Its been a long time, I don't remember all of them.
2nd grade, Charlotte's Web
3rd grade, the entire Wrinkle in Time series
6th grade, 1984-and then watched the film (Nudity included, we had an awesome homeroom teacher. He also had us watch The Exorcist followed by a documentary on the making of The Exorcist.)
Junior year, an English literature class that featured several works from Nathaniel Hawthorne (OK, but I in general don't like stuff from that period) F. Scott Fitsgerald (I liked them) Willa Cather (ehh not terrible) and then Steinbeck (I can't stand Steinbeck.)
Senior year, what I thought was the complete works of Shakespeare. It turns out my teacher is in the school of opinion that believes Shakespeare did not write Titus Andronicus. I disagree, and have since read it. Other than that, plus the crunch of having to go through all of them in a single year... it was a great experience.
College, I was in an honors program and our literature portion of the gen ed requirement for non lit majors simply assumed we had read many of the classics already and only required that we read one we had not before and write a paper on them every 2 weeks, our choice. Before finding this out they gave us a blind survey of which classics we had already read, but generally we were on the honor system. I went from classic sci-fi to gothic horror generally.
2nd grade, Charlotte's Web
3rd grade, the entire Wrinkle in Time series
6th grade, 1984-and then watched the film (Nudity included, we had an awesome homeroom teacher. He also had us watch The Exorcist followed by a documentary on the making of The Exorcist.)
Junior year, an English literature class that featured several works from Nathaniel Hawthorne (OK, but I in general don't like stuff from that period) F. Scott Fitsgerald (I liked them) Willa Cather (ehh not terrible) and then Steinbeck (I can't stand Steinbeck.)
Senior year, what I thought was the complete works of Shakespeare. It turns out my teacher is in the school of opinion that believes Shakespeare did not write Titus Andronicus. I disagree, and have since read it. Other than that, plus the crunch of having to go through all of them in a single year... it was a great experience.
College, I was in an honors program and our literature portion of the gen ed requirement for non lit majors simply assumed we had read many of the classics already and only required that we read one we had not before and write a paper on them every 2 weeks, our choice. Before finding this out they gave us a blind survey of which classics we had already read, but generally we were on the honor system. I went from classic sci-fi to gothic horror generally.