Flowers bloom from the pages of every classic that was ever written. They would have long withered and died otherwise.
@poncedeleon7595 ай бұрын
1. Dostoevsky, 2. Tolstoy, 3. Thomas Hardy, et al (Shakespeare, Trollope, Collins, Dickens, Austen, Steinbeck - so hard to narrow down to a top 5)
@llonaangelp.32195 ай бұрын
The Brontë sisters, yessss! The tenant of the wildfell hall is underrated, but omg that book is a hidden gem and deserves more recognition!!!
@kimbarbeaureads5 ай бұрын
1. Thomas Hardy - Tess of the d'Urbervilles. 2. Jane Austen - Sense and Sensibility 3. Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte 4. C.S. Lewis - Mere Christianity 5. Oscar Wilde - The Selfish Giant I am not crazy about Hemingway, but The Old Man and the Sea lives rent free in my head.
@christopherpaul75885 ай бұрын
Really? A Moveable Feast and A Farewell to Arms are both so much better than the Old Man and the Sea.
@davidanthony48453 ай бұрын
Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre
@thelibraryofphoebe5 ай бұрын
“fiction is truth retold” is such an amazing way to put it! i love steinbeck but haven’t read hemingway since highschool, i definitely need to give him another shot.
@sawsawsuka5 ай бұрын
your love for literature is contagious
@miyuk99055 ай бұрын
You are my inspiration for reading classics in English. As I am Japanese native, it’s sometimes very difficult but reading the original text is very worthy
@WhiteRaven435 ай бұрын
My top five favorite classic authors are Harper Lee (To Kill A Mockingbird), Betty Smith (A Tree Grows In Brooklyn), Anne Frank (The Diary Of A Young Girl), Frances Hodgson Burnett (The Secret Garden), and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (The Complete Sherlock Holmes). I just started War & Peace this week. I'm 400 pages in and really enjoying it so far.
@Scottlp25 ай бұрын
1. Tolstoy is great and illustrates human nature including the heights (e.g. Andrei's spiritual flowering in W &P). 2. Somerset Maugham equally well illustrates human nature but usually the darker sides. Start with Razor's Edge. 3. Steinbeck's way with words is amazing: "Cannery Row...is a poem, a stink, a grating noise, a quality of light, a tone, a habit a nostalgia, a dream".
@dggjr17594 ай бұрын
That story about the gopher in Cannery Row is too relatable 😢
@yannick83725 ай бұрын
1. Fyodor Dostoevsky - Brothers Karamazov and the Idiot in particular. 2. Leo Tolstoy - War and Peace, Anna Karenina, Death of Ivan Iljitsj, Childhood Boyhood Youth. 3. John Steinbeck - East of Eden, Cannery Row, Grapes of Wrath, Travels with Charley. 4. Alexander Pushkin - Jevgeni Onegin, short stories. 5. Oscar Wilde - Picture of Dorian Gray.
@abrilquiroz73105 ай бұрын
1. Victor Hugo (Les Misérables/The Last Day of a Condemned Man) 2. Fyodor Dostoevsky (The Idiot/C&P/The Brothers Karamazov) 3. Alexander Pushkin (Eugene Onegin) 4. Leo Tolstoy (The Death of Ivan Ilyich) 5. Markus Zusak (The Book Thief) I feel like my list is always changing, except my top 2 will always be my top 2!
@abrilquiroz73105 ай бұрын
@@Whoever_is_here you should!! I’ve been saving The Hunchback of Notre Dame but I can’t keep putting it off
@subtlefire72565 ай бұрын
I literally clicked on this thinking, "yay, I can't wait to hear Carolyn talk about Anna Karenina again". 😄 I always love to hear you talk about something you're passionate about, your joy just shines through so much, and I could listen to you gush about Anna Karenina all day, it's one of my favourites as well. ❤ One of my favourite classics authors would definitely be Thomas Hardy, I’ve read five of his novels and some of his poetry by now. Three of those novels have become all-time favourites (Far from the Madding Crowd, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, and Jude the Obscure). I might need to go on another Hardy spree soon hahaha.
@maliha39215 ай бұрын
I read Anna Karenina last month ! My first Tolstoy book , and it did not disappoint!! It took me 2 months to read it ( w my job n everything ) but I enjoyed every word of it . Definitely gonna reread it !
@juliehughes12585 ай бұрын
Well done, you. I really must pick it up again.
@Gonzalezluis895 ай бұрын
It literally took me six months to read. But I do work 10 to 12 hours a day. My reading schedule was all over the place. Somedays I will read for 30 minutes but when I had the chance I would read for 4 to 5 hours. There was a time when I couldn’t read for about three weeks. But the story was so good that I was always able to pick up right were I left off and dive back into the story. In the end it became my all time favorite book. And I can’t wait to reread it again when I have a more balanced schedule.
