Reading 52 classics in a year is not a sprint. It is a habit: 45 minutes per day at 350 WPM. At that pace you cover approximately 9,450 words per session, or around 66,000 words per week. That is enough for most of the books on this list within a single week, and enough for the long novels within their allocated multi-week slots.
The plan below is structured to build momentum. Short, immediately rewarding books come first. Longer and more demanding works land mid-year, when the habit is established. The year ends with a summit.
How to read 52 books in a year
45 minutes per day at 350 WPM is the baseline: 9,450 words per session, ~66,000 words per week. This is a modest commitment that compounds significantly across 52 weeks.
Three principles make it work:
- Front-load the short books. Finishing a book in a single sitting is motivating. The first 10 weeks are all under 50,000 words.
- Schedule the long books deliberately. War and Peace, The Brothers Karamazov, and Les Misérables each get 2–3 weeks. Planning this removes the dread.
- Don't read at one fixed speed. Short stories and thrillers suit 400–450 WPM; philosophy and literary modernism suit 200–250 WPM. warpread's speed control lets you adjust per book.
The 52-book week-by-week plan
All books are available free on warpread unless noted. Reading times at 350 WPM.
| Week | Title | Author | Words | Time at 350 WPM | Hook |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Yellow Wallpaper | Gilman | 6,000 | 17 min | Medical gaslighting in 20 minutes |
| 2 | The Importance of Being Earnest | Wilde | 20,000 | 57 min | The funniest thing in Victorian English |
| 3 | The Metamorphosis | Kafka | 22,000 | 1h 3m | A man wakes up as an insect; the family adapts |
| 4 | The Art of War | Sun Tzu | 10,000 | 29 min | 2,500-year-old strategy handbook; still useful |
| 5 | White Nights | Dostoevsky | 16,000 | 46 min | Tender, romantic Dostoevsky — entry to Russian lit |
| 6 | Candide | Voltaire | 28,000 | 1h 20m | Voltaire's satire on optimism; very funny |
| 7 | The Enchiridion | Epictetus | 11,000 | 31 min | The Stoic handbook — read slowly |
| 8 | The Death of Ivan Ilyich | Tolstoy | 28,000 | 1h 20m | The most devastating 2 hours in world literature |
| 9 | Jekyll and Hyde | Stevenson | 25,000 | 1h 11m | The plot resolves more cleverly than you expect |
| 10 | Heart of Darkness | Conrad | 38,000 | 1h 49m | The horror; proto-modernist and colonial |
| 11 | Notes from Underground | Dostoevsky | 43,000 | 2h 3m | The Underground Man; precursor to Crime and Punishment |
| 12 | Romeo and Juliet | Shakespeare | 28,000 | 1h 20m | Faster than you remember; still devastating |
| 13 | The Turn of the Screw | James | 42,000 | 2h | Deliberately ambiguous: ghosts, or delusion? |
| 14 | Adventures of Sherlock Holmes | Doyle | 107,000 | 5h 6m | 12 stories; do The Speckled Band first |
| 15 | The Time Machine | Wells | 33,000 | 1h 34m | The original; surprisingly affecting |
| 16 | The War of the Worlds | Wells | 60,000 | 2h 51m | Mars invades Surrey; the social allegory holds |
| 17 | Hamlet | Shakespeare | 32,000 | 1h 31m | The indecision is the point |
| 18 | Treasure Island | Stevenson | 67,000 | 3h 12m | Long John Silver is a better character than you remember |
| 19 | Alice in Wonderland | Carroll | 27,000 | 1h 17m | Logic puzzles in narrative form |
| 20 | Meditations | Marcus Aurelius | 50,000 | 2h 23m | A Roman Emperor's private notebook — read slowly |
| 21 | The Scarlet Letter | Hawthorne | 63,000 | 3h | Guilt in Puritan New England |
| 22 | Siddhartha | Hesse | 39,000 | 1h 51m | Spiritual journey; the river ending stays with you |
| 23 | Frankenstein | Shelley | 74,000 | 3h 31m | More sympathetic to the monster than expected |
| 24 | The Picture of Dorian Gray | Wilde | 78,000 | 3h 43m | The horror of aesthetic excess |
| 25 | The Call of the Wild | London | 32,000 | 1h 31m | A dog's return to nature; very fast read |
| 26 | MIDPOINT REVIEW | — | — | — | Re-read a favourite from weeks 1–25 |
| 27 | Dracula | Stoker | 161,000 | 7h 40m | Epistolary; atmospheric; longer than expected (2 weeks) |
