1. Hamlet by William
Shakespeare- Just make up your mind already, dude.
2. Anything by Stephen Crane- It
doesn't matter what you do- the Universe still thinks you're super
lame.
3. Don Quixote by Miguel de
Cervantes- You can never read too many novels...oh wait, maybe
you can...
4. 2001: A Space Odyssey by
Arthur C. Clarke- As they say in the Lion King, it's the
circle of life, people.
5. Moby Dick by Herman
Melville- When a big ol' whale pisses you off by gnawing on
your leg like it's a chicken bone, go to physical therapy and seek
emotional support from friends and family, rather than dragging lots
of other people with you on a suicide mission to mess up that dang
whale.
6. The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann- Treat every out-of-town visit like a permanent move, cause you never know if you'll wind up staying there, like, 10 years or something.
7. Sister Carrie by Theodore
Dreiser- Cluelessness is not something you want to broadcast
when you're a young woman in strange new city, for you'll just
become a skeevy-guy magnet.
8. Dracula
by Bram Stoker- If you have a
choice between Count Dracula's castle and the Holiday Inn, stay at
the Holiday Inn.
9.
Frankenstein by Mary
Shelley- If you absolutely
must create a freakish monster thing, be sure to make a girlfriend
for it, cause if you don't, he'll be really, really mad.
10.
The Blithedale Romance
by Nathaniel Hawthorne- It's called a
"utopia" for a reason, geniuses.
11.
The Metamorphosis by
Franz Kafka- Sucks to be a bug.
12.
Macbeth by William
Shakespeare- You should treat
your guests well by, you know, not murdering them in their beds.
13.
Huckleberry Finn by
Mark Twain- When you travel
around in a boat with a friend, away from human civilization, when
you do run in to people you realize just how crazy they all are.
14.
Sense and Sensibility
by Jane Austen- When it comes down
to choosing between the hot guy who treats you like crap and the
not-as- hot guy who treats you like a queen, it's really not a choice
at all.
15. An
American Tragedy by Theodore
Dreiser- When you start
going out with two chickies at the same time, it gets really
complicated.
16.
Madame Bovary by
Gustave Flaubert- You can't always
get what you want, but that's no reason to poison yourself and die a
horribly slow and painful death.
17.
Heart of Darkness by
Joseph Conrad- Don't frighten the
natives.
18.
The War of the Worlds
by H. G. Wells- When
the freaky alien things come swooping down on Earth and shooting
lasers or whatever at everyone, run as fast as you can cause those
aliens are mean.
19.
The Great Gatsby by F.
Scott Fitzgerald- Yeah, yeah, money
can't buy happiness- check.
20.
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
by Thomas Hardy- Just
when you thought that life couldn't get any more unfair, you read
Tess and lost any last
shred of hope.
21. "Ulysses"
by Alfred, Lord Tennyson- Strive to live a
life that's so awesome that, on your deathbed, you can say to your
friends, "we had some really great times, huh guys?"
22.
Finnegan's Wake by
James Joyce- A book that ends
at its beginning and begins at its end is inviting you not to read
it, and you should accept that invitation.
23.
Crime and Punishment
by Fyodor Dostoyevsky- Crime, really,
doesn't pay- it just makes you turn your soul inside out and beat it
with a stick, that is, if you're an angst-ridden, depressed,
19th-century Russian guy.
24.
The Age of Innocence
by Edith Wharton- Society cramps
your style, but it's so damn convenient when it accepts you.
25.
Odyssey by Homer- Go through life
looking straight ahead and ignoring all those bothersome people who
try to get all up in your face and make their business your
business- you know, like those kiosk people at the mall who accost
you and spray you with some new perfume or whatever.
26.
Buddenbrooks by Thomas Mann- Look, you can't be
awesome forever.
27.
Remembrance of Things Past
by Marcel Proust- Better not eat that corn chip- otherwise,
you'll be mentally transported back to that time when you were 9
years old and you went to that camp that you liked but stupid Andy
whatever-his- last-name-was was there too and he ripped that bag of
corn chips right out of your hand and you had just bought it with
the last 50 cents you had left but you were too scared to tell the
counselor cause Andy would have beaten you up. So yeah, ixnay on the
cornchip-ay, monsieur.
28.
Anything by e. e. cummings:
capital
letters
are for
losers.
capital
letters
are for
losers.
