"The test of literature is, I suppose,
whether we ourselves live more intensely
for the reading of it."
--Elizabeth Drew--
THE FOLLOWING RECOMMENDED READING LIST FOR
SENIOR STUDENTS IN ENGLISH 4 (BRITISH LITERATURE)
WAS COMPILED FROM TWO SOURCES:
REF 028.5 EST -- Reading Lists for College-Bound Students
REF 028.5 LEW -- Outstanding Books for the College Bound
California Department of Education Recommended Literature for Grades 9-12
Choose a book that is right for you! Call numbers are provided to make it easier to locate these books in the OHS Library:
- Austen, Jane, Emma, FIC AUS
A classic novel about a self-assured young lady whose capricious behavior is
dictated by romantic fancy. Emma, a clever and self-satisfied young lady, is
the daughter and mistress of the house. Her former governess and companion,
Miss Anne Taylor, beloved of both father and daughter, has just left them to
marry a neighbor.
- Austen, Jane, Pride and Prejudice,
FIC AUS
The romantic clash of two opinionated young people provides the theme.
Vivacious Elizabeth Bennet is fascinated and repelled by the arrogant Mr.
Darcy, whose condescending airs and acrid tongue have alienated her entire
family. Their spirited courtship is conducted against a background of ballroom
flirtations and drawing-room intrigues.
- Beckett, Samuel, Waiting for Godot, 842.914
BEC
The story line evolves around two seemingly homeless men waiting for someone--or
something--named Godot. Vladimir and Estragon wait near a tree on a barren
stretch of road. The result is a comical wordplay of poetry, dreamscapes, and
nonsense, which has been interpreted as a somber summation of mankind's search
for meaning.
- Bolt, Robert, A Man for All Seasons,
822.914 BOL
The classic play about Sir Thomas More, the Lord chancellor who refused to
compromise and was executed by Henry VIII. Bolt's classic play is a brilliant
dramatization of this historic confrontation. But first it is a compelling
portrait of a courageous man who died for his convictions.
- Bradley, Marion Zimmer, The Mists
of Avalon, FIC BRA
Here is the magical legend of King Arthur vividly retold through the eyes and
lives of the women who wielded power from behind the throne. There is the darkly
bewitching Morgaine, half sister to Arthur and a high priestess in the enchanted
land of Avalon, where women rule as the creators of life and keepers of
knowledge. The fair and lovely Queen Gwynhefar is torn between her duty to her
king and the new God and her passion for the dashing Lancelot. Both women
struggle and suffer, and both--in their own extraordinary ways--triumph.
- Bronte, Charlotte, Jane Eyre, FIC BRO
This is a stormy, intense, introspective novel of the mid 19th century which
probes the psychology of passion. The heroine is a governess, an orphan,
penniless and plain but full of courage and spirit. The hero is a brooding,
melancholy figure, a stranger given to rough outbursts of temper.
- Bronte, Emily, Wuthering Heights, FIC BRO
A savage, tormented classic love story set in the English moors. The central
character is Heathcliff, an orphan, picked up in the streets of Liverpool and
brought home by Mr. Earnshaw and raised as one of his own children. Bullied
and humiliated after Earnshaw's death by his son, Heathcliff falls
passionately in love with Catherine.
- Burgess, Anthony, A Clockwork Orange, FIC
BUR
Story of gang violence and social retribution, set in some iron-gray
superstate of the future. This is the first-person account of a juvenile
delinquent who undergoes state-sponsored psychological rehabilitation for
aberrant behavior.
- Butler, Samuel Taylor, The Way of the Flesh, FIC BUT
This devastating indictment of Victorian values presents an ironic and
incisive portrait of a determined young man in revolt against his father,
religion, society, and self. This is the story of his flight to freedom.
- Carroll, Lewis, Alice in Wonderland, FIC CAR
The Mad Hatter, the Ugly Duchess, the Mock Turtle, the Queen of Hearts, the
Cheshire Cat-characters each more eccentric than the last, and that could only
have come from Lewis Carroll, the master of sublime nonsense. He has created
one of the most famous and fantastic novels of
all time that not only stirred our imagination but revolutionized literature.
