Entertainment/Literature - Fiction

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and Sixpence – William Somerset Maugham. Based on the life of Gauguin

Ashenden – William Somerset Maugham

The Painted Veil – William Somerset Maugham

Rain – Somerset Maugham

Guy de Maupassant is considered one of the fathers of the modern short story and one of the form's finest exponents. Many of the stories are set during the Franco-Prussian War of the 1870s

The Necklace, Boule de Suif – Guy de Maupassant

Tales of the City – series of novels based in San Francisco by Armistead Maupin

Manderley burns down in Rebecca, by Daphne Du Maurier (1907 – 1989)

Jamaica Inn, My Cousin Rachel, Frenchman’s Creek – Daphne Du Maurier

Jamaica Inn tells the story of 20 year-old Mary Yellan, who was brought up on a farm in Helford but has to go and live with her Aunt Patience after her mother dies. Patience's husband, Joss Merlyn, a great big bully who is almost seven feet tall, is the keeper of Jamaica Inn

George Du Maurier – grandfather of Daphne Du Maurier

Svengali – hypnotic main character in George Du Maurier’s Trilby

Ring of Bright WaterGavin Maxwell

Vladimir Mayakovsky was a Russian and Soviet poet and playwright, among the foremost representatives of early-20th century Russian Futurism

Val McDermid is a Scottish crime writer, best known for a series of suspense novels starring her most famous creation, Dr. Tony Hill

Captain Ahab killed Moby Dick, in the book by Herman Melville

Ishmael – only survivor in Moby Dick

Moby Dick – based on The Essex, which was sunk by a sperm whale

Peaquod sailed from Nantucket, in Moby Dick

Moby Dick was a sperm whale

Billy Budd, Foretopman – Herman Melville

Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life – first novel by Herman Melville

Modern Love – collection of sonnets by George Meredith

The Lark Ascending – poem by George Meredith

Twilight novels of Stephanie MeyerTwilight, New Moon, Eclipse and Breaking Dawn. Charts a period in the life of Isabella ‘Bella’ Swan, a teenage girl who moves to Forks, Washington, and falls in love with a 104-year-old vampire named Edward Cullen

Fugitive PiecesAnne Michaels. Second winner of the Orange Prize (1997)

Women Beware Women, A Chaste Maid in CheapsideThomas Middleton

The Changeling is a Jacobean tragedy written by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley

Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of CapricornHenry Miller

The Rosy Crucifixion trilogy – Henry Miller. Consists of Sexus, Plexus, and Nexus

Tara estate – home of Scarlett O’Hara in Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

Samson AgonistesJohn Milton (1608 – 1674)

“Every cloud has a silver lining” – from John Milton’s Comus (A Mask Presented at Ludlow Castle, 1634)

Paradise Lost – written by Milton in 1667

“All hell broke loose” – from Paradise Lost. Contains a reference to ‘His dark materials’, which was an inspiration for Philip Pullman

Paradise Lost ends with the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden

Paradise Regained – John Milton

Lycidas – John Milton. Dedicated to the memory of Edward King

Areopagitica – treatise condemning censorship, John Milton

On His Blindness – sonnet by John Milton. First line – “When I consider how my light is spent”. Last line – “They also serve who only stand and wait”

Cloud AtlasDavid Mitchell

The American Way of DeathJessica Mitford

Love in a Cold ClimateNancy Mitford

The Pursuit of Love – Nancy Mitford

Anne of Green GablesLucy Maud Montgomery. Village of Avonlea, on Prince Edward Island. Features Anne Shirley, a young orphan

Anne of Avonlea – sequel to Anne of Green Gables

HMS Compass Rose – ship in The Cruel Sea, by Nicholas Montserrat

Elric of Melnibone is a character created by Michael Moorcock, and the antihero of a series of sword and sorcery stories centering in an alternate Earth

The Eternal Champion is a fictional creation of the author Michael Moorcock and is a recurrent feature in many of his novels

Alan Moore is an English writer most famous for his influential work in comics, including the acclaimed graphic novels Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell. He has also written a novel, Voice of the Fire

Clement Clarke Moore is best known as the credited author of A Visit from St. Nicholas (more commonly known today as Twas the Night before Christmas)

How to Build a GirlCaitlin Moran. Columnist at The Times

UtopiaThomas More (1516). Amorat (capital city), Aneda (river)

The Reluctant Vampire, The Vampire’s RevengeEric Morecambe

News from NowhereWilliam Morris

The Bluest Eye, Beloved, Song of SolomonToni Morrison

Rumpole books – John Mortimer

The Pumpkin EaterPenelope Mortimer

Labyrinth, Sepulchre, The Winter GhostsKate Mosse

Public PropertyAndrew Motion

On the Record – Andrew Motion’s poem for Prince William’s 21st birthday

The Pleasure Steamers – Andrew Motion

The Land of Green PlumsHerta Muller

A Very British Coup is a 1982 novel by British politician Chris Mullin

Dear Life, Dance of the Happy Shades – Alice Munro

The Bell, The Severed Head, Under the NetIris Murdoch

The Book and the Brotherhood – Iris Murdoch

The Sea, the Sea is the 19th novel by Iris Murdoch. It won the Booker Prize in 1978

Iris Murdoch has been shortlisted for Booker Prize six times

Oxford Book of Humorous ProseFrank Muir

Norwegian Wood, Kafka on the Shore, 1Q84Haruki Murakami

Hear the Wind Sing – first Murakami novel

The Tale of Gengi – a classic work of Japanese literature attributed to the Japanese noblewoman Murasaki Shikibu in the early eleventh century. It is sometimes called the world's first novel

Vladimir Nabokov (1899 – 1977) wrote his first nine novels were in Russian. He then rose to international prominence as a writer of English prose. Lolita (1955) is his most famous novel. Died in Montreux, Switzerland

Signs and Symbols, Pale Fire – Vladimir Nabokov

“Light of my life, fire of my loins” – from Lolita. One of the novel's characters, ‘Vivian Darkbloom’, is an anagram of the author's name. Literature professor Humbert Humbert is obsessed with the 12-year-old Dolores Haze

The Original of Laura – unfinished novel by Nabokov

A Bend in the RiverVS Naipaul. Set in a city that resembled Stanleyville

A House for Mr Biswas – VS Naipaul

Among the Believers – travelogue by VS Naipaul

The Unfortunate TravellerThomas Nashe

Suite FrancaiseIrene Nemirovsky. Two novellas portraying life in France between June 1940 and July 1941, the period during which the Nazis occupied Paris. Nemirovsky died in Auschwitz in 1942

Pablo Neruda (1904 – 1973) was the pen name of the Chilean writer and politician Neftalí Ricardo Reyes Basoalto. Neruda was accomplished in a variety of styles ranging from erotically charged love poems like his collection Twenty Poems of Love and a Song of Despair, surrealist poems, historical epics, and overtly political manifestos

