Best Classic Novels Everyone Should Read
BooksWagon, an ocean of bottomless erudite masterpieces, holds a world down from your daily life. We bring you to this realm where no work deadlines, assignment due dates, or home curfew timings could reach you—offering you the Must-read classic novels, where your imagination awaits you to be explored. BooksWagon offers an escape door to take you on a lift sprinting on the hills of the stylish books to read for everyone and diving into the stimulating water of stories of recommended classics far down from reality.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald: Set against the background of the Roaring Twenties, the book delves into the American Dream and the disillusionment that follows. The new explores wealth, love, and the substance of happiness as a reflection of the mortal condition where time does not count. The book covers the themes of love, desire, class, social status, and moral decay. Also, it talks about the American dream, insulation, and loneliness.
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë: "Jane Eyre" is a tale of tone-discovery and rigidity about an orphaned nanny who finds love in unanticipated places after floundering to find it. She's a representation of women's strength and agency because of her independence and turndown to submit to social prospects. Despite the difficulties one faces, Bront's analysis of societal prospects and the fight for freedom remains applicable. It is one of the All-time best classic novels.
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen: The morals of love, social class, and societal prospects are all covered in Austen's "Pride and Prejudice," a masterwork of wit and social commentary. The tale of Elizabeth Bennet's love and tone discovery is still as applicable as in the morning of the 1800s. While the compendiums deal with the characters' excrescences, the characters themselves display the craft of mortal nature. The reader's disquisition of social issues has been told by the book.
1984 by George Orwell:
Orwell's masterpiece showcases a totalitarian society where verity is private
and surveillance is universal. It presents the idea of study control by using
tools like the study police and Newspeak. The book examines the influence,
issues, and power of unrestricted and unmeasured authority.
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