Herman Melville Β· 1851
One man. One whale. An ocean of vengeance.
A peg-legged captain drags his entire crew to the ends of the earth to kill the white whale that maimed him. Obsession as an extreme sport.
Alexandre Dumas Β· 1844
Betrayed. Buried alive. Reborn rich. Time to collect.
The greatest revenge story ever told. A wronged man escapes an island prison, claims a hidden fortune, and spends years dismantling his enemies one by one.
Homer Β· 700 BC
A war hero. Ten years lost at sea. Every monster wants him dead.
Cyclopes, sirens, a witch who turns men into pigs, and a sea god holding a grudge β all between one soldier and home. The original epic journey.
Robert Louis Stevenson Β· 1883
X marks the spot. Everyone aboard wants the gold. Most would kill for it.
A treasure map, a one-legged cook with a parrot, and a boy in way over his head. The book that invented every pirate you've ever pictured.
H. G. Wells Β· 1895
He traveled to the year 802,701. Humanity was waiting. So was something else.
The book that invented time travel. A Victorian inventor leaps eons into the future and finds a paradise hiding a nightmare just beneath the surface.
Jules Verne Β· 1870
Beneath the waves, one captain rules a world no one knew existed.
A mysterious genius, a submarine generations ahead of its time, and a giant squid in the crushing deep. Verne's blueprint for every undersea adventure since.
Jack London Β· 1903
They made him a sled dog. The wild made him a legend.
Ripped from a sunny ranch into the brutal Klondike, a dog rediscovers the wolf inside. A primal survival epic told through the animal's own eyes.
Lewis Carroll Β· 1865
Down the rabbit hole, nothing makes sense β and everything wants to play.
A girl falls into a world of grinning cats, mad tea parties, and a queen who screams for heads. The trippiest book ever aimed at children.
L. Frank Baum Β· 1900
A tornado dropped her in a strange land. The only way home runs through a wizard who isn't what he seems.
Before the movie, there was the book: a cyclone, a yellow brick road, a wicked witch, and a humbug behind the curtain. Pure American fairy tale.
Alexandre Dumas Β· 1844
All for one, and one for all β now draw your sword.
Swashbuckling at full gallop: duels, court intrigue, and four hot-headed friends taking on a cardinal's army. The blueprint for every buddy-action movie since.
Jerome K. Jerome Β· 1889
Three friends, one dog, and a boat none of them can row.
A lazy river trip that goes hilariously wrong at every bend. Victorian England's funniest book β basically a 19th-century comedy podcast about absolutely nothing.
Jules Verne Β· 1873
A gentleman bets his fortune he can circle the globe in 80 days.
A breakneck Victorian race around the world β trains, steamers, elephants, and one impossibly cool Englishman who refuses to panic. Pure adventure fun.
Edgar Rice Burroughs Β· 1912
A soldier wakes on Mars β half the gravity, twice the danger.
The pulpy granddad of every space adventure (yes, including the ones with laser swords). Sword fights, four-armed warriors, and a red-planet princess.
Mark Twain Β· 1884
A runaway boy, an escaped man, and a raft down the Mississippi.
Twain's masterpiece: funny, big-hearted, and quietly revolutionary β a friendship on a river that says more about America than any textbook ever could.
Jules Verne Β· 1864
Down a volcano lies a world that time forgot.
Verne sends you spelunking to the center of the Earth β underground oceans, glowing caverns, and living dinosaurs. Wonder-filled adventure for the curious.
J. M. Barrie Β· 1911
Second star to the right, and straight on till morning.
The boy who wouldn't grow up, a pirate with a hook, and a whole island of lost kids. Magical, bittersweet, and far more grown-up than you remember.
Miguel de Cervantes Β· 1605
An old man reads too many knight stories β and decides to become one.
The first modern novel and still one of the funniest: a delusional would-be knight charging windmills, with the most loyal sidekick in literature. Joyous.
H. Rider Haggard Β· 1885
A treasure map written in blood leads into uncharted Africa.
The original lost-treasure hunt β the book that basically invented Indiana Jones. Deserts, diamond mines, and danger at every turn.
Rudyard Kipling Β· 1894
Raised by wolves. Hunted by a tiger. At home in the wild.
A boy growing up among panthers, bears, and wolves in the Indian jungle β thrilling, warm, and wilder than any cartoon version. The law of the jungle, up close.
Voltaire Β· 1759
Everything happens for the best β in this best of all possible worlds?
Voltaire's savage, hilarious romp that drags wide-eyed optimism through every disaster imaginable. Short, sharp, and still the sharpest satire around.
James Fenimore Cooper Β· 1826
Caught between two empires and a war in the wilderness.
A breathless chase through the forests of colonial America β ambushes, loyalty, and a vanishing world. Sweeping frontier adventure at full sprint.
