If you are a particularly attentive—or simply thorough—reader, you may have noticed a certain listing on the copyright page of some of your favorite books: the Library of Congress’s catalog data.

For instance, in my favorite novel, said listing reads:

1. Teacher-student relationships–Fiction.
1. College students–Fiction.
3. Classicists–Fiction.
4. Murder–Fiction.
5. Vermont–Fiction. I. Psychological fiction. II. College stories.

(I imagine you can guess which novel this is.) The rules of cataloging are complicated, but in practice they boil down to a series of subjects (like “Classicists”) and a generic listing or two (like “College stories”).

The Library of Congress is the largest library in the world, containing a collection of “over 162 million books, periodicals, manuscripts, maps, music, recordings, images, and electronic resources.” According to the Library of Congress website, the catalog itself has 17 million records that describe these collections. The cataloging system began in 1898, and while some of the older records remain, they are being gradually updated to reflect contemporary language, and the Library of Congress staff catalogues about 350,000 bibliographic volumes per year.

This is only to say: there are a lot of these listings. Sometimes the subjects are spot on; other times they are laughably surface-level. Sometimes the subject categories rankle a modern reader (why are all the books about black people specifically categorized as such, when books about white people are not?). Not every book has cataloging data, and not every edition of a book will be the same. But once I started looking these up, I got addicted, and I thought some of you nerds out there might enjoy playing a little guessing game based on my findings.

Article continues after advertisement

Below, you’ll find 70 sets of Library of Congress cataloging data for classic novels (sometimes with proper names like, say, Bigger Thomas, removed, so they’re not total gimmes) with the answers hidden below (highlight the space after “answer” to see them). Some you will find very easy to guess; others less so.

Once you’re done, leave your score in the comments, and then proceed (if you’re still bored) to look up all your own favorite books in the Library of Congress Catalog.

Let the quiz commence:

1.

Social classes–Fiction.
Young women–Fiction.
Courtship–Fiction.
Sisters–Fiction.
England–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Love stories.

Answer: Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice

2.

Depression, Mental–Fiction.
Women college students–Suicidal behavior–Fiction.
Autobiographical fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

3.

Fishers–Fiction.
Older men–Fiction.
Male friendship–Fiction.
Cuba–Fiction.
Bildungsromane.
Allegories.

Answer: Ernest Hemingway, The Old Man and the Sea

4.

Historical fiction, American–History and criticism.
African American women in literature.
Infanticide in literature.
Slavery in literature.
Ohio–In literature.

Answer: Toni Morrison, Beloved

5.

Triangles (Interpersonal relations)–Fiction.
Middle-aged women–Fiction.
Suicide victims–Fiction.
Married women–Fiction.
First loves–Fiction.
Parties–Fiction.
Regret–Fiction.
London (England)–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Domestic fiction.

Answer: Virginia Woolf, Mrs. Dalloway

6.

Governesses–Fiction.
Fathers and daughters–Fiction.
Mentally ill women–Fiction.
Charity-schools–Fiction.
Married people–Fiction.
Country homes–Fiction.
Young women–Fiction.
Orphans–Fiction.
England–Fiction.
Bildungsromans.
Love stories.

Answer: Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre

7.

African American women–Fiction.
Racially mixed people–Fiction.
Identity (Psychology)–Fiction.
Passing (Identity)–Fiction.
Female friendship–Fiction.
Human skin color–Fiction.
Married women–Fiction.
New York (N.Y.)–Fiction.

Answer: Nella Larsen, Passing

8.

City and town life–Fiction.
Married people–Fiction.
Young women–Fiction.
England–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Didactic fiction.
Bildungsromans.
Love stories.

Answer: George Eliot, Middlemarch

9.

African American women–Fiction.
Time travel–Fiction.
Slaveholders–Fiction.
Slavery–Fiction.
Slaves–Fiction.
Los Angeles (Calif.)–Fiction.
Southern States–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Science fiction.

Answer: Octavia Butler, Kindred

10.

