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British survey says 62 percent of people lie about having read classic books

The novel people most commonly claim to have read is '1984' by George Orwell, followed by 'War and Peace' by Leo Tolstoy.

By Molly Driscoll , Staff Writer

Have you ever pretended you鈥檇 read a well-known book at a dinner party when you鈥檇 only seen the movie version or read the summary on the back?

Then you鈥檙e not alone.

According to a new survey, 62 percent of Britons say they鈥檝e read classic books they鈥檝e actually never picked up. The results of the study, which were discovered by people billed only as 鈥渁 leading research team鈥 by the Telegraph, came from talking to 2,000 members of the British public.

Fifty-two percent of those who responded said they鈥檝e displayed books on their shelves that they haven鈥檛 actually read, while 42 percent said they鈥檝e only seen a film or TV version of a classic novel but have pretended they read the book, too.

The novel most people lie about having read, according to the Telegraph, is 鈥1984鈥 by George Orwell, with 鈥淲ar and Peace鈥 by Leo Tolstoy coming in second, and 鈥淕reat Expectations鈥 by Charles Dickens in third. Coming in at fourth place was 鈥淐atcher in the Rye鈥 by J.D. Salinger, 鈥淎 Passage to India鈥 by E.M. Forster took fifth, and the 鈥淟ord of the Rings鈥 trilogy was sixth, followed by 鈥淭o Kill A Mockingbird鈥 by Harper Lee at seventh, 鈥淐rime and Punishment鈥 by Fyodor Dostoevsky at eighth, 鈥淧ride and Prejudice鈥 by Jane Austen at ninth, and 鈥淛ane Eyre鈥 by Charlotte Bronte at tenth.

According to the Daily Mail, women are more likely to lie about having read a classic novel than men.聽

Those who rely on film adaptations of classic books to pretend they perused the page have better shots at getting away with it if they鈥檙e fibbing about titles like 鈥淟ord of the Rings,鈥 鈥淧ride and Prejudice,鈥 and 鈥淛ane Eyre,鈥 which each received high-profile movie adaptations within the last 15 years. Meanwhile, 鈥淕reat Expectations,鈥 which came in third on the most-lied-about list, has been adapted into a film starring Helena Bonham-Carter, Ralph Fiennes, and Jeremy Irvine which will be released this October in the US.