| Amy Tan. Her prose is so beautiful and I love how she weaves in Chinese history into her work. Also, From all the interviews and the 2 books that have come closest to her memoirs, she seems like such a lovely person. |
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So many right now, I’m loving
Jane Smiley - Some luck (first of all trilogy) Richard Powers |
Same |
the question was favorite author not best writer |
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I love Stephen King and I think he's a much better writer than people give him credit for. And I am not a fan of horror/fantasy.
Authors whose wrote has struck me include Robert Penn Warren, Jhumpa Lahiri, Chris Bohjalian (some of his books are phenomenal, others aren't), and Barbara Kingsolver. There are others but I can't think of them right now. |
^^^^^ whose *work* has struck me I shouldn't try to post while on conference calls, sorry |
I love Elizabeth Strout too. Other favorites are: Anne Tyler, Jane Smiley, Paul Murray, Richard Russo, Chris Bohjalian, Fannie Flagg, Nathan Hill, Rebecca Makkai, Frederik Bachman, and Celeste Ng. |
forgot to mention Ann Patchett! |
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Currently Elin Hilderbrand.
Call me down market if you wish, but I had fun at this event. I think she's deeper than Hilderbabes Take Nantucket https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/23/books/elin-hilderbrand-bucket-list-weekend.html?unlocked_article_code=1.dk8.Gcnq.3D8aSWA2FS56&smid=url-share |
| *deeper than you may be giving her credit for |
No judgement here. I think recreational reading should be . . . fun. I haven’t read Elin Hilderbrand, but I expect that she is probably fathoms deeper than the fluff I generally read. While I can appreciate the merits of fine literature, when I read, I generally want to indulge in escapism with a guaranteed happy ending and ideally some laughs along the way (bonus points for: regency dukes, aliens, magic, alternate dimensions, vampires, shifters, time travel, etc.). |
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Favorites - (a lot of them are dead)
Philip Roth Shakespeare Seamus Heaney Gerard Manley Hopkins Diane Seuss |
What is your favorite of hers? |
I didn't hate it, but I thought that the effort to reimagine David Copperfield by drawing parallels to Appalachia in the age of the opiate crisis often felt forced and did neither justice. |
God forbid people read what they enjoy. Take your snobbery elsewhere. |