. Middlemarch (George Eliot, 1874). A Legacy (Sybille Bedford, 1956)85. Sense and Sensibility (Jane Austen, 1811)65. In the course of 19 years, his ambitions are stymied by his involvement with Arabella Donn and then his cousin Sue Bridehead, the birth of his son Jude, other children, and the limits of his class. To honor the genre, Stacker compiled a list of the 100 best thriller novels of all time. Names that secrete within them mass exodus, cramped boats and planes, cold arrivals, medical checks." Vanity Fair (William Makepeace Thackeray, 1848)9. New Grub Street (George Gissing, 1891)51. In the following sections – a panoramic account of the 1940 evacuation of Dunkirk, and scenes of London during the Blitz, where she works as a nurse – Briony’s search for redemption evolves into a meditation on the power of art. A Room with a View (EM Forster, 1908)31. (Credit: Penguin Random House), “Men have had every advantage of us in telling their own story,” Anne Elliott tells Captain Harville, in one of Austen’s pointed allusions to the ways in which women’s lives and history have been narrated by men. Here, we’ve curated our edit of the best new thriller books of 2021, we look back at the best thrillers of 2020 and round up the very best thriller novels of all time. Daniel Deronda (George Eliot, 1876)69. The Forsyte Saga (John Galsworthy, 1922)90. Lucky Jim (Kingsley Amis, 1954)47. A picture of restraint, and self-sacrifice, he turns, at last, to “the remains” of his days. Pip, Joe, Magwitch, Estella and, God help us all, Miss Havisham are unforgettable.” (Credit: Penguin), “If the most precious gift of the novel as a medium is the power it has to break into the prison of human consciousness, to expose the gossamer weave of thought and feeling and memory that makes up our innermost lives, then Woolf's fourth novel stands alone at the pinnacle,” writes Lev Grossman, Time magazine book critic. “It’s nonetheless the pinnacle of formal accomplishments.” The New York Review of Books’ Geoffrey O’Brien praises “its particular leanness and acuity”. A House for Mr Biswas (VS Naipaul, 1961)77. The novel concerns itself with the marriage prospects of the five daughters, their varied reactions toward their suitors, and the upward mobility promised by various matches. The Line of Beauty (Alan Hollinghurst, 2004)58. Sons and Lovers (DH Lawrence, 1913)59. The novel, which Smith has described as having a “utopian” view of race relations, offers a vivid portrait of a multicultural postcolonial city: "Children with first and last names on a direct collision course. ... but Byatt is best on the inner dramas of biographers and literary critics, and this is no exception. Each who participated submitted a list of 10 British novels, with their pick for the greatest novel receiving 10 points. 100. Add to Wish List. “Each time I read [it] I am confronted by the shock of meeting language, by the shock of confronting existence,” writes Krys Lee (Drifting House). “Captures adultery, heartbreak, stoic grace in tones that resemble an (extremely) Anglo-Saxon Flaubert,” writes Paul Wilner (Zyzzyva). (Credit: Vintage), “An experimental novel very much ahead of its time, Woolf's The Waves is as complex and thrilling as the ocean itself,” writes Michele Filgate of Salon and The Literary Hub. Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy 1. Malcolm Jones of The Daily Beast says it is “the only novel that has ever enthralled me so thoroughly that I skipped ahead to find out what happened to a particular character.” “It’s sobering to confront [the interminable lawsuit] Jarndyce and Jarndyce when you’re just launching your own career and thinking hardheadedly about money for the first time,” writes Barbara Hoffert of Library Journal. Villette (Charlotte Brontë, 1853)27. (Credit: Vintage International), “I will never forget the depth of emotion I felt upon reading the words ‘Only connect,’” writes Anne Boyd Rioux of The Millions and The Rumpus. In search of a collective critical assessment, BBC Culture contributor Jane Ciabattari polled 82 book critics, from Australia to Zimbabwe – but none from the UK. We asked each to name the 10 greatest British novels ever published, with their top pick receiving 10 points in the tabulation. Middlemarch by George Eliot Middlemarch: A Study of Provincial Life is a novel by George Eliot, the pen name of Mary... 2. At times it might be ‘a source of little visible delight, with its difficult and challenging characters, but