Anonymous wrote:Once in a blue moon I will read something that really grabs me and holds on - such that I will reread sections and really have almost a painful feeling of loss when the book ends. I find myself thinking about it and almost trying to find moments that resonate in the book in my own life for days on end.
Does this happen to anyone else? Or am I just a little bit cray cray?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The 100 Years Trilogy that Ken Follet is writing now. I'm literally waiting for the third like a stalker.
I read the first one and it was ok - when did you get hooked?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Road
Me, too, but because I hated it so much!
Anonymous wrote:I still think about The Road. The choice the father made and his hope for his son consumes me still. I think about that book at least once a week in amazement. I'll never read it again, though.
Anonymous wrote:The Poisonwood Bible and A Prayer for Owen Meany for me, too. Also, A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley, A Widow for One Year by John Irving (which I know is not a favorite among many Irving fans), The Long Walk by Richard Bachman (Stephen King), and Bel Canto by Ann Patchett.
For non-fiction I'd add Into Thin Air by Jon Krakauer, and Love Thy Neighbor: A Story of War by Peter Maass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- I can't divulge the name of the latest book that gripped me because it's a YA novel that is too embarrassing to admit.![]()
lol. I have a few of these too!!! Good to hear I'm not the only one!
Anonymous wrote:"Tuesdays with Morrie."
No one who has read that book can ever say their lives have been the same after reading that book.
Once you have read that book, your whole perspective on life changes + you are a completely different person.
Guaranteed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Unbearable Lightness of Being[/quote
The only book I ever threw across the room in disgust at the end!
Mine is A Prayer For Owen Meany. I plan to read it again soon.
A Prayer for Owen Meany: I burst into tears when I read the last line of that book. Never really undrerstood what that meant until that moment.