@alanbauch281524 күн бұрын
Your explanation of your passion to read as a compulsion to read for your various gains resonated so strongly with me. I know exactly what you mean! Books are such a large part of my life, and have been most of my life. Some of my favorites, all paperbacks, I bought in '67. These are Sherlock Holmes, Jules Verne, Jack london,HG Wells, and quite a few more. In '67 I was13 years old, and this was the beginning of the fire for reading and, of course acquiring my beloved books. I have, all my life kept picking them up and now have a really fine collection! In the last 10 years I have really concentrated on the classics, and come to really enjoy them especially! Wel.....I enjoyed your presentation , Carolyn, and your enthusiasm, too. I hope to see more of your videos in future times, as they are always top notch! So bye for now, my fair booklover, AL
@kjgerdes11115 ай бұрын
Yes to a Part 2. I love seeing everyone's favorites. Carolyn, your voice is so relaxing. I went through a very hard time in my life and you helped bring me through everything just by listening to you. Thank you so so much. ❤
@juliehughes12585 ай бұрын
I agree with you about Carolyn's soothing voice and peaceful approach to talking about books. It really can be an antidote to this crazy world. I'm so happy that she helped you, @kjgerdes1111. 🥰
@Lynn_Ann_Jackson5 ай бұрын
How incredible and how inspirational this video was, Carolyn…I couldn’t save it to my Books list fast enough! I will eagerly await part 2! I, myself, might add Virginia Woolf, Edith Wharton, Louisa May Alcott, LM Montgomery, and Anthony Trollope to this already stellar list.📚❤️
@shuween7065 ай бұрын
I think I started reading Hemingway after watching one of your videos, and I was just like HOW HAVE I BEEN CASUALLY MISSING OUT ON THIS MY WHOLE LIFE UGHHHHH. My friends hate me now because I keep talking about Hemingway. I have no regrets. Thank you :)
@et66772 ай бұрын
I ordered Anna K and War and Peace. I am currently reading The Count of Monte Christo, and I am loving it. Thank you for reviving the love for classics for me.
@malissamoench85875 ай бұрын
Yes to part 2! I will watch all the classics book lists.
@ReligionOfSacrifice5 ай бұрын
I love that you got me to read "Childhood" "Boyhood" and "Anna Karenina" so THANK YOU. Two authors have only one based on my series criteria, but I put them there anyway, for as a child under ten years old reading these two stories there is nothing to compare to them in my early childhood. Also two of them have very good stories about them. 103) "Dostoevsky in Love: An Intimate Life" by Alex Christofi 130) "Mark Twain: A Life" by Ron Powers Mark Twain will have you rolling in laughter and crying. As to Dostoevsky saying out loud two stories every day to who would be his future wife that were his most vulnerable and who he is as a man with "The Gambler" and "The Idiot" while she writes them for him, so he can get them done on time, I can't imagine it, nor the life she lives with him afterwards. I know one thing, she probably loved "The Idiot" and when she found a book by him years before called "The Insulted and Humiliated" it had to be her favorite book of all time. FAVORITE AUTHORS 1st) Fyodor Dostoevsky (The Insulted and Humiliated) 1) “The Insulted and Humiliated” by Fyodor Dostoevsky 4) "The Idiot" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 19) "Crime and Punishment" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 30) "Demons" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 65) "My Uncle's Dream" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 80) "The Heavenly Christmas Tree" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 113) "Poor Folk" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 130) "The Gentle Spirit" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 141) "The Gambler" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 149) "White Nights" by Fyodor Dostoevsky 173) "Netochka Nezvanova" (nameless nobody) by Fyodor Dostoevsky 2nd) Leo Tolstoy (Resurrection) 3) "Resurrection" by Leo Tolstoy 9) "War and Peace" by Leo Tolstoy 17) “Childhood, Boyhood” by Leo Tolstoy 62) "Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy 91) "A Confession" by Leo Tolstoy 3rd) Ivan Turgenev (Fathers and Sons) 5) "Fathers and Sons" by Ivan Turgenev 11) "Smoke" by Ivan Turgenev 23) "Virgin Soil" by Ivan Turgenev 41) "Torrents of Spring" by Ivan Turgenev 64) "First Love" by Ivan Turgenev 101) "Acia" by Ivan Turgenev 107) "The Watch" by Ivan Turgenev 132) "Rudin" by Ivan Turgenev 141) "On the Eve" by Ivan Turgenev 152) "Home of the Gentry" by Ivan Turgenev 172) "Clara Militch" by Ivan Turgenev 177) "The Inn" by Ivan Turgenev 4th) James A. Michener (Chesapeake) 12) "Chesapeake" by James A. Michener 13) "Poland" by James A. Michener 36) "Caribbean" by James A. Michener 37) "Hawaii" by James A. Michener 197) “Mexico” by James A. Michener 