gables mini series with Megan Followes?!!! That is one of my all time favorites! I watch it every year during Spring Break. All the characters are so perfectly cast, ESPECIALLY Anne. I highly recommend it. It's easy more faithful than the Netflix series.
Your voice is Soo soothing and relaxing ✨
i'm shocked not a single george eliot made this list! middlemarch is such a cozy, romantic, character-driven book, has taken me a month but is sooo worth it!! i have become somewhat of an evangelist for it because i want everyone to have the pleasure of reading it!
According to Goodreads I'm 28% of the way through it and it is fantastic so far!
"Middlemarch" is considered by many to be one of the most seamless novels written. This, together with Thackeray's "Vanity Fair" and Dickens's "Little Dorrit" are blockbusters which encapsulate the Victorian age in fiction.
Breathe, Emma.
Try her Mill on the Floss. Awesome
Good call. I've only read Middlemarch once, thirty years ago, but am looking forward to one day reading it again. Of all the novels that distribute just desserts, this did it for me - in the most edifying and gratifying way.
i cried so much on some passages during ''mis'', once you read it you will never forget this story, so impactful
Thank you for this video, which I enjoyed very much. At the moment I'm reading the epilog of "War and Peace" in German. It is a fantastic read, not quite as good as Anna Karenina, but still a more than wonderful book. But my all time favourite writer is and will always be Dostoevsky. Have a nice day and enjoy whatever you are reading📚
Yes, Don Quixote! So funny despite being written 500 years ago. Life-changing book.
One of the smartest videos on this subject, that I have seen. Thanks for your effort.
I read Great Expectations in high school about 45 years ago and I still remember the opening of the book (an many other parts!). A fabulous book that I do want to re-read! Victor Hugo really loved to go off on tangents. It is as if he knew change was afoot in Paris and he had to capture all the details in so sort of historical record. I've read Anne Karenina twice and certainly worth reading again. Great selection! I think all of them have been adapted for the film. Your passion for books certainly comes across the screen and inspires me to read.
When my teacher in high school read to us that memorable opening scene from "Great Expectations", I (at 15 years) was hooked for life. I pledged to read each of his novels and have done so. "Great Expectations" is special to me. It is my landmark novel - the gateway that ushered me into the wonderful universe of the great classics.
No one talk about classics like you, Carolyn! I absolutely love this video!💖📚
Jamaica Inn blew my mind, one of my favorite books ever! Glad you mentioned wanting to read it!
Hi Caroline, just came across your channel and this is the first video I have gone through. Like you, Jane Eyre was the first book that made me fall in love with classics. But past couple of years I just didn't pick up any classics. Don't know why so . And, now I am back into it. Thanks for the recommendations. I have to definately read some from the list. I have to say this, you give out such a soothing vibe. And your voice 💕 just wow. Lots of love.
this video encouraged me to pick up Don Quixote. I always liked the idea of it but it always intimidated me, but this was enough to get me on board. thanks Carolyn!
I love how you didn't edited out the parts where you realized you forgot to read the first page of some books 🤣. Also, you answered the question I was going to ask: "Should I read Anna Karenina before War and Peace or not?" Thank you!!
It took me almost two months to read Anna Karenina and there were times where I wanted to stop reading it and start another book but it always called me back … when i finished it i immediately missed the characters now it’s one of my all time favorite books !
Took me a month to read Moby-Dick. Seemed to go on forever.
I'm in the middle of Les Miserables right now for my first time. It's so so good. If you can manage it, I recommend the unabridged for your first read, but to each their own. The Count of Monte Cristo is my favorite book of all time so far.
I really enjoyed Great Expectations a lot as well as The Princess Bride. Need to read a number of these.
I’m thinking about reading In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust and using it for a book review in school. My teacher said I’m free to pick it, but he doubted whether I’d be able to finish it in time. It seems like a great story well worth my time. I calculated that if I read 30 pages a day (just about doable, I reckon), it’ll take me roughly 4 months which is not too bad.
Some other long books which I am fond of are The Brothers Karamazov and War and Peace-my 2 favourite books.
Let me know if you finish it
@@bedhead9975 I will, but expect it not to be in the near future lol.
I took a whole course in college on it. When I went back to it many years later, I found it unreadable. It's navel-gazing writing.
