Les Miserables is truly epic, one of the best novels ever written, it envelopes life, and death, heaven and earth, love and hate, good and evil, and all else under the sun.
For more than 130 years, children have reveled in the delightfully non-moralistic, non-educational virtues of this classic. When choosing for a home library, consider this one.
Poetic, disturbing, thought-provoking, Women in Love is a book about individual philosophies, personalities, desires, and the conscious or subconscious need for control in relationships.
D.H. Lawrence's Sons and Lovers greets the reader with the author's elegant prose while systematically immersing the story in a swirling cloud of tangled dysfunction.
The novel is immersed in Gothic elements and in typical Hawthorne symbolism which deal with man's struggle versus sin and good versus evil.The theme of the violation of the human heart is the real strength of the novel.
This book is about the conflict between nature and the industrial society, between pure sensuality and sex, between the intellectual life and the body.This book is not pornography.
A great, irrestible book in the English language, this novel is tragic and beautifully written; the writer of Tess of the d'Urbervilles was, and remains, unrivalled in evocation of tragic emotion.
This is an excelent tale that has been made into many plays and movies. The mystery, suspense, and in parts, downright horror of this novel will make you never want to put it down.
Romeo And Juliet is one of Shakespeare’s most famous tragedies, written in 1595. The play is about love and passion between two young people. It is also about the fate of the two “star-crossed lovers,” who eventually take their own lives because of misunderstandings.
Witty, and evocative, the novel is a sharply detailed portraiture of the decorum surrounding courtship and the importance of marriage to a woman's livelihood and comfort.