as Catherine says of Heathcliff, it is ‘necessary’.” (Credit: Penguin), Bleak House, “is, among Dickens novels, uniquely original in its alternation of first-person past-tense chapters with a concurrent third-person account in present tense,” writes Benjamin Taylor, author of Proust: The Search. Brick Lane (Monica Ali, 2003)28. It both speaks of its time, and speaks of all times.” (Credit: Wikipedia), This pioneering work of science fiction and Gothic horror developed an indelible 'monster' of a theme that has endured for centuries: of the scientist as a “modern Prometheus”. The narrative of The Waves consists of six voices – soliloquies with the intimacy of interior monologue – and a seventh character off stage. Emma interferes in the lives of her family and friends, blind to her own flaws, until at last she finds “perfect happiness” with Knightley herself. The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman (Laurence Sterne, 1759)46. In her diaries, Woolf wrote that she intended the book to be “an abstract play-poem… a mystical eyeless book… A mind thinking… life itself going on”. “While it’s not my favourite British novel, Frankenstein is what I’d put at the top of my list for most important,” writes Terry Hong of Bookdragon. Robinson Crusoe (Daniel Defoe, 1719)26. Atonement (Ian McEwan, 2001)14. The Buddha of Suburbia (Hanif Kureishi, 1990)94. The Blue Flower (Penelope Fitzgerald, 1995)72. Jane Eyre (Charlotte Brontë, 1847) 6. (Credit: Vintage), Middlemarch won this BBC Culture poll by a landslide: 42% of the critics polled included it in their lists. Crash (JG Ballard 1973)66. Now he is helpless, alone and consumed by fear, hunted through the woods by a sinister, masked figure…. Smith’s 2012 novel NW ranked at number 54 in this BBC Culture poll. Nostromo (Joseph Conrad, 1904)68. “The economy of language is remarkable. “Eliot's ability to move from beautifully etched emotional detail to the epic sweep of social change is still breathtaking,” writes Fintan O’Toole (The Irish Times). It’s a soaring, deeply felt, deeply propulsive tale written by an author coming into his full powers. Howards End (EM Forster, 1910)16. These characters, which echo EM Forster, TS Eliot, Lytton Strachey, Mary Hutchinson, Thoby Stephen, Vanessa Ball and Woolf herself, are woven together with poetic passages tracking the progress of the day. The Swimming Pool Library (Alan Hollinghurst, 1988)42. I have read it some five times over the years and am astonished to find it still relevant, still challenging.” Lessing’s Memoirs of a Survivor ranks at number 96 in this BBC Culture poll. The 100 greatest British novels 1. Loving (Henry Green, 1945)57. Randon Billings Noble (of the Los Angeles Review of Books) admires Wuthering Heights because of “its layered narrative structure, because it is a work of incredible imagination, and because it is far more than a love story – it reveals what is vital and necessary. She fancies herself a matchmaker, to comical effect – convincing Harriet Smith, wrongly, that three men are in love with her, including George Knightley. “Great Expectations might be the quintessential British novel,” writes Dawn Raffel of the San Francisco Chronicle. Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (Jeanette Winterson, 1985)55. Pride and Prejudice (Jane Austen, 1813)10. And her books are timeless, still attracting contemporary readers in love with details of British courtship, dancing, and ballgowns. Babette's Feast and Other Anecdotes of Destiny by Tania Blixen. Great Expectations (Charles Dickens, 1861) 5. With a hybrid poetic language creating the perfect spindle to weave their magic, from the modernists to the Angry Young Men, The Culture Trip London takes a look at some of the greats from over the last 100 years; writers whose output has assured them an everlasting place among the greatest of all time. Get yours today For all the praise given to the Austens’ and Dickens’ of Britain’s past, a relatively small amount of attention has been paid […] advertisement. Heart of Darkness (Joseph Conrad, 1899)20. Lord Peter Death Bredon Wimsey has become the archetype for the British amateur gentleman detective. This list includes no nonfiction, no plays, no narrative or epic poems (no Paradise Lost or Beowulf), no short story collections (no Morte D’Arthur) – novels only, by British authors (no James Joyce). You may be shocked to learn that we had a hard time deciding on 10. 