Can You Match These Famous Books to the Author?
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Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Novel Pride And Prejudice?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Children's Book Charlotte's Web?
Question 1
Harper Lee Is Best Known For Writing Which Famous Novel?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Grapes Of Wrath?
Question 1
Which Author Created The Wizard Of Oz?
Question 1
Agatha Christie Is Best Known For Writing Which Genre?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Harry Potter Series?
Question 1
Gone With The Wind Was Written By Which Author?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Diary Of A Young Girl?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote Moby Dick?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Novel The Great Gatsby?
Question 1
Little Women Was Written By Which Beloved American Author?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Thrilling Novel The Old Man And The Sea?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Spooky Classic Frankenstein?
Question 1
John Grisham Is Best Known For Writing Which Type Of Novel?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Timeless Classic A Tale Of Two Cities?
Question 1
Which Author Created The Famous Detective Sherlock Holmes?
Question 1
Toni Morrison Won The Nobel Prize For Literature In Which Decade?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Novel The Color Purple?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Suspense Novel Rebecca?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Novel Wuthering Heights?
Question 1
Mark Twain Is Best Known For Writing Which Classic Novel?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Chilling Classic Dracula?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Handmaid's Tale?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Series Little House On The Prairie?
Question 1
George Orwell Wrote Which Famous Dystopian Novel?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Sweeping Novel Gone Girl?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Timeless Classic Anne Of Green Gables?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Novel Jane Eyre?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel Beloved?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Novel Don Quixote?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Timeless Novel Middlemarch?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Classic Novel Catch-22?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Novel The Call Of The Wild?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Novel A Wrinkle In Time?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Classic Novel Crime And Punishment?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Novel Treasure Island?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Sweeping Epic War And Peace?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Novel Around The World In 80 Days?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Timeless Classic The Scarlet Letter?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Fairy Tales Cinderella And Sleeping Beauty?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Celebrated Novel Their Eyes Were Watching God?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Unforgettable Novel Uncle Tom's Cabin?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Spellbinding Novel The Da Vinci Code?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Classic Adventure Novel Robinson Crusoe?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Chilling Novel It?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Sweeping Historical Novel Roots?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel The Secret Garden?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Play Romeo And Juliet?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Classic Novel The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Groundbreaking Novel Invisible Man?
Question 1
Who wrote Brave New World?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Timeless Classic The Count Of Monte Cristo?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel Watership Down?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Novel One Hundred Years Of Solitude?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Fantasy Novel The Hobbit?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Sweeping Novel Doctor Zhivago?
Question 1
Which Author Created The Beloved Character Hercule Poirot?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Novel The Catcher In The Rye?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Classic Novel Madame Bovary?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Timeless Classic Gulliver's Travels?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Novel The Picture Of Dorian Gray?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Classic Novel Les Miserables?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Chilling Classic The Tell-Tale Heart?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel A Tree Grows In Brooklyn?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Novel The Alchemist?
Question 1
Who Wrote Lord Of The Flies?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel Eat Pray Love?
Question 1
Who wrote Fahrenheit 451?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Memoir The Glass Castle?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Novel The Joy Luck Club?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Sweeping Novel Cold Mountain?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Novel The Bridges Of Madison County?
Question 1
Who Wrote I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel The Thorn Birds?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel The Outsiders?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Beloved Novel The Kite Runner?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Famous Novel The Bell Jar?
Question 1
Which Author Wrote The Beloved Novel Where The Crawdads Sing?
Question 1
Who Wrote The Sweeping Novel The Pillars Of The Earth?
1
George Eliot
2
Thomas Hardy
3
Jane Austen
4
Charlotte Bronte
Jane Austen published Pride And Prejudice in 1813 and originally titled it First Impressions.
1
Beverly Cleary
2
Laura Ingalls Wilder
3
Roald Dahl
4
E.B. White
E.B. White wrote Charlotte's Web in 1952 and based the farm on his own property in Maine.
