DAVID COPPERFIELD
by Charles Dickens


This is one of my favorite books. I picked up a used copy in high school (don't ask me why!) and read it. It took me three months, but I loved it. The book is densely populated with entertaining characters. There is plenty of action, and Dickens’ use of words is amusing.

A warning. 19th century English novels are wordy and digressive by modern standards. Many people do not have the patience for them. Years ago, when I was in graduate school, I had lunch with a buddy, and we talked about our favorite books. I recommended David Copperfield. A week or so later, we had lunch again. He said, “You’ve got to be joking. I read seventy pages, and it’s the most digressive piece of drivel I’ve ever encountered.” Alas.

THE WAY WE LIVE NOW,
by Anthony Trollope


Trollope is a lot like Dickens. He writes long novels with multi-layered plots and widely varied characters. Both novelists capture the hustle and bustle of the Victorian era. The Way We Live Now features unscrupulous finanical dealings,various literary schemes and a couple of good love stories. It's great fun--for me at least.

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
by Jane Austen


The world of Charles Dickens and Anthony Trollope was noisy and boisterous. So are their books. Jane Austen’s world was slower and quieter, as are her books. But in a more tidy and disciplined way, Jane Austen’s books are as complex and humorous as Dickens and Trollope’s. Pride and Prejudice is one of the sharpest and wittiest books ever written.

Another warning. Sometimes I teach this in introductory literature classes. Most students don’t like it much. I can't convince them that it is really funny.


MIDDLEMARCH
by George Eliot


I am betraying my preference for Victorian novels. I had a freshman literature teacher who said, “Middlemarch is the most tedious book ever written; don’t ever try to read it.” I had never heard of it, but I checked it out of the library the next day.

I liked it, though I didn’t understand anything more than the surface plot. I’ve had occasion to read it a couple of times since, and it’s better each time. Admittedly, it has a leisurely pace. But it explores the stresses of late Victorian life very well—the strong pull of tradition struggling against new forces of skepticism. The characters are masterfully drawn. To me it is great writing. But if you read it, don’t rush it.

THE WINDS OF WAR
by Herman Wouk


I almost always regret making definitive judgments about books, but I do think this book and its sequel, War and Remembrance, are the best historical novels I’ve ever read. The Winds of War covers the events up to Pearl Harbor. War and Remembrance covers the period from Pearl Harbor to the war’s end—with a gut-wrenching account of the Holocaust.

The books feature multi-layered narrative perspectives, extremely interesting characters and an ocean of realistic detail. If you read these two books you’ll learn more about World War II than if you take a college history course—but you'll enjoy yourself more.


 







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