Ten Amazing Literary
Facts You Should Know
1. Most expensive book
ever purchased:
Everyone’s favorite
billionaire Bill Gates bought ‘Codex Leicester’, one of Leonardo Di Vinci’s
scientific journals for $30.8 million.
2. Longest book in the
world:
‘A la recherche
du temps perdu’ by Marcel Proust is
the longest book in the world at 9,609,000 characters. Translated into
Remembers of Things Past, the book tells the story of the narrator’s
experiences growing up.
3. Roald Dahl’s
interesting life experiences:
Dahl served in the
Royal Air Force during World War II and also tested chocolates for Cadbury’s
while he was at school. (I guess we know where his inspiration for Charlie and
the Chocolate Factory came from).
4. Victor Hugo’s 823
word long sentence:
In Victor Hugo’s
novel, Les Miserables, you can find a sentence that is 823 words long. However,
there may be other sentences that surpasses this length. But this one is worth
knowing.
5. J.K. Rowling is not
actually her name:
Our favorite author
who goes by initials, actually doesn’t have a middle name. After a suggestion
from her publisher, she chose her grandmother’s name, Kathleen.
6. Charles Dickens’
superstitious behaviour:
Dickens believed that
sleeping facing North, would improve his writing. He also carried a compass
when travelling to make sure he was facing the right direction and he always touched
things 3 times for luck.
7. Tolstoy owes War
and Peace to his wife’s efforts:
The 1400 page novel
was copied around 7 times by Leo Tolstoy’s wife, Sophia, by hand – that’s love.
8. The words F. Scott
Fitzgerald created that you use everyday:
Oxford English
Dictionary notes the earliest use of the word ‘wicked’ to mean good/cool to be
from Fitzgerald’s novel ‘This Side of Paradise’. He is also thought to have
used the word T-shirt for the first time.
9. The children’s
story that China banned:
The Governor of Hunan
Province in China banned Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland because he
believed that animals should not be given the power to use the language of
humans and to put animals and humans on the same level would be ‘disastrous’.
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