Recommend me a 'must read' book 1900

Recommend me a 'must read' book 1900

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dibbers006

Original Poster:

12,225 posts

219 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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The initial message was deleted from this topic on 16 December 2023 at 10:53

icetea

846 posts

143 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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dibbers006 said:
I'm open to any suggestions.
If you have zero budget then you're not depriving any author of anything by downloading a modern book from a more dubious source... so use amazon to find something modern you want then get it on pirate bay, thats my suggestion biggrin

Cool Mart

131 posts

215 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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I enjoyed the first two Tarzan books as freebies, some of the later ones just seemed to be the author extracting additional money from the readers.

theironduke

6,995 posts

189 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Crime and Punishment

Great Expectations

Anna Karenina

All genuinely stunning books. GE is one of my favourite reads ever.

davepoth

29,395 posts

200 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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The Count of Monte Cristo
Eugene Onegin

mike80

2,248 posts

217 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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The War of the Worlds. Don't know if it's available as an audiobook, but you can get it free on the Kindle.

Harrytsg

1,264 posts

163 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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dibbers006 said:
Recommend me a classic book from (preferably) before 1900.
..
How on earth were we supposed to meet that criteria?

You didn't put your original post up until 1911!

timbob

2,110 posts

253 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Beaten to the War of the Worlds suggestion.

What about all the Arthur Conan Doyle Sherlock Holmes stories? I have them in a big compendium, and they make for great bedtime reading as most of them are short stories you can rattle through in 30-45 mins.

Dusty964

6,923 posts

191 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Moby Dick .

Loads of free classics on ibooks

silverthorn2151

6,298 posts

180 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Pickwick Papers is always good to revisit from time to time.

Or try Three Men in a Boat, one of the funniest books ever written.


Edited by silverthorn2151 on Wednesday 12th December 20:16

john2443

6,341 posts

212 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Don' know if you can get it free, it's not pre 7pm, To kill a Mockingbird.

vladcjelli

2,970 posts

159 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Harrytsg said:
dibbers006 said:
Recommend me a classic book from (preferably) before 1900.
..
How on earth were we supposed to meet that criteria?

You didn't put your original post up until 1911!
The Time Machine - H.G. Wells

HOGEPH

5,249 posts

187 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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Diary of a nobody is quite amusing.

Treasure Island is a good read.

Skodaku

1,805 posts

220 months

Wednesday 12th December 2012
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dibbers006 said:
Thanks. But we don't condone that sort of thing around here wink

I'm considering 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea or Frankenstein next.
Dracula.

FlossyThePig

4,083 posts

244 months

Thursday 13th December 2012
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I don't know where you live but Suffolk libraries have both ebooks and audiobooks available to borrow online. Ebooks are not Kindle compatible and are DRM protected with a three week timeout. The audiobooks are MP3 and it is up to your personal honesty to delete the files when you have finished them.

The audiobooks are commercial copies with professional readers. The copy of Dracula I borrowed was excellent.

Tango13

8,456 posts

177 months

Thursday 13th December 2012
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silverthorn2151 said:
Pickwick Papers is always good to revisit from time to time.

Or try Three Men in a Boat, one of the funniest books ever written.


Edited by silverthorn2151 on Wednesday 12th December 20:16
The lesser known sequel to Three men in a Boat, Three men on the Bummel is also well worth a read.


Catweazle

1,169 posts

143 months

Thursday 13th December 2012
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The Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy.

silverthorn2151

6,298 posts

180 months

Thursday 13th December 2012
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Tango13 said:
silverthorn2151 said:
Pickwick Papers is always good to revisit from time to time.

Or try Three Men in a Boat, one of the funniest books ever written.


Edited by silverthorn2151 on Wednesday 12th December 20:16
The lesser known sequel to Three men in a Boat, Three men on the Bummel is also well worth a read.
Quite right and a good call.

Sparta VAG

436 posts

148 months

Friday 14th December 2012
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Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conran, superb book that was used as the basis for Apocalypse Now.