And how many books from this list have You read? Question of the day! Who dares to answer?
1. Mikhail Bulgakov — Master and Margarita
2. Antoine de Saint-exupéry — the Little Prince
3. Mikhail Bulgakov — heart of a Dog
4. Leo Tolstoy — War and peace
5. Fyodor Dostoevsky — Crime and punishment
6. Mikhail Lermontov — a Hero of our time
7. Ilya Ilf, Evgeny Petrov — the Twelve chairs
8. Alexander Pushkin — Eugene Onegin
9. Gabriel Garcia Marquez — one Hundred years of solitude
10. Anton Chekhov — Short Stories
11. Nikolai Gogol — Dead souls
12. Fyodor Dostoyevsky — The Idiot
13. Arthur Conan Doyle — Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes
14. Ilya Ilf, Evgeny Petrov — the Golden calf
15. Leo Tolstoy — Anna Karenina
16. Nikolai Gogol — Evenings on a farm near Dikanka
17. Daniel Defoe — Robinson Crusoe
18. Erich Maria Remarque — Three comrades
19. Margaret Mitchell — gone with the wind
20. O. Henry — Stories
21. Mark TWAIN — The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer
22. William Shakespeare — Romeo and Juliet
23. Alexandre Dumas — the Three Musketeers
24. Oscar Wilde — The Picture Of Dorian Gray
25. Ernest Hemingway — the old Man and the sea
26. Jerome D. Salinger — the catcher in the rye
27. Alan Alexander Milne — Winnie-The-Pooh
28. Ken Kesey — one Flew over the cuckoo's nest
29. Stendhal — Red and black
30. Erich Maria Remarque is On the Western front without changes
31. Alexandre Dumas — The Count Of Monte Cristo
32. William Shakespeare — Hamlet
33. Alexander Pushkin — the captain's daughter
34. Lewis Carroll — Alice in Wonderland
35. Miguel Cervantes — Don Quixote
36. John Tolkien — the Lord of the rings
37. Jane Austen — Pride and prejudice
38. Mark TWAIN — Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn
39. Ivan Goncharov — Oblomov
40. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe — Faust
41. Fyodor Dostoevsky — The Brothers Karamazov
42. Alexander green — Scarlet sails
43. Ivan Turgenev — Fathers and sons
44. Mikhail Bulgakov — the White guard
45. Richard Bach — a Seagull named Jonathan Livingston
46. Alexander Pushkin Is The Tales Of Belkin
47. Victor Hugo — Notre Dame De Paris
48. Arthur Conan Doyle — The Hound Of The Baskervilles
49. George Orwell — 1984
50. Jack London — Martin Eden
51. Jerome K. Jerome — Three men in a boat, not counting the dog
52. Boris Pasternak — Doctor Zhivago
53. Charlotte Bronte — Jane Eyre
54. Erich Maria Remarque — arc de Triomphe
55. Ray Bradbury 451 degrees Fahrenheit
56. Arkady and Boris Strugatsky — roadside picnic
57. Arkady and Boris Strugatsky — Monday begins on Saturday
58. Mikhail Sholokhov — And Quiet Flows The Don
59. Jules Verne — Children of captain Grant
60. Stanislaw LEM — Solaris
61. Alexander Griboedov — Woe from wit
62. Robert Louis Stevenson — treasure Island
63. Homer — The Odyssey
64. Jack London — White Fang
65. Arkady and Boris Strugatsky — Hard to be God
66. Jules Verne — the Mysterious island
67. Ivan Bunin — Dark avenues
68. Richard Bach — Illusions
69. Vladimir Nabokov — Lolita
70. Stendhal — Charterhouse of Parma
71. Homer — The Iliad
72. Francis Scott Fitzgerald — The Great Gatsby
73. Giovanni Boccaccio — The Decameron
74. Paulo Coelho — The Alchemist
75. Boris Akunin — The Adventures Of Erast Fandorin
76. Veniamin Kaverin — Two captains
77. Theodore Dreiser — an American tragedy
78. Emily Bronte — Wuthering heights
79. Harper Lee — to Kill a Mockingbird
80. Ernest Hemingway — farewell to arms
81. Umberto Eco — The Name Of The Rose
82. Jaroslav Hasek — the good soldier Svejk during the world war
83. Franz Kafka — The Process
84. Nikolai Gogol — Taras Bulba
85. Ethel Lilian Voynich — The Gadfly
86. Colleen McCullough — the thorn birds
87. Ernest Hemingway — a Holiday that is always with you
88. Kurt Vonnegut — Slaughterhouse-five or the children's Crusade
89. Richard Bach Is The Only
90. James \ Par \ Tab — Shogun
91. Andrei Platonov — The Foundation Pit
92. Leo Tolstoy — Hadji Murat
93. Victor Hugo — Les Miserables
94. Eleanor Porter — Pollyanna
95. George Sand — Consuelo
96. Richard Bach — Bridge across forever
97. Astrid Lindgren — Pippi Longstocking
98. Erich Maria Remarque — the Life of a loan
99. Voltaire — Candide, or optimism
100. James Joyce — Ulysses
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Lessons of the summerWhy Gerasim recessed Mumu
P. S. And remember, only by changing their consumption — together we change the world! ©
Source: matveychev-oleg.livejournal.com/3669235.html