Russian Americans–Fiction.
College teachers–Fiction.
Immigrants–Fiction.

Answer: Vladimir Nabokov, Pnin

11.

Triangles (Interpersonal relations)–Fiction.
Separated people–Fiction.
Upper class–Fiction.
New York (N.Y.)–Fiction.

Answer: Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence

12.

Americans–France–Fiction.
Sexual orientation–Fiction.
Bisexuals–Fiction.
Paris (France)–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room

13.

Teenage girls–Fiction.
Suicide victims–Fiction.
Friendship–Fiction.
Racism–Fiction.
Deaf–Fiction.
Southern States–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Bildungsromane.

Answer: Carson McCullers, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter

14.

African American women–Fiction.
Self-realization–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God

15.

Macondo (Imaginary place)–Fiction.
Latin America–Social conditions–Fiction.
Epic literature.

Answer: Gabriel García Márquez, One Hundred Years of Solitude

16.

Traffic accidents–Fiction.
Married women–Fiction.
First loves–Fiction.
Rich people–Fiction.
Mistresses–Fiction.
Revenge–Fiction.
Long Island (N.Y.)–Fiction.

Answer: F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby

17.

City and town life–Fiction.
Married people–Fiction.
Jewish men–Fiction.
Artists–Fiction.
Dublin (Ireland)–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Epic literature.
Domestic fiction.

Answer: James Joyce, Ulysses

18.

World War, 1939-1945–Fiction.
Americans–Europe–Fiction.
Rockets (Ordnance)–Fiction.
Rocketry–Fiction.
Soldiers–Fiction.
Europe–Fiction.
War stories.
Science fiction.

Answer: Thomas Pynchon, Gravity’s Rainbow

19.

End of the world–Fiction.
Humorous fiction.
Science fiction.
Satire.

Answer: Kurt Vonnegut, Cat’s Cradle

20.

African American men–Fiction.
Death row inmates–Fiction.
Trials (Murder)–Fiction.
Murderers–Fiction.
Chicago (Ill.)–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: Richard Wright, Native Son

21.

Trials–Fiction.
Allegories.

Answer: Franz Kafka, The Trial

22.

Hackers–Fiction.
Business intelligence–Fiction.
Information superhighway–Fiction.
Nervous system–Wounds and injuries–Fiction.
Conspiracies–Fiction.
Japan–Fiction.
Science fiction.

Answer: William Gibson, Neuromancer

23.

Triangles (Interpersonal relations)–Fiction.
Man-woman relationships–Fiction.
Children of the rich–Fiction.
Children of clergy–Fiction.
Women household employees–Fiction.
Women murderers–Fiction.
Poor families–Fiction.
Wessex (England)–Fiction.
Pastoral fiction.
Didactic fiction.

Answer: Thomas Hardy, Tess of the d’Urbervilles

24.

Monastic and religious life–Italy–History–Middle Ages, 600-1500–Fiction.
Monastic libraries–Italy–Fiction.
Italy–Church history–476-1400–Fiction.
Church history.
Detective and mystery stories.
Historical fiction.
Didactic fiction.

Answer: Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose

25.

Burial–Fiction.
Death–Fiction.
Mississippi–Fiction.
Stream of consciousness fiction.
Domestic fiction.

Answer: William Faulkner, As I Lay Dying

26.

Country homes–Fiction.
Household employees–Fiction.
England–Fiction.
Historical fiction.
Love stories.

Answer: Kazuo Ishiguro, The Remains of the Day

27.

Upper class families–Fiction.
Male friendship–Fiction.
Catholics–Fiction.
England–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.

Answer: Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited

28.

Totalitarianism–Fiction.
London (England)–Fiction.
Political fiction.
Dystopias.

Answer: George Orwell, Nineteen Eighty-Four

29.

Igbo (African people)–Fiction.
British–Nigeria–Fiction.
Men–Nigeria–Fiction.
Race relations–Fiction.
Nigeria–Fiction.
Historical fiction.

Answer: Chinua Achebe, Things Fall Apart

30.

