Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The History of Love by Nicole Krauss. Absolutely beautifully written
Anything by lorrie moore - she writes some sentences so gorgeous I stop reading to marvel and wish I had written them
Life After Life by Kate Atkinson (she also has a mystery series that is incredibly well-written)
Some great suggestions in this thread! I particularly agree with these.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A room of one's own by Virginia Woolf. It is read-aloud good.
Great Gatsby and Tender is the night.
I recommend Fitzgerald too. Also Edith Wharton. Her writing can bring tears to your eyes.
Anonymous wrote:The History of Love by Nicole Krauss. Absolutely beautifully written
Anything by lorrie moore - she writes some sentences so gorgeous I stop reading to marvel and wish I had written them
Life After Life by Kate Atkinson (she also has a mystery series that is incredibly well-written)
Anonymous wrote:The Blue Flower by Penelope Fitzgerald
So long, see you tomorrow by William Maxwell
Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner
The Master and Margerita by Bulgakov
James Baldwin--I particularly love Giovanni's Room
I also love Roberto Bolano and Haruki Murakami's writing, but they are more of an acquired taste.
Anonymous wrote:I was going to suggest Marilynne Robinson too. Beautiful writing.
Anonymous wrote:The Goldfinch. Some passages are so gorgeous they knock me over. A paragraph early on in the book comes to mind in which the narrator recalls the stark horror of what losing his mother really means -- that she is never coming back -- and how everytime he remembers it's so crushingly horrible.
Anonymous wrote:A room of one's own by Virginia Woolf. It is read-aloud good.
Great Gatsby and Tender is the night.