5th) Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich) 10) "A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 28) "Cancer Ward" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 44) "In the First Circle" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 78) "The Gulag Archipelago, 1918-1956: an Experiment in Literary Investigation" by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn 6th) C. S. Lewis (The Magician's Nephew) 7) The Chronicles of Narnia - series by C. S. Lewis 42) "Mere Christianity" by C. S. Lewis 184) "Surprised by Joy: The Shape of My Early Life" by C.S. Lewis 7th) Charlotte Brontë (Vilette) 8) "Vilette" by Charlotte Brontë -- Highest ranked book by a female author 74) "Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Brontë 146) "The Professor” by Charlotte Brontë 171) "Shirley" by Charlotte Brontë 8th) J. R. R. Tolkien (The Hobbit) 15) The Silmarillion - The Hobbit, or there and back again - The Lord of the Rings - Middle Earth stories by J. R. R. Tolkien 9th) Isaac Asimov (Foundation and Empire) 18) Foundation Series - Isaac Asimov 10th) Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice) 24) "Pride and Prejudice" by Jane Austen 43) "Emma" by Jane Austen 68) “Sense and Sensibility” by Jane Austen 80) “Persuasion” by Jane Austen 11th) Anne Brontë (The Tenant of Wildfell Hall) 22) "The Tenant of Wildfell Hall" by Anne Brontë 32) "The Complete Poems of Anne Bronte" by Anne Brontë 104) "Agnes Grey" by Anne Brontë 12th) Mark Twain (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer) 25) The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn - by Mark Twain 58) "Life on the Mississippi" by Mark Twain 111) "Pudd'n Head Wilson" by Mark Twain 137) "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court" by Mark Twain 179) "The Innocents Abroad" by Mark Twain 13th) Anthony Trollope (He Knew He Was Right) 59) "He Knew He Was Right" by Anthony Trollope 71) "The Warden" by Anthony Trollope 86) "The Way We Live Now" by Anthony Trollope 101) "Can you forgive her?" by Anthony Trollope 14th) Dr. Burrhus Frederic (B. F.) Skinner (Verbal Behavior) 2) "Verbal Behavior" by Dr. B. F. Skinner 78) “Science and Human Behavior” by Dr. B. F. Skinner 15th) George Eliot (Silas Marner) 54) "Silas Marner" by George Eliot 87) "Middlemarch" by George Eliot 16th) Charles Dickens (Hard Times) 69) "Hard Times" by Charles Dickens 93) "A Christmas Carol" by Charles Dickens 17th) Thomas Hardy (Jude the Obscure) 83) "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy 110) "A Pair of Blue Eyes" by Thomas Hardy
@denisefreitas67275 ай бұрын
Loved your Top 5, Carolyn! Here's mine: 1. Marcel Proust, 2. Anton Chekhov, 3. Brontë sisters, 4. Virginia Woolf, 5. Jane Austen.
@VickyMeowM5 ай бұрын
I loved that you started the video with the Brontë Sisters, they're so special to me
@amolove245 ай бұрын
I haven’t read that many classic books but my favorites of all time are 1.) Mary Shelley (Frankenstein was my first classic I read for fun and I recently read her other book Matilda and both of those books are just life changing for me) 2.) Oscar Wilde (the picture of Dorian gray is just too good) 3.)Bram Stoker (I read Dracula for the first time last year and it was so much fun) 4.) Gaston Leroux (the phantom of the opera my beloved) 5.) William Shakespeare (I need to get more into Shakespeare but midsummer’s night dream was so good)
@juliehughes12585 ай бұрын
Of course I agree with you about all of those authors! I recently finished that very edition of A Moveable Feast and I'm 100% certain I bought it based on your recommendation. I very much enjoyed it as well. When I think of Hemingway, I think of two things; he was the definition of a man's man, and alcohol. I would love to watch a Part 2 to this video.
@evangelinepoe89525 ай бұрын
You've mentioned some great books and a part 2 would be great as well. An author whose works I love is Pat Conroy. His works aren't classics yet, but I hope someday they will be. The first book of his I read was The Prince of Tides. You can read the prologue from google search. Put book after the title because it's also a movie now. I beg you to just read the prologue and let me know your thoughts. If it doesn't feel like a book you'd like, that's okay. I'd just like to hear your thoughts. 💚🦀💫
@lo23455 ай бұрын
yes it was a great book :)
@wisikapradipta87435 ай бұрын
My Top 5 is : 1. Dostoevsky - The Brothers Karamazov 2. Tolstoy - War and Peace 3. Alexander Dumas - The count of Monte Cristo 4. George Orwell - 1984 5. John Steinbeck - East of Eden
@mattkean11285 ай бұрын
Five of my most favorite classic writers would have to include in the conversation: Tolstoy - War & Peace Henry James - The Portrait of a Lady Virginia Woolf - The Waves Jane Austen - Persuasion Marcel Proust - In Search of Lost Time
@circleofleaves_zigzag5 ай бұрын
The Waves is my favourite VW and my favourite book of all time. Nice to see The Portrait of a Lady get a mention too!