29.
King Lear by William Shakespeare- Don't bother
arguing with your parents. Or your children. Just don't bother.
30.
Fight Club by Chuck
Palahniuk- Don't beat yourself up about it.
31.
Paradise Lost
by John Milton- If
you want a snack that badly, just open up a can of Pringles, jeez.
32.
Fahrenheit 451
by Ray Bradbury- Lock
those books up, lock 'em up GOOD, like behind a big honkin' solid
steel door or a vault or something, and then station a mean, growly
dog in front of that door to guard it, cause ain't NOBODY takin'
your books.
33. Little Dorrit by Charles
Dickens- Don't let people treat you like a doormat all the
time, cause pretty soon they're gonna be like "hey, this
doormat is familiar and comfy, and it's even got my footprints on it,
so I think I'll just use this doormat forever!"
34. The Autobiography by
Benjamin Franklin- Do what your dad says, not what he does,
cause he's, like, world famous and writes really well and helped
form the freakin' country you live in, for God's sake, so even if
he's done some stupid stuff just take his advice.
35. Jane Eyre by Charlotte
Bronte- Freaky dude with wife locked up in attic does not a
great employer make.
36. Beowulf by some unknown
dude- Be nice to the rampaging monster, cause if you mess with
him, his mamma's gonna come after you.
37.
1984 by
George Orwell- If
Big Brother's watching you, well, give him something FUN to watch-
you know, paint yourself blue and walk around on your hands and
yodel or something, and I'm sure he'll appreciate it cause it's the
thought that counts, am I right?
38.
Death in Venice
by Thomas Mann- You
might want to consider NOT going on vacation to a place that's known
for its germy miasmas cause, you know, you could catch cholera and
die and then what would you do about next year's vacation???
39.
Rip Van Winkle by Washington Irving
Don't fall asleep, cause you might wake up in the 24th century or something where the cats have all taken over the Earth and there's cat litter everywhere, and mouse, fish, and bird carcasses line the streets and everything smells REALLY bad and your cat overlords will only give you a teeny tiny cat bed to sleep in.
Don't fall asleep, cause you might wake up in the 24th century or something where the cats have all taken over the Earth and there's cat litter everywhere, and mouse, fish, and bird carcasses line the streets and everything smells REALLY bad and your cat overlords will only give you a teeny tiny cat bed to sleep in.
40.
The Jungle
by Upton Sinclair
Vegetarianism
might just be your best bet if you're not into, you know, meat ground
up with rat dung or rat-poison flavoring in your sausage links- just
sayin'.
41.
The Shining by Stephen King
If you're definitely going to take that job babysitting the freaky haunted old hotel in the middle of nowhere, be sure to bring plenty to read and lots of DVDs to watch, cause all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...
If you're definitely going to take that job babysitting the freaky haunted old hotel in the middle of nowhere, be sure to bring plenty to read and lots of DVDs to watch, cause all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy...
42.
Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha
Christie
Murder will out, but it'll take a helluva lot longer if you do the deed with a big ol' posse.
Murder will out, but it'll take a helluva lot longer if you do the deed with a big ol' posse.
43.
White-Jacket by Herman Melville
Listen to your mama and don't run off to sea (even though this is the 21st century and people kind of don't do that so much anymore, but whatever...)
Listen to your mama and don't run off to sea (even though this is the 21st century and people kind of don't do that so much anymore, but whatever...)
44.
Phases of an Inferior Planet by Ellen Glasgow
You can love opera and you can love science, but you can also stay sane and have a good, enjoyable life- they're not mutually exclusive, y'all.
You can love opera and you can love science, but you can also stay sane and have a good, enjoyable life- they're not mutually exclusive, y'all.
45.
Les Fleurs du Mal by Charles Baudelaire
Life is like stinky, rotting roadkill (here heave great big sigh of l'ennui...)
Life is like stinky, rotting roadkill (here heave great big sigh of l'ennui...)
46.
"The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" by T. S.
Eliot
Don't be like the J-dawg; dude's got issues; love, Tommy.
Don't be like the J-dawg; dude's got issues; love, Tommy.
47.
War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
War, uh, good god y'all, what is it good for, absolutely nuthin'.
War, uh, good god y'all, what is it good for, absolutely nuthin'.
48.
"Bartelby, the Scrivener" by Herman Melville
If your boss asks you to do anything not specifically spelled out in your employment contract, tell him/her that you would prefer not to.
