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Do You Think You Can Finish These Famous Book Titles?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: To Kill A ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Gone With The ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Catcher In The ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Little Women By Louisa May ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Pride And ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: One Flew Over The Cuckoo's ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Grapes Of ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Rebecca By Daphne Du ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Secret ___By Frances Hodgson Burnett?

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Fill In The Blank: Sense And ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Old Man And The ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Of Mice And ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: A Tale Of Two ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Wuthering ___By Emily Brontë?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Great ___By F. Scott Fitzgerald?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Their Eyes Were Watching ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Anne Of Green ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Brave New ___By Aldous Huxley?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Color ___By Alice Walker?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Little House On The ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Charlotte's ___By E.B. White?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Wizard Of ___By L. Frank Baum?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Call Of The ___By Jack London?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Diary Of A Young ___By Anne Frank?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Lord Of The ___By William Golding?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: East Of ___By John Steinbeck?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: A Wrinkle In ___By Madeleine L'Engle?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Thorn ___By Colleen McCullough?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Flowers For ___By Daniel Keyes?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Bridge Of San Luis ___By Thornton Wilder?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Adventures Of Tom ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Around The World In Eighty ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Hound Of The ___By Arthur Conan Doyle?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: War And ___By Leo Tolstoy?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Phantom Of The ___By Gaston Leroux?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Picture Of Dorian ___By Oscar Wilde?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Count Of Monte ___By Alexandre Dumas?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: A Room With A ___By E.M. Forster?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Scarlet ___By Nathaniel Hawthorne?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Adventures Of Huckleberry ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Jane ___ By Charlotte Brontë?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Sun Also ___By Ernest Hemingway?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Catch-___ By Joseph Heller?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: To The ___ By Virginia Woolf?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The ___ Of Innocence By Edith Wharton?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Moby- ___ By Herman Melville?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: ___ Karenina By Leo Tolstoy?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Remains Of The ___ By Kazuo Ishiguro?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: ___ Passage By E.M. Forster?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Harry Potter And The Sorcerer's ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Gone Girl By Gillian ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Da Vinci ___By Dan Brown?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Help By Kathryn ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Nightingale By Kristin ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Eat, Pray, ___By Elizabeth Gilbert?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Outlander By Diana ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: Where The Crawdads ___By Delia Owens?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Bridges Of Madison ___?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Handmaid's ___ By Margaret Atwood?

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Question 1

Fill In The Blank: The Girl With The Dragon ___?

1
Nightingale
2
Bluebird
3
Sparrow
4
Mockingbird

Harper Lee published this 1960 Pulitzer Prize winner, and the mockingbird symbolizes innocent people destroyed by evil.
1
Storm
2
Rain
3
Wind
4
Tide

Margaret Mitchell wrote this 1936 epic, and the title comes from a line in the poem Cynara by Ernest Dowson.
1
Wheat
2
Corn
3
Oat
4
Rye

J.D. Salinger published this 1951 novel, and Holden Caulfield's fantasy of catching children before they fall off a cliff gives the book its name.
1
Brontë
2
Austen
3
Alcott
4
Eliot

Alcott based the March sisters on herself and her three real sisters, drawing directly from her Massachusetts childhood.
1
Prejudice
2
Passion
3
Privilege
4
Prestige

Jane Austen originally titled this 1813 novel First Impressions, and her publisher rejected that earlier version before she rewrote it.
1
Nest
2
Roost
3
Perch
4
Cage

Ken Kesey wrote this 1962 novel while working night shifts at a psychiatric ward, where he actually spoke with patients.
1
Hope
2
Wrath
3
Mercy
4
Sorrow

John Steinbeck borrowed the title from the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and this 1939 novel won him the Pulitzer Prize.
1
Beaumont
2
Maurier
3
Fontaine
4
Villiers

Du Maurier published Rebecca in 1938, and the unnamed narrator remains one of fiction's most famous characters without a name.
1
Garden
2
Room
3
Path
4
Door

Published in 1911, this beloved novel was inspired by the walled gardens Burnett discovered at her English manor house.
1
Sincerity
2
Sensibility
3
Simplicity
4
Sensitivity

This was Jane Austen's first published novel in 1811, and she originally released it anonymously as written by a Lady.
1
Sea
2
River
3
Moon
4
Storm