Love that you included The Princess Bride! Such a good book (and movie)! Also, the original Anne of Green Gables adaptation is amazing! Although I might be biased because that was the version I watched as a kid. 😄
I love this list so much! I’ve read basically all these books and they’re my favorites! ❤ I’m so glad you mentioned Tess! Tess of the D’Urbervilles is one of my favorite books of all time! So tragic! Thomas Hardy is such an amazing writer.
I’m working on Anna Karenina and am enjoying it so much. ❤️
I love your insight about Les Miserables, and it is something I hear quite a lot! But wow, that wasn’t at all the case for me. I loved every page of this book, and I think everything is so necessary for the construction of the story and its background. But yeah, I like boring readings 😂
I’m so glad you feel that way! That’s how I feel about Tolstoy’s “boring” scenes 😂
I agree with this one. I learned so much with Hugo telling the stories and philosophizing. I wouldn't read an abridged version
I think the translation also makes it quite boring to read. In French, I had the impression that it read quickly (the style of VH is not complicated).... And if they don’t translate/explain words like « dioceses » (word that probably 1 French out of 2 can't define correctly), good luck 🤣
@@deletedacctc That makes sense! I'm A2 to B1 in French, but I still don't have the courage to read Les Mis in French. Maybe in a year :)
@@CarolynMarieReads I am reading War and Peace now and I can agree that Tolstoy rambles on more beautifully 😂 but yeah, I love both, they are my favourite writers, for sure
I read Anna Karenina during the first lockdown. I cried and screamed and threw the book and then picked it up again. It is nothing short of a masterpiece.
Hii Carolyn, I love the time and effort you put in all of your video's.
Thank you so much for the book idea's. I absolutely agree that Tolstoy is the best writer of all time, no doubt.
Just an FYI - Rachel McAdams of “Notebook” fame actually does the audiobook version of “Anne of Green Gables” on audible! SO, so good!
Your commentary and enthusiasm definitely sold me on each book. Whenever i finish any of these books I'll comment again here
Anne Shirley is one of the best characters in fiction ever. 😃
BOY I LOVE HER
An abridged version of Les Mis is a great idea -- that said, I love it, and Victor Hugo's inability to ignore the full humanity of every character, no matter how minor, is an intrinsic part of his charm.
There has been one for decades, Jean Valjean. Check it out. 📕
Hi Caroline. Wow, I'm blown away by hearing you rave about these longer classics. I have Anna K. but haven't read it yet. I'm reading "Mercury Pictures Presents" for a book club meeting next week and trying to finish "The Sun also Rises" by Hemingway. Then, "100 Years of Solitude" based on Emma's rec and then Anna K!!! These poor books have to take a ticket and wait in line! Thanks for your utube videos. They are so fun!
Good chance you'll remember this as one of your best reading years!
I LOVE this! Thank you! But for anyone watching, PLEASE don't read an abridged Les Miserables. Then entire novel is perfect and Carolyn is correct, readers are MUCH happier with the original Hugo novel 😍
Tess deserves everyone to read her. Wonderful book and I fell in love with her the way Carolyn, you fell in love with Levin!!
Plus, her Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition is wonderous! And the BBC makes the best version of Les Miserables
Also, I 1million% agree about the best main character of Anna Karinina! I totally agree with you there Carolyn!
One more that I would add Carolyn is Jonathon Strange and Mr Norell. It has such an unfortunate title but it's historical fantasy and it's by the same person who wrote Piranesi and honestly that's all you need to know. It's about 800 or 900 pages long but it is ABSOLUTELY well worth your time. It will stay with you loooong after you've read it. Such a masterpiece. You can watch the TV adaptation but the book is by far superior
i read Rebecca last week and i loved it so much, i picked it up not knowing anything about it, i didn't even know it was a classic. i absolutely Loved it!! it was amazing and very captivating it became an instant favorite. (English isn't my first language but i still found it easy to read-that's probably why i never suspected it was a classic-)
It was said that London did not know what fog really was until Dickens described it. Glad you made this list (and you should know that Tolstoy had a photo of Dickens in his study).
Thank you for a great list, I appreciate it! I would also add "One Hundred Years of Solitude".
Yeeeees, some Anna Karenina love. You've literally made my evening. I have a special edition of War and Peace coming in the mail which is split in 4 volumes, and I can't wait to start reading it. The short story, The Death of Ivan Ilych, is also fantastic.
So nice to sit and watch someone speak to camera about books who doesn't use 4 jumpcuts a second or per sentence. Not to mention a beautiful voice to listen to. 👍🏆
I was with an old friend in a bookshop recently and for some reason we started to talk about Tolstoy and I think I've managed to convince him to read War And Peace.When you translate my friend's name into French it's Pierre.😁✨
I am a mathematician and computer scientist. My wife said I needed to read some good classic literature. I DO like literature and without doubt it is extremely important in our world. I will try a few of your suggestions. You did a nice job BTW.
