As much as I agree that some, perhaps many people may never experience the written versions because it is just too easy to settle for the film versions, I myself only knew of the titles because I
had seen the films. If not for that fact, even though I had the CLASSIC BOOKS ON CD, I doubt that I would have been inspired to sort through the hundreds of titles and have found such things as
20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, as that title would have very little significance to me. Moreover, it was very likely my having seen the film versions that made the CD appealing in the 1st place. The front of the CD’s case says “over 3,500 of the world’s best literary works” The flip side of the CD’s case lists several well-known authors & their best-known novels; Hans Christian Anderson, Washington Irving, and Robert Lewis Stevenson, among several others. If not for my familiarity w/ the film versions, would titles such as
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde or
Treasure Island have been enticing to me?
Having said that, I took a course in HS called
Novels, Plays, & Movies in the hope that I would escape any meaningful class work. I believe it was here, that I read
The Hobbit, & as strange as it was, I actually read the other three by myself for my own pleasure. But after that, I had little if any interest in literature until I bought that CD some 20 to 25 years later.