Harry Hole is the main character in a series of crime novels written by Jo Nesbo. The series follows Harry Hole, a tough detective who struggles with alcoholism and works on solving crimes on the streets of Oslo

Play up! Play up! And play the game! – poem by Henry Newbolt

PH Newby was the first winner of the Booker Prize in 1969, for his novel Something to Answer For

The LodgerCharles Nicholl. About Shakespeare appearing as a witness in a court of law

Starter for Ten, One Day – novels by David Nicholls

A Day in the Life of Joe EggPeter Nichols

The Time Traveler’s WifeAudrey Niffenegger

Her Fearful Symmetry – Audrey Niffenegger

Delta of Venus, Little BirdsAnias Nin

Ringwall science fiction novels – Larry Niven

The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, The Fall and Rise of Gordon CoppingerDavid Nobbs

The Pope’s Rhinoceros – novel by Lawrence Norfolk

The HighwaymanAlfred Noyes

The Country Girls TrilogyEdna O’Brien

At Swim-Two-Birds, The Third PolicemanFlann O’Brien

Master and Commander – based on books by Patrick O’Brien

My Friend Flicka is a 1941 novel by Mary O'Hara, about Ken McLaughlin, the son of a Wyoming rancher, and his horse Flicka

Scott Pilgrim is a graphic novel series by Bryan Lee O'Malley

NetherlandJoseph O’Neill

The Wild GeeseMori Ogai

The Famished RoadBen Okri. Won the 1991 Booker Prize

The Scarlet Pimpernel – written by Baroness Orczy

The Scalet Pimpernel, Book 2: Mademoiselle Guillotine

The Scalet Pimpernel, Book 3: The Kidnapped King

The Scarlet Pimpernel is set in 1792, during the early stages of the French Revolution

Percy Blakeney was the leader of the league of the Scarlet Pimpernel

George Orwell (1903 – 1950) was born in India. He served as a policeman in Burma, and later served in the Home Guard. Wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four on Jura. Died of TB

Keep the Aspidestra Flying – George Orwell

Down and Out in Paris and London – Orwell’s first book

The Road to Wigan Pier – about coal miners

Homage to Catalonia – George Orwell. Based on his visit to Spain in 1936 to train anti-fascist troops

Animal Farm – George Orwell. Satire on Bolshevik revolution in Russia

Boxer was the carthorse.Together with the pig Napoleon, Snowball leads the animals' revolt against the human farmer, but is driven away from the farm (a comparison to Trotsky) by his former comrade Napoleon (like Stalin) in the later part of the story

Frederick owns Pinchfield Farm in Animal Farm. Supposedly based on Hitler

‘But already it was impossible to say which was which’ – last line of Animal Farm

Burmese Days – novel by George Orwell

Coming Up For Air – George Orwell, features insurance salesman George Bowling

The Clergyman’s Daughter – George Orwell

George Orwell wrote about his ‘ideal pub’, The Moon under Water, in the Evening Standard

The Lion and the Unicorn: Socialism and the English Genius is an essay by George Orwell expressing his opinions on the situation in wartime Britain

Nineteen Eighty-Four – published in 1949

Last Man in Europe – original title of Nineteen Eighty-Four

Ossian is the narrator and supposed author of a cycle of poems which the Scottish poet James Macpherson claimed to have translated from ancient sources in the Scots Gaelic Wilfred Owen was born in Oswestry. Killed in action in France one week before the signing of the armistice in 1918

The Send Off – Wilfred Owen

Greater Love – Wilfred Owen

Anthem for Doomed Youth – Wilfred Owen

Dulce et Decorem Est – known as ‘the old lie’. Wilfred Owen

Fight ClubChuck Palahniuk

Hemingway’s Chair – first novel by Michael Palin

The Museum of InnocenceOrhan Pamuk

Orhan Pamuk novels include The White Castle, The Black Book, The New Life, My Name Is Red and Snow

Christopher Paolini is the author of the Inheritance Cycle, which consists of the books Eragon, Eldest, Brisingr, and Inheritance. The dragon in Eragon is called Saphira

The protagonist of all but two of Sara Paretsky's novels is V.I. Warshawski, a female private investigator

Spencer crime novels written by Robert Parker

Man and BoyTony Parsons

Doctor ZhivagoBoris Pasternak. Zhivago's great love is Lara

Along Came a Spider – first novel by James Patterson

Series featuring Alex Cross, an African-American forensic psychologist – James Patterson

Cry The Beloved CountryAlan Paton. About South Africa

GB84, The Damned Utd – novels by David Peace

The Red-Riding Quartet by David Peace comprises the novels Nineteen Seventy-Four, Nineteen Seventy-Seven, Nineteen Eighty and Nineteen Eighty-Three. The books deal with police corruption, and are set against a backdrop of the Yorkshire Ripper murders

Nightmare Abbey – novel by Thomas Love Peacock

Headlong Hall – first novel by Thomas Love Peacock

Gormenghast – trilogy by Mervyn Peake. The series consists of three novels, Titus Groan (1946), Gormenghast (1950), and Titus Alone (1959)

The Tenderness of WolvesStef Penney

Amelia Peabody series is a series of mystery novels written by Elizabeth Peters featuring Egyptologist Amelia Peabody Emerson, for whom the series is named

A Morbid Taste for Bones – first novel to feature Brother Cadfael, by Ellis Peters (real name Edith Pargeter). Cadfael is a Benedictine monk at Shrewsbury Abbey

Flambards is a novel by K. M. Peyton. The book and its three sequels are set just before, during, and after World War I. The first three books were made into a television series, Flambards in 1979, starring Christine McKenna as Christina Parsons

The Final Passage, Crossing the RiverCaryl Phillips, born in St. Kitts

Songs of the Humpback Whale – first novel by Jodi Picoult

House Rules – Jodi Picoult

Vernon God Little, Lights Out in WonderlandD.B.C. Pierre

The Shell Seekers, SeptemberRosamunde Pilcher

Trelawny of the WellsArthur Wing Pinero. Rose Trelawny is an actress in a theatrical troupe known as the ‘Wells’

Six Characters in Search of an Author, The Late Mattia PascalPirandello (1867–1936)

The Bell Jar, ArielSylvia Plath

The Bell Jar was published under the name of Victoria Lucas

First line of The Bell Jar “It was a queer, sultry summer, the summer they electrocuted the Rosenbergs, and I didn’t know what I was doing in New York”

The Great Carbuncle, Wuthering Heights – Sylvia Plath

Edgar Allen Poe (1809 – 1849) was expelled from West Point in 1831 for neglect of duty

The Tell-Tale Heart – Edgar Allen Poe

The Raven, The Masque of the Red Death – Edgar Allen Poe

The Premature Burial – Edgar Allen Poe

C. Auguste Dupin is a fictional detective created by Edgar Allan Poe. Dupin made his first appearance in Poe's The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841), widely considered the first detective fiction story

