ADVERTISEMENT

A great book can change your life, and that’s no exaggeration. It allows your imagination to flourish, which can sometimes birth new ideas that are worth exploring. 

With more than 129 million titles in existence, finding a good title would be like looking for a diamond in the rough. So, to help narrow down that lengthy list, users from Mumsnet gave their book suggestions you can check out. 

You will find many classics on this list that you’ve likely already read, but you may also come across a few that may pique your interest. And if you’re not an avid reader, this may just turn you into one.

Click here & follow us for more lists, facts, and stories.

#1

36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe I’m halfway through The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas & loving it.

Mary Barton by Mrs Gaskell has vivid characters and is a real page turner.

EmpressaurusDeiGatti , Alyssa Borges Report

RELATED:
    #2

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe George Orwells novels are good, particularly 1984 and Animal Farm, but I really enjoyed Down and Out in London and Paris, describing his early life working in Parisienne restaurant kitchens, then coming back to live with the poorest in society in London.
    I also enjoy Thomas Hardy books. Tess if the D'Urbervilles, Far from the Madding Crowd and Jude the Obscure all set in one of my favourite parts of the UK.

    Lincslady53 , Hannah Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #3

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Pride and Prejudice is also my comfort book

    Viou , Kk Report

    #4

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Little women - I love it, and any TV/film adaptation

    Tattletail , Swetha Soundar Report

    #5

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Jane Eyre
    The Mill on the Floss
    Anne of Green Gables
    A Christmas Carol

    UltramarineViolet , Dana E. Mastrogianakis Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #6

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Frankenstein - I love that book and Jane Eyre

    ghostyslovesheets , Jen Winchester Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #7

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Because reading is so subjective, I can go out on a limb.
    Wuthering Heights is in my opinion the most self indulgent pile of pitiful [jerk] ever written. There. I've said it. (Although it does have a redeeming feature in that it gave rise to one of the most brilliant songs ever.)
    Dickens is tricky because he's so long winded. Great romping stories though, and the more popular ones are referenced frequently.
    Balzac was a great writer, often churning out books practically overnight to pay off his debts. Daphne du Maurier and John Wyndham were also superb for both storytelling and writing style and Jane Eyre is and will always be wonderful. For modern classics, anything by Penelope Lively is worth a read. Oh and Brave New World.
    Great thread. Always lovely to have an excuse to talk books instead of do work...

    Wordsmithery , KrystalTears Report

    #8

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Flowers for Algernon

    The Reader

    Fluffyowl00 , Christine Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    #9

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Agree with a lot of the comments above.
    I recently read Gulliver's Travels (for the first time( and really enjoyed it. Well written, very entertaining, and contains some surprisingly pertinent observations.
    Also add Bulgakov's Master and Margarita as a great read.
    Interested to see several people mention John Wyndham - I really like his novels and short stories but are they really 'great books' or 'classics'? Not sure I think of them in that way.

    Grumpyoldpersonwithcats , Rebecca Hargrave Malamud Report

    #10

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe To [end] a Mockingbird
    Rebecca
    1984
    Lord of the Flies

    The only "classics" I have ever enjoyed. Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion bored me to tears.

    IdgieThreadgoodeIsMyHeroine , Mariah Hill Report

    #11

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Middlemarch

    North and South

    libertybonds , Victória C Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #12

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe The Poisonwood Bible Barbara Kingsolver (I know it doesn’t always get listed on the more traditional great literature lists).

    In Cold Blood, Truman Capote

    MurdoMunro , SublimeCalliope Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #13

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe War and Peace!
    Honestly, if you enjoyed Anna Karenina you will enjoy W&P. It is long but it is really enjoyable and has unforgettable characters.
    If it helps, there is a Substack called Footnotes and Tangents that does a read along and is full of notes.
    Actually, how could I forget, there was also a Mumsnet read along thread that you can still access!

    MotherOfCatBoy , Jennifer Gridley Report

    #14

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Dracula
    dr Jekyll and mr Hyde
    the Scarlet letter
    H.G Wells- the invisible man, the war of the worlds, the Time Machine

    enjoyable in their own right, but also all of the above have had an enormous impact on horror/sci fi in all forms across the world.

    Mumoftwoboysaged4and5 , Sara Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #15

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Lessons in chemistry is one of my all time Favourites.

    Wwyd2025 , Christina sadaka Report

    Never miss a story that brings joy to the world. Follow on Google News

    #16

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Machiavelli the prince

    SugarHorseSpooks , Corey Burns Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #17

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Crime and Punishment is an absolute banger. Love it.

    Gettingannoyednow , Kindle Customer Report

    #18

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Vanity Fair - my all-time favourite book

    Ethelswith , Sophia Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #19

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Donna Tartt is right up there too imho. See The Secret History and Goldfinch.

    yy to these lists. They didn’t get to be classics because they’re rubbish.