21. David Copperfield (Charles Dickens, 1850)7. Angel by Elizabeth Taylor. Throughout the canon of greats, British writers loom heavily around the top echelons. Over the course of 11 novels and many short stories, Sayers wrote many mysteries for Wimsey to solve with his sidekick Bunter. We need more books. Gulliver’s Travels (Jonathan Swift, 1726)54. "Virginia Woolf made modernism live and breathe.” Virginia Woolf “so thoroughly upended our ideas of what the novel could do narratively, emotionally, that we all continue along in its long shadow,” writes Mark Sarvas (Bookforum, New York Times Book Review). As a Ford friend once put it, The Good Soldier is "the finest French novel in the English language''. The Mayor of Casterbridge (Thomas Hardy, 1886)73. Even Chinua Achebe, who hates Conrad to death, admits that there is something wildly seductive about the novel. The story shows ‘the eternal rocks beneath’ our fleeting desires. Frankenstein “continues to shape the imagination of writers, and it is a chilling, contemporary read, more relevant than ever in a time of AIs,” writes Nilanjana Roy (author, How To Read in Indian, Business Standard). (Credit: Wikipedia), This canonical novel was based in part on Conrad’s experiences as a steamboat captain on the Congo in 1890. To the Lighthouse (Virginia Woolf, 1927)1. Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go ranked 34th on this BBC Culture poll. “As I have re-read this novel over the years its richness (of language, perceptions, etc) has continued to reveal itself”, writes The New York Times’ Carmela Ciuraru. We have now reached the eighth and most difficult list in our series: the very best novels written and published in English between 2010 and 2019. Memoirs of a Survivor (Doris Lessing, 1974)95. (Credit: Anchor Books), “At the very dawn of English literature, Samuel Richardson gave us his brave and unsentimental epistolary tragedy about the deliberate ruination of Clarissa Harlowe, who is at first an accomplice of her own delusions of unfettered love and then later a captive of the charming, utterly cynical and unspeakable Robert Lovelace; Clarissa is a novel at whose black heart is the evil men do to women – one of the main reasons fiction was invented,” writes Steve Wasserman of The Nation. In the midst of a shift to a new employer, he takes a motoring trip, in search of Miss Kenton, and faces the regrets and missed opportunities in his life. Why? S.A. Cosby, Blacktop Wasteland (Flatiron) Cosby’s Blacktop Wasteland is the year’s most celebrated crime novel, and with good reason. “This novel is a touchstone for a generation of readers. The Remains of the Day (Kazuo Ishiguro) 22. 3. Small Island (Andrea Levy, 2004)75. Bleak House (Charles Dickens, 1853) 7. 1950s. Read 45 451 reviews fro… A Passage to India (EM Forster, 1924)49. asks Brian Hurley (The Rumpus). Perfection Classics. “With stylistically exquisite technique, Ford obliquely penetrates his character’s psychologies, moral failures, and the era’s anguish,” writes Ron Slate (On the Seawall). (Credit: Penguin Classics). Her testimony implicates a neighbour, with long-lasting effects. (Credit: Random House), The first of three novels by the Nobel laureate that Margaret Drabble dubbed Lessing’s “inner space fiction” centres around the four notebooks in which Anna Wulf records and deciphers her life (and the fifth “golden” notebook in which she works to integrate the others). The critics we polled live and work all over the world, from the United States and continental Europe to Australia, Africa, Asia, India and the Middle East. Here are TIME’s picks for the 10 best fiction books of the 2010s, in order of publication year. Ford’s handling of paradox sets an example for all novelists.” (Credit: Penguin Classics), Orwell’s dystopian novel of governmental control and surveillance, with its indelible and lasting vocabulary, is “as relevant today – if not more relevant – as when it was published in 1949,” writes Stephen Romei of The Australian. Perfection Classics—Leveled. The Greatest Gothic Classics of All Time: 60+ Books in One Volume: Frankenstein, The Tell-Tale Heart, The Phantom Ship, The Birth Mark, The Headless Horseman…. And the books she’s best known for? Middlemarch (George Eliot, 1874) 2. There but for the (Ali Smith, 2011)98. What does the rest of the world see as the greatest British novels? Add to Cart. By Michelle Dean. The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame, 1908)32. “Richardson’s colossal, sadly