@JonathElemRechokim5 ай бұрын
I read ‘The Portrait of a Lady’ last year and loved it! ❤ Henry James’s writing is so good. It’s beautiful, but at the same time, it feels very current.
@capturedbyannamarie5 ай бұрын
Love! My top 5 1. Jane Austen - All of them 2. Lm Montgomery read Blue castle it is amazing! I love Anne too! 3. Dostoyevsky- Every book I have loved so far 4. Tolstoy- love Anna Karenina, but not as much War and Peace. 5. Emily Bronte-Wuthering Heights is just so good. I do love Hemingway too! A Farewell to Arms is just beautiful
@claireh2485 ай бұрын
I absolutely love Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. Always a cozy read for the autumn 🍂
@Sarahac85 ай бұрын
I agree with most of these, though I haven't yet read any Hemingway. IDK about my top 5 but my top 3: 3. Jane Austen (Pride and Prejudice) 2. Dostoevsky (The Brothers Karamazov) 1. C.S. Lewis (Till We Have Faces)
@tayabel11035 ай бұрын
I absolutely love Till We Have Faces too! I haven't seen many people talk about it as one of their favourites though. I'm slowly reading my way through CS Lewis's entire collection of books he has published.
@Gaurav-gx2zh5 ай бұрын
Oh my God ! You just gave me a mini heart attack rn. As the video was progressing towards the end, I thought, how is this possible that Anna Karenina could not make it to the list (the way you keep ranting about it). But finally 😭😭 Btw my favorite classic authors are : Bronte sisters, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Alexander Dumas, Virginia Woolf, Arthur Miller and Leo Tolstoy (obviously) loved your list 😊
@kulkin123613 күн бұрын
I'll forever read everything you're recommending," Ann of green gables" was the book that made me fall in love with reading, I read it when I was 14 and again in my 40s and it's still as beautiful ❤️ Anna Karenina is my number one,nothing is even close to it❤
@Rene_Lhote5 ай бұрын
Thomas Hardy. 1. The Mayor of Casterbridge: Hardy does not tell you who to like and who to dislike. He gives you full characterizations and lets the reader decide. 2. Return of the Native: Do you want to feel as if you are living in mid-nineteenth century England? This book will transport you there. 3. Tess of the D'Urbervilles; Angel is portrayed as the good guy and Alex is portrayed as the bad guy. But wait. Is that really so? Hardy is a genius.
@cassiopeiathew74065 ай бұрын
My top 3 are Interchangeable because I can’t be forced to choose between them but they’re Virginia Woolf: Orlando: A Biography, To the Lighthouse Herman Melville: Moby Dick William Faulkner: The Sound and The Fury I don’t know if I can say who my other two favorites are yet, my other favorites are Jane Eyre and The Trial (Franz Kafka) but they’re just barely below my all time favorites and I’m not sure I can say I would love everything else by them. There’s so many writers I still need to read, so I also feel it’s fair to leave the other 2 spots open for the time being.