| 28 | (continued Dracula) | — | — | — | — |
| 29 | Pride and Prejudice | Austen | 122,000 | 5h 49m | The Austen entry point; Lydia's subplot still funny |
| 30 | Persuasion | Austen | 84,000 | 4h | Austen's most emotionally direct novel |
| 31 | Jane Eyre | Brontë | 183,000 | 8h 43m | Gothic romance; first-person; faster than its reputation (2 weeks) |
| 32 | (continued Jane Eyre) | — | — | — | — |
| 33 | Wuthering Heights | Brontë | 107,000 | 5h 6m | Darker and stranger than Jane Eyre |
| 34 | The Great Gatsby | Fitzgerald | 47,000 | 2h 14m | Read at pace — the compression is the art |
| 35 | The Sun Also Rises | Hemingway | 68,000 | 3h 14m | The Lost Generation; Hemingway's best novel |
| 36 | Huckleberry Finn | Twain | 112,000 | 5h 20m | The voice is everything |
| 37 | Madame Bovary | Flaubert | 114,000 | 5h 26m | Emma's illusions vs provincial reality |
| 38 | Mrs Dalloway | Woolf | 88,000 | 4h 11m | One day; stream of consciousness; slow down |
| 39 | The Trial | Kafka | 105,000 | 5h | Josef K.'s unanswerable guilt |
| 40 | Tess of the d'Urbervilles | Hardy | 163,000 | 7h 46m | Hardy's most crushing novel (2 weeks) |
| 41 | (continued Tess) | — | — | — | — |
| 42 | Great Expectations | Dickens | 185,000 | 8h 48m | The full Dickens; Miss Havisham (2 weeks) |
| 43 | (continued Great Expectations) | — | — | — | — |
| 44 | A Farewell to Arms | Hemingway | 83,000 | 3h 57m | War and love; the ending is as bad as they say |
| 45 | Les Misérables | Hugo | 530,000 | 25h 14m | The great French epic; skip the Waterloo essay on first read (3 weeks) |
| 46 | (continued Les Mis) | — | — | — | — |
| 47 | (continued Les Mis) | — | — | — | — |
| 48 | Crime and Punishment | Dostoevsky | 212,000 | 10h 6m | Deserves its reputation; propulsive (2 weeks) |
| 49 | (continued Crime & Punishment) | — | — | — | — |
| 50 | Anna Karenina | Tolstoy | 349,000 | 16h 37m | Possibly the greatest novel; Levin's storyline matters |
| 51 | (continued Anna Karenina) | — | — | — | — |
| 52 | The Brothers Karamazov | Dostoevsky | 364,000 | 17h 20m | The summit; read it last — you'll be ready |
Notes on the plan
Weeks 27–28 (Dracula) and 29 (Pride and Prejudice): If Dracula runs long, shift Pride and Prejudice to the following week — the back half has more flexibility built in.
Weeks 45–47 (Les Misérables): Victor Hugo's famous digressions — the Battle of Waterloo essay, the Paris sewers chapter — are optional on a first reading. Skipping them reduces the reading time by roughly 15–20%.
Weeks 50–52 (Anna Karenina and Brothers Karamazov): These are allocated as the final weeks intentionally. After 50 books, your tolerance for complexity, your familiarity with Russian names, and your patience for sustained reading are all at their highest. These books are the reward for the year.
FAQ
Q: Can I really read 52 books in a year? A: Yes, if you choose the right books and build a consistent habit. Many of the most rewarding public domain classics are short — The Yellow Wallpaper (20 minutes), The Metamorphosis (1 hour), The Death of Ivan Ilyich (2 hours). At 350 WPM for 45 minutes per day you cover 590,000 words per month. The plan above averages 38 minutes per day. The key is consistency over marathon sessions.
Q: What counts as reading a book? A: For this challenge: reading the complete text of a prose work, including novellas. The Yellow Wallpaper (6,000 words) counts; so does Les Misérables (530,000 words). Anthologies like the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes count as one book (12 stories). Poetry collections are excluded from this list because RSVP is not appropriate for verse.
Q: How long should I read each day to finish 52 books? A: 45 minutes per day at 350 WPM covers approximately 590,000 words per month. The average across all 52 books on this list is approximately 38 minutes per day. A daily reading habit of 30–45 minutes is more reliable than occasional long sessions, and 45 minutes is a realistic slot for most working adults — one commute, one lunch break, one pre-sleep session.
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