Ernest Hemingway / A Moveable Feast

David Foster Wallace / Infinite Jest

Lewis Carroll / Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

Leo Tolstoy / Anna Karenina

Jack London / The Call of the Wild

JD Salinger / Catcher in the Rye

Charles Dickens / A Christmas Carol

Fyodor Dostoevsky / Crime and Punishment

Miguel de Cervantes / Don Quixote

Oscar Wilde / The Picture of Dorian Gray

H. G. Wells / The Island of Dr. Moreau

Bram Stoker / Dracula

Charles Bukowski / Factotum

Mary Shelley / Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus

F. Scott Fitzgerald / The Great Gatsby

Charles Dickens / Great Expectations

Mark Twain / Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

H. G. Wells / The Invisible Man

Charlotte Brontë / Jane Eyre

Robert Louis Stevenson / Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

Louisa May Alcott / Little Women

Vladimir Nabokov / Lolita

John Steinbeck / Of Mice and Men

Herman Melville / Moby Dick

Alexandre Dumas / The Count of Monte Cristo

Alexandre Dumas / The Three Musketeers

Henry David Thoreau / Poems of Nature

F. Scott Fitzgerald / This Side of Paradise

Jane Austen / Pride and Prejudice

Jack Kerouac / On the Road

Nathaniel Hawthorne / The Scarlet Letter

Frances Hodgson Burnett / The Secret Garden

Arthur Conan Doyle / The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

Charles Dickens / A Tale Of Two Cities

H. G. Wells / The Time Machine

Mark Twain / The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

Robert Louis Stevenson / Treasure Island

H. G. Wells / The War of the Worlds

L. Frank Baum / The Wonderful Wizard of Oz

Emily Brontë / Wuthering Heights

If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfield kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth. In the first place, that stuff bores me, and in the second place, my parents would have about two hemorrhages apiece if I told anything pretty personal about them. They’re quite touchy about anything like that, especially my father. They’re nice and all–I’m not saying that–but they’re also touchy as hell. Besides, I’m not going to tell you my whole goddam autobiography or anything. I’ll just tell you about this madman stuff that happened to me around last Christmas just before I got pretty run-down and had to come out here and take it easy. I mean that’s all I told D.B. about, and he’s my brother and all. He’s in Hollywood. That isn’t too far from this crumby place, and he comes over and visits me practically every week end. He’s going to drive me home when I go home next month maybe. He just got a Jaguar. One of those little English jobs that can do around two hundred miles an hour. It cost him damn near four thousand bucks. He’s got a lot of dough, now. He didn’t use to. He used to be just a regular writer, when he was home. He wrote this terrific book of short stories, The Secret Goldfish, in case you never heard of him. The best one in it was “The Secret Goldfish.” It was about this little kid that wouldn’t let anybody look at his goldfish because he’d bought it with his own money. It killed me. Now he’s out in Hollywood, D.B., being a prostitute. If there’s one thing I hate, it’s the movies. Don’t even mention them to me.

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