    Virginia Wolf, Jane Austen & George Elliott are my comfort reads.

    There’s loads of humour in Middlemarch. It’s a brilliant piece of work.

    FGSChargethecarregularly , A E Report

    #20

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald is almost perfect. Or as close to perfect as any book I’ve ever read.

    Anything by Camus is wonderful but the First Man, his unfinished novel is just sublime.

    ConstantlyFuriosa , Amazon Customer Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #21

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Anthony Trollope is very readable for a 19th century novelist, The Palliser novels, Barchester Chronicles, and also The Way We Live Now and He Knew He Was Right.

    Also Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence is great.

    KimberleyClark , Arlene Dwyer Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #22

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Opinions all my own - feel free to disagree!!

    Steinbeck - East of Eden is brilliant, The Grapes of Wrath is even better - if you struggle with it, the chapters alternate between the story of the Joads and broader more philosophic/political so if you just want the narrative it is possible to halve the length of the book!
    Flaubert - Madame Bovary is very readable, but unfortunately my copy is in a very small font so I found it difficult.
    George Eliot - particularly Silas Marner
    I liked Gaskell's North and South, but shockingly can't get on with Dickens (Three failed attempts at Great Expectations!)
    Bram Stoker - Dracula is genuinely scary
    D.H. Lawrence - Lady Chatterley's Lover is dull, and mostly about religion
    EM Forster - A Passage to India and A Room with a View are very readable
    Jane Austin - Emma is my favourite
    Thomas Hardy - Read The Mayor of Casterbridge because I had to, and Tess of the D'Urbervilles because I wanted to then didn't feel any desire to read more.

    More modern

    Catch 22 - cannot get past page 52
    Wild Swans was compelling, but back in the 90s I was the only person I knew who got through it!
    Wolf Hall - took effort to get into Mantell's style but was worth it
    Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell took two goes because its long and complicated and you need to read it consistently - don't put it down and expect to pick it up a month later - but I loved it.

    SweetLathyrus , ikaika Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #23

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Germinal by Emile Zola

    I also thought like others East of Eden was phenomenal.

    brainpain , Ronilson Maia de Andrade Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #24

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe I liked The Catcher in the Rye
    Wolf Hall was good but dense going.

    powershowerforanhour , Kari Owen Report

    #25

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe All the Brontes and Austen. Dickens too, although he goes on a bit.

    RitaFromThePitCanteen , Peltier Alexia Report

    #26

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe Bleak House, Dickens
    The Gree Mile, Stephen King
    A Dance to the Music of Time, Anthony Powell
    The Quincunx, Charles Palliser

    Daphnise , M. Tawzer Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #27

    Oh, mustn’t forget G K Chesterton, Father Brown.

    MadamTeapot Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #28

    I’m going to add Barbara Pym, since she’s been called a modern Austen.

    The Enchanted April is my comfort book.

    MinnieMountain Report

    #29

    36 Times People Read A Book And Were In Awe I sometimes think when reading 19th-century literature that the author really needed a good editor who would take their blue pencil to whole pages, if not chapter! Dickens, Tolstoy...

    Having said that, "A Tale of Two Cities" is gripping once they actually get to France (the first third is a bit slow and turgid).

    A great alternative to Dickens, and much underrated in my opinion, is "The Odd Women" by George Gissing.

    PrincessOlga , pangobooks.com Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #30

    A Suitable Boy by Virkram Seth
    I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith
    In the Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco

    Almostwelsh Report

    #31

    Tess of the D'Urbervilles
    Wuthering Heights
    The Woman in White
    Madame Bovary

    halava Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #32

    The Raj Quartet - Paul Scott.

    KimberleyClark Report

    #33

    Ulysses - a truly life changing read. I'm obsessed.

    IsThisCluttered Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    #34

    Someone else mentioned it earlier. A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth. It's very long but completely immerses you. I didn't enjoy the TV adaptation but the book was (imo) brilliant.

    lemonsaretheonlyfruit Report

    #35

    The Age of Innocence

    Please don't stop there with Edith Wharton. The House of Mirth is also wonderful. And Ethan Frome, although extremely bleak, is one of my favourite novels (although it probably only really qualifies as a novella).

    Speaking of American female novelists, Carson McCullers is also very much worth reading, especially The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.

    I am fond of sagas of families in decline. I haven't got around to Galsworthy's Forsyte Saga, but I would particularly recommend (all translations from German/Italian):

    Buddenbrooks - Thomas Mann
    Radetzky March - Joseph Roth
    The Leopard - Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa

    User Report

    ADVERTISEMENT
    ADVERTISEMENT
    #36

    If they’re not worth reading, they’re not great, imo.

    I love George Eliot and Mrs Gaskell, while loathing Thomas Hardy and Dickens.

    bridgetreilly Report

    Add Your Answer! This post is a community curated
    Not your original work? Add source
    Publish