Science fiction, English–History and criticism.
Horror tales, English–History and criticism.
Scientists in literature.
Monsters in literature.
Scientists–Fiction.
Monsters–Fiction.
Geneva (Switzerland)–Fiction.

Answer: Mary Shelley, Frankenstein

31.

Remarried people–Fiction.
Cornwall (England : County)–Fiction.
Romantic suspense fiction.

Answer: Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca

32.

Man-woman relationships–Fiction.
Misogyny–Fiction.
Women–Fiction.
Dystopian fiction.
Fantasy fiction.

Answer: Margaret Atwood, A Handmaid’s Tale

33.

Vampires in literature.
Vampires–Fiction.
Transylvania (Romania)–Fiction.
Whitby (England)–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Horror tales.

Answer: Bram Stoker, Dracula

34.

Appearance (Philosophy)–Fiction.
Conduct of life–Fiction.
Portraits–Fiction.
Didactic fiction.

Answer: Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray

35.

Europeans–Africa–Fiction.
Trading posts–Fiction.
Degeneration–Fiction.
Imperialism–Fiction.
Africa–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness

36.

Children of prostitutes–Fiction.
Fathers and sons–Fiction.
Sibling rivalry–Fiction.
Brothers–Fiction.
Salinas River Valley (Calif.)–Fiction.
Historical fiction.
Domestic fiction.

Answer: John Steinbeck, East of Eden

37.

Psychiatric hospital patients–Fiction.
Psychiatric nurses–Fiction.
Mentally ill–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Medical novels.
Allegories.

Answer: Ken Kesey, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest

38.

Brothers and sisters–Fiction.
Genetic engineering–Fiction.
War games–Fiction.
Science fiction.

Answer: Orson Scott Card, Ender’s Game

39.

Indians of North America–Fiction.
Teenage boys–Fiction.
Massacres–Fiction.
Outlaws–Fiction.
Mexican-American Border Region–Fiction.
Historical fiction.

Answer: Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian

40.

Murder–Kansas–Case studies.

Answer: Truman Capote, In Cold Blood

41.

Married women–Fiction.
Adultery–Fiction.
Russia–Fiction.

Answer: Leo Tolstoy, Anna Karenina

42.

African American women–Fiction.
Adult child sexual abuse victims–Fiction.
Abused wives–Fiction.
Sisters–Fiction.
Southern States–Fiction.

Answer: Alice Walker, The Color Purple

43.

Passivity (Psychology)–Fiction.
Genetic engineering–Fiction.
Totalitarianism–Fiction.
Collectivism–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Political fiction.
Science fiction.
Dystopias.

Answer: Aldous Huxley, Brave New World

44.

Capitalists and financiers–Fiction.
Boys–Fiction.
Humorous stories.

Answer: William Gaddis, J R

45.

Runaway children–Fiction.
Male friendship–Fiction.
Fugitive slaves–Fiction.
Race relations–Fiction.
Boys–Fiction.
Mississippi River–Fiction.
Missouri–Fiction.
Adventure fiction.
Humorous fiction.
Bildungsromans.

Answer: Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn

46.

Young men–Fiction.
Failure (Psychology)–Fiction.

Answer: Saul Bellow, The Adventures of Augie March

47.

State-sponsored terrorism–Fiction.
Totalitarianism–Fiction.
Book burning–Fiction.
Censorship–Fiction.
Political fiction.
Satire.
Science fiction.

Answer: Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451

48.

Fathers and daughters–Fiction.
Race relations–Fiction.
Trials (Rape)–Fiction.
Girls–Fiction.
Southern States–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Bildungsromane.
Legal stories.

Answer: Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird

49.

Poor families–Fiction.
Girls–Fiction.
Brooklyn (New York, N.Y.)–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Bildungsromans.

Answer: Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

50.

Psychiatric hospital patients–Fiction.
Inheritance and succession–Fiction.
Country homes–Fiction.
Art teachers–Fiction.
Deception–Fiction.
Nobility–Fiction.
England–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Gothic fiction.
Love stories.

