
I first joined The Classics Club in March of 2017 and signed up to read 50 books in 5 years. I finished those first fifty books and it turned out to be a really enjoyable reading experience for me. I do love reading the classics, so I immediately started a second round of reading 50 books in the next 5 years! I have just finished reading those 50 books, and I’m now ready to start my third list of 50 classics!
One disclaimer… As you can see from looking at the list of my second round of classics, I did not review all that I read on the list. After my husband’s death in 2022, I found it difficult to read, my blogging became very inconsistent, and I simply couldn’t focus to write reviews of the books I was able to read. My reading focus has returned, but I can’t promise to write a review of every book I read now. Life has changed for me, so I am giving myself permission to simply continue participating in The Classics Club and reading another 50 classics in 5 years, and writing as many reviews of those books as I can.
As with my first two lists, my reading will be a mix of novels, novellas, non-fiction, short stories, and poetry — a combination of adult and children’s literature. This time I’ve decided to create a pool of classics I’m interested in reading, add to it often as I run into other books I’d like to read, and choose my 50 from that changing pool of books. I will keep a running list of the books I read along this journey, so please check back here to see my progress. My new time goal for completing this third round of reading 50 books in 5 years is March 30, 2031! Once again, that sounds so far away, but I know that five years goes by in a flash, and what pleasurable reading years they will be!
- Click here to see my completed Classics Club List #1
- Click here to see my completed Classics Club List #2
The Classics Club List #3
GOAL DATE: March 30, 2026 – March 30, 2031
Progress = 00/50
Red = Link to my review
Blue = Read but not reviewed yet
GOAL DATE: March 30, 2026 – March 30, 2031
Classics Completed:
- .
- .
- .
- .
- …
MY POOL OF CLASSICS I’M INTERESTED IN READING:
- Agee, James: A Death in the Family
- Allende, Isabel: The House of the Spirits
- Arkell, Reginald: Old Herbaceous
- Austin, Mary Hunter: The Land of Little Rain
- Babbitt, Natalie: The Moon Over High Street
- Baldwin, James: The Fire Next Time
- Berry, Wendell: Hannah Coulter
- Beston, Henry: The Northern Farm: A Glorious Year on a Small Maine Farm
- Blythe, Ronald: In the Artist’s Garden
- Buck, Pearl S.: Sons
- Camus, Albert: The Stranger
- Chagall, Marc: My Life
- Choi, Sook Nyul: Year of Impossible Goodbyes
- Conrad, Joseph: The Secret Agent
- de Beauvoir, Simone: Inseparable
- Dostoyevsky, Fyodor: The Idiot
- Eliot, George: Daniel Deronda
- Emecheta, Buhi: The Joys of Motherhood
- Gogol, Nicolai: Dead Souls
- Goldman, William: The Princess Bride
- Gunther, John: Death Be Not Proud
- Hesse, Hermann: Siddhartha
- Hinton, S.E.: The Outsiders
- Irving, Washington: Tales of the Alhambra
- Knowles, John: A Separate Peace
- Kuroyanagi, Tetsuko: Totto-Chan, The Little Girl at the Window
- Lee, Laurie: As I Walked Out One Morning
- Lindbergh, Anne Morrow: North to the Orient
- Malraux, Andre: Man’s Fate
- Mansfield, Katherine: New Zealand Stories
- Márquez, Gabriel García: Chronicle of a Death Foretold
- Miller, Arthur: Death of a Salesman
- Momaday, N. Scott: House Made of Dawn
- Morrison, Toni: Home
- Narayan, R.K.: Malgudi Days
- O’Nan, Stewart: Emily, Alone
- Okakura, Kazuko: The Book of Tea
- Pilcher, Rosamunde: A Place Like Home
- Potter, Beatrix: The Fairy Caravan
- Proust, Marcel: Days of Reading
- Proust, Marcel: Remembrance of Things Past
- Miss Read: Thrush Green
- Rushdie, Salman: The Enchantress of Florence
- Shakespeare, William: Hamlet
- Sharma, Bulbul: The Ramayana
- Shute, Nevil: On the Beach
- Soseki, Natsume: Botchan
- Soseki, Natsume: Kokoro
- Stegner, Wallace: Crossing to Safety
- Steinbeck, John: Cannery Row
- Steinbeck, John: East of Eden
- Tanizaki, Jun’ichirō: The Makioka Sisters
- Tey, Josephine: The Daughter of Time
- Tokarczuk, Olga: Flights
- Tolstoy, Leo: Anna Karenina
- Tzu, Lao: Tao Te Ching
- von Arnim, Elizabeth: The Caravaners
- Wiesel, Elie: Night
- Woolf, Virginia: A Room of One’s Own

Porchreader…







My parents-in-law met and fell in love in Hawaii. My father-in-law was retired from the Navy after 6 years of service and then a civilian worker at the Naval Air Station in Pearl Harbor. We were told that they watched the bombing of Pearl Harbor from the hillside that December morning. They wouldn’t ever talk about it, but among their belongings after they had both passed away, we found a framed shadow box with a twisted piece of metal in it collected quietly after the attack.

I also enjoyed some traveling in 2025. There were two extended stay trips to Seaside, Oregon. One Seaside week was spent with friends who came to spend time together at the beach. Weather was wonderful, but shortly after we arrived, there was a Tsunami warning, which stayed in effect for a couple of days, and unfortunately kept us from spending much time on the beach! Oh well.
In early September I visited my friends in Cedar City, Utah, to see a performance of 
In the early fall, I discovered that that painting was on exhibit at the Art Institute of Chicago, as part of a wonderful traveling exhibition of artist Gustave Caillebotte’s work. I toyed with the idea of traveling to Chicago to see it, and asked my daughter if she would go with me. She wasn’t able to do that, so I gathered all my courage and decided I would put together a solo trip. Not my first time traveling alone, but the first time I would traveling without going to spend time with my people! I planned this trip very carefully (loved the planning part!), and every bit of it was especially meaningful. Lots of time to spend at the Art Institute, an afternoon on the Architectural River Tour to celebrate Byron’s love of architecture, and plenty of walking and exploring Chicago time. This trip was truly a celebration of Byron, and a wonderful experience for me.











I started reading this book on January 1st as part of an unusual reading challenge created by