@shizukoakatsuki62875 ай бұрын
I have been dying to read A Room with a View, and hearing you talk about E.M Forster with such love and passion makes me want to read it even more ! My favourite author of all times has to be Jane Austen, and just like you, my favourite novels from her are P&P and S&S ♥Like you said her work has had a huge impact on literature, and her prose is wonderful ! She manages to capture the complexity of both platonic and romantic relationships with so much humour and tenderness :) The rest of my top five would be something like : -Emile Zola (The Beast Within, Germinal) -Charlotte Brontë (Jane Eyre, Villette) -Virginia Woolf (Between the Acts, To the Lighthouse) -Fyodor Dostoevksy (Crime and Punishment, Brothers Karamazov)
@Milly2u25 ай бұрын
I love reading classics and my top Author to get me into that was Jane Austen absolutely love her novels my two favourites would be Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion although I do actually love them all. Next author would be Charlotte Bronte with Jane Eyre Ann and Emily Bronte are ok my TBR list. Charles Dickens Christmas Carol, then Elizabeth Gaskell North and South and Louisa May Alcott with Little Women. I need to read more Classics but it's so difficult to pick which ones as they are all good ❤
@IreneTerenteva5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing this with us❤ your love for Tolstoy is so inspiring ❤
@SheepandOak5 ай бұрын
I tried but couldn't pick just two books from each author! Thomas Hardy - Tess of the D’Urbervilles, The Mayor of Casterbridge, & Far From the Madding Crowd Jane Austen - Pride and Prejudice & Sense and Sensibility Edith Wharton - The Custom of the Country, The Age of Innocence, & Summer Shirley Jackson - We Have Always Lived in the Castle, The Sundial, The Bird's Nest, Hangsaman, & The Haunting of Hill House George Eliot - Middlemarch & The Mill on the Floss
@onourpath5 ай бұрын
1. Thomas Hardy (Jude the Obscure, Life's Little Ironies) 2. George Eliot (Silas Marner, Adam Bede) 3. Somerset Maugham (Of Human Bondage, The Moon and Sixpence) 4. Edith Wharton (Ethan Frome, Ghost Stories of EW) 5 . Willa Cather (Death Comes for the Archbishop, My Antonia) 💚 *Do you ever include the ancient classic authors like Homer, Euripides, Hesiod, Aeschylus, Aristophanes, etc? That would be a fun video -- you could give a little info on the ancients, and recommend something.
@tahlia__nerds_out4 ай бұрын
My Mom has begun her true Austen journey with Northanger Abbey, which ended up being a really good starting point for her. She just finished Lady Susan, and is headed into Sense & Sensibility. She’s even made small noises about maybe reconsidering giving Emma (which is what made her unwilling to read Austen in the first place) another chance. Our Jane Austen/Anne of Green Gables reading challenge for each other has been a great success for us, as I’ve finished not only Anne of Greeb Gables (which I’ve long loved), but also Anne of Avonlea and Anne of the Island. I’m just waiting for Anne of Windy Poplars to come in. Great choices of the classics! ❤
@Kev_Cos5 ай бұрын
Great list! I think another video on this topic would be better if you followed it up my your Top 5 Underated Classic Authors, everybody knows most of the well-known ones, it's great to shine a light on some of the lesser-known ones. Personally, I've been really getting into Wilkie Collins recently. I can only speak for myself but I had never heard of him until this year and his books are terrific reading.
@knappiegolden93187 күн бұрын
Thank you! I've added a lot of these to my list! Some of my favorite classics are: Enchanted April by Elizabeth Van Arnim, I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith, and Jane Austin!
@renee12925 ай бұрын
Wonderful video for anyone wanting to start on classics. I've read all of these and loved them! I do believe the Brontes are many, many steps above Henry and Hoover. Jane Eyre is surely one of the best!
@orasolomons5 ай бұрын
I've just started reading Anna Karenina and 117 pages in I'm pretty certain this is the best book I will ever read. Each sentence is something to savour. So excited to read it is it's definitely a bucket list book for me.
@ManorClassics5 ай бұрын
1. George Eliot - Middlemarch. 2. Anthony Trollope - Phineas Finn and Phineas Redux (I sort of see them as one book because they are both about the same main character). 3. Jane Austen - Mansfield Park. 4. Leo Tolstoy - War and Peace. 5. Henry James - Washington Square. As an aside, I really like Shirley by Charlotte Brontë!
@janierichmond56072 ай бұрын
I love ALL the books you talked about and have read some and own some others that I haven’t read yet. They are the exact copies/translations of Tolstoy you have. I’ve been intimidated to read them because of how long they are. It will take me so long to get through the first I plan to read (Anna) that I have FOMO on reading other books! 🤦🏻♀️ Dumb I know! The way you described your feelings for them helped me to be enthusiastic to start. So after I finish the book I’m currently reading, I will finally read Anna Karenina! 👩🏻🏫 Thanks Carolyn❤
@sergorze64535 ай бұрын
1. Jack London (Martin Eden, The Star Rover, The Kempton-Wace Letters, The Scarlet Plague, short stories) 2. Anton Chekhov (A Dreary Story, Ward No. 6, In the Ravine, The Seagull, short stories) 3. Franz Kafka (The Castle, The Trial, The Metamorphosis) 4. Herbert Wells (The Door in the Wall, The Invisible Man, The War of the Worlds) 5. Stefan Zweig (Chess, Amok, Fear, Compulsion, Downfall of the Heart)
@sanjabozic4115 ай бұрын
Finally Kafka ❤😊
@hmm64115 ай бұрын
When I think of you and classics, authors don't come to mind as much as the list of short classics you opened my world to. Ethan From and Turn of the Screw to mention two. Can't thank you enough. Thanks for the video and happy writing!!!