- Coleridge, Samuel, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, 821 COL
In this poem, the main character detains one of three young men on their way
to a wedding feast and holds them spellbound with the story of his youthful
adventures at sea -- killing an albatross, the deaths of his shipmates, his
suffering, and his redemption. Among the many memorable lines are these
from stanza nine: "Water, water, everywhere/Now any drop to
drink."
- Conrad, Joseph, Heart of Darkness, FIC CON
In this searing tale, Seaman Marlow recounts his journey to the dark heart of
the Belgian Congo in search of the elusive Mr. Kurtz. Far from civilization as
he knows it, he comes to reassess not only his own values, but also those of
nature and society. For in this heart of darkness, it is the fearsome face of
human savagery that becomes most visible.
- Conrad, Joseph, Lord Jim, FIC CON
Haunted sailor, driven from port to port, from island to island, Lord Jim is a
man trying to hide from his past. This is a novel of the outcast from
civilization finding refuge in the tropics. The natives of Patusan in the Far
East worship the bold young Englishman by the name of "Lord Jim,"
but he despises himself. Tortured by an art of cowardice and desertion that
wrecked his career in the Merchant Service years before and tormented by his
ideal of what an officer should be, he has fled from scandal farther and
farther East. This is a story of dramatic and psychological action.
- Conrad, Joseph, Secret Agent, FIC CON
Verloc, who is secretly working for the police and a "foreign power" (Russia)
while ostensibly a member of an anarchist group in Soho, is required by his
masters to discredit the anarchists in some spectacular way.
- Crossley-Holland, Kevin,
Arthur: the seeing stone
In late 12th century England, a 13-year-old boy named Arthur recounts how Merlin
gives him a magical seeing stone which shows him images of the legendary King
Arthur, the events of whose life seem to have many parallels to his own.
King of the Middle March
As in previous episodes, Arthur de Caldicot tells his story, which this time
finds the teen on an island off the coast of Venice waiting for a Crusade to
begin. He is full of both wonder at his surroundings and the multinational band
of men and anxiety over what is expected of him. Arthur is knighted and takes
his oath to defend God seriously, but he is conflicted to learn that the
Saracens are educated and devout people not unlike the Europeans. At the
forefront of his thoughts is Merlin's admonition to keep asking questions. When
money and politics wreak havoc with the plans for the Crusade, Arthur becomes
disillusioned, and he faces a crisis of faith when the Venetians bring the
Crusaders into an internal conflict to siege the city of Zara. Concurrently, Sir
Stephen, Arthur's lord, is wounded and must be taken home to England, and
because of duty, Arthur takes him and leaves the Crusade...will Arthur's dream
be destroyed?
Arthur at the Crossing Places
In the year 1200, Arthur de Caldicot sets out to accompany Lord Stephen on the
Fourth of the Crusades, which pitted Christians against Muslims in what were
called the holy wars. At the Crossing Places bursts with exciting characters,
stories, and themes both true to the Middle Ages and shockingly relevant to the
present. Then and now we find bitter societal conflict, injustice, and
misunderstanding alongside personal acts of valor, courage, and compassion. Then
and now we meet a boy named Arthur whose story thrills, moves, and inspires.
- Defoe, Daniel, Moll Flanders, FIC DEF
What happens to a woman forced to make her own way through life in 17th
century England? This story retells Moll's life from her birth in Newgate Prison to her final
prosperous respectability--gained through a life where all human relationships
could be measured in value by gold.
- Defoe, Daniel, Robinson Crusoe, FIC DEF
An Englishman leaves his comfortable middle-class life to go to sea. During one of his several adventurous voyages in the 1600s,
he becomes the sole survivor of a shipwreck and lives for nearly thirty years on
a deserted island.
- Dickens, Charles, Bleak House, FIC DIC
This may well be the finest literary work to come out of 19th century England.
It is the story of several generations of the Jarndyce family who wait in vain
to inherit money from a disputed fortune in the settlement of a lawsuit. It is
pointedly critical of England's Court of Chancery in which cases could drag on
through decades of convoluted legal maneuvering.
- Dickens, Charles, David Copperfield, FIC DIC
David Copperfield is the story of a young man’s adventures on his journey
from an unhappy and impoverished childhood to the discovery of his vocation as
a successful novelist. Among the gloriously vivid cast of characters he
encounters are his tyrannical stepfather, Mr. Murdstone; his formidable aunt,
Betsey Trotwood; the eternally humble yet treacherous Uriah Heep; frivolous,
enchanting Dora; and the magnificently impecunious Micawber, one of literature’s
great comic creations. In David Copperfield—the novel he described as his
"favorite child"—Dickens drew revealingly on his own experiences
to create one of his most exuberant and enduringly popular works, filled with
tragedy and comedy in equal measure.