The Vampyre is a short story or novella written in 1819 by John William Polidori which is a progenitor of the romantic vampire genre of fantasy fiction

The Essay on Man – poem by Alexander Pope (1688 – 1744)

An Essay on Criticism – Pope

The Rape of the Lock is a mock-heroic poem written by Alexander Pope, first published anonymously in Lintot's Miscellany in 1712 in two cantos

Ramage novels – Dudley Pope

True Grit – novel by Charles Portis

Ezra Pound was the driving force behind several Modernist movements, notably Imagism and Vorticism. The Cantos by Ezra Pound is a long, incomplete poem in 120 sections, each of which is a canto. The section he wrote at the end of World War II has become known as The Pisan Cantos

A Dance to the Music of Time is a twelve-volume cycle of novels by Anthony Powell, inspired by the painting of the same name by Nicolas Poussin. One of the longest works of fiction in literature, it was published between 1951 and 1975. The sequence is narrated by Nick Jenkins in the form of his reminiscences

First novel – A Question of Upbringing

Twelfth and final novel – Hearing Secret Harmonies

The Fisher King – Anthony Powell

Terry Pratchett Discworld novels are set in the city of Ankh-Morpork

The Discworld itself is described as a large disc resting on the backs of four giant elephants, all supported by the giant turtle Great A'Tuin as it swims its way through space

Making Money – Terry Pratchett

The Carpet People – first novel

The Colour of Magic – first Discworld novel

Unseen University (UU) is a school of wizardry in Ankh-Morpork

Truckers, Diggers and Wings make up The Bromeliad Trilogy by Terry Pratchett

Good Omens: The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch (1990) is a novel written in collaboration between Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman

Manon LescautAntoine Prevost. The story has influenced a number of ballets and operas, such as Manon (1884) by French composer Jules Massenet and Manon Lescaut (1893) by Italian composer Giacomo Puccini

The Prestige is a 1995 novel by British writer Christopher Priest

The Good CompanionsJB Priestley (1894 – 1984). Focuses on the trials and tribulations of a concert party in England between World War I and World War II

E Annie Proulx’s second novel, The Shipping News (1993), won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award for fiction in 1994. Her short story Brokeback Mountain was adapted as a motion picture released in 2005. She won the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for her first novel, Postcards

Accordion Crimes – E Annie Proulx

A la Recherche du Temps Perdu (Remembrance of Things Past or In Search of Lost Time) – a semi-autobiographical novel in seven volumes by Marcel Proust. Title taken from Sonnet 30 by Shakespeare. Volume One is Swann’s Way

Marcel Proust fought a duel with writer Jean Lorrain in 1897

Malcolm Pryce writes in the style of Raymond Chandler, but his novels are set on the rainswept streets of an alternate universe version of Aberystwyth. The hero of the novels is Louie Knight, the best private detective in Aberystwyth

The Ruby in the Smoke, The Shadow in the North, The Tiger in the Well, The Tin PrincessPhilip Pullman books featuring Sally Lockhart

Alexander Pushkin (1799 – 1837) was killed in a duel with Georges d’Anthes, who was suspected of having an affair with his wife Natalia

Boris Gudonov, The Queen of Spades, The Captain’s Daughter – Alexander Pushkin

Eugene Onegin – Pushkin, concerns the fortune of two couples (Onegin and Tatyana are one couple) doomed to unhappiness. Modelled on Byron’s poem Don Juan

The Tale of Tsar Saltan, The Bronze Horseman – Pushkin

The Tale of Tsar Saltan, of His Son the Renowned and Mighty Bogatyr Prince Gvidon Saltanovich, and of the Beautiful Princess-Swan – full title

V. (1963), The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), Gravity's Rainbow (1973), Vineland (1990), and Mason & Dixon (1997) – novels by Thomas Pynchon

Bleeding Edge – Thomas Pynchon

Confessions of an English Opium EaterThomas De Quincy

The Mysteries of Udolpho – gothic novel by Ann Radcliffe

The Gentle ShepherdAllan Ramsay

The Fountainhead – first successful novel by Ayn Rand. Howard Roark is an individualistic young architect who chooses to struggle in obscurity rather than compromise his artistic and personal vision

John Galt is a fictional character who describes Objectivism in Ayn Rand's novel Atlas Shrugged. Although he is absent from much of the text, he is the subject of the novel's often repeated question, ‘Who is John Galt?’, and the quest to discover the answer

The Naming of the DeadIan Rankin. Inspector (John) Rebus novel set in the week of the G8 summit in Gleneagles in 2005

Knots and Crosses – first Inspector Rebus novel

Rebus novels are based in Edinburgh. Last book – Exit Music

Where the Red Fern GrowsWilson Rawls

Dora Jessie Saint, best known by the pen name Miss Read, was an English novelist. She is best known for two series of novels set in the British countryside – the Fairacre novels and the Thrush Green novels

The Cloister and the HearthCharles Reade

The Celestine ProphecyJames Redfield

Deja Dead is the first novel by Kathy Reichs starring forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan

Ice StationMatthew Reilly

Inspector Wexford books – Ruth Rendell

From Doon With Death – first Wexford novel, 1964

A Judgment in Stone – Ruth Rendell

Barbara Vine – pseudonym of Ruth Rendell

All Quiet on the Western FrontErich Remarque. Told through the eyes of a German soldier in WWI

Alexander trilogyMary Renault's trilogy of novels about Alexander the Great (Fire From Heaven, The Persian Boy and Funeral Games)

Wide Sargasso SeaJean Rhys, prequel to Jane Eyre

Interview with the VampireAnne Rice

The Vampire Chronicles is a series of novels by Anne Rice that revolves around the fictional character Lestat de Lioncourt, a French nobleman made into a vampire in the 18th century

Samuel Richardson (1689 – 1761) was best known for his three epistolary novels: Pamela: Or, Virtue Rewarded (1740), Clarissa: Or the History of a Young Lady (1748) and Sir Charles Grandison (1753)

IlluminationsArthur Rimbaud

At Risk – novel by Stella Rimington (the first female Director General of MI5)

ScarlettAlexandra Ripley. Sequel to Gone with the Wind

The Dream Merchants – first novel by Harold Robbins

Mars trilogyKim Stanley Robinson. The three novels are Red Mars, Green Mars, and Blue Mars

HomeMarylynne Robinson. Winner of the 2009 Orange Prize

Gallows View is the first novel by Canadian detective fiction writer Peter Robinson in the Inspector Banks series of novels

Landscape with Dead Dons – detective novel by Robert Robinson

Fu Manchu featured in a series of novels by English author Sax Rohmer during the first half of the 20th century

Christina Rossetti is best known for her long poem Goblin Market, her love poem Remember, and for the words of the Christmas carol In the Bleak Midwinter