Arthur Conan Doyle Β· 1912
On a hidden plateau, the dinosaurs never died.
Before Jurassic Park, there was this: a bombastic professor leads an expedition to a plateau where prehistoric monsters still roam. Rollicking pulp adventure.
Joseph Conrad Β· 1899
Up the river, into the dark, after a man who became a god.
A hypnotic voyage up the Congo toward the mysterious Mr. Kurtz β and into the shadows of the human soul. Short, haunting, and endlessly debated.
Charles Dickens Β· 1837
Four jolly gentlemen blunder across England.
Dickens' rollicking, big-hearted debut β pure comic misadventure on the open road.
Alexandre Dumas Β· 1850
A secret prisoner. A masked face. A king to topple.
The aging Musketeers risk everything on a hidden twin and the throne of France.
Lew Wallace Β· 1880
Betrayed into slavery, reborn for one furious chariot race.
A Jewish prince seeks vengeance across the Roman Empire in the original epic blockbuster.
Daniel Defoe Β· 1719
One man, one island, twenty-eight years.
The original castaway survival story β shipwreck, ingenuity, and a single footprint in the sand.
Walter Scott Β· 1820
A knight returns to a England of tournaments and outlaws.
Jousts, Robin Hood, Saxon-vs-Norman intrigue β the book that invented medieval romance as we know it.
Robert Louis Stevenson Β· 1886
Robbed of his inheritance and shipped off to die β if he lets them.
A breathless chase across the Scottish Highlands with a roguish Jacobite at his side.
Jack London Β· 1904
Trapped at sea under the cruelest captain alive.
A soft gentleman is press-ganged onto a sealing ship ruled by a brilliant, brutal tyrant.
Baroness Orczy Β· 1905
A foppish fool by day, a daring rescuer by night.
The original masked hero β smuggling aristocrats out of revolutionary France under the guillotine.
Anthony Hope Β· 1894
An ordinary man must impersonate a kidnapped king.
Swordplay, palace intrigue, and impossible romance in a tiny invented kingdom. Endlessly imitated.
Howard Pyle Β· 1883
Rob the rich, feed the poor, embarrass the Sheriff.
The definitive Robin Hood β greenwood archery, merry men, and gleeful outlaw mischief.
Rudyard Kipling Β· 1897
A spoiled rich boy goes overboard and grows up fast.
Swept off a liner onto a working fishing schooner, a brat learns the value of hard work.
H. Rider Haggard Β· 1887
Deep in Africa rules an immortal queen who waits for a dead man reborn.
The blueprint for every lost-civilization fantasy β a deathless sorceress and a 2,000-year-old love.
Edgar Rice Burroughs Β· 1912
Orphaned in the jungle, raised by apes, lord of them all.
The pulp legend himself β a man between two worlds, swinging through the African canopy.
Edgar Rice Burroughs Β· 1913
Back on Mars, and the gods themselves are the enemy.
John Carter returns to a red planet of flying ships, savage gods, and nonstop sword-and-blaster action.
Owen Wister Β· 1902
A quiet cowboy, a schoolteacher, and a showdown at high noon.
The first true Western β and the source of every laconic gunslinger who came after.
Zane Grey Β· 1912
A masked gunman rides in to save a woman from zealots.
The Western that defined the genre β purple canyons, fast guns, and a hidden valley paradise.
John Buchan Β· 1915
An innocent man, a dead spy, a whole country hunting him.
The original man-on-the-run thriller β a chase across Scotland with a deadly secret in hand.
Erskine Childers Β· 1903
Two yachtsmen stumble onto a secret invasion plan.
The first modern spy novel β fog, tide charts, and espionage among the North Sea sandbanks.
H. G. Wells Β· 1901
Two Englishmen land on the Moon β and it is inhabited.
A wild Victorian lunar voyage into caverns ruled by an insect-like Moon civilization.
Maurice Leblanc Β· 1907
The thief who robs you with a smile and a calling card.
France's dashing master burglar β disguises, daring heists, and outwitting the police for sport.
Carlo Collodi Β· 1883
A wooden puppet lies his way toward becoming a real boy.
Stranger and darker than you remember β a mischievous marionetteβs wild road to a soul.
Joseph Conrad Β· 1900
One moment of cowardice he spends a lifetime outrunning.
A young sailor abandons ship and chases redemption to the far edges of the colonial East.
Rudyard Kipling Β· 1901
A street orphan becomes a player in the Great Game of spies.
A vivid romp across colonial India β a quick-witted boy torn between a holy man and the secret service.
Johann David Wyss Β· 1812
A shipwrecked family builds a paradise from a desert island.
The ultimate castaway family adventure β treehouses, wild beasts, and endless ingenuity.