- Dickens, Charles, Great Expectations, FIC DIC
In what may be Dickens’s best novel, humble, orphaned Pip is apprenticed to
the dirty work of the forge but dares to dream of becoming a gentleman—and
one day, under sudden and enigmatic circumstances, he finds himself in
possession of “great expectations.” In this gripping tale of crime and
guilt, revenge and reward, the compelling characters include Magwitch, the
fearful and fearsome convict; Estella, whose beauty is excelled only by her
haughtiness; and the embittered Miss Havisham, an eccentric jilted bride.
- Dickens, Charles, Hard Times, FIC DIC
Classic novel which depicts the callous nature of Victorian education, the
ills of industrial society. Thomas Gradgrind, a fanatic, has raised his
children, Tom and Louisa, in an atmosphere of the grimmest practicality.
Louisa marries the banker Josiah Bounderby partly to protect her brother who
is his employee and partly because her education has caused her to be
unconcerned about her future. Tom, shallow and unscrupulous, robs Bounderby's
bank and tries to frame someone else. Find out what happens when Louisa falls
for another man, when Tom's guilt is discovered, and when their father
realizes how his principles have affected his children's lives.
- du Maurier, Daphne, Rebecca, FIC DUM
With a husband she barely knew, the young bride arrives at an immense estate
called Manderly, only to be drawn into the life of the first Mrs. de Winter,
the beautiful Rebecca. She is dead but apparently never forgotten: her room of
suites never touched, her clothes ready to be worn, her servant--the sinister
Mrs. Danvers--still loyal. It is the eerie aura of evil that tightens around
her heart, as the second Mrs. de Winter begins her search for the real fate of
Rebecca.
- Eliot, George, Adam Bede, FIC ELI
In Adam Bede (1859), George Eliot took the well-worn tale of a lovely
dairy-maid seduced by a careless squire, and out if it created a wonderfully
innovative and sympathetic portrait of the lives of ordinary Midlands working
people--their labors and loves, their beliefs, their talk. This edition
reprints the original broadsheet reports of the murder case that was a
starting point for the book, and detailed notes illuminate Eliot's many
literary and biblical allusions.
- Eliot, George, The Mill on the Floss, FIC ELI
As Maggie Tulliver approaches adulthood, her spirited temperament brings her
into conflict with her family, her community, and her much-loved brother Tom.
Still more painfully, she finds her own nature divided between the claims of
moral responsibility and her passionate hunger for self-fulfillment.
- Eliot, George, Silas Marner, FIC ELI
The story's main character is a friendless weaver who cares only for his cache
of gold. He is ultimately redeemed through his love for Eppie, an abandoned
golden-haired baby girl, whom he discovers shortly after he is robbed and raises
as his own child.
- Eliot, T.S., Murder in the Cathedral,
822.912 ELI
A drama of the conflict between church and state in 12th century England
culminates in the murder of Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral.
- Fielding, Henry, Joseph Andrews
Joseph Andrews begins as a parody, but soon outgrows its origins, and its
deepest roots lie in Cervantes and Marivaux. Fielding demonstrates his concern
for the corruption of contemporary society, politics, religion, morality, and
taste.
- Fielding, Henry, Tom Jones, FIC FIE
One of the great comic novels in the English language, Tom Jones was an
instant success when it was published in 1749. Tom is discovered one evening
by the benevolent Squire Allworthy and his sister Bridget and brought up as
her son in their household until it is time for him to set out in search of
both his fortune and his true identity.
- Forster, E.M., Howard's End, FIC FOR
A chance acquaintance brings together the prosperous bourgeois Wilcox family
and the clever, cultured, and idealistic Schlegel sisters. As clear-eyed
Margaret develops a friendship with Mrs. Wilcox, the impetuous Helen brings
into their midst a young bank clerk named Leonard Bast, who lives at the edge
of poverty and ruin. When Mrs. Wilcox dies, her family discovers that she
wants to leave her country home, Howards End, to Margaret. Thus Forster sets
in motion a chain of events that will entangle three different families and
brilliantly portrays their aspirations for personal and social harmony.
