I've done it! W J Campbell has inspired me to read classics and I now have finished all 100 books in his simply beautiful reference book. I never would have finished the 320 classic books I've read so far if I hadn't come across his book on books. It is a brief recapitalization of great works and should be treated as an aid not a complete cheat book for delinquent teenagers to finish high school without actually reading a book. I've found true pleasure in learning about each title after I finished the individual books. One thing is wrong though, I didn't see a follow up book or any way to thank Professor Campbell for the hard work it must of took to combine and author his book of great books. If ever I go back to college I will bring this book with me.
I probably would never have bought this book if I hadn't purchased it at a discount price. If you imagine a stack of SparksNotes bound together, you get an idea of what this book has to offer. It's useful as a general tool, especially for high school or lower-division literature studies. However, some of the information is questionable and I wonder at some of the titles selected/omitted for this book. If you can pick a copy up for a few bucks and you're interested in overviews of some major works, I'd say, 'go for it.' However, more advance literary students might turn their noses up.
I like that it addresses many classic works. This helps me determine which books to read next.
It is a loan from Kindle Unlimited (KU), I won’t get it all read before my KU subscription expires, so here is a list of the books described in it.
Table of Contents Aeneid: Virgil All Quiet on the Western Front: Erich Maria Remarque All the King's Men: Robert Penn Warren Animal Farm: George Orwell As I Lay Dying: William Faulkner As You Like It: William Shakespeare The Awakening: Kate Chopin Beowulf: Anonymous Billy Budd: Herman Melville The Bluest Eye: Toni Morrison Brave New World: Aldous Huxley The Call of the Wild: Jack London Candide: Voltaire The Canterbury Tales: Geoffrey Chaucer Catch-22: Joseph Heller 1 minute left in chapter The Color Purple: Alice Walker Crime and Punishment: Fyodor Dostoyevsky The Crucible: Arthur Miller Daisy Miller: Henry James David Copperfield: Charles Dickens Death of a Salesman: Arthur Miller Diary of a Young Girl: Anne Frank The Divine Comedy: Inferno: Dante Doctor Faustus: Christopher Marlowe A Doll's House: Henrik Ibsen Don Quixote: Miguel de Cervantes Ethan Frome: Edith Wharton Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo: Plato A Farewell to Arms: Ernest Hemingway Faust, Parts 1 and 2: J. W. von Goethe For Whom the Bell Tolls: Ernest Hemingway Frankenstein: Mary Shelley The Glass Menagerie: Tennessee Williams The Good Earth: Pearl S. Buck The Grapes of Wrath: John Steinbeck Great Expectations: Charles Dickens The Great Gatsby: F. Scott Fitzgerald Gulliver's Travels: Jonathan Swift Hamlet: William Shakespeare Hard Times: Charles Dickens Heart of Darkness: Joseph Conrad Henry Part 1: William Shakespeare House Made of Dawn: N. Scott Momaday The House of the Seven Gables: Nathaniel Hawthorne Huckleberry Finn: Mark Twain I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings: Maya Angelou Iliad: Homer Invisible Man: Ralph Ellison Jane Eyre: Charlotte Bronté The Joy Luck Club: Amy Tan Julius Caesar: William Shakespeare The Jungle: Upton Sinclair King Lear: William Shakespeare 1 minute left in chapter Light in August: William Faulkner Lord Jim: Joseph Conrad The Lord of the Flies: William Golding The Lord of the Rings: J. R. R. Tolkien Macbeth: William Shakespeare Madame Bovary: Gustave Flaubert The Mayor of Casterbridge: Thomas Hardy The Merchant of Venice: William Shakespeare A Midsummer Night's Dream: William Shakespeare Moby-Dick: Herman Melville Native Son: Richard Wright 1984: George Orwell Odyssey: Homer The Oedipus Trilogy: Sophocles Of Mice and Men: John Steinbeck The Old Man and the Sea: Ernest Hemingway Oliver Twist: Charles Dickens One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest: Ken Kesey Othello: William Shakespeare Paradise Lost: John Milton The Pearl: John Steinbeck The Plague: Albert Camus A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man: James Joyce Pride and Prejudice: Jane Austen The Prince: Niccolö Machiavelli The Red Badge of Courage: Stephen Crane Republic: Plato The Return of the Native: Thomas Hardy Richard Ill: William Shakespeare Romeo and Juliet: William Shakespeare The Scarlet Letter: Nathaniel Hawthorne A Separate Peace: John Knowles Silas Marner: George Eliot Sons and Lovers: D. H. Lawrence 1 minute left in chapter The Sound and the Fury: William Faulkner Steppenwolf: Hermann Hesse The Stranger: Albert Camus The Sun Also Rises: Ernest Hemingway The Taming of the Shrew: William Shakespeare The Tempest: William Shakespeare Tess of the D'Urbervilles: Thomas Hardy Their Eyes Were Watching God: Zora Neale Hurston Tom Sawyer: Mark Twain Treasure Island: Robert Louis Stevenson Twelfth Night: William Shakespeare Waiting for Godot: Samuel Beckett Walden: Henry David Thoreau
*I've had this in reading limbo since 2007 since it's not a book I'll read cover to cover, but rather a guide and the sort I might look up a specific book.
