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101 Libros Imprescindibles Para Leer En Tu Vida

Esta colección incluye 101 obras maestras, los tesoros de la literatura universal:

La Ilíada y La Odisea

Edipo Rey

El Banquete

Metafísica

La metamorfosis

De la Brevedad de la Vida

Las Confesiones de San Agustín

El Arte de la Guerra

Cantar de Mío Cid

Popol Vuh

El castillo interior

Ejercicios Espirituales

El Príncipe

La divina Comedia

El Decamerón

Lazarillo de Tormes

Don Quijote de la Mancha

Los mejores cuentos de Andersen

Cuentos escogidos de Hermanos Grimm

Romeo y Julieta

El Paraíso Perdido

Utopía

El Contrato Social

Fundamentación de la metafísica de las costumbres

Los viajes de Gulliver

Las Aventuras de Robinson Crusoe

Historia de dos ciudades

La Feria de las Vanidades

Orgullo y prejuicio

Jane Eyre

Cumbres borrascosas

La isla del tesoro

El retrato de Dorian Gray

Frankenstein

Drácula

Otra vuelta de tuerca

Las aventuras de Sherlock Holmes

La dama de blanco

El corazón de las tinieblas

Las minas del rey Salomón

Tarzán de los monos

La guerra de los mundos

Los Crímenes de la calle Morgue

La Llamada de Cthulhu

La leyenda de Sleepy Hollow

La Cabaña del Tío Tom

Las aventuras de Tom Sawyer

Moby Dick

La llamada de la selva

La letra escarlata

Mujercitas

Alicia en el País de las Maravillas

El maravilloso mago de Oz

Peter Pan y Wendy

Cándido

Los miserables

Papá Goriot

Madame Bovary

El conde de Montecristo

La Dama de las Camelias

Veinte mil leguas de viaje submarino

El Corsario Negro

Fausto

Intriga y Amor

Así habló Zaratustra

La metamorfosis

La interpretación de los sueños

Almas muertas

Crimen y castigo

Ana Karenina

Tío Vania

Dios y el Estado

Una casa encantada

La Celestina

Fuenteovejuna

El burlador de Sevilla

Historia de la vida del Buscón

La vida es sueño

El arte de la prudencia

Don Juan Tenorio

Los cuatro jinetes del apocalipsis

Don Álvaro o la fuerza del sino

La Edad de Oro

Pepita Jiménez

La Regenta

Fortunata y Jacinta

Niebla

Campos de Castilla

Luces de bohemia

Los pazos de Ulloa

María

Cuentos de Amor de Locura y de Muerte

Poema del cante jondo

Rimas

Azul

Las flores del mal

El profeta

Casa de muñecas

Noli Me Tángere

El libro de las mil noches y una noche


Authors:

  • Sun Tzu
  • Teresa de Jesús
  • Mark Twain
  • Julio Verne
  • Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Lewis Carroll
  • L. Frank Baum
  • Franz Kafka
  • Voltaire
  • Victor Hugo
  • Ignacio de Loyola
  • Nicolás Maquiavelo
  • Homero
  • Benito Pérez Galdós
  • Platón
  • León Tolstoi
  • Antón Chéjov
  • Arthur Conan Doyle
  • Jane Austen
  • Emily Brontë
  • Robert Louis Stevenson
  • Oscar Wilde
  • Mary Shelley
  • Bram Stoker
  • H. G. Wells
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • H. P. Lovecraft
  • Washington Irving
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Herman Melville
  • Jack London
  • Seneca
  • San Agustín
  • Dante Alighieri
  • Giovanni Boccaccio
  • Miguel Cervantes
  • Hans Christian Andersen
  • Hermanos Grimm
  • William Shakespeare
  • John Milton
  • Tomás Moro
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • Immanuel Kant
  • Federico García Lorca
  • Sófocles
  • Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
  • Juan Valera
  • Leopoldo Alas
  • Miguel De Unamuno
  • Emilia Pardo Bazán
  • Duque de Rivas
  • José Martí
  • Antonio Machado
  • Ramón María del Valle-Inclán
  • Jorge Isaacs
  • Horacio Quiroga
  • Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer
  • Rubén Darío
  • Charles Baudelaire
  • Henrik Ibsen
  • Gibrán Jalil Gibrán

Format:

  • E-book

Duration:

  • 20779 pages

Language:

Spanish

Categories:

  • Culture
  • Literature
  • Classics and poetry
  • Classics

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  • 220 books

    Sun Tzu

    Sun Tzu (544 B.C.–496 B.C.) was an ancient Chinese military general, strategist, and philosopher from the Zhou Dynasty, who has had a significant impact on Chinese and Asian history and culture, both as an author of The Art of War as well as through legend.

