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Nine classic audiobooks to help you ace English Literature

Are you a student aiming to ace English Literature? Or a reader hoping to tick off some tomes?

Radio 4’s Classic Stories audiobooks series offers an extensive collection of timeless fiction from the literary greats. We’ve selected nine classic masterpieces, recorded full and unabridged for Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Sounds, that are guaranteed to have you hooked.

1. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

Most of us have enjoyed a TV adaptation, or marvelled at the Muppet movie version, but now’s the chance to listen in full to Charles Dickens's festive classic about a bitter old man and his Christmas epiphany.

After elderly miser Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by the ghost of his former business partner Jacob Marley – followed by the spirits of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come – he is transformed into a kinder, gentler citizen. It’s a wonderfully uplifting, moral tale – perfect ear fodder at a time when we’re all being reminded how important it is to give a helping hand to those around us.

2. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Frankenstein tells the story of gifted scientist Victor Frankenstein and his quest to bring about new life. However, rather than summoning the perfect specimen, he manages to create a hideous “monster”. And after being rejected by everyone, including his maker, Frankenstein’s creature seeks its revenge – resulting in murder…

Shelley’s gothic masterpiece explores the dangers of scientific ambition at a time of great social change, and has been heralded as the first major work in the sci-fi genre.

Boris Karloff in Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

3. Jane Eyre by Charlotte BrontΓ«

When orphan Jane Eyre takes a job as a governess at the estate of Edward Rochester, she gets more than she’s bargained for. Intelligent, honest and dependable Jane soon falls in love with the dark and troubled master of the mansion (and he with her), but when she uncovers the terrible secret the brooding Rochester has been hiding in his attic, her life is changed forever…

Charlotte Brontë’s coming-of-age classic is one of the most famous – and thrilling – romance novels of all time.

Why do we love Jane Eyre?

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss one of the best-known novels in British fiction

4. The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

Dr Jekyll is a kind and well-respected scientist who wants to experiment with the duality of human nature and he finds a way to transform himself into Mr Hyde – an evil alter ego. Hyde is violent and murderous, and has no remorse for his terrible crimes. For a while, Jekyll is able to control his darker side, but soon he starts to lose power…

Stevenson’s novella is about the timeless battle between good and evil – so iconic, we now use the expression “Jekyll and Hyde” to describe someone with a split personality.

5. Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson

If swashbuckling escapades are your thing, then you’ll love Robert Louis Stevenson’s youthful tale of adventure, across high seas and Highlands. This historical fiction is set in the aftermath of the Jacobite rising of 1745 and is narrated by the teenager David Balfour, a young man from the Lowlands of Scotland. Suddenly an orphan, the seventeen-year-old sets out to seek his fortune, only to discover that his miserly uncle Ebeneezer means to cheat him out of his inheritance. A fact made undoubtedly clear when he is kidnapped aboard a ship and told that he’s to be sold into slavery. Shipwrecks, a desert island and cunning plots ensue…

6. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

As the second eldest of five sisters, Elizabeth Bennett faces mounting pressure from her parents to marry in order to secure the families financial future. When she’s introduced to the handsome (and rich) Mr Darcy, sparks fly – but it’s not to be plain sailing…

Published over 200 years ago, Austen’s masterpiece stands the test of time as it deals with the enduring issues of love, social class, money, manners and hasty judgement. Elizabeth – the witty, intelligent, female protagonist at its heart – was a radical ahead of her time. And perhaps the first heroine to ask, is it possible to have it all?

Just how rich was Mr Darcy?

The male love interest of 'Pride and Prejudice' is supposed to be fabulously wealthy.

7. Sign of Four by Arthur Conan Doyle

Sign of Four is Arthur Conan Doyle's classic locked-room mystery, and the second novel about master detective Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick Dr John Watson.

Miss Mary Morstan arrives at 221B Baker Street to request help with the mystery of her missing father, the anonymous gifts of pearls she has been receiving in the post on the same day every year, and a letter requesting her to meet with a stranger that very night. Of course, Holmes takes on the case and a compelling tale with poison darts, hidden treasure, a Thames-side chase – and murder – begins.

8. Silas Marner by George Eliot

Silas Marner is a weaver, and a member of a small Calvinist congregation, who lives on a poor street in Northern England. His world is turned upside down when he is falsely accused of stealing the church’s money while watching over the ill deacon. Suddenly an outcast, he moves to a rural town where he lives a hermit-like existence in an isolated cottage, with only money for company. But then his own fortune is stolen and an orphaned child turns up on his doorstep, changing everything…

George Eliot has been praised for her realistic characterisation and tackling of issues, from religion to community, in this tale of hope and redemption.

9. The War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells

This iconic sci-fi story is about the battle to save Earth from a terrifying, tentacled race of Martians. The novel is a first-person account – from an unnamed protagonist in Surrey and his brother in London – of how the extra-terrestrials invade and devastate Earth, feeding on humans while their voracious “red weed” spreads. Despite the Earthlings' best efforts to stop them, the planet is soon overrun. However, the people may be powerless but the Martians aren't prepared for Earth's bacteria…

One of the earliest stories about a struggle between mankind and aliens, H.G. Wells’s classic has remained immensely popular since its first serialisation in 1897, and has spawned feature films, radio dramas, and numerous television series.

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