1
To Kill A Mockingbird
2
The Color Purple
3
A Tree Grows In Brooklyn
4
Their Eyes Were Watching God
Harper Lee won the Pulitzer Prize in 1961 and reportedly based Atticus Finch on her own father.
1
Ernest Hemingway
2
F. Scott Fitzgerald
3
John Steinbeck
4
William Faulkner
John Steinbeck wrote The Grapes Of Wrath in just 100 days and won the Nobel Prize in 1962.
1
Lewis Carroll
2
L. Frank Baum
3
Robert Louis Stevenson
4
Mark Twain
L. Frank Baum published The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz in 1900 and wrote 13 more Oz books afterward.
1
Gothic Horror
2
Murder Mysteries
3
Science Fiction
4
Historical Romances
Agatha Christie is the best-selling fiction writer of all time with over two billion books sold worldwide.
1
Stephenie Meyer
2
J.K. Rowling
3
Philip Pullman
4
Judy Blume
J.K. Rowling wrote the first Harry Potter book while a single mother sitting in Edinburgh cafes.
1
Pearl S. Buck
2
Edna Ferber
3
Margaret Mitchell
4
Willa Cather
Margaret Mitchell wrote Gone With The Wind in 1936 and it remains one of the best-selling novels ever published.
1
Corrie Ten Boom
2
Anne Frank
3
Elie Wiesel
4
Irene Gut Opdyke
Anne Frank received her famous red-checked diary as a birthday gift on June 12 1942.
1
Washington Irving
2
James Fenimore Cooper
3
Herman Melville
4
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Herman Melville dedicated Moby Dick to his friend Nathaniel Hawthorne and the book flopped when first published.
1
Sinclair Lewis
2
John Dos Passos
3
Ernest Hemingway
4
F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald published The Great Gatsby in 1925 and it sold poorly during his lifetime.
1
Willa Cather
2
Harriet Beecher Stowe
3
Edith Wharton
4
Louisa May Alcott
Louisa May Alcott based Little Women on her own childhood growing up in Concord Massachusetts.
1
William Faulkner
2
John Updike
3
Theodore Dreiser
4
Ernest Hemingway
Ernest Hemingway won the Pulitzer Prize in 1953 for The Old Man And The Sea.
1
Mary Shelley
2
Edgar Allan Poe
3
Ann Radcliffe
4
Bram Stoker
Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at just 18 years old during a stormy summer in Switzerland.
1
Science Fiction
2
Legal Thrillers
3
Romance Novels
4
Historical Fiction
John Grisham was a practicing attorney before writing The Firm which launched his bestselling career.
1
George Eliot
2
Thomas Hardy
3
Charles Dickens
4
Anthony Trollope
Charles Dickens set A Tale Of Two Cities during the French Revolution and it remains one of history's best-selling novels.
1
Edgar Wallace
2
G.K. Chesterton
3
Wilkie Collins
4
Arthur Conan Doyle
Arthur Conan Doyle actually grew tired of Sherlock Holmes and tried to kill him off in 1893.
1
The 1990s
2
The 2000s
3
The 1980s
4
The 1970s
Toni Morrison won the Nobel Prize in 1993 and her novel Beloved is considered one of America's greatest books.
1
Toni Morrison
2
Alice Walker
3
Zora Neale Hurston
4
Maya Angelou
Alice Walker won the Pulitzer Prize in 1983 making her the first Black woman to win for fiction.
1
Agatha Christie
2
Edith Wharton
3
Daphne Du Maurier
4
Virginia Woolf
Daphne du Maurier published Rebecca in 1938 and it has never gone out of print since.
1
Charlotte Bronte
2
Jane Austen
3
George Eliot
4
Emily Bronte
Emily Bronte published Wuthering Heights in 1847 under the pen name Ellis Bell.
1
The Red Badge Of Courage
2
The Scarlet Letter
3
The Call Of The Wild
4
The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer
Mark Twain based Tom Sawyer on his own childhood adventures growing up in Hannibal Missouri.