- Forster, E.M., A Passage to India, FIC FOR
Among the greatest novels of the twentieth century,
A Passage to India tells of the
clash of cultures in British India after the turn of the century. In exquisite
prose, Forster reveals the menace that lurks just beneath the surface of
ordinary life, as a common misunderstanding erupts into a devastating affair.
- Fugard, Athol, "Master Harold"... and the boys,
822.19 FUG
"Master Harold," or Hally, learns that his alcoholic father is to be released
from the hospital and struggles with his emotions during a confrontation with
the two black men who help in the family's restaurant in 1950s South Africa.
- Fowles, John, The French Lieutenant's Woman, FIC FOW
The plot centers on Charles Smithson, an amateur Victorian paleontologist. He
is engaged to Ernestina Freeman, a conventional, wealthy woman, but he breaks
off the engagement after a series of secret meetings with the beautiful,
mysterious Sarah Woodruff, a social outcast known as the forsaken lover of a
French lieutenant.
- Galsworthy, John, Forsyte Saga
The three novels which make up The Forsyte Saga chronicle the ebbing social
power of the commercial upper-middle class Forsyte family between 1886 and
1920. Galsworthy's masterly narrative examines not only their fortunes but
also the wider developments within society, particularly the changing position
of women. This is the only critical edition of the work available, with Notes
that explain contemporary artistic and literary allusions and define the slang
of the time.
- Greene, Graham, The Power and the Glory, FIC GRE
A suspenseful story about a hunted, driven desperate priest in Mexico. The
last priest is on the run. During an anti-clerical purge in one of the
southern states of Mexico, he is hunted like a rabbit. Too human for heroism,
too humble for martyrdom, the little worldly priest is pursued by vultures but
learns to soar like an eagle.
- Hardy, Thomas, Far from the Madding Crowd, FIC HAR
Bathsheba Everdene is loved by Gabriel Oak, a young farmer who becomes bailiff
of the farm she inherits. She is also loved by William Boldwood and Sergeant
Troy. She marries Troy, who mistreats her and squanders her money. When he
leaves her and is presumed drowned at sea, Bathsheba becomes engaged to
Boldwood. Troy, however, reappears and is murdered by Boldwood who goes
insane. Find out what becomes of loyal Gabriel, the most faithful of her
suitors.
- Hardy, Thomas, Jude the Obscure, FIC HAR
Jude the Obscure created storms of scandal and protest for the author upon its
publication. Hardy, disgusted and disappointed, devoted the remainder of his
life to poetry and never wrote another novel. Today, the material is far less
shocking. Jude Fawley, a poor stone carver with aspirations toward an academic
career, is thwarted at every turn and is finally forced to give up his dreams of
a university education. He is tricked into an unwise marriage, and when his wife
deserts him, he begins a relationship with a free-spirited cousin. With this
begins the descent into bleak tragedy as the couple alternately defy and succumb
to the pressures of a deeply disapproving society.
- Hardy, Thomas, Mayor of Casterbridge, FIC HAR
The novel is set in southwest England, in the Wessex area, shortly before
1830. It tells the story of Michael Henchard, an itinerant laborer who, in a
moment of drunken despair, sells his wife at auction. After Henchard has
become prosperous, his act of inhumanity comes back to haunt him, and finally
to destroy him. This is the record of an anguished soul, as it struggles
hopelessly against a relentless, fatal retribution, makes one of the great
novels of the English language.
- Hardy, Thomas, Return of the Native, FIC HAR
Clym Yeobright returns to his home with the intention of improving the lives
of his neighbors, but he falls in love with and marries someone who would
rather leave the area where they lived, and tragedy must occur before Clym may
pursue his dream of service.
- Hardy, Thomas, Tess of the D'Urbervilles, FIC HAR
In Tess, victimized by lust, poverty, and hypocrisy, Thomas Hardy created no
standard Victorian heroine, but a women whose intense vitality flares
unforgettably against the bleak background of a dying rural society. Shaped by
an acute sense of social injustice and by a vision of human fate cosmic in
scope, her story is a singular blending of harsh realism and indelibly
poignant beauty. The novel shocked its Victorian audiences with its honesty;
it remains a triumph of literary art and a timeless commentary on the human
condition.