If your boss asks you to do anything not specifically spelled out in your employment contract, tell him/her that you would prefer not to.
49.
The Ambassadors
by Henry James
Don't
be indecisive...well, maybe sometimes it's appropriate, but then
again, there are other times when it's definitely not appropriate,
but you really don't know sometimes, and you need to think about it
a lot and even then sometimes you can't really decide if you should
or should not be indecisive...
50.
The Decameron
by Giovanni Boccaccio
If
a big 'ol plague comes roaring through town, grab your friends and go
out into the country to some abandoned house, play beer pong, and
tell bawdy stories, cause, man, plagues are extremely
uncool.
51."The
Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe
Don't let any talking birds into your place cause they'll just make you paranoid, but then again, if you think you're hanging out with a talking bird, maybe you ARE paranoid, and maybe everyone else already knows it.... (insert shifty eyes here)
Don't let any talking birds into your place cause they'll just make you paranoid, but then again, if you think you're hanging out with a talking bird, maybe you ARE paranoid, and maybe everyone else already knows it.... (insert shifty eyes here)
52.Waiting
for Godot by Samuel Beckett
If the dude you're supposed to meet up with is a no-show after 15 minutes, he's probably not coming so... you know, finish your coffee, read some more of that book you started the other day, and go home already.
If the dude you're supposed to meet up with is a no-show after 15 minutes, he's probably not coming so... you know, finish your coffee, read some more of that book you started the other day, and go home already.
53.Behind
a Mask by Louisa May Alcott
If it walks like a scheming, conniving gold-digger, and it talks like a scheming, conniving gold- digger, well...you know the rest...
If it walks like a scheming, conniving gold-digger, and it talks like a scheming, conniving gold- digger, well...you know the rest...
54.Lolita
by Vladimir Nabokov
Don't
ever ever ever name your child Humbert Humbert or George George or
anything like that cause you're just setting him up for trouble.
55.Looking
Backward by Edward Bellamy
Seriously, don't fall asleep!!! (See "Rip Van Winkle" post)
Seriously, don't fall asleep!!! (See "Rip Van Winkle" post)
56.Ulysses
by James Joyce
(I'm
sorry, but am I supposed to be able to come up with a moral for
Ulysses when the only
way I can actually understand what I'm reading is if I consult the
equally huge Ulysses Annotated
for every single word? I mean, really, Jimmy, really?)
57."The
Awakening" by Kate Chopin
Don't let a fickle boy-toy get you so depressed that you drown yourself in the ocean, even if his name *is* Rrrrrrroberrrrrrrr...
Don't let a fickle boy-toy get you so depressed that you drown yourself in the ocean, even if his name *is* Rrrrrrroberrrrrrrr...
58.Under
the Dome
by Stephen King
If you think aliens are scary, you don't even want to know what
their kids are like...
59."The
Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
If
your doctor ever says to you, "you look depressed, why don't you
go lock yourself up in a house somewhere out in the country and
stare at grimy, puke-yellow wallpaper all day and you'll feel MUCH
better...eventually...," you should smack that doctor hard and
then go find another one.
60.Sherlock
Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle
If
you like always being proven wrong, be best friends with someone like
Sherlock Holmes- if your ego and self-esteem aren't pulverized after
a few weeks, you get a gold star sticker.
61.The
Man of Property
by John Galsworthy
Think
about it like this: Pepe le Pew is chasing la
chatte charmante
and just as he grabs her and starts planting wet, skunky kisses on
her, she slips out of his arms and runs to a park, where she dives
into a stroller and hides under the blankets, but Pepe (of course)
finds her and grabs her again, but she slips away again and this
time hides in a mound of fruit in front of a grocery store, but Pepe
finds her...well, it's kinda like that, but without all the actual
running and grabbing and slobbering and skunks and cats and whatnot.
62.The
Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel
Hawthorne
So apparently, those stiff, stodgy Puritan types LOVED monogramed clothes and accessories- who knew?!
So apparently, those stiff, stodgy Puritan types LOVED monogramed clothes and accessories- who knew?!
63.Sentimental
Education
by Gustave Flaubert
Remember- and this is very important- keep the woman you love and
your mistress and your OTHER mistress far apart from one another,
cause otherwise things could get very dicey.