Hi Caroline I Just start reading Anna Karenina and I am about a 100 pages in and I am loving it. I watched a little parts of your Anna Karenina videos so as not to get spoilers anyways to to thank you for talking about this book so much it's amazing I don't want it to end.
Hi, I loved your selection. If you have not read them yet, may I recommend The Moonstone and The Woman in white by Wilky Collins. I keep coming back again and again, because they are so fascinating and Collins knows how to keep the reader turning pages on those two real classics, IMHO. Thanks for a great video,
THANK YOU for talking about Don Quixote!! It's one of my favorites and I never hear anyone talk about it!!
Great Expectations is my favorite Dickens, with David Copperfield a close second.
My recommends:
The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins
Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray
Cousin Bette by Honore Balzac
Middlemarch by George Eliot
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë
Portrait of a Lady by Henry James
Happy reading!
I agree with you on so many things, but one I don't: I'd rather read Hugo's ramblings that Tolstoi's! Ahahah, please don't kill me! xD
If you love Daphne du Maurier, House on the Strand is my favourite. People don't talk too much about it but it's really great. I won't say too much not to spoil it, just two words: time travel! If you've never read Dumas and are hesitant to start with Count of Monte Cristo, which is huge, but also very easy to read as Dumas, contrary to authors like Hugo, Dickens or Tolstoi, doesn't love too much rambling, read The Three Musketeers. Is so good, it's got everything, friendship, love, adventure, suspense, tragedy, comedy... it's my most favourite book ever! And finally, if you love Jane Eyre and Tess, try also Au Bonheur des Dames by Emile Zola. It's a very good book about the industralization and how it affected commerce, about a house that sells acessories, fabrics and other stuff for women, and about Denise, the main character, a poor orphan girl who has to support herself and her little siblings, who works there. She's strong and dignified like Jane and she two fights for her dignity and independence. And Zola writes beautifully. I loved it and I think you will love it too!
If you've never read Dickens and want a sampling, read A Christmas Carol ffs!! Delightful and extremely short book. Love this vid overall though >_
Agree!
Hi Caroline, I would recommend you read The Ladies' Paradise by Emile Zola. I am currently reading it and it is absolutely amazing. It is also very educational as the author discusses the effects capitalism and consumerism have on people and society as a whole.
By the way, I love your videos and your book recommendations! 🥰
IIRC that is the novel based on the opening of the first gigantic department store in Paris? Of course, modern readers comfortable with on-line shopping may not get the full force of the story. I know that for me, visiting Macy's in NY, or spending afternoons in the brand new malls was exciting, but it would be hard to believe Zola's Realism on this point can easily reach today's readers.
Yes! One of my all time favourites.
The Anne of Green Gables mini series starring Megan Follows from the 80’s is wonderfully casted. I would suggest the book, Christy, by Catherine Marshall. They made it into a short lived t.v. series starring Kellie Martin, who narrates the audiobook. I think any fan of Anne would like Christy. If you can get a hold of the t.v. series as well you’re all good to go. It has a wonderful cast as well.
Yes, I agree Christy is an excellent read by Catherine Marshall as well as some of her other books.
Megan was just wonderful as Anne.
As someone who started reading many of the classics as a hobby after college, I'm blown away by Tolstoy's ability to create such real, immersive worlds. His talent is awesome. Levin is one of my favorite characters in any book.
The Way We Live Now. My boy Anthony Trollope is seriously underrated!
Your video was amazing ,... you really express the love of reading great books and remind us to keep reading them , and connect a part of our soul to these great ''personnages'' in these stories, Merci!
I don't think of classics as being restricted to fiction. Some of my favourite classics are: "Decline of the West" by Oswald Spengler, "Aesthetic Theory" by Theodor Adorno, and "Truth and Method" by Hans Gadamer.
Oh such great recommendations. And you’ve convinced me War and Peace, it’s time. I would love to see you do a review on The Count Of Monte Cristo. I think you’ll fall in love with it. I love Anna Karenina, and I never thought I would find a classic that would capture my heart as much. And it so very nearly did.
Just thinking about Anna Karenina makes me choke up, it's so sad and beautiful. I share the passage on the coming of spring with my friends every year.
