Classic Literature Reading Challenge: Gearing up for 2026

I remember first signing up for this challenge a good decade ago in an attempt to get familiar with more classic literature books. My Classics TBR followed me around from one blog to another, and now it’s time to re-post it here with a few exciting additions and a new deadline to look forward to.

There are many different reading challenges for avid readers to discover and enjoy. Quite a few of them focus on rediscovering the good old classic literature. The one I’d like to commit to again is The Classics Club, which encourages you to set an ambitious long-term goal. The last time I participated in the challenge, I was aiming at reading 150 classics in the span of 5 years.

I’m ready to take on a new challenge in the coming new year 2026 and beyond, especially now that my sister and I are actively building our home library and filling our shelves with a plethora of works of Ukrainian, as well as classic literature in translation. And this time I’ll start with a humble one hundred books (maybe, a little more) to read in the next five years.

My Classic Literature Challenge: Books to read

TBR: 111 books

Challenge end date: January 2031

  1. Achebe, Chinua: Things Fall Apart
  2. Angelou, Maya: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
  3. Austen, Jane: Sense and Sensibility
  4. Bronte, Anne: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
  5. Bronte, Charlotte: Villette
  6. Bronte, Emily: Wuthering Heights
  7. Burney, Frances: Evelina
  8. Cather, Willa: My Antonia
  9. Collins, Wilkie: The Woman in White
  10. Cooper, James Fenimore: The Last of the Mohicans
  11. de Cervantes, Miguel: Don Quixote
  12. Defoe, Daniel: Moll Flanders
  13. Dickens, Charles: David Copperfield
  14. Dickens, Charles: Tale of Two Cities
  15. Dickens, Charles: The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club
  16. Dreiser, Theodore: American Tragedy
  17. Dreiser, Theodore: Sister Carrie
  18. Dreiser, Theodore: The Financier
  19. Dreiser, Theodore: The Titan
  20. Dreiser, Theodore: The Stoic
  21. Du Maurier, Daphne: Rebecca
  22. Dumas, Alexandre: The Count of Monte Cristo
  23. Eco, Umberto: The Name of the Rose
  24. Edgeworth, Maria: Castle Rackrent
  25. Eliot, George: Middlemarch
  26. Faulkner, William: As I Lay Dying
  27. Faulks, Sebastian: Birdsong
  28. Fitzgerald, F. Scott: This Side of Paradise
  29. Foer, Jonathan Safran: Everything is Illuminated
  30. Ford, Ford Madox: The Good Soldier
  31. Forster, E.M.: Passage to India
  32. Gaskell, Elizabeth: North and South
  33. Goethe, Johann: Faust
  34. Gogol, Nikolay: Dead Souls
  35. Haggard, Henry Rider: King Solomon’s Mines
  36. Hansberry, Lorraine: A Raisin in the Sun
  37. Hardy, Thomas: Far From the Madding Crowd
  38. Hardy, Thomas: Jude the Obscure 
  39. Hardy, Thomas: The Mayor of Casterbridge 
  40. Heller, Joseph: Catch-22
  41. Hemingway, Ernest: For Whom the Bell Tolls
  42. Hemingway, Ernest: The Garden of Eden
  43. Hemingway, Ernest: A Moveable Feast 
  44. Hemingway, Ernest: To Have and Have Not 
  45. Hemingway, Ernest: Across the River and into the Trees 
  46. Hugo, Victor: Les Miserables
  47. Hugo, Victor: The Hunchback of Notre Dame
  48. Hurston, Zora Neale: Their Eyes Were Watching God
  49. Irving, John: A Prayer for Owen Meany
  50. Irving, John The World According to Garp
  51. Ishiguro, Kazuo: Remains of the Day
  52. James, Henry: The Portrait of a Lady
  53. Joyce, James: Ulysses
  54. Joyce, James: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man 