Portnoy’s Complaint, EverymanPhilip Roth

The Plot Against America – Philip Roth. Lindbergh defeats Roosevelt to become president in 1940

American Pastoral, The Human Stain, Nemesis – Philip Roth

Divergent, Insurgent, AllegiantDivergent trilogy by Veronica Roth

The Casual VacancyJK Rowling (born 1965). The novel is set in a West Country town called Pagford and begins with the death of Parish Councillor Barry Fairbrother

Crime fiction novels The Cuckoo's Calling and The Silkworm – JK Rowling, under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith

Grimus – debut novel by Salman Rushdie (born 1947)

Shalimar the Clown, The Moor’s Last Sigh – Salman Rushdie

The Enchantress of Florence – Salman Rushdie

Geordie Sharp is a fictional character featured in a series of military novels written by Chris Ryan. He is a Sergeant in the Special Air Service (SAS)

Scaramouche – a historical novel by Rafael Sabati, originally published in 1921 and subsequently adapted into a play by Barbara Field and into feature films in 1923 starring Ramon Novarro and in a 1952 remake with Stewart Granger. It is a romantic adventure and tells the story of a young aristocrat during the French Revolution

Bonjour TristesseFrancoise Sagan. Means ‘Hello Sadness’

George Sand was the pseudonym of the French novelist and feminist Amantine-Lucile-Aurore Dupin, later Baroness Dudevant (1804–1876)

The Devils Pool, Little Fadette – George Sand

Franny and ZooeyJD Salinger (1919 – 2010)

Glass family featured in a number of JD Salinger’s short stories

Holden Caulfield – main character in The Catcher in the Rye. 16 years old, runs away to New York. Holden Caulfield has ideas of becoming a ‘catcher in the rye,’ a heroic figure who symbolically saves children from ‘falling off a crazy cliff’ and being exposed to the evils of adulthood. Title taken from a poem by Robert Burns

The Catcher in the Rye has never been made into a film

DissolutionCJ Sansom. Set in the 16th Century during the dissolution of the monasteries, it follows hunchbacked lawyer Shardlake's attempts to solve the murder of one of Thomas Cromwell's commissioners

Nausea – novel by Jean Paul Sartre

Attack, Everyone SangSiegfried Sassoon

Memoirs of a Fox-Hunting Man, Memoirs of an Infantry Officer, Sherston's Progress – Siegfried Sassoon's semi-autobiographical trilogy (Sherston Trilogy)

Siegfried Sassoon won military cross in World War I

Dorothy L. Sayers is best known for her mysteries set between World War I and World War II that feature English aristocrat and amateur sleuth Lord Peter Wimsey

Lord Peter Wimsey lived at 110A Piccadilly. Bunter – Peter Wimsey’s manservant

Whose Body? – first Lord Peter Wimsey book

Dorothy L Sayers translated Dante’s Divine Comedy

Ode to Joy, The Robbers, Don Carlos, The Wallenstein Trilogy, Mary Stuart, William TellFriedrich Schiller

The ReaderBernhard Schlink

The Raj Quartet is a four-volume novel sequence, written by Paul Scott, about the concluding years of the British Raj in India. The four volumes are: The Jewel in the Crown (1966), The Day of the Scorpion (1968), The Towers of Silence (1971), A Division of the Spoils (1975). Some of the characters are carried through to a further novel called Staying On (1977)

The Fair Maid of PerthWalter Scott (1771 – 1832). The maid was Katherine Glover

Heart of Midlothian – Walter Scott. Account of the Porteous riots in Edinburgh in 1736, features the Deans family

Kenilworth, Rob Roy, Red Gauntlet – Walter Scott

Ivanhoe is the story of one of the remaining Saxon noble families at a time when the English nobility was overwhelmingly Norman. It follows the Saxon protagonist, Wilfred of Ivanhoe, who is out of favour with his father owing to his courting the Lady Rowena and for his allegiance to the Norman king Richard I of England. The story is set in 1194, after the end of the Third Crusade

The Lady of the Lake is a narrative poem by Walter Scott,. Set in the Trossachs region of Scotland, it is composed of six cantos, each of which concerns the action of a single day. The poem has three main plots: the contest among three men, Roderick Dhu, James Fitz-James, and Malcolm Graeme, to win the love of Ellen Douglas; the feud and reconciliation of King James V of Scotland and James Douglas; and a war between the lowland Scots (led by James V) and the highland clans

Waverley, Guy Mannering, The Bride of Lammermoor – Walter Scott

Marmion is an epic poem by Walter Scott about the Battle of Flodden Field

The Lovely BonesAlice Sebold

Love StoryErich Segal

Oliver’s Story – sequel to Love Story by Eric Segal

The Book of Dave by Will Self tells the story of an angry and mentally-ill London taxi driver named Dave Rudman

Cock and Bull – first novel by Will Self

Great Apes – Will Self

Umbrella – Will Self

The Golden GateVikram Seth’s first novel

A Suitable Boy – Vikram Seth

Black BeautyAnna Sewell. Merrylegs – pony in Black Beauty

SleuthAnthony Shaffer

Grantchester Grind – follow-up to Porterhouse Blue by Tom Sharpe. About Cambridge University

TekWar is a series of science fiction novels created by William Shatner and ghost-written by science-fiction author Ron Goulart

The Young Lions, Rich Man Poor ManIrwin Shaw

Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792 – 1822) was expelled from Oxford University in 1811 for producing a pamphlet called The Necessity of Atheism. Shelley married Harriet Westbrook, who committed suicide. His second wife was Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin. Less than a month before his 30th birthday, Shelley drowned in a sudden storm while sailing back from Livorno to Lerici in his schooner, Don Juan. Shelley claimed to have met his Doppelganger, foreboding his own death

To a Skylark, Ode to the West Wind – Percy Bysshe Shelley

Ozymandius, The Revolt of Islam – Shelley

Adonais: An Elegy on the Death of John Keats – Shelley

The Masque of Anarchy – Shelley’s response to the Peterloo Massacre

Autumn: A Dirge – Shelley

Mary Shelley, née Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, was a British novelist, short story writer, dramatist, essayist, biographer, and travel writer, best known for her Gothic novel Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus (1818). She also edited and promoted the works of her husband, the Romantic poet and philosopher Percy Bysshe Shelley. Her father was the political philosopher William Godwin, and her mother was the philosopher and feminist Mary Wollstonecraft

The Last Man is an apocalyptic science fiction novel by Mary Shelley, which was first published in 1826

Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus is a novel written by Mary Shelley about eccentric scientist Victor Frankenstein

Journey’s EndRC Sherriff

The Stone DiariesCarol Shields

The Triumph of Beauty – poem by James Shirley

We Need To Talk About Kevin, So Much For ThatLionel Shriver

The New Republic – Lionel Shriver

Big Brother – Lionel Shriver

On the BeachNeville Shute

Neville Shute founded the aircraft construction company Airspeed Ltd in 1931

Astrophel and Stella, The Defence of Poesy, The Countess of Pembroke’s Arcadia – Philip Sidney, who was killed at the Battle of Zutphen in 1586. Son-in-law of Francis Walsingham

Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, The Loneliness of the Long Distance RunnerAlan Sillitoe

Georges Simenon wrote 75 novels and 28 short stories featuring Commissaire Maigret. The first novel in the series, Pietr-le-Letton, appeared in 1931; the last one, Maigret et M. Charles, was published in 1972

The JungleUpton Sinclair. Dealt with conditions in the US meat packing industry

Oil! – Upton Sinclair. Basis of the film There Will be Blood

Between 1940 and 1953, Upton Sinclair wrote the World's End series of 11 novels about Lanny Budd, the son of an American arms manufacturer

Facade – Dame Edith Sitwell

Martin Beck is a fictional Swedish police detective who is the main character in a series of ten novels by Sjowall and Wahloo, collectively titled The Story of a Crime

John Skelton – 16th century poet, born in Norfolk

By Grand Central Station – poem by Elizabeth Smart

A Thousand Acres is a novel by American author Jane Smiley. It won the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and was adapted to a 1997 film of the same name. The novel is a contemporary deconstruction of Shakespeare's King Lear

The AccidentalAli Smith

I Capture the CastleDodie Smith

101 Dalmatians – Dodie Smith. Set in London

Lensman series is a serial science fiction space opera by Edward Elmer ‘Doc’ Smith

Gorky Park is a 1981 crime novel written by Martin Cruz Smith set in the Soviet Union. It follows Arkady Renko, a chief investigator for the Militsiya, who is assigned to a case involving three corpses dug up in Gorky Park, an amusement park in Moscow

The Devil’s Tune – thriller by Iain Duncan Smith

The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency – books by Alexander McCall Smith

No 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency – started by Precious Ramotswe in Botswana

Tears of the Giraffe – Alexander McCall Smith

In the Company of Cheerful Ladies – Alexander McCall Smith

Blue Shoes and Happiness – Alexander McCall Smith

Not Waving but Drowning – poem by Stevie Smith

Wilbur Smith – born in Rhodesia, wrote two series of novels about the Courtney and Ballantyne families

When the Lions Feed – Wilbur Smith

White Teeth, The Autograph Man, NWZadie Smith

On Beauty – Zadie Smith. Winner of the Orange Prize for fiction in 2006. The book is loosely based on Howards End by E. M. Forster

The Expedition of Humphry Clinker was the last of the picaresque novels of Tobias Smollett

The Adventures of Roderick Random (1748), The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle (1751) – Tobias Smollett

Homecomings, The Corridors of PowerC.P. Snow

Strangers and Brothers is a series of novels by C. P. Snow

August 1914 is a novel by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (1918 – 2008) about Imperial Russia’s defeat in 1914's Battle of Tannenberg

November 1916 is a novel by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, the sequel to August 1914. The novel picks up on the brink of the Russian Revolution

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, The Cancer Ward, The Gulag Archipelago, The First Circle – Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

The Battle of BlenheimRobert Southey

The Story of the Three Bears – Robert Southey

Memento MoriMuriel Spark

The Fairie QueenEdmund Spenser, was unfinished

The Decline of the WestOswald Spengler

MausArt Spiegelman. Graphic novel which tells the story of a Holocaust survivor, with the Jews depicted as mice and the Germans as cats

Fame is the SpurHoward Spring

HeidiJohanna Spyri

Last and First Men, StarmakerOlaf Stapleton

Going Home – first novel by Danielle Steel (Danielle Fernande Dominique Schuelein-Steel), published in 1973

Fernhurst, Three Lives, The Making of Americans, Tender ButtonsGertrude Stein. Her life partner was Alice B. Tolkas. Stein and her brother Leo owned a large collection of modern art

“A rose is a rose is a rose is a rose” – Gertrude Stein quotation

Tortilla Flat – novel by John Steinbeck (1902 – 1968)

Cup of Gold – first novel by John Steinbeck

Of Mice and Men, Cannery Row, East of Eden – John Steinbeck

Of Mice and Men – the title is taken from Robert Burns' poem To a Mouse

The Grapes of Wrath – John Steinbeck. The Joad family abandon the Oklahoma dustbowl and head for California. Title comes from Battle Hymn of the Republic

East of Eden brings to life the intricate details of two families, the Trasks and the Hamiltons, and their interwoven stories

The Winter of Our Discontent, The Wayward Bus, In Dubious Battles, Travels With Charley – John Steinbeck

Marie-Henri Beyle, better known by his penname Stendhal (1783 – 1842), was a French writer. Known for his acute analysis of his characters' psychology, he is considered one of the earliest and foremost practitioners of realism in his two novels The Red and the Black (1830) and The Charterhouse of Parma (1839). Stendahl was part of Napoleon’s army in the 1812 invasion of Russia

The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman – 1759 novel by Laurence Sterne

Apart from Tristram as narrator, the most familiar and important characters in the book are his father Walter, his mother, his Uncle Toby, and Toby's servant Trim

A Sentimental Journey Theough France and Italy – Laurence Sterne

The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two RosesRobert Louis Stevenson (1850 – 1894)

Kidnapped: The Adventures of David Balfour – RL Stevenson

Catriona by Robert Louis Stevenson is a sequel to Kidnapped. It tells the further story of the central character David Balfour

Weir of Hermiston – unfinished romance by RL Stevenson

The Master of Ballantrae, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde – RL Stevenson

Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde. Set in Edinburgh

Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes – RL Stevenson

The Body Snatcher – RL Stevenson. The story is based on characters in the employ of Robert Knox, around the time of the Burke and Hare murders

Treasure Island – narrated by Jim Hawkins

Ben Gunn – pirate in Treasure Island, longed to eat toasted cheese

Long John Silver – one legged cook aboard the Hispaniola. Owns the Spyglass Inn

Long John Silver is also known by the nicknames ‘Barbecue’ and ‘the Sea-Cook’

Parrot is Captain Flint (buried the treasure)

Robert Louis Stevenson is buried on Samoa

The Help is a 2009 novel by American author Kathryn Stockett. The story is about African-American maids working in white households in Jackson, Mississippi, during the early 1960s

Bram Stoker was better known as personal assistant of actor Henry Irving and business manager of the Lyceum Theatre in London, which Irving owned

Renfield and Mina Murray – characters in Dracula, by Bram Stoker. Published in 1897

Jonathan Harker is one of the main protagonists in Dracula. His journey to Transylvania and encounter with Count Dracula and the Brides of Dracula at Castle Dracula constitutes the dramatic opening scenes in the novel