Answer: Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White

51.

Man-woman relationships–Fiction.
Millionaires–Fiction.
Young women–Fiction.
Humorous fiction.
Diary fiction.

Answer: Anita Loos, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

52.

Teenage boys–Fiction.
Criminals–Fiction.
Science fiction.
Satire.

Answer: Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork Orange

53.

Women–Louisiana–Fiction.
Adultery–Fiction.
New Orleans (La.)–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Love stories.

Answer: Kate Chopin, The Awakening

54.

Survival–Fiction.
Regression (Psychology)–Fiction.
Islands–Fiction.
Boys–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: William Golding, Lord of the Flies

55.

Vampires–Fiction.
Imaginary interviews.
Horror tales.

Answer: Anne Rice, Interview with the Vampire

56.

Wolfdogs–Fiction.
Wolves–Fiction.
Animal welfare–Fiction.
Feral dogs–Fiction.
Pet theft–Fiction.
Sled dogs–Fiction.
Dogs–Fiction.
Klondike River Valley (Yukon)–Fiction.
Adventure fiction.
Nature stories.

Answer: Jack London, The Call of the Wild

57.

Women immigrants–Fiction.
Farmers’ spouses–Fiction.
Czech Americans–Fiction.
Women pioneers–Fiction.
Married women–Fiction.
Friendship–Fiction.
Farm life–Fiction.
Nebraska–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Western stories.

Answer: Willa Cather, My Antonia

58.

Physicians’ spouses–Fiction.
Suicide victims–Fiction.
Middle class–Fiction.
Adultery–Fiction.
France–Fiction.
Domestic fiction.

Answer: Gustave Flaubert, Madame Bovary

59.

Runaway teenagers–Fiction.
Teenage boys–Fiction.
New York (N.Y.)–Fiction.

Answer: J. D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye

60.

Marginality, Social–Fiction.
Mothers and sons–Fiction.
New Orleans (La.)–Fiction.

Answer: John Kennedy Toole, A Confederacy of Dunces

61.

Teenage girls–Fiction.
Fathers–Death–Fiction.
United States marshals–Fiction.
Outlaws–Fiction.
Revenge–Fiction.
Western stories.
Humorous fiction.

Answer: Charles Portis, True Grit

62.

Polo, Marco, 1254?-1323?–Fiction.
Kublai Khan, 1216-1294–Fiction.
Biographical fiction.

Answer: Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

63.

City and town life–Fiction.
Science fiction.

Answer: Samuel R. Delaney, Dhalgren

64.

Lesbians–Fiction.
Sex addicts–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.

Answer: Djuna Barnes, Nightwood

65.

Surgeons–Czechoslovakia–Fiction.
Man-woman relationships–Czechoslovakia–Fiction.

Answer: Milan Kundera, The Unbearable Lightness of Being

66.

Hotelkeepers–Fiction.
Families–Fiction.
Occult fiction.
Horror tales.

Answer: Stephen King, The Shining

67.

Female friendship–Fiction.
Women novelists–Fiction.
Feminists–Fiction.
London (England)–Fiction.

Answer: Doris Lessing, The Golden Notebook

68.

Married women–Psychology–Fiction.
Mentally ill women–Fiction.
Sex roles–Fiction.

Answer: Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper

69.

Triangles (Interpersonal relations)–Fiction.
Illegitimate children–Fiction.
Women immigrants–Fiction.
Married women–Fiction.
Puritans–Fiction.
Adultery–Fiction.
Revenge–Fiction.
Clergy–Fiction.
Boston (Mass.)–History–Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775–Fiction.
Psychological fiction.
Historical fiction.

Answer: Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter

70.

Mothers and sons–Fiction.
Sex addicts–Fiction.
Jewish men–Fiction.
Young men–Fiction.

Answer: Philip Roth, Portnoy’s Complaint

Emily Temple

Emily Temple

Emily Temple is the managing editor at Lit Hub. Her first novel, The Lightness, was published by William Morrow/HarperCollins in June 2020. You can buy it here.