Reading list · 2026-04-23 · Reading time ~ 9 min
Start light: 10 classics under 300 pages
Classics have a reputation for being long. Many aren't. Pagera's pick of ten short masterpieces that go down in an evening or two, all available with Korean translations.
Pagera Editorial
"I want to read classics but they're so long" is a common worry. It's also a misconception. Many classics finish their business in roughly 200 pages, and precisely because they're short, they tend to be written without a wasted line. Below are ten public-domain classics under 300 print-equivalent pages, all with Korean translations already live on Pagera.
Why start with short classics
Pick up a thick book and your brain immediately tracks progress — speed, pages left, when it will end. That calculation fights immersion. Short books disable it. You finish in an evening and reading starts behaving like reading again. Completing one or two short classics installs the conviction "I can actually do this," which is the bridge to longer books.
The 10 at a glance
| # | Title | Author | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde | R. L. Stevenson | ~120 pp |
| 2 | A Christmas Carol | Charles Dickens | ~140 pp |
| 3 | Alice's Adventures in Wonderland | Lewis Carroll | ~150 pp |
| 4 | The Time Machine | H. G. Wells | ~140 pp |
| 5 | The Call of the Wild | Jack London | ~170 pp |
| 6 | The Legend of Sleepy Hollow | Washington Irving | ~80 pp |
| 7 | No Longer Human | Dazai Osamu | ~200 pp |
| 8 | Romeo and Juliet | Shakespeare | ~160 pp |
| 9 | Daisy Miller | Henry James | ~120 pp |
| 10 | Flatland | Edwin A. Abbott | ~130 pp |
1. Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (~120 pp)
A novella in length, a heavyweight in density. Stevenson describes the coexistence of appetites inside one person in dry court-record prose. The closing "full statement" chapter is the kind of chapter you read twice.
2. A Christmas Carol (~140 pp)
So familiar it's easy to skip, but the original is funny and rhythmic. Unlike Dickens's novels, scenes aren't overgrown with description; the prose stays lean. A textbook one-evening classic.
3. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (~150 pp)
A book whose real worth only reveals itself on adult rereading. A mathematician's comedy about the arbitrariness of language and rule. Bilingual view sharpens the wordplay considerably.
4. The Time Machine (~140 pp)
Foundational SF. Slim, yet covers 800,000 years of future. Wells's pessimism reads as unsettlingly current to a 2026 reader. Still the canonical short SF novel.
5. The Call of the Wild (~170 pp)
An Alaskan adventure narrated from a dog's perspective. The non-human point of view makes human nature more visible rather than less. Short but imagistically sticky.
6. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (~80 pp)
A founding piece of American short fiction. Irving's slightly archaic prose matches autumn atmosphere. Almost a single sitting. A classic Halloween-evening read.
7. No Longer Human (~200 pp)
The darkest title on the list. Few novels of any era translate self-loathing into prose this precise. Not an easy read emotionally, but short enough that you aren't burdened with progress anxiety.
8. Romeo and Juliet (~160 pp)
Plays are surprisingly short. Act by act moves fast, no descriptive scene-setting slows you down. Ideal first Shakespeare.
9. Daisy Miller (~120 pp)
The best starting point for Henry James. A short traveller's novel but with full psychological detail. Calibrate on this before attempting his longer novels (The Golden Bowl, The Ambassadors).
10. Flatland (~130 pp)
A satire-plus-geometry novel: creatures confined to a two-dimensional plane discover the third. Written in 1884 and in places still ahead of current popular science. Especially recommended for science-leaning readers.
How to approach this list
The goal is simple: a successful "finished it" experience. Once you finish one short classic, the next one stops being frightening. Suggested order:
- 90-minute reads: 1, 6, 9 (single sitting)
- Weekend day: 2, 3, 4, 8
- Travel read: 5, 10 (benefit from scenery)
- When ready emotionally: 7