The Jewel of the Seven Stars – Bram Stoker

The Primrose Path – first novel by Bram Stoker

The Agony and the EcstasyIrving Stone. Biographical novel of Michelangelo

Lust for Life – Irving Stone. Biographical novel of Vincent van Gogh

The Origin – Irving Stone. Biographical novel of Charles Darwin

This Sporting LifeDavid Storey. Tells the story of rugby league player, Frank Machin

In Celebration – David Storey

Detective Nero Wolfe was created by crime writer Rex Stout

Uncle Tom’s CabinHarriet Beecher Stowe. Anti-slavery novel published in 1852. Tom is sold to the evil Simon Legree after the death of Mr St Clare. Topsy is a slave girl

The Red Room, The Son of a Servant (autobiographical novel) – August Strindberg, born in Stockholm

The Defence of a Fool, Inferno, Mademoiselle Julie, Dances of Death – Strindberg

Sophie’s ChoiceWilliam Styron

Valley of the DollsJacqueline Susann

PerfumePatrick Suskind

A Tale of a Tub, The Battle of the BooksJonathan Swift (1667 – 1745)

Gulliver’s Travels – Jonathan Swift. One of the conflicts in the book is between Lilliputians who preferred cracking open their soft-boiled eggs from the little end, and Blefuscans who preferred the big end

Gulliver’s first name was Lemuel

Gulliver was shipwrecked on The Antelope in 1699

Houyhnhnms are a race of intelligent horses described in the last part of Gulliver's Travels

Yahoos – creatures in Gulliver’s Travels

A Modest Proposal is a satirical essay written and published anonymously by Jonathan Swift in 1729. Swift suggests that the impoverished Irish might ease their economic troubles by selling their children as food for rich gentlemen and ladies

Jonathan Swift was Dean of St Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin

Anita and Me, Life Isn't All Ha Ha Hee HeeMeera Syal

Taliesin was a 6th century Welsh poet whose work has possibly survived in a Middle Welsh manuscript, the Book of Taliesin

The Joy Luck Club, Saving Fish from DrowningAmy Tan

The Magnificent Ambersons, Alice AdamsBooth Tarkington

The Secret History, The Little FriendDonna Tartt

The Goldfinch – 2013 novel by Donna Tartt

Shadowmancer – a fantasy novel by Graham Taylor. Like CS Lewis's The Chronicles of Narnia it is a Christian allegory in the form of a fantasy adventure

Charge of the Light Brigade, Charge of the Heavy BrigadeAlfred, Lord Tennyson (1809 – 1892)

The Lady of Shallot – unrequited love for Lancelot. Poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson

‘On either side the river lie’ – first line of The Lady of Shallot

‘In spring, a young man’s fancy likely turns to thoughts of love’ – Locksley Hall, by Tennyson

Idylls of the King, published between 1856 and 1885, is a cycle of twelve narrative poems by Alfred Lord Tennyson which retells the legend of King Arthur, his knights, his love for Guinevere and her tragic betrayal of him. Dedicated to Prince Albert

Come into the Garden, Maud – Tennyson

In 1833, Alfred Lord Tennyson's closest friend died. He was Arthur Hallam, fiance to

Tennyson's sister. In Memoriam (1850) is an elegy written in honor of Hallam. It is made up of 133 poems, all written over a 17-year period

Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington – Tennyson

The Eagle – Tennyson

Ulysses – poem by Tennyson

Tennyson was the first to be raised to a British peerage for his writing

The Book of SnobsWilliam Makepeace Thackeray (1811 – 1863)

Vanity Fair is subtitled A Novel Without a Hero. Features Becky Sharp

Vanity Fair – title comes from The Pilgrim’s Progress

Vanity Fair features Miss Pinkerton’s Academy for Young Ladies

History of Pendennis – WM Thackeray

The Newcomes – Thackeray

The History of Henry Esmond – Thackeray

The Virginians: A Tale of the Last Century is a historical novel by William Makepeace Thackeray which forms a sequel to his Henry Esmond and is also loosely linked to Pendennis

WM Thackeray was born in Calcutta

The Mosquito CoastPaul Theroux

The White HotelDM Thomas

Land of my Fathers – written by Dylan Thomas (1914 – 1953)

“Do not gentle into that good night. Rage, rage, against the dying of the light” – Dylan Thomas

“The past is the only dead thing that smells sweet” – Edward Thomas, an Anglo-Welsh World War 1 war poet who knew Robert Frost. He enlisted in the army in 1915, and was killed in action during the Battle of Arras in 1917

Adlestrop – poem by Edward Thomas

Lark Rise to Candleford: A Trilogy: Lark Rise, Over to Candleford, Candleford GreenFlora Thompson

Fear and Loathing in Las VegasHunter S Thompson

Behind the Candelabra: My Life With Liberace (1988) is an autobiographical novel by Liberace's live-in lover of five years, Scott Thorson

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty is a short story by James Thurber. The most famous of Thurber's stories, it first appeared in The New Yorker in 1939

Mr MacGregor – novel by Alan Titchmarsh

The Master, Colm Toibin, is about Henry James

Brooklyn – Colm Toibin

The Empty Family – Colm Toibin

Elvish languages – invented by JRR Tolkein (1892 – 1973)

Hobbits – Brandybuck, Frodo Baggins, Gamgee, Meriadoc (Merry), Perigrin (Pippin) Took, Samwise (Sam). Dwarf – Gimli

Bilbo Baggins is 111 at the start of Lord of the Rings

Smaug – dragon that guards the treasure in The Hobbit

The Hobbit was first published in 1937. Subtitle – ‘there and back again’

The Silmarillion comprises five parts

John Ronald Reuel Tolkien served as the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon and Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford, from 1925 to 1945 and Merton Professor of English Language and Literature and Fellow of Merton College, Oxford from 1945 to 1959. Born in South Africa

War and PeaceLeo Tolstoy (1828 – 1910). Follows the lives of the Bolkonsky and Rostov families as Napoleon’s armies sweep across Europe. Published in 1869

Battle of Austerlitz is mentioned in War and Peace

“Happy families are all alike. Every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way” is the opening line of Anna Karenina. Published in 1877

Count Vronsky – officer in Anna Karenina

Anna Karenina commits suicide by throwing herself in the path of a train

The Death of Ivan Ilych and Other Stories – Tolstoy

Resurrection – Tolstoy

Salmon Fishing in the YemenPaul Torday

The Woman Who Went to Bed for a YearSue Townsend

Mary PoppinsPL Travers. Published in 1934

Mary Poppins will stay “until the wind changes”

The Road HomeRose Tremain. Winner of the 2008 Orange Prize

Restoration – Rose Tremain

The Ragged Trousered Philanthropist – Robert Trestle

The Chronicles of Barsetshire is a series of six novels by Anthony Trollope (1815 – 1882), set in the fictitious English county of Barsetshire and its cathedral town of Barchester

The Warden – Anthony Trollope. Title character is Septimus Harding. First novel in The Chronicles of Barsetshire