I gave it a five star, because this is the sort of book that it either did what I wanted it to or it didn't. I got what I wanted/expected, so thumbs up.
2007 Because this is a huge collection of summaries on the classics it's taking me a while to get through. The summaries are interesting, but don't really fill the gap for a regular story. This is kind of my side reading.
I think it's a very useful book to read if you don't want to read all the classics. That was part of the reason I got it. I don't plan to read all these classics and some of them are so old that the language is hard to understand. This is a book for readers and non-readers who want to be informed in literature.
This was so helpful. There are so many classic books that I have no desire to read, but I am interested in their cultural relevance, now and during the time they were written. This book clearly and objectively summarizes each book alphabetically, goes over the characters and main themes, tells me about the author and how the book was received during the time it was written, as well as other helpful information I appreciate knowing.
This gives a lot of information about the 100 classic books chosen - info about the author, about the characters and chronological details of the plot by chapter. It is broken into several sections for each book - Plot Summary, Background, Key Characters, Main Themes and Ideas, Main Symbols, Style and Structure. Very good reference.
This guide lists short synopsis of novels, plays and epic poems, from Shakespeare to Plato and Virgil to modern day writers. Campbell describes plot, characters, meaning of symbols, main themes and ideas and authors’ backgrounds. This helped me to make a list of classic books to be read.
I remember buying this book years ago and I found it a mostly helping resource just for simply getting an overall snapshot and overview of specific classics. As other reviewers allude to, the structure is very SparkNotes-ish in that it contains a quick overview, a comprehensive summary, key themes, important primary characters, significant symbols, and a brief critical analysis. I think this is a very helpful guide for the student who may be taking a literature course with classics or those who are interested in reading classics. I'm mostly pleased with the books contained within as well, but, as you can imagine with only 100 classics listed, the reader will probably find ones that are not included as well as ones they feel should be omitted (clearly subjective to each reader, however). I know you can find out so much information online now, but this one is well worth the look if you are studying classic literature.
This one's a keeper! From the perspective of a former AP English teacher and current librarian, this is a great reference book for any reader. The list of 100 classics is organized alphabetically by title, which is helpful for those who find titles rather than authors' names easier to remember.
Each entry has the same format: a one-sentence summary; detailed plot summary broken down by sections of scenes, chapters, or books according to the format of the text; character chart (very useful graphic for some novels); background information about the novel (e.g., type of work, author information, etc.); key characters list with descriptions; main themes & ideas; main symbols; style & structure; and critical overview.
There's not too much to say - a compilation of book summaries of classics that read like spark notes. It's hard to get that spectacularly wrong or spectacularly right. The relationship infographics/trees in each section were pretty useful - eventually I started reading those first and the summaries after. As far as compilation selection went it seems, in my unuanced opinion, that too great an emphasis was placed on Shakespeare - 14/100 of the books were his.
This is a decent enough book to use as reference, but I found it highly misogynist, since only about 5-10% of the authors represented are women. No mention of Margaret Mitchell, Fannie Flagg, Carson McCullers, Ayn Rand, and so many others. What really shocked me was looking at the publication date, which was 2000! I honestly expected it to be 1950s of earlier!
Oh. This is a good one, I haven't read it, but i'll do it sooner as I can. I know to the author, He is one of the greatest persons I've known. He is great.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.