1
Bram Stoker
2
Edgar Allan Poe
3
H.G. Wells
4
Robert Louis Stevenson
Bram Stoker researched Eastern European folklore for seven years before publishing Dracula in 1897.
1
Ursula K. Le Guin
2
Doris Lessing
3
Margaret Atwood
4
Joyce Carol Oates
Margaret Atwood wrote every event in The Handmaid's Tale based on something that had already happened in history.
1
Pearl S. Buck
2
Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings
3
Laura Ingalls Wilder
4
Willa Cather
Laura Ingalls Wilder was 65 years old when her very first Little House book was published in 1932.
1
Fahrenheit 451
2
1984
3
Brave New World
4
Lord Of The Flies
George Orwell wrote 1984 while seriously ill and finished it just one year before his death.
1
Nora Roberts
2
Lisa Gardner
3
Jodi Picoult
4
Gillian Flynn
Gillian Flynn wrote Gone Girl in 2012 and it spent eight straight weeks at number one on the bestseller list.
1
Beatrix Potter
2
Kate Douglas Wiggin
3
L.M. Montgomery
4
Frances Hodgson Burnett
L.M. Montgomery was rejected by five publishers before Anne Of Green Gables became a worldwide sensation in 1908.
1
Emily Bronte
2
Charlotte Bronte
3
Jane Austen
4
George Eliot
Charlotte Bronte published Jane Eyre in 1847 under the male pen name Currer Bell to be taken seriously.
1
Alice Walker
2
Zora Neale Hurston
3
Toni Morrison
4
Maya Angelou
Toni Morrison's Beloved won the Pulitzer Prize in 1988 and was inspired by a true historical story.
1
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
2
Miguel De Cervantes
3
Jorge Luis Borges
4
Pablo Neruda
Published in 1605 Don Quixote is widely considered the first modern novel ever written.
1
Charlotte Bronte
2
George Eliot
3
Anthony Trollope
4
Thomas Hardy
George Eliot was the pen name of Mary Ann Evans who hid her gender to be taken seriously as a writer.
1
Kurt Vonnegut
2
James Jones
3
Norman Mailer
4
Joseph Heller
Joseph Heller's Catch-22 gave the English language a brand new phrase still used every day.
1
Rudyard Kipling
2
Zane Grey
3
Owen Wister
4
Jack London
Jack London wrote The Call Of The Wild in just a month in 1903 and it became an instant bestseller.
1
Ursula K. Le Guin
2
Judy Blume
3
Madeleine L'Engle
4
Beverly Cleary
A Wrinkle In Time was rejected by 26 publishers before winning the Newbery Medal in 1963.
1
Anton Chekhov
2
Ivan Turgenev
3
Leo Tolstoy
4
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Dostoevsky wrote Crime And Punishment in 1866 while deeply in debt and racing against a publisher's deadline.
1
Jack London
2
Jules Verne
3
Robert Louis Stevenson
4
Rudyard Kipling
Robert Louis Stevenson published Treasure Island in 1883 and originally told the story to entertain his stepson.
1
Fyodor Dostoevsky
2
Anton Chekhov
3
Ivan Turgenev
4
Leo Tolstoy
Leo Tolstoy spent six years writing War And Peace and his wife Sofia hand-copied the manuscript eight times.
1
Alexandre Dumas
2
Arthur Conan Doyle
3
Jules Verne
4
H.G. Wells
Jules Verne was so prolific that he wrote over 60 adventure novels and is the second most translated author in history.
1
Washington Irving
2
Ralph Waldo Emerson
3
Herman Melville
4
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Nathaniel Hawthorne was so ashamed of his ancestor's role in the Salem witch trials that he added a W to his last name.
1
The Brothers Grimm
2
Hans Christian Andersen
3
Charles Perrault
4
Aesop
Charles Perrault published early literary versions of both tales, making him the most widely credited author for them.