I'll start with Jane Eyre first. Love your enthusiasm
stumbled upon this video because I'm currently reading Anna Karenina and I'm loving it so far and was hoping to find some other great classics to read. loved the video and very excited to read some more classics!
During a particularly depressing part of my early 20s, I read Don Quixote. I credit it with the decision not to kill myself that summer. So yeah, stories matter. Literature matters. ❤
les mis is a book worth reading slowly, there is so much in it, a good story, a good portrayal of the society, a fantastic cast of characters.....
I couldn’t agree more!!
Don’t know if you’ve read her but I highly love Virginia Woolf. To the Lighthouse is my favorite but I surprisingly also loved Night and Day.
My favourite book is The Odessey of Homer. I can't find the translation that I read many years ago. I love how it keeps repeating the attributes of each of the gods as it mentions them time after time. Even though it is a translation the repeating of the attibutes make it feel like the poetry that the book is. Of course another great book to read is simply the Bible. Our whole culture in the West is built on it. It is full of insights into what people and what God is like.
A classic I really love is The Phantom of the Opera. Like Les Mis, its predominantly known for the musical adaptation but honestly the novel is really beautiful in its own ways. Christine is far stronger, Raoul is much more complex (he isn't exactly the perfect partner but he's got backstory which makes him more interesting to follow), and Daroga is basically the best friend everyone wants. For those who know the musical but not the book, Daroga is a cop who originally saved Erik from the circus and hid him in the theatre and is essentially Erik's only friend. He was cut out from the musical and his part was sort of morphed into Madame Giry.
Rebecca is my favorite book of all time! So eerie and tense and just a profound exploration of power in women and the way it upsets the status quo when women refuse to apologize for the upper hand (assuming you can even trust the narrator’s perception!). You have excellent taste in books!
I LOVE long classics! Totally agree on your list--the books I've read, at least. I still need to get to Tolstoy and Hemingway! The others I'd add are The Count of Monte Cristo and Crime and Punishment. Both were really daunting, but so worth it! :) Thanks for the video!
I honestly haven’t read too many long classics but a couple that I have enjoyed (that you didn’t mention) have been The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo and Moby Dick by Herman Melville
I agree that Anna Karenina and war and peace are great . In fact I read war and peace so many times that I wrote a letter to a friend with an analysis . I still think Victor Hugo is worth your time . Regarding Dickens I read all his books as a child . I suspect in a simplified version. I have all his novels in a “original “ version with the great illustrations. There’s a lot of great 1800 early 1900 classics . I hope that they get some visibility in this age of fast entertainment. Great vlog !
Hi Caroline! Thanks for the video! I totally agree with you, I love Tolstoy's rambling as well!! My book recommendation for you is The Odyssey. It looks more daunting than it really is. The story is very catchy and you will end up hooked on Ulysses' tricks over the journey! I also read the Iliad but didn't like it as much, so my tip is to read directly The Odyssey, as you don't lose much as greek mythology is very widespread. I did that, and because I loved it so much I decided to give The Iliad a chance later.
The sewers and Waterloo chapters in Les Miserables are a beautiful example of descriptive writing, as I recall.
Don't forget, many books of this period were serialised in newspapers, so perhaps best to read them as instalments, rather than in long sittings.
I would never read an abridged version of any book. If it's not enjoyable to read, I would put it aside until I was in the mood.
I went to the used books store to get the Tess of the D'Urbervilles immediately after watching this! I hope I hate/love it as much as you did!!
Anne of Green Gables is my favorite book!!! I truly love it and I hope more and more people could read it too!!!
I love watching Anne growing up and facing some challenges, while I read, I think I'm also facing those challenges. The moment I finished the book I felt warm but at the same time, upset, for I suddenly realized that Anne is just a fictional character, all the wonderful things in the book are just fictional, how I wish it all was real!!!
I always found Emily Byrd Starr much more interesting and relatable.
Love this list. Adding them all to my list to read, because I want to read all the classics. Anne of green gables is my favorite fiction book series ever.
Thank you for this wonderful introduction to so many classics. Your choices are excellent. I'll turn 72 in a month and have chosen to read classic books for 2023 along with a few others. Starting on War and Peace first!
Just liked and subscribed. Great job on your video Your selections brought back a wave of memories.
You are brilliant. I love the entire video. Anna Karenina is better than War & Peace. Try Waterland by Graham Swift.
Not a lot of people know that War and Peace was the follow up to Watership Down! (Warren Peace - get it...I'll get my coat)