@a.g.2790Күн бұрын
I love classics too but LOVE LOVE LOVE Victorian literature that are considered classics. My top five authors... George Eliot- her Middlemarch and Silas Marner. 🩷 Anne Brontë, Anthony Trollope, Wilkie Collins and Mary Elizabeth Braddon. There are many more though & difficult to pick. Great video! 🩷
@oliviac7125 ай бұрын
I think mine would be: 1. Agatha Christie 2. P. G. Wodehouse 3. Oscar Wilde 4. Charles Dickens 5. J. R. R. Tolkien Also picked authors from whom I've read multiple books 😊 Loads of authors I've only read one of that would be up there though!!
@rozaganser30165 ай бұрын
I am currently reading War and Peace. So far it is one of the most amazing books I have ever read. I agree with you about Tolstoy as an author. Anna Karenina changed my life as well.
@ellarose86965 ай бұрын
I think a video that might be helpful for readers is a breakdown of names, money and cultural references in Russian and French classics, particularly Russian! I have kinda got a grasp on it now after reading some Dostoevsky and Tolstoy but boy was it intimidating to get started!
@Blondie1010101005 ай бұрын
Part 2 please 🤞👏 I enjoyed Part 1 🎉 Have you ever read any Thomas Hardy or DH Lawrence? Just wondering. I always find they are forgotten when it comes to classics. I love John Steinbeck and George Orwell and Daphne du Maurier. 😊
@cynthianixon82294 ай бұрын
I loved listening to this video. You feel about your favorite books the way I do. Beautiful work!
@ooh295 ай бұрын
I read Karenina, but seeing you so passionate about War and Peace Im gonna read that as well !
@andreacavanaugh90464 ай бұрын
Have you done a video about how you annotate with post-it notes? I’d love to do more of that for my book club, and I love hearing about the process others use. ❤
@writerchic6765 ай бұрын
I love this question!! Here are my top faves… I’m including poets, because their work saved me. I return to each of these authors’ works when I’m struggling or am in a slump! ❤️ 1) Jane Austen (fun fact, we were born on the same day!) 2) Agatha Christie 3) Mary Shelley 4) Elizabeth Barrett Browning 5) Louisa May Alcott My honorable mentions that would definitely be in my top 10 list: John Keats, William Wordsworth, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Virginia Woolf!
@LoriCremer5 ай бұрын
I would love a Part 2 since I love classics as well. I don’t know many people who love classic literature (sadly) so I love to watch your videos! I love Jane Austen and the Brontes and would love a whole video dedicated to Jane Austen if you have time!
@mabelmoreno15 ай бұрын
Jane Austen, particularly Pride and Prejudice, is what got me into reading classics.I Love Her! 📚Another one of my favorite authors: Leon Tolstoi; he is just stunning. And I couldn’t agree with you more, Carolyn: it is a difficult decision to make. It’s something to really give to some serious thinking to. 😅
@sunshinelorena5 ай бұрын
I really like Jane Austin books. I have just started Anna Karenina as my first book by Leo Tolstoy and loving it so far. I can see why you love it 😊
@yannick83725 ай бұрын
War and peace next
@sunshinelorena5 ай бұрын
@yannick8372 I heard such good things about it. I might make it a goal for next year to read it
@yannick83725 ай бұрын
@@sunshinelorena You should! It's a long book but so so worth it.
@Jane40775 ай бұрын
Carolyn, I hope you get the time to read EM Forsters A Passage To India. The relationship between Dr Aziz and Mr Fielding is truly touching,I think you would love it.
@mm348155 ай бұрын
My favorite authors - the ones I've read multiple of their books: (I can put them in no order) Anthony Doerr Jonathan Safran Foerr Markus Zusak (I just finished Bridge of Clay today, and I feel empty inside. I love those characters so much) Amor Towles (Carolyn, if you love Tolstoy, PLEASE read A Gentleman in Moscow) Ruta Sepetys
@gwenhughes86505 ай бұрын
If you haven't already, you should definitely check out The Blue Castle by L.M. Montgomery! It's a fantastic book and definitely shares many of the charming elements of the Green Gables series ❤
@annabel1565 ай бұрын
1. Charlotte Brontë, 2. Louisa May Alcott, 3. L.M. Montgomery, 4. Tolstoy, 5. Dickens
@kathleenbell80985 ай бұрын
I’d love to see a part two!
@ileanaaaaa5 ай бұрын
Great list! I totally agree with everything you said about Tolstoy 😄🖤. He's my favourite, along with Jane Austen 🙌. If we're talking about authors that you've read multiple books from, I'd also add Virginia Woolf, Dostoevsky, and (I'm going to cheat a bit here because I can't decide between James Baldwin or Juan Rulfo).
@Cubehead275 ай бұрын
Rulfo's such a great pick! Everything I've read from him is completely enthralling.
