Eh, I don't think so. The movie quote game is hard enough, and now you want to do it for literature? I doubt you'd find one person in ten-thousand who could identify that quote you just cited — and if someone did, it would only get more obscure (and difficult) from there.
Take, for example, this quote. It's from a very famous author, but I doubt if anyone here could identify the source. And how can anyone play if they can't keep the game going?
To find out who said it, e-mail me at leezion2 (at) yahoo.com
"You don't care for Ghosts, then," I ventured to suggest, unless they are really terrifying?"
"Quite so," the lady assented. "The regular Railway-Ghosts — I mean the Ghosts of ordinary Railway-literature — are very poor affairs. I feel inclined to say, with Alexander Selkirk, 'Their tameness is shocking to me'! And they never do any Midnight Murders. They couldn't 'welter in gore,' to save their lives!"
"'Weltering in gore' is a very expressive phrase, certainly. Can it be done in any fluid, I wonder?"
"I think not," the lady readily replied — quite as if she had thought it out, long ago. "It has to be something thick. For instance, you might welter in bread-sauce. That, being white, would be more suitable for a Ghost, supposing it wished to welter!"
"You have a real good terrifying Ghost in that book?" I hinted.
"How could you guess?" she exclaimed with the most engaging frankness, and placed the volume in my hands. I opened it eagerly, (with a not unpleasant thrill like what a good ghost-story gives one) at the 'uncanny' coincidence of my having so unexpectedly divined the subject of her studies.
It was a book of Domestic Cookery, open at the article Bread Sauce.'