- Huxley, Aldous, Brave New World, FIC HUX
"Community, Identity, Stability" is the motto of Aldous Huxley's
utopian World State. Here everyone consumes daily grams of soma, to fight
depression, babies are born in laboratories, and the most popular form of
entertainment is a "Feelie," a movie that stimulates the senses of
sight, hearing, and touch. Though there is no violence and everyone is
provided for, Bernard Marx feels something is missing and senses his
relationship with a young women has the potential to be much more than the
confines of their existence allow. Huxley foreshadowed many of the practices
and gadgets we take for granted today--let's hope the sterility and absence of
individuality he predicted aren't yet to come.
- Ishiguro, Kazuo, Remains of the Day, FIC
ISH
Greeted with high praise in England, this winner of the Booker Prize, Ishiguro's
third novel (after An Artist of the Floating World ) is a tour de force-- both a
compelling psychological study and a portrait of a vanished social order.
Stevens, an elderly butler who has spent 30 years in the service of Lord
Darlington, ruminates on the past and inadvertently slackens his rigid grip on
his emotions to confront the central issues of his life. Glacially reserved,
snobbish and humorless, Stevens has devoted his life to his concept of duty and
responsibility, hoping to reach the pinnacle of his profession through totally
selfless dedication and a ruthless suppression of sentiment. Having made a
virtue of stoic dignity, he is proud of his impassive response to his father's
death and his "correct" behavior with the spunky former housekeeper, Miss
Kenton. Ishiguro builds Stevens's character with precisely controlled details,
creating irony as the butler unwittingly reveals his pathetic self-deception. In
the poignant denouement, Stevens belatedly realizes that he has wasted his life
in blind service to a foolish man and that he has never discovered "the key to
human warmth.".
- Joyce, James, Dubliners, SC JOY
Collection of 15 short stories set within the geographic boundary of
Dublin. Contents
include: "The Sisters", "An Encounter", "Araby",
"Eveline", "After the Race", "Two Gallants",
"The Boarding House", "A Little Cloud",
"Counterparts", "Clay", "A Painful Case",
"Ivy Day in the Committee Room", "A Mother",
"Grace", "The Dead".
- Joyce, James, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, FIC JOY
Here is one of the masterpieces of modern fiction. This semi-autobiographical
Irish novel focuses on Stephen Dedalus, a sensitive and creative young man who
rebels against his family, his education, and his country by committing
himself to the artistic life.
- Koestler, Arthur, Darkness at Noon, FIC KOE
This splendid novel is set in the tumultuous Soviet Union of the 1930s during
the treason trials. Rubashov, the protagonist and a hero of the revolution, is
arrested and jailed for things he has not done, though there is much about the
current Soviet state that veered from his ideals as a revolutionary. His
investigators, Ivanov and Gletkin, seek a public confession and interrogate
him using a number of methods. Through the ordeal, Rubashov reaches an
epiphany or two while his interrogators suffer the cruel fate of the Soviet
machine. Darkness at Noon succeeds as a political and historical novel, but even
more so as a refreshing tale of the human spirit.
- Lawhead, Stephen,
Arthur
Avalon: the return of King Arthur
Grail
Merlin
Pendragon
- Lawrence, D.H., Sons and Lovers, FIC LAW
The novel revolves around Paul Morel, a sensitive young artist whose love for
his mother, Gertrude, overshadows his romances with two women. Unable to watch
his mother die slowly of cancer, Paul kills her with morphine.
- Maugham, William Somerset, Of Human Bondage, FIC MAU
The author wrote this novel to free himself from the demons that haunted him
from his heart wrenching childhood and difficult young adulthood; it is ranked
among the greatest works of British literature. This is a moving story of
Philip Carey, a hero full of fears and feelings.
- Meredith, George, The Egoist
The "egoist" is Sir Willoughby Patterne of Patterne Hall,
possessed of good looks, wealth and all of the virtues except humility and a
sense of humor. He invites his fiancee and her father to spend a month
at the Hall, where he is the idol of two aunts. Patterne is in mortal
dread of being jilted and to preserve his dignity he proposes to a former
admirer. Many complications arise. What happens to "the
egoist"?
