- ~ Betrayal – Harold Pinter
~ The Quiet American – Graham Greene
~ The BFG – Roald Dahl
~ A Clockwork Orange – Anthony Burgess
~ Anthills of the Savannah – Chinua Achebe
~ The Invention of Love – Tom Stoppard
~ Black Dogs – Ian McEwan
~ Night Train – Martin Amis
~ Amadeus – Peter Shaffer
~ Royal Hunt of the Sun – Peter Shaffer
~ Mrs. Dalloway – Virginia Woolf
~ Morality Play – Barry Unsworth
~ A Study in Scarlet – Arthur Conan Doyle
~ Loved One – Evelyn Waugh
~ Treasure Island – Robert Louis Stevenson
~ The Collected Works of Billy the Kid – Michael Ondaatje
~ July’s People – Nadine Gordimer
~ The Tenth Man – Graham Greene
~ Orient Express – Graham Greene
~ A Man for All Seasons – Robert Bolt
~ Gertrude and Claudius – John Updike
~ Adventures of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass – Lewis Carroll
~ My Dog Tulip – J. R. Ackerley
~ The Path to Rome – Hilaire Belloc
~ The Picture of Dorian Gray – Oscar Wilde
~ Theatre – W. Somerset Maugham
~ Down and Out in Paris and London – George Orwell
~ Or any other British Literature (Besides like harry potter) Must be approved by my teacher.
Currently, I'm looking into The BFG, since Roald Dahl is a children's writer, and for me, it wouldn't be much of a hassle to read. (Matilda was one of my favorite books as a child) A Clockwork Orange also seems interesting, as the movie adaptation is well-liked by many critics, and The Picture of Dorian Gray for it's moral and philosophical implications. Plus I know a bit about the book already, and it does pique my interest, though it certainly seems the most complicated to read since it's older than the other two.
Has anybody else read any of these? And if so, which ones would you recommend?