Barchester Towers – second novel in The Chronicles of Barsetshire

The Way we Live Now – Anthony Trollope

Palliser novels are six novels, also known as the ‘Parliamentary Novels’, by Anthony Trollope. The common thread is the wealthy aristocrat and politician Plantagenet Palliser and (in all but the last book) his wife Lady Glencora

Can You Forgive Her? – Anthony Trollope. First of the Palliser novels

The Choir – first novel by Joanna Trollope

A Village Affair – Joanna Trollope

A Month in the Country, Fathers and Sons, First Love, Fortune’s FoolIvan Turgenev

Mark Twain (1835 – 1910) was born in Missouri. He may have been the first author to use a typewriter

The Prince and the Pauper – Mark Twain

A Tramp Abroad – Mark Twain

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876) – Mark Twain. Tom is brought up by his Aunt Polly. Huck is his friend

Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) – Mark Twain. Huck is kidnapped by his father, fakes his own death, and runs away with a slave called Jim

A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court – Mark Twain. The novel tells the tale of Hank Morgan, a 19th century citizen of Hartford, Connecticut who awakens to find himself inexplicably transported back in time to early medieval England at the time of the legendary King Arthur in AD 528

Life on the Mississippi – Mark Twain

Breathing Lessons, The Accidental TouristAnne Tyler

Sacred Hunger, Morality PlayBarry Unsworth

John Updike's most famous work is his "Rabbit" series (the novels Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit Is Rich; Rabbit At Rest; and the novella Rabbit Remembered), which chronicles the life of the middle-class everyman Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom over the course of several decades

The Widows of Eastwick – sequel to The Witches of Eastwick, by John Updike

The Poorhouse Fair, Bech books, Couples, Terrorist, The Coup, Gertrude and Claudius, Couples, Villages – John Updike

My Father’s Tears and Other Stories – last work by John Updike

Exodus by American novelist Leon Uris is about the founding of the State of Israel. Published in 1958, it is based on the name of the 1947 immigration ship Exodus

Trinity, Mila 18, Armageddon: A Novel of Berlin – Leon Uris

The Provoked Husband, The Provoked WifeJohn Vanbrugh

The Relapse – John Vanbrugh, written in the Bastille

The Three Evangelists series, Commissaire Adamsberg series – crime fiction books by Fred Vargas, the pseudonym of Frederique Audoin-Rouzeau

Paul Verlaine was a French Symbolist poet

Chanson d’Automne – Paul Verlaine

The Mysterious Island – sequel to Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea, by Jules Verne

Captain Nemo is captain of the Nautilus submarine in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. Also known as Prince Dakkar

From the Earth to the Moon – Jules Verne

Gore Vidal wrote The City and the Pillar in 1948, which created controversy as the first major American novel to feature unambiguous homosexuality

Myra Breckinridge – Gore Vidal

Francois Villon is best known for his Testaments and his Ballade des Pendus, written while in prison

‘All is for the best in this best of all possible worlds’ – Dr. Pangloss, in Candide by Voltaire (1694 – 1778) was born Francois-Marie Arouet

Candide begins with a young man, Candide, who is living a sheltered life in an Edenic paradise and being indoctrinated with Leibnizian optimism by his mentor, Pangloss. Candide and his lover Cunegonde travel around the world

Full title – Candide, ou l'Optimisme

Slaughterhouse FiveKurt Vonnegut. Recounts the adventures of Billy Pilgrim, who sees Dresden destroyed before returning to America

Player Piano – Kurt Vonnegut’s first novel

Breakfast of Champions – Kurt Vonnegut

Kilgore Trout appears in several of Vonnegut’s books

Bokononism is a fictional religion invented by Kurt Vonnegut and practiced by many of the characters in his novel Cat's Cradle. Many of the sacred texts of Bokononism were written in the form of calypsos

Derek Walcott was born in Castries, St. Lucia. His work is intensely related to the symbolism of myth and its relationship to culture. He is best known for his epic poem Omeros, a reworking of Homeric story and tradition into a journey around the Caribbean and beyond to the American West and London. Walcott founded the Trinidad Theatre Workshop in 1959

Omeros – epic poem by Derek Walcott

The Colour PurpleAlice Walker

Join Me, Yes ManDanny Wallace

Infinite JestDavid Foster Wallace

The Four Just Men – first crime novel by Edgar Wallace

Ben-Hur: A Tale of the Christ is a novel by Lew Wallace

The Bridges of Madison CountyRobert Waller

Castle of Otranto – first Gothic novel. Written by Horace Walpole, the son of the first Prime Minister, Sir Robert Walpole

The Ice House – crime fiction writer Minette Walters

The ChoirboysJoseph Wambaugh

All the King’s MenRobert Penn Warren. Inspired the title of All the President’s Men

Billy LiarKeith Waterhouse, 1959

Billy Liar imagines himself as ruler of Ambrosia

Tipping the Velvet, Affinity, FingersmithSarah Waters

The Night Watch – Sarah Waters. Set in blitz-ravaged London in the 1940s

The Little Stranger – Sarah Waters

Decline and Fall – first novel by Evelyn Waugh (1903 – 1966)

Decline and Fall tells the story of Paul Pennyfeather, student at Scone College, Oxford

Brideshead Revisited, Scoop, A Handful of Dust, Vile Bodies – Evelyn Waugh

A Handful of Dust – the title is an allusion to lines in T. S. Eliot's 1922 poem The Waste Land

Brideshead – home of Marchmain family in Waugh’s book

In Scoop, William Boot is contributor of nature notes to Lord Copper's Beast, a national newspaper. He is dragooned into becoming a foreign correspondent when the editors of the aptly named Daily Beast mistake him for a novelist who shares his surname. The novel is partly based on Waugh's own experience working for the Daily Mail, when he was sent to cover Benito Mussolini's expected invasion of Abyssinia

Men at Arms, Unconditional Surrender and Officers and Gentlemen – Evelyn Waugh Sword of Honour trilogy about World War II

The protagonist of the Sword of Honour trilogy is Guy Crouchback, heir of a declining aristocratic English Roman Catholic family

Black Mischief – Evelyn Waugh. Inspired by the coronation of Haile Selassie. It is set on the fictional African island of Azania

The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold – Evelyn Waugh

The White DevilJohn Webster

Life and Loves of a She DevilFay Weldon

The Invisible Man of the title of the book by HG Wells (1866 – 1946) is Griffin

Island of Doctor Moreau – HG Wells

The Time Machine – HG Wells first novel (1895)

The World Set Free – HG Wells. The book is considered to foretell nuclear weapons

The Wheels of Chance – HG Wells

The War of the Worlds (1898) – HG Wells. Set in Horsell Common, near Woking. Among the most famous adaptations is the 1938 radio broadcast that was narrated and directed by Orson Welles. The first two-thirds of the 60-minute broadcast were presented as a news bulletin and led to outrage and panic by some listeners who had believed the events described in the program were real