Hemingway wrote this 1952 novel in just eight weeks, and it helped earn him the Nobel Prize in Literature.
1
Dreams
2
Time
3
Men
4
Dust

Steinbeck borrowed his title from a Robert Burns poem, where plans go wrong for both mice and men.
1
Brothers
2
Hearts
3
Worlds
4
Cities

Dickens set this 1859 novel in London and Paris during the French Revolution, opening with his most famous line.
1
Storms
2
Heights
3
Moors
4
Winds

Wuthering is an old Yorkshire dialect word describing the howling sound of fierce winds around a hilltop farmhouse.
1
Divide
2
Gatsby
3
Pretender
4
Illusion

Fitzgerald's 1925 masterpiece sold poorly at first — its true fame only came decades after his death in 1940.
1
Heaven
2
Stars
3
God
4
Morning

Zora Neale Hurston wrote this 1937 novel in just seven weeks while on a folklore research trip in Haiti.
1
Fields
2
Gables
3
Meadows
4
Pastures

Lucy Maud Montgomery set this beloved 1908 novel on Prince Edward Island, Canada, where the real Green Gables farmhouse still stands.
1
World
2
Order
3
Future
4
Dawn

Huxley borrowed his title from a line in Shakespeare's The Tempest, spoken by the character Miranda.
1
Purple
2
Violet
3
Scarlet
4
Crimson

Alice Walker won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for this 1982 novel written as a series of letters.
1
Range
2
Prairie
3
Plains
4
Frontier

Laura Ingalls Wilder based her beloved 1935 book on her real childhood in Kansas, living in a dugout house on the open grassland.
1
Way
2
Wish
3
World
4
Web

E.B. White wrote Charlotte's Web in 1952, inspired by a real spider he watched spin an egg sac on his farm.
1
Words
2
Old
3
Oz
4
Wonders

L. Frank Baum published The Wizard Of Oz in 1900, originally titling it The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz.
1
Wave
2
Wind
3
Wild
4
Wolf

Jack London wrote The Call Of The Wild in just 30 days in 1903, drawing on his own Klondike Gold Rush adventures.
1
Life
2
Soul
3
Girl
4
Woman

Anne Frank received her now-famous diary as a birthday gift on June 12, 1942, just weeks before her family went into hiding.
1
Deep
2
Rings
3
Night
4
Flies

William Golding's Lord Of The Flies was rejected by 21 publishers before finally being printed in 1954.
1
Eden
2
England
3
Empire
4
Evening

Steinbeck considered East Of Eden his masterpiece, spending over two years writing it and calling it his life's work in letters.
1
Space
2
Light
3
Time
4
Truth

A Wrinkle In Time was rejected 26 times before publication in 1962 and went on to win the Newbery Medal.
1
Crown
2
Path
3
Road
4
Birds

The Thorn Birds became a massive bestseller in 1977 and was later adapted into one of the most-watched TV miniseries of the 1980s.
1
Eleanor
2
Algernon
3
Arabella
4
Annabel

Flowers For Algernon began as a short story in 1959 before Daniel Keyes expanded it into a full novel, with Algernon being a laboratory mouse.
1
Rey
2
Rosa
3
Rio
4
Real

Thornton Wilder won the Pulitzer Prize for The Bridge Of San Luis Rey in 1928, making him one of very few authors to win it for both fiction and drama.
1
Sawyer
2
Brown
3
Hardy
4
Jones

Mark Twain published The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer in 1876, drawing heavily on his own Missouri childhood.
1
Days
2
Miles
3
Years
4
Hours

Jules Verne's 1872 novel was inspired by a newspaper article calculating that modern travel made an 80-day circumnavigation possible.
1
Highlands
2
Devonshires
3
Moors
4
Baskervilles

Conan Doyle set the story on Dartmoor after a friend told him the local legend of a ghostly black hound.
1
Peace
2
Grace
3
Honor
4
Love

Tolstoy spent six years writing War And Peace, weaving in over 500 characters across Napoleon's invasion of Russia.
1
Manor
2
Opera
3
Castle
4
Palace

Leroux based his 1910 novel on the real Paris Opéra, which actually has a subterranean lake beneath the building.
1
Black
2
Stone
3
Gray
4
White

