Ernest Hemingway / A Moveable Feast

David Foster Wallace / Infinite Jest

Leo Tolstoy / Anna Karenina

Jack London / The Call of the Wild

JD Salinger / Catcher in the Rye

Fyodor Dostoevsky / Crime and Punishment

Charles Bukowski / Factotum

Vladimir Nabokov / Lolita

John Steinbeck / Of Mice and Men

Herman Melville / Moby Dick

Henry David Thoreau / Poems of Nature

F. Scott Fitzgerald / This Side of Paradise

Jane Austen / Pride and Prejudice

Jack Kerouac / On the Road

Charles Dickens / A Tale Of Two Cities

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A few miles south of Soledad, the Salinas River drops in close to the hillside bank and runs deep and green. The water is warm too, for it has slipped twinkling over the yellow sands in the sunlight before reaching the narrow pool. On one side of the river the golden foothill slopes curve up to the strong and rocky Gabilan Mountains, but on the valley side the water is lined with trees- willows fresh and green with every spring, carrying in their lower leaf junctures the debris of the winter’s flooding; and sycamores with mottled, white, recumbent limbs and branches that arch over the pool. On the sandy bank under the trees the leaves lie deep and so crisp that a lizard makes a great skittering if he runs among them. Rabbits come out of the brush to sit on the sand in the evening, and the damp flats are covered with the night tracks of ‘coons, and with the spread pads of dogs from the ranches, and with the split-wedge tracks of deer that come to drink in the dark.

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