@coopaloopmex5 ай бұрын
Juan Rulfo!!!!! Yesssssss
@janeturner90643 ай бұрын
Would definitely love a part 2!
@eugerodriguez81755 ай бұрын
Love your videos and i agree with lots of this selection❤❤❤❤ Greetings from Argentina!
@kathy25395 ай бұрын
I also have a beautiful box set of Jane Austen and so glad you included her. The Anne books, too, we like so many of the same books. 💜
@michelleizoco5 ай бұрын
Love, love LOVE this video. You're making me bump up Anna Karenina on my TBR to this month because your love is contagious. Thanks!
@Missnoemit5 ай бұрын
Alcott, Burnett, Austen, Tolkien. Those are my fav. Im reading for the first time a Thomas Hardy novel and Im loving his writing but I would need to read more by him to say he is my fav writer too.
@MJ-hd7nr4 ай бұрын
I am surprised that no one listed Dante’s Divine Comedy! I would love to do 100 days of it. My all time favorite. Next, in no particular order: #2. Orwell’s 1984. #3. Plato’s, The Republic ( I studied this in school) #4. Homer’s, The Odyssey. #5. Woolf’s, A Room of One’s Own. If I can pick a bonus book it would be Wiesel’s, The Night Trilogy.
@rasa52593 ай бұрын
I just love watching your videos. You inspire me to get back to serious reading. So thank you 💖
@CarolynMarieReads3 ай бұрын
Aw I’m very glad!! My pleasure ☺️
@rasa52593 ай бұрын
@@CarolynMarieReads also I too love collecting different editions of my favorite books, so I’m glad I’m not the only one 🤓 Jane Eyre is one of my all time favorite as well 🥰
@Candywarhol2 ай бұрын
Having heard some of Tolstoy's recollections of watching combat during the Crimean War, I am once again reminded of how it is SELDOM a good thing to meet one's heroes.
@familiabuitoni5 ай бұрын
I would love a part 2!!! See you soon! Cheers from Brazil!
@katiek32585 ай бұрын
If you haven't read LM Montgomery's The Blue Castle yet, I recommend picking it up! It's her only adult novel and has more of her beautiful nature descriptions
@sumedhareads5 ай бұрын
Thanks to the booksclub I came across a farewell to arms, I absolutely adore the book! I want to have this specific edition but I can't find it anywhere in bookstores :') I wanted to E.M Foster for so long now!! Maybe this is my sign to start with him.👀
@tracysmith939317 күн бұрын
So far I have a top 2 jane austen and Alexandre dumas. I'm still working through a few big names this year. So I feel Hugo, steinbeck, dostoevsy and Tolstoy will end up on this list. I'm due to read maurice next and looking forward to it.
@disakland47145 ай бұрын
Dickens, Austen, Shakespeare, Homer and Ibsen I think 🤔 So hard to pick just five! Honorable mention to Melville. I read Moby Dick last year and I can’t stop thinking about it. I was immidiately ready to read it again even though I had a lot on my plate so I haven’t quite yet. Otherwise it’s been good what I have read of him, but it’s really Moby Dick that stands out so honorable mention.
@donello4305 ай бұрын
P.G. Wodehouse. Widely considered one of the greatest humourist writers, but his work is light tales of the british aristocracy, Hollywood studio serfs and the occasional criminal in what are essentially romantic comedies. They aren't serious and deep enough to be considered 'penguin classic' material, but the quality of the writing is on par with the best literature: his incredible dialogue, his genius with similes, and just being laugh out loud funny - which is astonishing for work that is roughly a century old (humour usually dates badly and fades). 'Blandings Castle' is a good introduction to his work, or any of the Jeeves series.
@oliviac7125 ай бұрын
I completely agree! Wodehouse is phenomenal
@rubyaugust71755 ай бұрын
1. Markus Zusak(modern classics author,) - The Book Thief, The Bridge of Clay 2. Louisa May Alcott - Little Women, Good wives 3. Jack London - Martin Eden ( underrated masterpiece 💔✨) 4. Charlotte Brontë - Jane Eyre 5. Erich Maria Remarque -Three comrades
@bujobyfilo5 ай бұрын
Tolstoy (Anna Karenina) Du Maurier (My cousin Rachel) the Brontë sisters (Vilette etc...) Hugo (Les misérables) Eliot (Silas Marner) Dickens (Oliver Twist) Shelley (Frankenstein)
@carolinelist-b4p5 ай бұрын
Some of my favourite classics are Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift, Orlando by Virginia Woolf, The Private Memoirs and Confessions of A Justified Sinner by James Hogg, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark and Nils Holgersson by Selma Lagerloeff.
