Penguin Classic Recommends
Author
Discussion

Justadreamer

Original Poster:

150 posts

5 months

Monday 9th March
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Would anyone be able to suggest some penguin classic please?

hellsbuddha

321 posts

270 months

Monday 16th March
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Tale of two cities is great

Super Sonic

13,590 posts

81 months

Monday 16th March
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John Wyndham - The Chrysalids
A young boy growing up in a religious family in a world where mutations are common, and seen as an offence against god.
Mutated crops are burned, animals killed and babies sterilised and left in the wilderness.
The protagonist realises that him and his friends ability to communicate telepathically is in fact a mutation...
First read this at school age 11, and it's still a favourite.

PushedDover

7,358 posts

80 months

Monday 16th March
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As a child - the Willard Price ‘adventure’ series
Fabulous

Got4wheels

548 posts

53 months

Monday 16th March
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If you're into history and travel, I cannot recommend Arabian Sands by Wilfred Thesiger enough. He travels (1945-50) along the Arabian Peninsula and the Empty Quarter with the Bedouin tribes that lived there. It's essentially a love letter to an ancient way of life that was being eroded by the discovery of oil even while Wilfred was there immediately following WW2, it's rather sad in places as Thesiger curses what he knows is coming.

I read it in 2022, and I'm talking myself into a re-read.

Michael

soad

34,478 posts

203 months

Monday 16th March
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The Invisible Man
Dracula
The Catcher in the Rye

Purosangue

2,381 posts

40 months

Monday 16th March
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nausea
Friedrich Nietzsche biography
Titus Andronicus
The Pit and the Pendulum
The Three Musketeers
Demons Fyodor Dostoyevsky
,


Edited by Purosangue on Tuesday 17th March 00:10

T697JVS

191 posts

19 months

Tuesday 17th March
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Another vote for A Tale of Two Cities

Will add The Mayor of Casterbridge

Turn7

25,517 posts

248 months

Tuesday 17th March
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PushedDover said:
As a child - the Willard Price adventure series
Fabulous
Oh yes, read and owned them all.. loved them

coppice

9,643 posts

171 months

Friday 20th March
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If you like Hemingway , and I love his prose despite him now being deeply unfashionable , there are some utter gems . I have read A Moveable Feast so many times,and still adore it. I'm no fan of bull fignting but Death in the Afternoon was fascinating . For Whom the Bell Tolls, Islands in the Stream - so much choice

Groomio

639 posts

7 months

Saturday 21st March
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A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole

Skyedriver

22,952 posts

309 months

Saturday 21st March
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coppice said:
If you like Hemingway , and I love his prose despite him now being deeply unfashionable , there are some utter gems . I have read A Moveable Feast so many times,and still adore it. I'm no fan of bull fignting but Death in the Afternoon was fascinating . For Whom the Bell Tolls, Islands in the Stream - so much choice
Hemingway's life was quite fascinating. I found For Whom the Bell Tolls a struggle.

spikeyhead

20,130 posts

224 months

Monday 6th April
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Anything by Trollope, Anthony not Joanna

Most of Dickens, Great Expectations, Nickolas Nickleby, A tale of two cities, David Copperfield, Pickwick papers and Bleak house are all worth a read