- Milton, John, Paradise Lost, 821.4 MIL
Great landmark in poems of English literature which portrays the fall of Adam
and Eve. Here in one volume are the complete texts of two of the greatest epic
poems in English literature, each a profound exploration of the moral problems
of God's justice. They demonstrate Milton's genius for classicism and
innovation, narrative and drama-and are a grand example of what Samuel Johnson
called his "peculiar power to astonish.".
- More, Sir Thomas, Utopia, 321.07 MOR
Did you know that the word "utopia" first appeared in Sir Thomas
More's book? More describes a pagan and communist city-state which is
governed by reason. The order and dignity of such a place was intended
to contrast with the unreasonable state of the Europe of his time. More
saw Europe divided by self-interest and greed for power and riches.
- Orwell, George, 1984, FIC ORW
In 1948 a book burst in on the reading public which forecast a world so
nightmarish, so devoid of promise, that it seemed the work of a
Mephistophelian mind. The year 1948 was to all appearances an odd time for
dire prediction: America had just helped save the world from tyranny in a
world war thought to be definitive; Americans were about to elect a Midwestern
common man to the presidency; the new-sprung United Nations was supposed to
become a forum of benevolent multiplicity. This astonishing novel was set in a
year so distant that it seemed incomprehensible; but the year 1984 has passed
and it is time to read or reread Orwell's predictions about the future.
- Orwell, George, Down and Out in Paris and
London, FIC ORW
Part autobiographical, this story follows the experiences of a penniless
adventurer, first in Paris in the early 1930's and later in London, where he
mingles among tramps and street people.
- Rhys, Jean, Wide Sargasso Sea, FIC RHY
Wide Sargasso Sea is the story of Antoinette Cosway, a Creole heiress who grew
up in the West Indies on a decaying plantation. When she comes of age she is
married off to an Englishman, and he takes her away from the only place she has
known--a house with a garden where "the paths were overgrown and a smell of dead
flowers mixed with the fresh living smell. Underneath the tree ferns, tall as
forest tree ferns, the light was green. Orchids flourished out of reach or for
some reason not to be touched." The novel is Rhys's answer to Jane Eyre.
Charlotte Brontë's book had long haunted her, mostly for the story it did not
tell--that of the madwoman in the attic, Rochester's terrible secret. Antoinette
is Rhys's imagining of that locked-up woman, who in the end burns up the house
and herself. Wide Sargasso Sea follows her voyage into the dark, both from her
point of view and Rochester's. It is a voyage charged with soul-destroying lust.
"I watched her die many times," observes the new husband. "In my way, not in
hers. In sunlight, in shadow, by moonlight, by candlelight. In the long
afternoons when the house was empty.".
- Richardson, Samuel, Clarissa
Richardson first presents the heroine, Clarissa Harlowe, when she is
discovering the barely masked motives of her family, who want to force her
into a loveless marriage to improve their fortunes. When Lovelace, a romantic
who holds the code of the Harlowe family in contempt, offers her protection, she
runs off with him. In the end she must choose her own fate.
- Richardson, Samuel, Pamela
A novel about a servant who avoided seduction and was rewarded by marriage.
- Shaw, George Bernard, Major Barbara,
822.912 SHA
Drama in which a Salvation Army member, Barbara is pitted against a munitions
manufacturer. When the Army accepts donations from armament manufacturer, her
father and a whiskey distiller, whose money Barbara regards as tainted, she
resigns in disgust, but eventually sees the truth of her father's reasoning that
social iniquity derives from poverty; it is only through accumulating wealth and
power that people can help each other.
- Shelley, Mary, Frankenstein, FIC SHE
Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus, is a combination of gothic
romance and science fiction, the book tells the story of Victor Frankenstein,
a Swiss student of natural science who creates an artificial man from pieces
of corpses and brings his creature to life. Rejected and reviled for his
hideous appearance, the creature learns the ways of humans, but he cannot find
companionship. Increasingly brutal, the monster haunts Frankenstein and
insists that he create a female companion. Frankenstein almost complies
but in the end cannot perform the deed. The monster eventually brings about
the scientists destruction. And then the name Frankenstein becomes
popularly attached to the creature itself.
- Stewart, Mary,
The Crystal Cave
The Hollow Hills
The Last Enchantment
The Wicked Day
- Stoker, Bram, Dracula, FIC STO
The vampire novel that started it all. Bram Stoker's Dracula probes deeply
into human identity, sanity, and the dark corners of Victorian sexuality and
desire. When Jonathan Harker visits Transylvania to help Count Dracula
purchase a London house, he makes horrifying discoveries about his client.
