Not the best - but have absolutely stayed with me and shaped how I see the world:
Fahrenheit 451 and Brave New World |
This! And 1984. I recently reread all three, and found them captivating. They shaped me into the fierce individualist I remain today. |
Lords of Discipline , Pat Conroy (read it years ago, in high school...I love all of his books)
Sea of Poppies A Fine Balance (so, so sad...but amazing) |
Me too! And I read about a book a week. However, I always tell people that A Prayer for Owen Meany is the only book that I would ever reread. |
My Antonia by Willa Cather
I also really loved The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls |
Just read this last year. Still gives me the willies just thinking about it. You might like The Poison Tree by Erin Kelly. |
Wow, I remember some of the books mentioned here as pure torture for me to get through in high school. I guess having to analyze every sentence takes away some of the joy of reading, perhaps I'll give them another chance. |
I'm going to have to get to the library this weekend to check out Owen Meany after all the praise on here. (although I got through maybe a third of Hotel New Hampshire and put it down and have never had the desire to pick it back up. It's in the house somewhere)
It's hard to choose a favorite, but I'm going with All the King's Men by Robert Penn Warren. Some of the most beautiful sentences you'll ever read and a gripping tale (it helps, especially, if you've any experience living in the South) |
This. As a homeschooling mom, I can assure you that school sucks the life and joy out of fabulous literature. When Diane Rehm did a show on The Scarlet Letter, a great deal of the callers talked about how they despised to book in high school, but love it now. I come across that constantly. It is so sad, such a shame. The Good Earth is another high school novel worth revisiting. Simple, spare language that communicates so much. |
I think I love you! I'll also second/third/whatever: The Winds of War/War and Remembrance A Fine Balance All of the Murakami A Secret History The Things They Carried The Power of One The English Patient Plus a few new ones: The Poisonwood Bible Anil's Ghost Rebecca |
I seem to be in the minority here, but Owen Meaney was just not my kind of book. I haven't found any Irving book that I like, frankly. I long ago decided to that if I don't like the first third of a book that I don't have to finish it. I never finished Owen Meaney.
I agree with Fahrenheit 451 and Rebecca. I also have very found memories of The Once and Future King by T.H. White. |
Thanks to all of you, I just dropped about $100 on my Kindle in just a few seconds. Woo hoo! Headed into the long weekend with plenty to read.
PLUS, I found that Wally Lamb and Julia Glass both have newish books I didn't even know about - how awesome is that?! Thanks all! And here's my vote for "A Room With a View". ABSOLUTELY LOVE that book. And anything Austen. Oh, and all Alice Munro, she is phenomenal - and also Jhumpa Lahiri (I know I spelled that wrong). Fabulous short stories. And Margaret Atwood. The list goes on and on... |
Are you me? ![]() |
I think I read Rebecca and The Once and Future King within a few months of each other, when I was about 14. Loved them both, but haven't re-read them since. I'm off to download Rebecca (and maybe My Antonia-- another from that year!) for my beach reading. ![]() I think it's interesting, in these threads, to see lists, instead of single titles. There's so much praise for A Fine Balance, for example, that I thought I had to get over to Amazon pronto. And then seeing that people who liked that one also liked a bunch of books that I loathed. (No judgment... literature is so personal. Just an observation, and encouragement for more explanation for your suggestions!) |
1984 by Orwell
Cat's Cradle by Vonnegut |