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22 Apr 2025—22 Apr 2028
Overview
So we asked our readers to tell us about their favourite classic books. The resulting list of must-reads is a perfect way to find inspiration to start your classics adventure. There's something for everyone, from family sagas and dystopian fiction to romances and historical fiction.
Penguin's 100 Must-Read Classics
1 participant (100 books)
STARTS: 22 Apr 2025ENDS: 22 Apr 2028
Overview
So we asked our readers to tell us about their favourite classic books. The resulting list of must-reads is a perfect way to find inspiration to start your classics adventure. There's something for everyone, from family sagas and dystopian fiction to romances and historical fiction.
Challenge Books
1
Pride and Prejudice
Jane Austen
We said: It is a truth universally acknowledged that when most people think of Jane Austen they think of this charming and humorous story of love, difficult families and the tricky task of finding a handsome husband with a good fortune.
You said: Philosophy, history, wit, and the most passionate love story.
2
To Kill a Mockingbird
Harper Lee
We said: A novel before its time, Harper Lee’s Pulitzer-prize winner addresses issues of race, inequality and segregation with both levity and compassion. Told through the eyes of loveable rogues Scout and Jem, it also created one of literature’s most beloved heroes – Atticus Finch, a man determined to right the racial wrongs of the Deep South.
You said: A jarring & poignantly beautiful story about how humans treat each other.
3
The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald
We said: Jay Gatsby, the enigmatic millionaire who throws decadent parties but doesn’t attend them, is one of the great characters of American literature. This is F. Scott Fitzgerald at his most sparkling and devastating.
You said: The greatest, most scathing dissection of the hollowness at the heart of the American dream. Hypnotic, tragic, both of its time and completely relevant.
4
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Gabriel García Márquez
We said: Gabriel García Márquez’s multi-generational spanning magnum opus was a landmark in Spanish literature.
You said: Magic realism at its best. Both funny and moving, this book made me reflect for weeks on the inexorable march of time.
5
In Cold Blood
Truman Capote
We said: The ‘true crime’ TV show / podcast you’re obsessed with probably owes a debt to this masterpiece of reportage by Truman Capote. Chilling and brilliant.
You said: In this groundbreaking novel, completed after six arduous years of research, Capote invented a new genre - the 'Nonfiction Novel' - applying prose techniques to fact. It spawned the school of New Journalism & invented the true crime genre as we know it.
6
Wide Sargasso Sea
Jean Rhys
We said: Jean Rhys wrote this feminist and anti-colonial prequel to Charlotte Bronte’s novel Jane Eyre which chronicles the events of Mr Rochester’s disastrous marriage to Antoinette Conway or Bertha as we come to know her.
You said: Rhys took a character from a classic novel and breathed new life into the “madwoman in the attic” based on her own experiences/world view. She beautifully showed how the stories we read fold into our lives to make new stories.
7
Brave New World
Aldous Huxley
We said: One of the greatest and most prescient dystopian novels ever written, this should be on everyone’s must-read list.
You said: Given the exponential growth of AI, Machine Learning & Robotics, Huxley's vision acts as a warning. Will we rise and challenge those who seek to shape our future or sleepwalk toward conditioning by technology?
8
I Capture the Castle
Dodie Smith
We said: Cassandra Mortmain’s upbringing in a crumbling castle with her eccentric family may not be everyone’s experience, but we can guarantee her coming-of-age story with all its enchanting and disenchanting moments will resonate for many.
You said: A 'children's book' that speaks volumes (ha) about unrequited love and dysfunctional families. Timeless. And funny. (and we need some laughs on the 100 Classics list!)
9
Jane Eyre
Charlotte Brontë
We said: One of literature’s steeliest heroines, in her short life Jane Eyre has overcome a traumatic childhood only to be challenged by secrets, strange noises and mysterious fires in her new home of Thornfield Hall. All while falling in love with her employer, Mr Rochester. A Gothic masterpiece that was groundbreaking in its intimate use of the first-person narrative.
You said: I read this in English lessons aged 13. Jane's defiance and courage speaks as much to me now as it did 50 years ago. I spent 25 years as an English teacher and introduced Jane to students as often as I could.
10
Crime and Punishment (Abridged)
Fyodor Dostoevsky
We said: This novel is a masterful and completely captivating depiction of a man experiencing a profound mental unraveling. No amount of ethical bargaining on Raskolnikov’s part can free him from the parasitic guilt nested in his soul. A brilliant read if you loved Breaking Bad.
You said: No other novel has made me feel so much for the main characters, so deeply depicted by the author. I felt like an orphan when I finished it and it's the only novel I've re-read several times.
11
The Secret History
Donna Tartt
We said: Donna Tartt's book follows a clique of smart, attractive students at an elite university and an outsider who finds himself forced to conceal a dark secret. A gripping and tense read.
You said: A modern classic - so well-articulated and written (something that’s hard to come by these days). Also, EXCELLENT PLOT!
12
The Call of the Wild
Jack London
We said: Jack London was a gold prospector in the Canadian wilderness and used his experiences to write about a dog named Buck who becomes a leader of the wild. With themes exploring nature and the struggle for existence in the frozen Alaskan landscape.
You said: Because everyone who loves the earth knows it’s true.