Soon afterward, disturbing incidents unfold in England-an unmanned ship is
wrecked at Whitby, strange puncture marks appear on a young woman's neck, and
a lunatic asylum inmate raves about the imminent arrival of his
"Master"-culminating in a battle of wits between the sinister Count
and a determined group of adversaries.
- Swift, Jonathan, Gulliver's Travels, FIC SWI
Gulliver's Travels describes the four fantastic voyages of Lemuel Gulliver, a
kindly ship's surgeon. Swift portrays him as an observer, a reporter, and a
victim of circumstance. His travels take him to Lilliput where he is a giant
observing tiny people. In Brobdingnag, the tables are reversed and he is the
tiny person in a land of giants where he is exhibited as a curiosity at
markets and fairs. The flying island of Laputa is the scene of his next
voyage. The people plan and plot as their country lies in ruins. It is a world
of illusion and distorted values. The fourth and final voyage takes him to the
home of the Houyhnhnms, gentle horses who rule the land. He also encounters
Yahoos, filthy bestial creatures who resemble humans.
.
- Thackeray, William Makepeace, Vanity Fair, FIC THA
The English classic about a social climber in Victorian London. The author said
while writing this novel, "What I want to make is a set of people living
without God in the world, greedy, pompous men, perfectly self-satisfied for
the most part, and at ease about their superior virtue." The two boarding
school friends, Amelia and Becky are contrasted. Becky is clever, scheming and
determined to get on in the world and sets her sights on winning over Amelia's
rich, stupid brother. Amelia is loved by two men. Find out what happens in the
lives of these two women.
- Waugh, Evelyn, A Handful of Dust
A satirical novel by Evelyn Waugh, examines the themes of contemporary
amorality and the death of spiritual values. This novel points out the savagery
of so-called civilized London society and the barbarity encountered by the
hero in the South American jungle.
- Wilde, Oscar, The Importance of Being Earnest
and Other Plays,
822.8 WIL
Oscar Wilde’s madcap farce about mistaken identities, secret engagements,
and lovers’ entanglements still delights readers more than a century after its
1895 publication and premiere performance. The rapid-fire wit and eccentric
characters of The Importance of Being Earnest have made it a mainstay of the
high school curriculum for decades. Cecily Cardew and Gwendolen Fairfax are both
in love with the same mythical suitor. Jack Worthing has wooed Gewndolen as
Ernest while Algernon has also posed as Ernest to win the heart of Jack’s ward,
Cecily. When all four arrive at Jack’s country home on the same weekend—the
"rivals" to fight for Ernest’s undivided attention and the "Ernests" to claim
their beloveds—pandemonium breaks loose.
- Wilde, Oscar, Picture of Dorian Gray, FIC WIL
Lord Henry Wotton is a spectator in life and he does his best to influence
Dorian in that direction. Dorian becomes corrupt and self-indulgent. But in
answer to his prayer, he escapes unscarred from his escapades. The portrait of
this man powerfully establishes evil as a reality in the novel.
- Woolf, Virginia, Mrs. Dalloway, FIC WOO
This brilliant novel explores the hidden springs of thought and action in one
day of a woman’s life. Direct and vivid in her account of the details of
Clarissa Dalloway’s preparations for a party she is to give that evening,
Woolf ultimately managed to reveal much more. For it is the feeling behind
these daily events that gives Mrs. Dalloway its texture and richness
and makes it so memorable.
- Woolf, Virginia, A Room of One's Own, 305.4 WOO
In one of the most entertaining and brilliant essays ever written on the
importance of freedom for women, Woolf brings her literary imagination and
defiant wit to bear on the relationship between gender, money, and the
creation of works of genius.
- Woolf, Virginia, To the Lighthouse, FIC WOO
Novel of the daily life of an English family in the Hebrides filled with
emotion, atmosphere, and poetry. The first section called "The
Window" describes a day during Mr. and Mrs. Ramsay's house party at their
country home by the sea. Mr. Ramsay is a distinguished scholar and, in the
eyes of Woolf, a typical male whose mind works rationally, heroically and
coldly. Mrs. Ramsay is a warm, creative, intuitive woman, the center of the
household.

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