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  • 1326 books

    Mark Twain

    Mark Twain, born Samuel Langhorne Clemens in 1835, left school at age 12. His career encompassed such varied occupations as printer, Mississippi riverboat pilot, journalist, travel writer, and publisher, which furnished him with a wide knowledge of humanity and the perfect grasp of local customs and speech manifested in his writing. It wasn't until The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885), that he was recognized by the literary establishment as one of the greatest writers America would ever produce. Toward the end of his life, plagued by personal tragedy and financial failure, Twain grew more and more cynical and pessimistic. Though his fame continued to widen--Yale and Oxford awarded him honorary degrees--he spent his last years in gloom and desperation, but he lives on in American letters as "the Lincoln of our literature."

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  • 431 books

    Lewis Carroll

    Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known by his pen name Lewis Carroll, was an English writer, mathematician, logician, and photographer. He is especially remembered for bringing to life the beloved and long-revered tale of Alice in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass (1871).

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  • 224 books

    L. Frank Baum

    Lyman Frank Baum was born in Chittenango, New York, on May 15, 1856. Over the course of his life, Baum raised fancy poultry, sold fireworks, managed an opera house, opened a department store, and an edited a newspaper before finally turning to writing. In 1900, he published his best known book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Eventually he wrote fifty-five novels, including thirteen Oz books, plus four “lost” novels, eighty-three short stories, more than two hundred poems, an unknown number of scripts, and many miscellaneous writings. Baum died on May 6, 1919. He is buried in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery, in Glendale, California.

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  • 355 books

    Franz Kafka

    Franz Kafka was born in Prague in 1883, where he lived until his death in 1924. Widely esteemed as one of the twentieth century's most important writers, he is the author of the novels The Trial and The Castle.

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  • 742 books

    Victor Hugo

    Victor Hugo, a major leader of the French Romantic Movement, was one of the most influential figures in nineteenth-century literature. By the age of thirty, he had established himself as a master in every domain of literature--drama, fiction, and lyric poetry. Hugo's private life was as unconventional and exuberant as his literary creations. At twenty, he married after a long, idealistic courtship; but later in life was infamous for his scandalous escapades. In 1851, he was exiled for his passionate opposition to Napoleon III. Hugo's rich, emotional novels, Notre Dame de Paris and Les Miserables, have made him one of the most widely read authors of all time.

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  • 910 books

    Arthur Conan Doyle

    Arthur Conan Doyle was a British writer and physician. He is the creator of the Sherlock Holmes character, writing his debut appearance in A Study in Scarlet. Doyle wrote notable books in the fantasy and science fiction genres, as well as plays, romances, poetry, non-fiction, and historical novels.

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  • 1144 books

    Jane Austen

    Jane Austen (1775-1817) was an English novelist known primarily for her six major novels—Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion—which observe and critique the British gentry of the late eighteenth century. Her mastery of wit, irony, and social commentary made her a beloved and acclaimed author in her lifetime, a distinction she still enjoys today around the world.

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  • 380 books

    Emily Brontë

    Emily Brontë (1818–1848) was an English novelist and poet, best remembered for her only novel, Wuthering Heights. The novel’s violence and passion shocked the Victorian public and led to the belief that it was written by a man. Although Emily died young (at the age of 30), her sole complete work is now considered a masterpiece of English literature.

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  • 481 books

    Robert Louis Stevenson

    Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson was born on 13 November 1850, changing his second name to ‘Louis’ at the age of eighteen. He has always been loved and admired by countless readers and critics for ‘the excitement, the fierce joy, the delight in strangeness, the pleasure in deep and dark adventures’ found in his classic stories and, without doubt, he created some of the most horribly unforgettable characters in literature and, above all, Mr. Edward Hyde.

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  • 912 books

    Oscar Wilde

    Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde was born on the 16th October 1854 and died on the 30th November 1900. He was an Irish playwright, poet, and author of numerous short stories and one novel. Known for his biting wit, he became one of the most successful playwrights of the late Victorian era in London, and one of the greatest celebrities of his day. Several of his plays continue to be widely performed, especially The Importance of Being Earnest.

