Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For funny, Liane Moriarty! If you haven’t read “The Husbands Secret” that’s a great funny page turner beach read. “Maybe Where’d You Go Bernadette” if you like quirky. “Lake Success” if you like social commentary or are interested in ASD. “Nothing to See Here” was very funny and poignant.
For serious books, “Wolf Hall”, “Never Let Me Go,” “pachinko.”
Tried wolf hall twice but couldn’t get passed the first few chapters. What am I missing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My favorite novel is A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving. I've reread it several times. Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout and Gilead by Marilynne Robinson are up there, too.
I hated Prayer for Owen Meany.
Anonymous wrote:I loved the great believers by Rebecca Makai and the Overstory by Richard Powers
Anonymous wrote:Not "funny" but "The Red Tent". Stuck with me more than any book other than "Pride and Prejudice."
Anonymous wrote:Richard Russo’s Straight Man is excellent and unexpectedly funny.
Anonymous wrote:My favorite novel is A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving. I've reread it several times. Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout and Gilead by Marilynne Robinson are up there, too.
Anonymous wrote:I stumbled on Kent Haruf's books a few years ago, loved them. They are all set in a small town on the eastern plains of Colorado. One, I forget which, was made into a movie (Jane Fonda and Robert Redford)--a widow visits her widower neighbor and says she misses having a companion to sleep with and proposes they do this--not for sex, but because of loneliness. Also, the characters reappear (kind of like Elizabeth Strout's books).
But I don't think I could pick a "best" work of fiction.
Another recommendation is anything by Alice McDermott. Irish people in New York, books span the 1950s to the present time, kind of playing off the histories of one generation and the current experience of their children or grandchildren. Another writer with lovely, simple, clear, yet vivid writing.
I went through a bunch of Edith Wharton's books years ago. Utterly depressing though.
I absolutely loved the Kent Haruf trilogy. Well, mostly the first 2 but they were so beautiful they make up for a slightly lackluster 3rd.