Your favorite author

Anonymous
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.
Anonymous
So many right now, I’m loving
Jane Smiley - Some luck (first of all trilogy)
Richard Powers
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Barbara Kingsolver. Some of her stuff gets a little preachy even for me, but most of it hits just right-- independent women making their way in the world through smarts and resolve, tending relationships, living with nature.
Everyone seems to have read the Poisonwood Bible, which I strongly disliked. Prodigal Summer is one of my all-time favorite books, and seems to be much less well-known. Go get it!

Only book that I did not like by Kingsolver was Demon Copperhead.
Same
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Taylor Jenkins Reid mentioned twice? John Grisham? I mean, I love a good beach paperback for a mindless read, but as your favorite author? I had no idea DCUM was so downmarket


Since when is John Grisham “downmarket??!”


Fully respect everyone’s right to like what they like, but I think we can all agree John Grisham is no literary master.
the question was favorite author not best writer
Anonymous
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.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: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
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Elizabeth Strout
Geraldine Brooks


There is sooooo much going on in her books. Especially with regard to empathy, which is the greatest thing a work of art can inspire.


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.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Elizabeth Strout
Geraldine Brooks


There is sooooo much going on in her books. Especially with regard to empathy, which is the greatest thing a work of art can inspire.


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!
Anonymous
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
Anonymous
*deeper than you may be giving her credit for
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: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


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.).
Anonymous
Favorites - (a lot of them are dead)

Philip Roth
Shakespeare
Seamus Heaney
Gerard Manley Hopkins

Diane Seuss
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Joan Didion at the moment but it changes every year.


That's a pretty good one.


What is your favorite of hers?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Barbara Kingsolver. Some of her stuff gets a little preachy even for me, but most of it hits just right-- independent women making their way in the world through smarts and resolve, tending relationships, living with nature.
Everyone seems to have read the Poisonwood Bible, which I strongly disliked. Prodigal Summer is one of my all-time favorite books, and seems to be much less well-known. Go get it!

Only book that I did not like by Kingsolver was Demon Copperhead.


That is her best book. Just incredible.


I hated it! And I love her work AND David Copperfield.


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.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Taylor Jenkins Reid mentioned twice? John Grisham? I mean, I love a good beach paperback for a mindless read, but as your favorite author? I had no idea DCUM was so downmarket


God forbid people read what they enjoy. Take your snobbery elsewhere.
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