Anonymous wrote:We Have Always Lived in the Castle
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I keep looking at this thread and feeling like my contribution doesn't fit. Here goes anyway...
I would give Walden by Thoreau. Plus a non-fiction book about how he actually was living a lot more connected to society life than Walden makes it seem.
That was one of the most impactful books I read on college. I visited the little mock-up of his cabin in the park at Walden Pond.
My mother kept Walden on her nightstand. I get it, PP.
Anonymous wrote:I keep looking at this thread and feeling like my contribution doesn't fit. Here goes anyway...
I would give Walden by Thoreau. Plus a non-fiction book about how he actually was living a lot more connected to society life than Walden makes it seem.
That was one of the most impactful books I read on college. I visited the little mock-up of his cabin in the park at Walden Pond.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These books always immediately come to mind but they’re also popular or classics, so I’d worry she has already read them or owns them.
“Wolf Hall”
“The Poisonwood Bible”
“Possession”
“The Secret History”
“The Snows of Kilimanjaro”
“The Namesake”
There are more recent books that I’m not sure are my favorite book ever, but I enjoyed them and think they should be commended as strong works:
“Great Circle”
“Annihilation”
“The Heart’s Invisible Furies”
“North Woods”
“Trust”
I also rate Possession and The Secret History as favorite books
Anonymous wrote:Lonesome Dove. Nobody talks about it but it's got everything. I recommended it to a book club once and got so many weird looks but then EVERYONE loved it.