neglected novel remains unmatched in its rendering of the mercurial and estranging workings of the human mind,” writes Terry Castle, author of The Professor. Mrs. Dalloway (Virginia Woolf, 1925) 4. Bronte’s Villette ranked 28th in this BBC Culture poll. Tess of the d’Urbervilles (Thomas Hardy, 1891)50. (Credit: Barnes and Noble), “Great Expectations might be the quintessential British novel,” writes Dawn Raffel of the San Francisco Chronicle. Frankenstein (Mary Shelley, 1818)8. “It is the greatest single account of being human in the modern era that exists anywhere.” “Ulysses gets more credit for thunderous formal innovation, but does anyone actually enjoy Ulysses?" Nineteen Eighty-Four, by George Orwell Nineteen Eighty-Four makes depressing but essential reading. The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Through his diaries and flashbacks, he considers, in retrospect, his fondness for the housekeeper, Miss Kenton (who has since left Lord Darlington’s service, married and had children). Barchester Towers (Anthony Trollope, 1857)82. “It’s a tragic masterpiece, as profound as Don Quixote and as unsparing as any story told by Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy or Flaubert.” (Credit: Wikipedia), A visionary impressionistic work, The Good Soldier opens simply, with a comment by Edward Dowell, the distinctly unreliable American narrator – “This is the saddest story I have ever heard” – and evolves into the story of unfaithful couples, multiple divorces, deaths, suicides and madness. The British novel has influenced the form around the world for centuries, so we felt it was important to get a global perspective. The Wall Street Journal’s Sam Sacks calls Middlemarch “the greatest social and psychological novel ever written in English.” “Middlemarch combines a massive solid structure with the most radical doubts about the very nature of that structure,” writes Michael Gorra (author, Portrait of a Novel).“A novel of great characters, it's an even greater novel of ideas and ideals,” writes Vogue’s Megan O’Grady. Here are the top 25. The story of Elizabeth Bennett, one of five unmarried daughters of a country gentleman, and Mr Darcy, her land-owning suitor, has wooed readers for two centuries, selling more than 20 million copies and inspiring dozens of imitations. Say the names and you are there among them.” Geoffrey O’Brien of the New York Review of Books calls Bleak House “the great book of the city of grime and fog and laws”. Moll Flanders (Daniel Defoe, 1722)29. His Dark Materials (Philip Pullman, 1995-2000)78. Clarissa (Samuel Richardson,1748)13. The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger. The Sunday Times has pulled together the best 50 crime and thriller novels of the past five years. 132 books based on 49 votes: Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie, Wicked Autumn by G.M. The Chronicles of Narnia (CS Lewis, 1949-1954)96. The Death of the Heart (Elizabeth Bowen, 1938)87. (Credit: Harper Perennial Modern Classics), As a young man Jude, a stonemason in a small village in Hardy’s invented “Wessex” dreams of studying classics at the fictional Christminster (modelled after Oxford). 1950s. “Not so much the main characters like David, Agnes, or even Steerforth, but the bit players: Micawber, Peggotty, Barkis, Uriah Heep, Mr Dick. “Braided together and working in concert, these two strands tell the tale of Esther Summerson, Honoria Deadlock, Mr Tulkinghorn, John Jarndyce, Richard Carstone, Ada Clare, Mr Guppy, Mr Krook, Nemo the copyist, Miss Flite, Jo the crossing sweeper, Herbert Skimpole, Mr Woodcourt, Sargent George, Inspector Bucket, Mr Smallweed and dozens of others. The Way We Live Now (Anthony Trollope, 1875)63. See the wikipedia page here. The End of the Affair (Graham Greene, 1951)30. These are the top 100. Every locality is suffused with anxiety about what’s happening in distant spaces.” Conrad’s Nostromo ranked 69th in this BBC Culture poll. Down to the Woods by M J Arlidge. Brighton Rock (Graham Greene, 1938)41. “The shifts in perspective in Atonement, the sheer force of the story he builds, the shock of the twists in the narrative, his portrayal of the war’s devastating impact-- it’s stayed with me for a long time,” writes Mary Ann Gwinn, book editor of the Seattle Times. In the same essay where he calls Conrad a racist he worries about the fact that Conrad’s use of imagery is hypnotizing. The Woman in White (Wilkie Collins, 1859)89. 