tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4979033477620316624.post6508827218850449676..comments2023-10-28T17:14:24.964+08:00Comments on the quill's story: 100 must read booksvithya velaithanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16271495893576649886noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4979033477620316624.post-28514008348840409862010-08-17T17:25:35.813+08:002010-08-17T17:25:35.813+08:00ur welcome =) i used to read C. Dicken's stori...ur welcome =) i used to read C. Dicken's stories, David Copperfield, Great expectation. cant remember the stories now. several of my fav books are there too, little women, anne of green gables, secret garden..<br />thanks 4 d comment though, cheersvithya velaithanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16271495893576649886noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4979033477620316624.post-83514044031310540072010-08-16T23:53:29.687+08:002010-08-16T23:53:29.687+08:00Interesting list, thanks for sharing. Good to see ...Interesting list, thanks for sharing. Good to see The Wind in the Willows in there, at 16. I'd have had it in my top 3. Probably haven't read more than ten of the rest. I love the Brontes, more the idea of them, than actually reading them. I can't get past, much as I've tried, the first five pages of Pride and Prejudice. I adore Dickens, but David Copperfield no. Our Mutual Friend, Nicholas Nickelby and Martin Chuzzlewit, yes. I have read The Great Gatsby, but a long time ago now. No Henry James? I love him as a man, and have the complete Notebooks and the Life in Letters, but I wonder if he'd find a publisher today. I read, or rather managed to get through, The Golden Bowl earlier this year and am still recovering.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com