1
Alice Walker
2
Langston Hughes
3
Zora Neale Hurston
4
Maya Angelou
Zora Neale Hurston wrote Their Eyes Were Watching God in just seven weeks while doing anthropology fieldwork in Haiti.
1
Edith Wharton
2
Harriet Beecher Stowe
3
Willa Cather
4
Louisa May Alcott
President Abraham Lincoln reportedly greeted Harriet Beecher Stowe by saying she was the little woman who started the Civil War.
1
Dan Brown
2
John Grisham
3
Michael Crichton
4
James Patterson
Dan Brown published The Da Vinci Code in 2003 and it became one of the best-selling novels in history.
1
Jonathan Swift
2
Henry Fielding
3
Samuel Richardson
4
Daniel Defoe
Daniel Defoe published Robinson Crusoe in 1719 and it is widely considered one of the first English novels.
1
Anne Rice
2
Stephen King
3
Dean Koontz
4
Peter Straub
Stephen King published It in 1986 and the terrifying clown Pennywise has scared readers ever since.
1
Ralph Ellison
2
Alex Haley
3
Richard Wright
4
James Baldwin
Alex Haley spent twelve years researching Roots and the 1977 TV miniseries became one of the most watched in American history.
1
Frances Hodgson Burnett
2
Louisa May Alcott
3
Edith Nesbit
4
Lucy Maud Montgomery
Frances Hodgson Burnett published The Secret Garden in 1911 and it remains one of the best-loved children's classics ever written.
1
Christopher Marlowe
2
Ben Jonson
3
William Shakespeare
4
John Webster
William Shakespeare wrote Romeo And Juliet around 1594 and it remains the most performed play in the world.
1
Jack London
2
Bret Harte
3
Mark Twain
4
O. Henry
Mark Twain published Huckleberry Finn in 1884 and Ernest Hemingway called it the source of all modern American literature.
1
Ralph Ellison
2
James Baldwin
3
Langston Hughes
4
Richard Wright
Ralph Ellison published Invisible Man in 1952 and it won the National Book Award the very following year.
1
Ray Bradbury
2
George Orwell
3
H.G. Wells
4
Aldous Huxley
Aldous Huxley wrote Brave New World in just four months and published it in 1932.
1
Alexandre Dumas
2
Gustave Flaubert
3
Victor Hugo
4
Emile Zola
Alexandre Dumas wrote The Count Of Monte Cristo in 1844 and it remains one of the best-selling novels ever.
1
C.S. Lewis
2
Roald Dahl
3
J.R.R. Tolkien
4
Richard Adams
Richard Adams originally told the story of Watership Down to his daughters on a long car trip in 1966.
1
Pablo Neruda
2
Isabel Allende
3
Jorge Luis Borges
4
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Gabriel Garcia Marquez reportedly pulled over his car and drove home to write this novel after the opening line came to him.
1
Lloyd Alexander
2
C.S. Lewis
3
J.R.R. Tolkien
4
T.H. White
J.R.R. Tolkien first wrote The Hobbit to entertain his own children and published it in 1937.
1
Leo Tolstoy
2
Mikhail Bulgakov
3
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
4
Boris Pasternak
Boris Pasternak was forced to decline the Nobel Prize in 1958 after Soviet authorities pressured him over Doctor Zhivago.
1
P.D. James
2
Agatha Christie
3
Arthur Conan Doyle
4
Dorothy L. Sayers
Agatha Christie grew so tired of Hercule Poirot that she called him a detestable little creep in her private diary.
1
Jack Kerouac
2
Kurt Vonnegut
3
J.D. Salinger
4
John Updike
J.D. Salinger published the novel in 1951 and it sold over 65 million copies worldwide.
1
Victor Hugo
2
Gustave Flaubert
3
Alexandre Dumas
4
Emile Zola
Gustave Flaubert was actually put on trial for immorality after publishing Madame Bovary in 1857.
1
Samuel Johnson
2
Jonathan Swift
3
Daniel Defoe
4
Henry Fielding
Jonathan Swift originally published Gulliver's Travels in 1726 as a sharp satire of British politics.