  55. Joyce, James: Finnegans Wake 
  56. Kafka, Franz: The Castle
  57. Kawabata, Yasunari: Thousand Cranes
  58. Kingsolver, Barbara: The Poisonwood Bible
  59. Knowles, John: A Separate Peace
  60. Lawrence, D.H.: Lady Chatterley’s Lover
  61. Marquez, Gabriel Garcia: Love in the Time of Cholera
  62. Marquez, Gabriel Garcia: Memories of My Melancholy Whores
  63. Marquez, Gabriel Garcia: The General in His Labyrinth
  64. Maupassant, Guy de: Bel-Ami
  65. McCullers, Carson: The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
  66. Melville, Herman: Moby Dick
  67. Miller, Arthur: Death of a Salesman
  68. Milton, John: Paradise Lost
  69. Morrison, Toni: Song of Solomon
  70. Morrison, Toni: The Bluest Eye
  71. Nesbit, E: The Enchanted Castle
  72. O, Brien: Tim: The Things They Carried
  73. Pamuk, Orhan: My Name is Red
  74. Pasternak, Boris: Doctor Zhivago
  75. Pepys, Samuel: Diary of Samuel Pepys
  76. Plath, Sylvia: Ariel
  77. Plath, Sylvia: The Bell Jar
  78. Rand, Ayn: Atlas Shrugged
  79. Rand, Ayn: The Fountainhead
  80. Richardson, Samuel: Clarissa
  81. Rushdie, Salman: Midnight’s Children
  82. Rushdie, Salman: The Satanic Verses
  83. Sand, George: Consuelo
  84. Steinbeck, John: America and Americans
  85. Steinbeck, John: Cannery Row
  86. Steinbeck, John: East of Eden
  87. Steinbeck, John: Sweet Thursday
  88. Steinbeck, John: The Grapes of Wrath
  89. Steinbeck, John: The Pastures of Heaven
  90. Steinbeck, John: The Pearl
  91. Steinbeck, John: The Red Pony
  92. Steinbeck, John: The Winter of Our Discontent
  93. Steinbeck, John: Tortilla Flat
  94. Steinbeck, John: Travels with Charley in Search of America
  95. Stendhal: The Red and the Black
  96. Stendhal: The Charterhouse of Parma
  97. Stendhal: Armance
  98. Sterne, Laurence: Tristam Shandy
  99. Stoker, Bram: Dracula
  100. Tan, Amy: The Joy Luck Club
  101. Thackeray, William Makepeace: Vanity Fair
  102. Verne, Jules: Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
  103. Verne, Jules: Journey to the Center of the Earth
  104. Verne, Jules: From the Earth to the Moon
  105. Verne, Jules: Five Weeks in a Balloon
  106. Watson, Winifred: Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
  107. Waugh, Evelyn: Brideshead Revisited
  108. Wells, H.G.: The Food of the Gods
  109. Woolf, Virginia: Mrs. Dalloway
  110. Wright, Richard: Native Son
  111. Zola, Emile: Germinal

What’s next?

I’ll be working my way through this classic literature list and writting book reviews along the way. The list is pretty much identical to my old challenge, after all these are the books that I’ve wanted to read for the longest time. So, I’m really excited to give this another try!

Comments

3 responses to “Classic Literature Reading Challenge: Gearing up for 2026”

  1. Billy Owens Jr Avatar
    Billy Owens Jr

    WOW! I’ll be cheering you on! With all that’s happening here, my focus on reading is put off until next year 😄

    We’ve been packing things, saving up for a new, better apartment. No excuses, though; I should be saying “hi!” and “how are you all?” My apologies, good friend.

    1. Halyna Avatar

      Thank you, Billy! I’m only just now getting back my taste for reading. I recently joined my sister’s book club, so that’s really motivating. 🙂 Moving must be so exciting and stressful! It’s good to change things up though. xD

  2. […] моя сестра запустила Classic Literature Reading Challenge у своєму блозі, і я зрозуміла, що хочу […]

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