The Devil Wears PradaLauren Weisberger

Swiss Family RobinsonJohan Weiss

SkagboysIrvine Welsh

Filth, Glue, Porno – Irvine Welsh

The Camomile Lawn is a novel by Mary Wesley about wartime London and Cornwall as seen through the eyes of five cousins

The Day of the Locust is a 1939 novel by American author Nathanael West, set in Hollywood during the Great Depression, depicting the alienation and desperation of a disparate group of individuals whose dreams of success have effectively failed

The Age of InnocenceEdith Wharton. First female winner of Pulitzer Prize for literature (1921)

Ethan Frome, The House of Mirth – Edith Wharton

Roger Brook novels – Dennis Wheatley

Dennis Wheatley wrote 12 historical novels set in Napoleonic period

Described as the ‘Jane Austen of the 20th Century’ by J. B. Priestley, the work of Poems On Various Subjects, Religious and MoralPhyllis Wheatley, the first African-American poet and first African-American woman to publish a book (1773)

Dorothy Whipple enjoyed a period of great popularity between the wars, two of her novels being made into feature films, They Were Sisters and They Knew Mr Knight

Frost in MayAntonia White

The Once and Future KingTH White, chronicles the raising and education of King Arthur

The Living and the Dead, VossPatrick White

The Tree of Man – Patrick White

Walt Whitman (1819 – 1892) is viewed as the first urban poet. He was a part of the transition between Transcendentalism and Realism, incorporating both views in his works. Works include Song of Myself and Drum-Taps

Walt Whitman was often called “the father of free verse”. His work was controversial in its time, particularly his poetry collection Leaves of Grass (1855), which was described as obscene for its overt sexuality

O Captain! My Captain! – Walt Whitman

I Sing the Body Electric – Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman was a volunteer nurse during the American Civil War

The Clematis Tree, An Act of TreacheryAnne Widdecombe

The Picture of Dorian GrayOscar Wilde (1854 – 1900). Dorian Gray is the subject of a painting by artist Basil Hallward

‘He did not wear the scarlet coat for blood and wine are red’ – opening line of Ballad of Reading Gaol by Oscar Wilde

Little House on the PrairieLaura Ingles Wilder

Little House on the Prairie is set in Walnut Grove

The Bridge of San Luis Rey (1927), by Thornton Wilder (1897 – 1975), tells the story of several unrelated people who happen to be on a bridge in Peru when it collapses, killing them

Stoner, AugustusJohn Williams

Nigel Williams – novels set in Wimbledon. Best known is The Wimbledon Poisoner

Tarka the Otter: His Joyful Water-Life and Death in the Country of the Two Rivers is a novel by Henry Williamson

Forever AmberKathleen Windsor

RD Wingfield created Detective Inspector Jack Frost, set in Denton

Oranges are not the Only FruitJeanette Winterson. It is a bildungsroman about a lesbian girl who grows up in an English Pentecostal community

Why be Happy When you could be Normal? – Jeanette Winterson

Sexing the Cherry – Jeanette Winterson

PG Wodehouse (1881 – 1975) was taken prisoner by the Germans at his home in Le Touquet in 1940. PG Wodehouse wartime broadcasts from Europe led to many accusations of collaborationism with the Germans and even treason

Blandings Castle is a fictional location in the short stories and novels of PG Wodehouse. It is the seat of Lord Emsworth, home to many of his family, and setting for numerous tales and adventures, written between 1915 and 1975. Blandings Castle is in Shropshire. Empress of Blandings is a Berkshire sow

Oswald Mosley is parodied as Sir Roderick Spode, who is leader of The Black Shorts, in PG Wodehouse Jeeves novels

Bertie Wooster visited The Drones club

Gussie Fink-Nottle is a newt fancier in the Jeeves novels

Reginald Jeeves was named after a Warwickshire cricketer

The Bonfire of the VanitiesTom Wolfe

Radical Chic & Mau-Mauing the Flak Catchers – Tom Wolfe

A Man in Full – Tom Wolfe

East LynneEllen Wood, known as Mrs Henry Wood

Virginia Woolf (1882 – 1941) drowned herself in the River Ouse

Virginia Woolf’s works include the novels Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), Orlando: A Biography (1928)

Flush: A Biography – Virginia Woolf. Flush is a dog

Orlando is a semi-biographical novel based in part on the life of Woolf's intimate friend Vita Sackville-West

Mrs Dalloway details a day in the life of Clarissa Dalloway, a fictional high-society woman in post-World War I England

The Vovage Out – first novel by Virginia Woolf

William Wordsworth (1770 – 1850) visited Revolutionary France in 1791 and became enthralled with the Republican movement. He fell in love with a French woman, Annette Vallon, who in 1792 gave birth to their child, Caroline. He later married Mary Hutchinson. Lived at Dove Cottage with his sister Dorothy

The Prelude – autobiographical poem by William Wordsworth

Lucy poems – Wordsworth

Ode to Duty – Wordsworth

Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood – Wordsworth

Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey – Wordsworth

“Earth hath not anything to show more fair” – from Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, sonnet written in 1802

“I wandered lonely as a cloud” – inspired by Ullswater. First line of Daffodils

On the extinction of the Venetian Republic – sonnet by Wordsworth

Lyrical Ballads, with a Few Other Poems is a collection of poems by Wordsworth and Coleridge

The Caine Mutiny. The Winds of War, War and RemembranceHerman Wouk

Captain Queeg – character in The Caine Mutiny

Beau GestePC Wren

Uncle Tom’s Children, Native Son, Black Boy, The OutsiderRichard Wright

The Berry Books, The Chandos Books – groups of novels by Dornford Yates

Revolutionary RoadRichard Yates

The Lake Isle of Innisfree, Easter 1916W.B. Yeats (1865 – 1939)

“No country for old men” – line in Sailing to Byzantium by WB Yeats

When you are old – poem by WB Yeats

The Song of Wandering Aengus – WB Yeats

The Tripods is a series of novels written by Samuel Youd (under the pseudonym John Christopher) beginning in the late 1960s. The first two were the basis of a science fiction TV series shown on the BBC

Refugee BoyBenjamin Zephaniah

Les Rougon-Macquart is the collective title given to the greatest literary achievement of French novelist Emile Zola (1840 – 1902), a monumental twenty-novel cycle about the exploits of various members of an extended family during the French Second Empire. Includes La Ventre de Paris, Nana (a prostitute), Germinale (a realistic story of a coalminers' strike in northern France in the 1860s), The Debacle (set against the background of the series of political and military events that ended the reign of Napoleon III and the Second Empire in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870), Money

Therese Raquin – Emile Zola

The Masterpiece (L'œuvre) – by Emile Zola is a fictional account of Zola's friendship with Paul Cezanne