1
Oscar Wilde
2
Thomas Hardy
3
Anthony Trollope
4
Wilkie Collins
Oscar Wilde's only novel was considered so scandalous in 1890 that editors secretly removed passages before publishing.
1
Stendhal
2
Victor Hugo
3
Emile Zola
4
Gustave Flaubert
Victor Hugo wrote Les Miserables in 1862 and it remains one of the longest novels ever written.
1
Nathaniel Hawthorne
2
Edgar Allan Poe
3
Herman Melville
4
Washington Irving
Edgar Allan Poe published The Tell-Tale Heart in 1843 and earned only nine dollars for the story.
1
Pearl S. Buck
2
Edna Ferber
3
Betty Smith
4
Willa Cather
Betty Smith's 1943 debut novel sold over 300000 copies in its first six weeks through a wartime book program.
1
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
2
Paulo Coelho
3
Jorge Luis Borges
4
Isabel Allende
Paulo Coelho published The Alchemist in 1988 and it became one of the best-selling books in history.
1
Graham Greene
2
John Steinbeck
3
William Golding
4
Aldous Huxley
William Golding won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1983 partly for his work on Lord Of The Flies.
1
Brene Brown
2
Elizabeth Gilbert
3
Nora Ephron
4
Cheryl Strayed
Elizabeth Gilbert wrote Eat Pray Love after her divorce and the memoir spent 187 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.
1
Aldous Huxley
2
Ray Bradbury
3
Kurt Vonnegut
4
George Orwell
Ray Bradbury chose 451 degrees Fahrenheit because he believed that was the temperature at which paper catches fire.
1
Jeannette Walls
2
Maya Angelou
3
Mary Karr
4
Cheryl Strayed
Jeannette Walls wrote The Glass Castle about her unconventional childhood and it spent over six years on the bestseller list.
1
Maxine Hong Kingston
2
Lisa See
3
Celeste Ng
4
Amy Tan
Amy Tan wrote The Joy Luck Club in 1989 and it was later adapted into a celebrated Hollywood film in 1993.
1
Cormac McCarthy
2
Charles Frazier
3
Larry McMurtry
4
Pat Conroy
Charles Frazier based Cold Mountain on the real Civil War journey of his great-great-uncle W.P. Inman.
1
Danielle Steel
2
Nora Roberts
3
Nicholas Sparks
4
Robert James Waller
Robert James Waller wrote The Bridges Of Madison County in just eleven days and it sold over 50 million copies worldwide.
1
Toni Morrison
2
Alice Walker
3
Maya Angelou
4
Zora Neale Hurston
Maya Angelou's I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings was banned in many schools but remains one of America's most celebrated memoirs.
1
Judith Krantz
2
Colleen McCullough
3
Danielle Steel
4
Barbara Taylor Bradford
Australian author Colleen McCullough published The Thorn Birds in 1977 and it became one of the best-selling novels of that decade.
1
Beverly Cleary
2
S.E. Hinton
3
Lois Lowry
4
Judy Blume
S.E. Hinton was only 15 years old when she began writing The Outsiders and it was published when she was just 18.
1
Arundhati Roy
2
Chimamanda Adichie
3
Jhumpa Lahiri
4
Khaled Hosseini
Khaled Hosseini published The Kite Runner in 2003 and it sold over 38 million copies worldwide.
1
Flannery O'Connor
2
Carson McCullers
3
Sylvia Plath
4
Anne Sexton
Sylvia Plath published The Bell Jar just one month before her death in February 1963.
1
Kristin Hannah
2
Delia Owens
3
Lisa Jewell
4
Jojo Moyes
Delia Owens was a wildlife scientist for decades before publishing her debut novel at age 70.
1
James Michener
2
Bernard Cornwell
3
Edward Rutherfurd
4
Ken Follett
Ken Follett spent three years researching medieval cathedral architecture before writing a single page of the novel.
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