Anonymous wrote:Love In The Time Of Cholera. I read it over thirty years ago, and it has stayed with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all want impossible things by Catherine Newman. It was heartbreaking and funny and I sobbed through it. But I think about that book often.
Reading this now. Have a friend in hospice. It’s cathartic. Just starting. I love Newmans writing style. She brings out tears and big belly laughs and it never feels cheap. That’s not easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We all want impossible things by Catherine Newman. It was heartbreaking and funny and I sobbed through it. But I think about that book often.
Reading this now. Have a friend in hospice. It’s cathartic. Just starting. I love Newmans writing style. She brings out tears and big belly laughs and it never feels cheap. That’s not easy.
Anonymous wrote:The Kite Runner
Bridge to Terabithia
Anonymous wrote:We all want impossible things by Catherine Newman. It was heartbreaking and funny and I sobbed through it. But I think about that book often.
Anonymous wrote:I was just looking at the "best book you've read" thread and I started thinking of a book that maybe isn't the best book I've read, but it's one that stayed with me the longest. I read it in high school and again in my 20s and there's something about it... a feeling it evokes I guess, that even in my 40s it has stayed with me.
Anyone else have a book like that? Not necessarily their favorite, but one that has stuck with them?
For me, it's My Antonia by Willa Cather.
Anonymous wrote:
Life as We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer
It's a YA novel that I picked up because someone's middle schooler had put it down on vacation and I was bore.
It is an incredibly haunting book and has stuck with me for many years.
Strangely, it has the most forgettable title and I have to look it up every time I talk about it.