litcritic
12 reviews

George Orwell
The world-building is extraordinary. The concept of doublethink alone makes this essential reading.

Matt Haig
A beautiful concept - a library between life and death where each book is a life you could have lived.

Bram Stoker
The sexuality beneath the surface is what makes Dracula timeless. Stoker tapped into primal fears.

Jane Austen
Charming and surprisingly funny. The social commentary is razor-sharp beneath the romance.

Charlotte Brontë
The red room scene is pure gothic terror filtered through a child's consciousness. Unforgettable.

F. Scott Fitzgerald
The American Dream deconstructed in under 200 pages. Efficient and devastating.

J. P. Steed
Holden Caulfield is either the most relatable character ever or the most annoying. I'm in the first camp.

Mary Shelley
The creature reading Paradise Lost, Plutarch, and Goethe is such a beautiful detail. He educates himself into suffering.

Bram Stoker
The epistolary format is genius - reading diary entries and letters makes the horror feel intimate and real.

Emily Brontë
Wild, passionate, and utterly unique. Heathcliff is one of literature's most complex antiheroes.

Herman Melville
The whaling chapters are surprisingly fascinating. The philosophical digressions are where the real treasure lies.

J.R.R. Tolkien
The foundation of modern fantasy. Tolkien didn't just write a story, he created an entire world with its own languages and histories.