@amyschmelzer64455 ай бұрын
I have at least one book on my shelf from all of these authors including two-thirds of your honorable mention. I’ve read Maurice and was saddened by it. I know we were supposed to read Hemingway in high school but I don’t remember if it was A Farewell to Arms or The Old Man and the Sea because I detested being forced to read and write papers on what I read. I have always liked reading for pleasure. Jane Eyre is on my fall TBR.
@Gonzalezluis895 ай бұрын
1. Anna Karenina 2. Dracula (yes, seriously)😅 3. Crime and Punishment.
@heatherdorsey47704 ай бұрын
I adore Jane Austen! I find that as I age, my favorite book changes. Now, in my 50s, Persuasion is the book that I adore the most. My daughter is named Emma because in my 30s that was my favorite. Pride and Prejudice was my teens. 20s was Sence and Sensibility. 40s was Mansfield Park. We'll see what my 60s bring. ❤
@karenminto73603 ай бұрын
Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall Trilogy is outstanding. The reader is there in 16th century England with Thomas Cromwell every second! Amazing!
@TheBookedEscapePlan3 ай бұрын
We have the same two favorite Hemingway books. I just picked up a copy of Howards End. I haven't read it yet, but I am very much looking forward to it. I have read Aspects of the Novel, though; every writer has to. I've read most of Austen and I think Emma is my favorite. There's a lot I admire about Northanger Abbey, but the character of Emma just feels so real in this bizarre, comical way. I find it hard to imagine who on earth could read all of War & Peace and not declare it to be the monument that it is. Is there a better book? It's as good as a book gets. It's The Great Novel for a reason, the very reason that Moby-Dick is the Great American Novel.
@doreene115 ай бұрын
One little quirk: it's not SandiTION but SandiTON, it's pronounced and spelled differently because there isn't a last "I" in it :) (at 13:42)
@Tolstoy1115 ай бұрын
I’d throw in The Brothers Karamazov, Moby Dick and Don Quixote. And Middlemarch!
@andrewglasson45835 ай бұрын
My top 5 classic authors would be Proust, Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Joyce and Woolf. Though I do love the Brontes, Hemingway and E M Forster too.
@TonyChiba5 ай бұрын
Thank you for an inspiring video! I also love Tolstoy, but I have only read the Death of Ivan Ilyich. As for my own favorite, James Joyce.
@-alittletoowildinthe70s-5 ай бұрын
Hello Carolyn!! Totally unrelated but yesterday, I picked up Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro because of your recommendation and I’m so excited to start reading it! ❤️❤️❤️
@oriana80215 ай бұрын
1. Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë 2. Frankenstein - Mary Shelley 3. Anna Karenina - Tolstoy 4. Anne of Green Gables - L.M Montgomery 5. Tales by Oscar Wilde (my favorite is The raven and the rose)
@christopherpaul75885 ай бұрын
1. Cervantes - Don Quijote, Exemplary Novels, and his short plays are all works of genius. 2. Dostoevsky- Crime and Punishment, The Brothers Karamazov, Notes from the Underground, White Nights 3. The Arabian Nights- probably my favorite collection of stories ever. 4. Franz Kafka - all of his short stories should be required reading. 5. George Orwell - 1984, Down and Out in Paris and London
@gladouhills90395 ай бұрын
My favorite classic authors are George Eliot and Anne Brontë 😊. I also enjoy reading Edith Wharton 😀
@rednblackedits52945 ай бұрын
Tess of the D’Urbervilles, first and favorite classic. The story and its heartbreaking ending lives in my heart and soul. The Count of Monte Cristo, absolutely amazing!!!!!! Crime and Punishment, about to finish it soon. Not five but my top three. Hoping to read more from each author as I love there different works very much. I’m looking forward to a part two of this!!!
@vina365 ай бұрын
I'm currently reading crime and punishment and it's a struggle 😭
@carenome14 ай бұрын
He was a MASTER of the classical tragedy.
@bettymaugeri73165 ай бұрын
Very nice list of classic to read!
@sherrykelly5 ай бұрын
My favorites list would start with Steinbeck, Dickens, and Dostoevsky, but then it is sort of a tie between CS Lewis, Gene Stratton Porter, Alexandre Dumas, Louisa May Alcott, Victor Hugo, and George Eliot. Little Women or Silas Marner are probably the books I would introduce to a first time classics reader. Aside from authors, a few favorite individual books would include Ivanhoe, Ben-Hur, Kristen Lavransdatter, and Man's Search for Meaning.
@maudhaugland58225 ай бұрын
I also absolutely adore Jane Austen and E. M. Forster! My top 2 Austens would be Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion, and my favourite Forster is A Passage to India. I also really like Charles Dickens, especially A Christmas Carol and Great Expectations.