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Win £700 worth of the best books of 2015!

(706 Posts)
CariGransnet (GNHQ) Tue 10-Nov-15 10:26:09

Yes, it's that time of year again - and may we now present this year's round up of the best reads for the festive season.

Something for everyone - and a chance for one person to win every single book featured on the page...a prize haul worth OVER £700!!

So how to enter? Simple! Tell us about your favourite book...in 140 characters or less.

All qualifying entries will be popped into our giant Santa hat and a winner will be pulled out at midday on Tuesday 8 December...to give us plenty of time to get the HUGE box of goodies over to you before the festive season begins.

Willtedamelia Wed 11-Nov-15 16:24:15

My favourite has to be The Time Travelers Wife , a very different love story with a weepy ending

melp1 Wed 11-Nov-15 16:10:30

Marley and me I cried buckets

northernfi Wed 11-Nov-15 16:07:00

Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Read long before I ever saw the TV series and so much better! The book that connected the page with my imagination for the first time.

rachsimmons85 Wed 11-Nov-15 16:02:57

The Night Circus is such a rich, evocative journey, despite its size I devoured this brilliant story double quick. I still want to visit it!

yourgrace123 Wed 11-Nov-15 16:01:30

Wind in the willows loved it as a child

jhocknull Wed 11-Nov-15 15:53:32

Arthur and George- Julian Barnes. Beautifully written. Full of drama and intrigue. If you have not read this classic then read it on holiday or at home where you will be transported into a glorious story.

contrarymary Wed 11-Nov-15 15:44:26

It's hard to choose but my favourite is 'Me Before You' by JoJo Moyes.
She has such an amazing way of bringing her characters to life.

LizRhodes Wed 11-Nov-15 15:40:49

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

LizRhodes Wed 11-Nov-15 15:40:48

I love Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge. I first came across it as a radio dramatization on Radio 4 and was quite aghast at the dreadful ways of Michael Henshaw, who sold his wife. The book portrays Dorset as it was in the mid-19th century, and in particular, Dorchester, which is a place I knew quite well.

babcia Wed 11-Nov-15 15:32:42

I've always loved Tom's Midnight Garden by Philippa Pearce, in spite of reading it countless times to children and grandchildren.

YvonneBradley Wed 11-Nov-15 15:32:00

The Shellseekers

Ikea1234 Wed 11-Nov-15 15:18:37

Currently re reading "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime " by Mark Haddon, having just seen it on stage at the West End. Both are, quite simply, superb. Insightful, funny, touching and clever. Must read,must see.

Slpotts53 Wed 11-Nov-15 15:03:40

My favourite book depends solely on my mood I am afraid. It could be Pride and prejudice because it describes society so wittily, Jane Eyre because my daughters say it reminds them of when I read it to them, Harry Potter and the philosophers Stone because it helped me as a teacher to inspire many reluctant boy readers or even The boy in the Striped Pyjamas because it was so moving about the Holocaust!maybe I haven't even read yet what might turn out to be my favourite book.

whenim64 Wed 11-Nov-15 14:55:03

Most memorable is The Reader by Bernhard Shlink. A beautifully written book that made me think about the complexities of intimate relationships with people who have committed atrocious acts.

glenka Wed 11-Nov-15 14:35:58

I like a good chick lit book so it has to Shopaholic Ties The Knot by Sophie Kinsella.

moxeyns Wed 11-Nov-15 14:24:26

Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall. I'm a historian, I know the ending - but Ms Mantel is SO super as a writer that it makes me cry every time!

JS06 Wed 11-Nov-15 14:21:42

Dam-Burst of Dreams by Christopher Nolan, this exceptional young man with cerebral palsy shows us the power and glory of words, spirit and living. A revelation of a book.

MilsBakhsh Wed 11-Nov-15 14:05:27

Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides. It is a massively epic story following one family over a hundred years, but still manages to focus on the in-depth feelings of the main character. I read it every year.

nannyH Wed 11-Nov-15 13:53:03

The Edge of Heaven by Gordon Honeycombe, a truly nostalgic book for me because I spent some of my teenage years in Cyprus before the island was divided and the places mentioned - Episkopi Garrison, Pissouri, Akrotiri, Curium - all have memories. To any other gransnetter who had a father in the Army or Air Force out there in the 1960s you will love it too.

Happyfox Wed 11-Nov-15 13:46:06

Alice in Wonderland has always been my escape, my place of dreams where anything is possible.

gran1 Wed 11-Nov-15 13:43:14

Any book by Roald Dahl. He started my love of reading.

Flowerpower22 Wed 11-Nov-15 13:34:25

One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, a book I read aged 16 which has stayed with me and been re-read many times. Evocative and humbling.

leeds22 Wed 11-Nov-15 13:33:28

My favourite book is Friday's Tunnel by John Verney. It was the first hardback book I ever owned and I can still remember begging my mother to buy it for my birthday in 1959. And I've still got it in my bookcase.

GrandmaEvie Wed 11-Nov-15 13:22:27

All the books I read with my grandchildren. The light in their eyes is inspiring, their questions intriguing and the discussions about the pictures fascinating.

ellenoo Wed 11-Nov-15 13:14:51

John Fowles - The Magus - paradoxical views on life, psychologically gripping - couldn't put it down!