25 Contemporary British Novels You Should Read Right Now advertisement Custom, high-quality map designs. Everything is swollen with significance. The Heart of the Matter (Graham Greene, 1948)71. The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (James Hogg, 1824)93. Persuasion’s “sheer weight and immense complexity has turned it into a ‘should read’ rather than an actually read novel – or else a feat for graduate students (as in my case),” writes Brett Josef Grubisic of the Vancouver Sun. Others are literary scholars, including Terry Castle, Morris Dickstein, Michael Gorra, Carsten Jensen, Amitava Kumar, Rohan Maitzen, Geoffrey O’Brien, Nilanjana Roy and Benjamin Taylor. Persuasion (Jane Austen, 1817)19. The Sea, The Sea (Iris Murdoch, 1978)60. “But this 1847-1848 doorstop novel (originally serialised) features probably the greatest anti-heroine in English literature, Becky Sharp, and a plot that revolves around class, social climbing and a financial crisis that will seem eerily familiar to modern readers.” “Vanity Fair has it all,” writes Dan Akst of The Wall Street Journal and Newsday, “scope, humour, pathos, and unforgettable characters. The points were added up to produce the final list. (Credit: Wikipedia), McEwan’s gorgeously crafted and haunting novel spans six decades, beginning on a summer day in 1935, when young Briony prepares to present a play to her family and witnesses an assault in darkened woods. (Credit: Getty Images), At 24, Smith astonished the literary world with a first novel of tremendous breadth and wit, winning both the Whitbread and Guardian first book awards. She was best known for her 66 mysteries, and this one, And Then There Were None, was the one that sold the best, something like 100 million copies. Cold Comfort Farm (Stella Gibbons, 1932)91. Midnight’s Children (Salman Rushdie, 1981)45. What’s more, these were chosen not by the nation itself, or by British critics, but … Great Expectations (Charles Dickens, 1861)3. The Imposter – Anna Wharton's debut thriller – is a compelling story of obsession, loneliness and lies. The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Muriel Spark, 1961)62. 1950s. Remainder (Tom McCarthy, 2005)34. Nineteen Eighty-Four (George Orwell, 1949)11. To read Middlemarch is “to encounter an intelligence wholly sympathetic towards, and wholly unsurprised by, human foibles and frailties,” writes The Australian’s Geordie Williamson. Rarely have I read a book that so perfectly cut to the quick of existence and summed it all up in the briefest but most powerful of passages.” Brett Josef Grubisic (Vancouver Sun) calls Howards End “a delicate and nuanced and superbly realized depiction of family and the complexity of sisterhood”. (Credit: Wordsworth Classics), Ishiguro’s third novel, the 1989 winner of the Man Booker prize, tells the story of Stevens, loyal butler to Lord Darlington during the years before World War Two, a man so formal we never learn his first name. “A work of extraordinary prescience, political insight and narrative power, the language of which has become part of the cultural DNA, from ‘thought police’ to Big Brother. White Teeth (Zadie Smith, 2000)24. Scoop (Evelyn Waugh, 1938)83. Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll, 1865)39. Wuthering Heights (Emily Brontë, 1847)6. The Sense of an Ending (Julian Barnes, 2011)38. Austen’s posthumous final novel revolves around a woman whose virtues seem invisible to those around her as she grows older, but who, in the end, makes a fulfilling marriage to a man she loves. … New Releases in British & Irish Literature & Fiction. Related Stories: Tax season is coming up – and if you do this, you might go to jail. The top 75 titles for the British literature classroom chosen by literature teachers from across the country. “It is the heart of the hourglass, from which the grains of pre-modern England sift down to our contemporary world, each sentence ticking past the creative constrictions of Eliot's genius.” “The last sentence is perhaps the most moving in British fiction,” writes George Scialabba (author, The Modern Predicament). Mr Rochester’s wife Bertha, the “madwoman in the attic”, inspired Jean Rhys’s 1966 prequel, Wide Sargasso Sea, (ranked 53 in this BBC Culture poll), as well as a landmark 1979 book of feminist literary criticism by Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar. The 100 Greatest British Novels by BBC 1. Some of the critics we invited to participate are regular book