Oscar Wilde's only novel, published in 1890, caused a scandal and was later used as evidence against him at his trial.
1
Cristo
2
Carlo
3
Christo
4
Cervo

Dumas based his revenge epic on a real case from a Paris police archive about a man wrongly imprisoned for years.
1
Past
2
Door
3
Balcony
4
View

Forster wrote this 1908 novel after his own travels to Florence, where the Arno River views genuinely stirred him.
1
Ribbon
2
Badge
3
Letter
4
Thread

Hawthorne was so ashamed of his Puritan ancestor who judged the Salem witch trials that he added a 'w' to his name.
1
Finn
2
Flynn
3
Brown
4
Jones

Mark Twain published this 1884 novel as a sequel to Tom Sawyer, and Ernest Hemingway called it the source of all modern American literature.
1
Austen
2
Fair
3
Shore
4
Eyre

Charlotte Brontë published Jane Eyre in 1847 under the pen name Currer Bell, fearing female authors would not be taken seriously.
1
Falls
2
Rises
3
Shines
4
Sets

Published in 1926, this novel introduced the term 'Lost Generation' to describe young Americans adrift in Europe after World War I.
1
44
2
21
3
18
4
22

Heller originally titled the 1961 novel Catch-18, but changed the number after another war novel used 18 first.
1
Shore
2
Lighthouse
3
Horizon
4
Sea

Virginia Woolf based the 1927 novel's Scottish island setting on her own childhood summers in St Ives, Cornwall.
1
Hour
2
Loss
3
Age
4
End

Edith Wharton won the 1921 Pulitzer Prize for this novel, becoming the first woman ever to receive that honor.
1
Dick
2
Rex
3
Blue
4
Jack

Melville dedicated his 1851 masterpiece to fellow author Nathaniel Hawthorne, whose friendship deeply influenced the book's dark themes.
1
Anna
2
Natasha
3
Sonya
4
Vera

Tolstoy opened this 1878 novel with one of literature's most famous lines: 'All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.'
1
Day
2
War
3
Past
4
Night

Ishiguro won the 1989 Booker Prize for this novel and later received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2017.
1
A Path To Bombay
2
A Passage To India
3
A Road To Delhi
4
A Journey East

Forster's 1924 novel was inspired by two visits to India and boldly criticized British colonial rule at a time when that was deeply controversial.
1
Wand
2
Spell
3
Curse
4
Stone

Published in 1997, J.K. Rowling's debut novel was titled Philosopher's Stone in the UK but renamed for American readers.
1
Flynn
2
Brown
3
James
4
Clark

Gillian Flynn wrote Gone Girl in 2012, and it spent over 100 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list.
1
File
2
Case
3
Clue
4
Code

Dan Brown's 2003 thriller became one of the best-selling novels ever, with over 80 million copies sold worldwide.
1
Sparks
2
Grafton
3
Hannah
4
Stockett

Kathryn Stockett's 2009 debut novel was rejected by 60 literary agents before finally finding a publisher.
1
Stockett
2
Picoult
3
Sparks
4
Hannah

Kristin Hannah set this 2015 novel in Nazi-occupied France, inspired by real women of the French Resistance.
1
Live
2
Heal
3
Hope
4
Love

Elizabeth Gilbert's 2006 memoir followed her year-long journey through Italy, India, and Bali after a painful divorce.
1
Setterfield
2
Cornwell
3
Fforde
4
Gabaldon

Diana Gabaldon wrote the first Outlander novel in 1991 and originally kept it secret, calling it a practice book.
1
Call
2
Live
3
Hide
4
Sing

Delia Owens published this 2018 debut novel at age 70, and it became the best-selling debut novel of the decade.
1
Valley
2
River
3
County
4
Road

Robert James Waller's 1992 romance novel sold over 50 million copies and was later made into a film starring Meryl Streep.
1
Tale
2
Vow
3
Song
4
Life

Margaret Atwood wrote this 1985 dystopian novel in West Berlin while the Cold War divided the city around her.
1
Secret
2
Curse
3
Tattoo
4
Shadow

Stieg Larsson's 2005 Swedish thriller became a worldwide sensation, selling over 80 million copies after his death.
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Think you know your classics? These titles have been read, quoted, and obsessed over for decades — but can you actually finish them? Put your literary knowledge to the test and find out if you're a true bookworm or just a casual page-turner.

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