64.The
Island of Dr. Moreau
by H. G. Wells
If you don't know what "vivisection" is, that's a good
thing, cause you really don't wanna know.
65.The
Remains of the Day by Kazuo
Ishiguro
The BUTLER did
it!!!
66.The
Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar
Wilde
If a painting can do all that freaky stuff to a dude, I think I'm
gonna stick with photos, thanks.
67.The
Lord of the Flies by William
Golding
Nothing good ever happens when people are stranded on a deserted
island (I mean, you watched "Lost," right?)
68.The
Iliad
by Homer
Really, if you're
gonna be THAT CLUELESS and accept a big ol' wooden horse from some
strangers as a "gift" and not give it another
thought,...well, I actually don't know what to tell you.
69.Spoon
River Anthology
by Edgar Lee Masters
Apparently dead people like to hang with their fellow townies and
talk about the old times sooo....
70.The
Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle
When someone says to you, "hey, come with me, I'm going on this
great adventure, there's this place deep in the interior of South
America where there are tons of dinosaurs and other huge and freaky
creatures that we all thought were extinct, but some still survive
there, and I'm going to go find this place and prove that it exists,
why don't you come with me? It'll be fun!!!" tell that person
that you do not wish to speak to them anymore, cause you value your
life and they clearly do not.
71. Jurassic Park shamelessly cribbed by Michael Crichton (jk, Mikey, we're cool)
How about this- if you absolutely MUST bring back an extinct life
form and set it up in a park somewhere on this planet near humans,
bring back something cute and cuddly (like the dodo) or fuzzy (like
the woolly rhinoceros).
72. Benito Cereno by Herman Melville
There are some
people who need *the obvious* to come up to them dressed in plaids
and polka dots and club them over the head vociferously with a big
wooden paddle, and then drag them to a wall and bang their head
against it several times.
73. Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare
There'll always be somebody who isn't down with your main squeeze,
but so what??
74. Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
Some people are a little TOO into their jobs- you know, like that
Inspector Javert dude...dude needs to get a LIFE
75. As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
Yes, apparently dead people can speak- now we've got TWO authors who
think so! (I'm lookin' at you, Edgar Lee Masters)
76. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
Trains are, like, TOTALLY awesome and anyone who tries to take your
train away from you is like, totally NOT awesome.
77. Au Bonheur des Dames by Emile Zola
Big, huge, gigantor franchise barging into town and putting all the
little guys out of business- yes, it happened in 19th-century
France, too.
78. A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr
Solzhenitsyn
It is very, very, very, very, very, very cold in Siberia, so that
icicle you swore you saw forming on your nose last year when you
were in Chicago in the dead of winter- yeah, that wasn't even close.
79.
Inferno by Dante
If
you can't stand the heat, get
out of the circle.
80.
Emily Dickinson's poetry
If slant rhymes make you all twitchy, don't read Emmy's poems.
If slant rhymes make you all twitchy, don't read Emmy's poems.
81. The Catcher
in the Rye by J. D. Salinger
Yes, yes, everyone's phoney-baloney; thanks for stating the obvious, Holdie.
Yes, yes, everyone's phoney-baloney; thanks for stating the obvious, Holdie.
82. A Streetcar
Named Desire by Tennessee
Williams
STELLLLLLLLLLLAAAAAAAAAA!!!
(sorry, couldn't help myself)
STELLLLLLLLLLLAAAAAAAAAA!!!
(sorry, couldn't help myself)
83.
Clarissa by Samuel Richardson
After suffering
through about half of this monster and giving it careful
consideration, I've come to the conclusion that ol' Sammy Rich wrote
Clarissa on a dare. I image
the conversation going something like this:
Richardson:
I rock this whole book-writing business, y'all.
Other
dude: Yeah? Prove it.
Richardson:
Ok, I will. I'll write the best damned book you've ever read.
Dude:
Bet you can't write more than a thousand pages.
Richardson:
I'll write a KAJILLION pages. Just you wait.
And
thus, Clarissa was
born.
84. Alice in Wonderland by Lewis
Carroll
When you're playing around outside, don't eat any of the funky-looking mushrooms or clovers or anything, cause you might have these really bad hallucinations.
When you're playing around outside, don't eat any of the funky-looking mushrooms or clovers or anything, cause you might have these really bad hallucinations.
85. The Pit by Frank
Norris
Fancy stock market shenanigans- yeah, they didn't work out back then, either.