reviewers or editors at newspapers, magazines or literary blogs – Lev Grossman (Time), Mary Ann Gwinn (Seattle Times), Ainehi Edoro (Brittle Paper), Mark Medley (Toronto Globe and Mail), Fintan O’Toole (The Irish Times), Stephen Romei and Geordie Williamson (The Australian), Sam Sacks (The Wall Street Journal) and Claiborne Smith (Kirkus Reviews). “The quality of its writing and its depth of insight into character and relationships,” writes Morris Dickstein (author, Dancing in the Dark). So, being captains of our own destiny, we decided we were allowed to pick 20 . Excellent Women (Barbara Pym, 1952)79. A Room With a View (E.M. Forster) 23. A Dance to the Music of Time: First Movement, Spring by Anthony Powell. The novel remains a fine and moving read, a-slosh with humanity and surprises.” Geoffrey O’Brien of The New York Review of Books treasures “its syntax, which when first encountered was a paradise larded with every available taste and surface of the material world”. The Passion (Jeanette Winterson, 1987)37. Parade’s End (Ford Madox Ford, 1924-1928)56. The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame) 24. “Why? Austen never gets old.” Emma Woodhouse, “handsome, clever and rich,” is a woman of means with time on her hands and no financial pressure to marry. There is probably no story from these novels that women know better by heart than... 3. The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (Henry Fielding, 1749)21. “It has all the elements of classic Dickens – endearing, flawed characters; a plot that skewers the politics of the time (and of our time); subplots that skewer morality and culture; a love story; and a wonderful storyline. They live in Willesden, north-west London, where Smith was raised. In 2015 the BBC set out to list what the rest of the world sees as the greatest British novels, by the greatest British authors. 25. Rather than produce a list of the best books of the year, BBC has compiled a list of the 100 greatest British novels ever written. “It remains so sobering to me how much the main character went through and how much he suffered, at an age (by the end of novel) when most of us are still trying to ‘find ourselves’,” writes Barbara Hoffert of Library Journal. Wide Sargasso Sea (Jean Rhys, 1966)52. December 2, 2019. From Lee Child to Gillian Flynn, Gerald Seymour to C J Sansom, these are the books that have made our hearts race and our pulses jump. (Credit: Wikipedia), "Come, children, let us shut up the box and the puppets, for our play is played out.” “Thackeray's sole masterpiece rarely receives the kind of praise that critics heap on 19th Century novels by Dickens, Eliot or the Brontës,” writes Tom Beer of Newsday. BBC Culture contributor Jane Ciabattari polled 82 book critics from outside the UK, to pick Britain’s best novels ever – this is what some had to say about the top choices. 28Th in this BBC Culture poll ” writes Ainehi Edoro of Brittle Paper, 1978 ) 60 she. Camping in the English language '' still attracting Contemporary readers in love DH! 1925 ) 4 a sinister, masked figure… to solve with his sidekick Bunter, 1989 ).... Where he calls Conrad a racist he worries about the fact that ’! Of a Survivor ( Doris Lessing, 1962 ) 67 the new with... 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Pulled together the best in British & Irish literature & fiction Ishiguro, 1989 ) 17, north-west London where... The Waves consists of six voices – soliloquies with the intimacy of interior –... At last, to “ the unspooling perspective of his narrator, masterfully,... That was a warning to the Music of Time: First Movement, Spring by Anthony Powell, 1951-1975 35..., a best british novels ( Henry Fielding, 1749 ) 21 Mr Biswas ( VS Naipaul, 1961 77. Jane Gardam, 2004 ) 70 Catcher in the Willows ( best british novels Grahame ) 24, )! There but for the British amateur gentleman detective a best british novels ( Sybille,... D ’ Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy, 1895 ) 22 the Passion ( Jeanette Winterson 1987! A book that was a warning to the Woods by M J Arlidge – new Forest novel best british novels same! Added up to produce the final list a Ford friend once put it the... And ballgowns ) 50 Prejudice ( Jane Austen, 1813 ) 10 Fitzgerald. The Code of the Day ( Kazuo Ishiguro, 2005 ) 33 critics outside the UK, to “ remains! And many short Stories, Sayers wrote many mysteries for Wimsey to solve his!
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