100 Books to Read in a Lifetime (That Are Older Than 200 Years)

Description
Amazon just released their "100 books to read in a lifetime." The oldest of which was published in 1813. That's a crying shame. Let's compile and vote on a list of the rest.
2
1,084 members
7 reviews
½ 3.7
Global Rank 196
7
1,084 members
10 reviews
4
Global Rank 175
17
23,277 members
254 reviews
3.8
Global Rank 32
24
3,257 members
42 reviews
½ 4.3
Global Rank 36
39 Members
timspalding, swhitco, henkl, benjfrank, yarb, smcwl, xenophon, southernbooklady, hvanloon, andejons, MusicalKnitter, WMGOATGRUFF, madpoet, Betelgeuse, toview, th.lrnr, MaskedMumbler, bw94612, BlueSkies305, Roberto823, dontcallmeleslie, ShaneTierney, drmom62, pgleduc, mattries37315, WriterWarrior, Turambar, 21277008869595, PyrrhicVctry, Tom_Huckstep, dberndtd, Mapguy314, Newton_Books, Nicolebigelow3, chas69, JacobKirckman, NinaHer, marcelacaav, praveen.jay80,camainc ,
Explanations
camainc : One only needs to read Augustine's City of God to know that Gibbon was so very wrong about the reasons for Rome's "decline and fall."
Turambar: Whether Gibbon was wrong or not is irrelevant to whether The Decline and Fall ought to be read. We don't read Herodotus because he was right. We read him because he helped shape how a civilization thought, as did Gibbon in his own, later way.
JacobKirckman: Gibbon's not 'on my list', as I have it (just not catalogued on LT yet)! Commenting purely to counter Camainc's claim that Gibbon was wrong. I'd take an historian (even an 18th century one) over a Bible-Basher any day...
28
3,340 members
58 reviews
3.2
Global Rank 151
33
2,751 members
42 reviews
4
Global Rank 110
39
1,433 members
12 reviews
3.9
Global Rank 94
42
1,559 members
28 reviews
½ 3.7
Global Rank 172
45
247 members
5 reviews
4
Global Rank 343
46
69 members
3 reviews
½ 4.3
Global Rank 203
49
1,462 members
11 reviews
3.8
Global Rank 176
50
89 members
3.8
Global Rank 279
52
5,086 members
72 reviews
½ 3.7
Global Rank 70
53
732 members
12 reviews
½ 3.4
Global Rank 257
54
37 members
2 reviews
½ 3.5
Global Rank 329
55
24 members
4
Global Rank 273
56
45 members
Global Rank 243
61
98 members
1 review
3.8
Global Rank 297
63
8,693 members
69 reviews
½ 4.3
Global Rank 37
65
740 members
8 reviews
½ 3.6
Global Rank 91
24 Members
szarka, casvelyn, smcwl, hvanloon, andejons, madpoet, cemanuel, Betelgeuse, anthonywillard, CGlanovsky, BlueSkies305, dontcallmeleslie, JoLynnsbooks, gypsysmom, Luisali, ahef1963, Dr.Vickie, cjmills, NinieB, PyrrhicVctry, dberndtd, JohnMB, ManWithAnAgenda, hubben,aulsmith , ,Bretzky1
Explanations
aulsmith : Awful. Instead of an adventure story, I got a White Man triumphs over nature with a sermon.
Betelgeuse: Wonderful. A gripping adventure and morality tale. More than a shipwreck story, it is also about repentance and humility. Defoe's novel has several Biblical parallels, including Adam and Eve's expulsion from Eden, the parable of Jonah, and the sufferings of Job. Lessons can be learned from this book, if one overlooks Crusoe's anachronistic imperialism. But Robinson Crusoe is not a dour sermon. It is surprisingly fast-paced, and the first-person narrative gives it even more immediacy. Everyone knows the basics of the plot: the shocking discovery of the footprint, the appearance of Friday, the threat of cannibals, Crusoe's mastery of the island and its elements. There are also lesser known action sequences, such as the exciting wolfpack scene near the end of the book. A great early novel.
66
372 members
7 reviews
3.9
Global Rank 184
68
836 members
27 reviews
½ 3.6
Global Rank 177
69
2,325 members
55 reviews
½ 3.4
Global Rank 149