Fancy stock market shenanigans- yeah, they didn't work out back then, either.
86. The Invisible Man by H. G.
Wells
Invisibility is awesome. ..oh wait, no it isn't
Invisibility is awesome. ..oh wait, no it isn't
87. Oedipus Rex by
Sophocles
As Tom Lehrer once said, "so be sweet and kind to mother, now and then have a chat, buy her candy or some flowers or a brand new hat, but maybe you had better let it go at that..."
As Tom Lehrer once said, "so be sweet and kind to mother, now and then have a chat, buy her candy or some flowers or a brand new hat, but maybe you had better let it go at that..."
88. The Yiddish Policeman's Union
by Michael Chabon
Jews + ubercold weather = very unhappy campers
(Unless, of course, there's matzoh ball soup involved, and then it's all good )
Jews + ubercold weather = very unhappy campers
(Unless, of course, there's matzoh ball soup involved, and then it's all good )
89. A Gallery of Women by
Theodore Dreiser
The Dreiser-dawg was a mayja playa.
(Yeah, Theo, don't try to pass all that off as fiction. We all know that the chickies in this book were, like, girlfriends #81-96 or something.)
The Dreiser-dawg was a mayja playa.
(Yeah, Theo, don't try to pass all that off as fiction. We all know that the chickies in this book were, like, girlfriends #81-96 or something.)
90. Ernest Hemingway's short
stories
Brevity rocks.
(I'm sorry, Ernie, was that sentence not short enough for you? I'll try to do better next time!)
Brevity rocks.
(I'm sorry, Ernie, was that sentence not short enough for you? I'll try to do better next time!)
91. The Grapes of Wrath by John
Steinbeck
If you ever timetravel, don't go to the 1930s Dustbowl cause it was very dusty and...um...uncool
If you ever timetravel, don't go to the 1930s Dustbowl cause it was very dusty and...um...uncool
92. Anything by D.H.Lawrence
Love is SO mysterious that it can't be explained- but you can still try by writing lots of big honkin' novels.
Love is SO mysterious that it can't be explained- but you can still try by writing lots of big honkin' novels.
93. The Squatter and the Don by
Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton
You can indeed go to sleep in one country and wake up in another without having moved an inch! Ahh, war/expansion/imperialism...
You can indeed go to sleep in one country and wake up in another without having moved an inch! Ahh, war/expansion/imperialism...
94. The Rise of David Levinsky
by Abraham Cahan
Blah blah blah, pull yourself up by your bootstraps, blah blah blah...
Blah blah blah, pull yourself up by your bootstraps, blah blah blah...
95. Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight
If a big green dude walks into your place and challenges you to whatever, tell him that you appreciate that he thought of you, but you're just gonna have to say NO, THANKS.
If a big green dude walks into your place and challenges you to whatever, tell him that you appreciate that he thought of you, but you're just gonna have to say NO, THANKS.
96. Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia
Woolf
Our brains are a big mish-mash, full of thoughts and bits of thoughts, signifying. ..not a whole hell of a lot, actually.
Our brains are a big mish-mash, full of thoughts and bits of thoughts, signifying. ..not a whole hell of a lot, actually.
97. A Tale of Two Cities by
Charles Dickens
Everyone's got a doppelganger, but it doesn't mean that you have to go to the guillotine for them, jeez.
98. Joyland by Stephen King- Apparently, only little boys can see dead people.
(And a big thank you to Stella Weng (@ghobubo) for these last two!)
99. Of Mice & Men by John Steinbeck- When the guy is really big & dumb, don't let him touch your hair!
100. The Trial by Franz Kafka-Relax, you're not paranoid...they are SO after you!
Everyone's got a doppelganger, but it doesn't mean that you have to go to the guillotine for them, jeez.
98. Joyland by Stephen King- Apparently, only little boys can see dead people.
(And a big thank you to Stella Weng (@ghobubo) for these last two!)
99. Of Mice & Men by John Steinbeck- When the guy is really big & dumb, don't let him touch your hair!
100. The Trial by Franz Kafka-Relax, you're not paranoid...they are SO after you!
(the first 30 were posted on Book Riot 7/30/13)
This is a very good idea. I think I've saved 120 hours not reading the Proust alone. Multiplied by others on the list and I've saved enough time to go live in Tahiti for a few years!
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