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  • 510 books

    Mary Shelley

    Mary Shelley (1797–1851) was born to well-known parents: author and feminist Mary Wollstonecraft and philosopher William Godwin. When Mary was sixteen, she met the young poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, a devotee of her father’s teachings. In 1816, the two of them travelled to Geneva to stay with Lord Byron. One evening, while they shared ghost stories, Lord Byron proposed that they each write a ghost story of their own. Frankenstein was Mary’s contribution. Other works of hers include Mathilda, The Last Man, and The Fortunes of Perkin Warbeck.

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  • 581 books

    Bram Stoker

    Bram Stoker was born November 8, 1847, in Dublin, Ireland. Stoker was a sickly child who was frequently bedridden; his mother entertained him by telling frightening stories and fables during his bouts of illness. Stoker studied math at Trinity College Dublin, graduating in 1867. He worked as a civil servant, freelance journalist, drama critic, editor and, most notably, as manager of the Lyceum Theatre. Although best known for Dracula, Stoker wrote eighteen other books, including Under the Sunset, The Snake’s Pass, The Jewel of Seven Stars, The Lady of the Shroud, and The Lair of the White Worm. He died in 1912 at the age of sixty-four.

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  • 597 books

    H. G. Wells

    English author H. G. Wells is best known for his work in the science fiction genre. He was also a prolific writer in many other genres, including contemporary novels, history, politics, and social commentary, even writing textbooks and rules for war games. He was born on September 21, 1866, and died on August 13, 1946.

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    Edgar Allan Poe

    Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) was an American writer, poet, and critic. Best known for his macabre prose work, including the short story “The Tell-Tale Heart,” his writing has influenced literature in the United States and around the world.

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  • 321 books

    H. P. Lovecraft

    H. P. Lovecraft was an American author of horror, fantasy, and science fiction, especially the subgenre known as weird fiction.

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    Washington Irving

    Washington Irving was an American author, essayist, biographer, historian, and diplomat of the early 19th century.

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  • 126 books

    Harriet Beecher Stowe

    Harriet Beecher Stowe (1811–1896) was an American abolitionist and author of more than 20 books, including novels, three travel memoirs, and collections of articles and letters. Her novel Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852) was a realistic account of life for African-Americans under slavery; it reached millions and became influential in the United States and United Kingdom.

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  • 404 books

    Herman Melville

    Herman Melville was born in 1819 in New York City. After his father's death he left school for a series of clerical jobs before going to sea as a young man of nineteen. At twenty-one he shipped aboard the whaler Acushnet and began a series of adventures in the South Seas that would last for three years and form the basis for his first two novels, Typee and Omoo. Although these two novels sold well and gained for Melville a measure of fame, nineteenth-century readers were puzzled by the experiments with form that he began with his third novel, Mardi, and continued brilliantly in his masterpiece, Moby-Dick. During his later years spent working as a customs inspector on the New York docks, Melville published only poems, compiled in a collection entitled Battle-Pieces, and died in 1891 with Billy Budd, Sailor, now considered a classic, still unpublished.

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    Jack London

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  • 240 books

    Dante Alighieri

    Dante Alighieri, born in Florence in 1265, became one of the leading lyric poets in Italy as a young man. He was exiled for political reasons, and in the last fifteen years of his life composed The Divine Comedy, of which the Inferno is the most-read part today.

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  • 112 books

    Miguel Cervantes

    Miguel de Cervantes was a Spanish writer known for his novels, plays, and poems. He is the author of Don Quixote and is one of the most recognized writers in Spanish literature.

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    Hans Christian Andersen

    One of the most prolific and beloved writers of all time, Danish poet and author Hans Christian Andersen is best known for his fairy tales. Born in Odense, Denmark, in 1805, Andersen published his first story at 17. In all, he wrote more than 150 stories before his death in 1875.

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  • 1666 books

    William Shakespeare

    William Shakespeare is widely regarded as the greatest playwright the world has seen. He produced an amount of work; 37 plays, 154 sonnets, and 5 poems. He died on 23rd April 1616, aged 52, and was buried in the Holy Trinity Church, Stratford.

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  • 198 books

    John Milton

    John Milton is a famous English poet and intellectual known for his epic, Paradise Lost.

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  • 150 books

    Immanuel Kant

    Immanuel Kant was a German philosopher and is known as one of the foremost thinkers of Enlightenment. He is widely recognized for his contributions to metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, and aesthetics.

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