My favourite is The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart. First read when I was a teenager along with the other 3 in the series.
Read many times since then.
I’m a Pear/Apple - Part 5. Still going!!
Being asked for an honest opinion
I was asked this question yesterday (at a literary event), and my mind just went blank. I grasped at straws, and said Great Expectations, which is a very good book, but probably not my favourite of all time. Coming home on the bus, I started to think about what I would say if someone asked me again, but I'm not much further forward really.
How would you answer that question? Do you have a favourite novel, and do you know why you love it? If you can't make up your mind, what are your top three (or four or five, if that's easier)? You can change your mind tomorrow, so don't let the question faze you like it did me
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My list would probably include:
Maus by Art Speigleman, although maybe that shouldn't count, as it is a graphic novel
The Women's Room by Marilyn French, although it is probably terribly dated.
The Woman Who Walked Into Doors, or pretty much anything by Roddy Doyle, who is the only male author I know who can write convincingly from the point of view of a woman, but I've changed my mind already writing that (other contenders are The Autobiography of Henry VIII by Margaret George, Life of Pi by Yann Martel and The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini) and as soon as I see other people's choices I will change it again.
what are yours?
My favourite is The Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart. First read when I was a teenager along with the other 3 in the series.
Read many times since then.
Neville Shute - “Requiem for a Wren”. Beautiful love story both of a woman and of a land that I love; Australia, but which you know from the outset will never come to fruition. Such a glorious story - almost a twin to the better known “A town like Alice”
My all time favourite book is The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck . I read it first in my late teens and it helped me become a better person becoming much more socially aware and a socialist. I’ve read it several times since and it still has the same effect.
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The Magus (John Fowles)
A Child in Time (Ian McEwan)
Never Let Me Go (Kashuo Iziguro)
Call of the Wild
Little Women
The Secret Garden
The Shell Seekers
Rebecca
The ragged trousered philanthropist Robert tressell read every few years
Fingersmith Sarah waters great twist in the middle
A terrible kindness jo browning ro one of my recent reads about the aberfan disaster and mortuaries, sounds a bit grim but is beautifully written and still resonates with me
Ps loved Crawdads sing, Girl on the train
Love GWTW read it several times always hoping for a different ending - was about 16 when I first read it.
As a teenager read The Womens Room but found it depressing and wondered why women put up with such c**p. Always thought women are more than equal to men but then I had a very bolshie strong minded Mum …and aunties! The husbands didn’t seem to stand a chance 🤣
As a child really enjoyed Swallow and Amazons and Ransome’s subsequent books plus anything about ponies or boarding school probably because it was so far removed from my working class upbringing - always wanted midnight feasts out of a tuckbox and wins at gymkhanas haha
Terry Pratchett's 'disc world' series
The Wind in the Willows for a rainy Sunday afternoon.
The Map of Love by Adhaf Soueif
Gone with the wind
Captain Corelli’s Mandolin
Valley of the Dolls
And so many others😱
The Women's Room definitely changed my outlook but so did The Glass Bead Game by Hermann Hesse and Feel the Fear by Susan Jeffers. Read dozens more that I really loved but these are the only ones I've read more than once.
I read lots of books and my favourite has to be Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. It’s about building cathedrals but is also a story about people.
Second choice would be Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens. Her descriptive writing makes you feel that you are actually there.
I also loved ‘The Fortnight in September’ after a recommendation by the journalist and critic Craig Brown. I have spells of reading a particular author. For a while I loved Ruth Rendell’s stand-alone books, although they are very dark, and also those written as Barbara Vine, such as A Fatal Inversion. I’ve recently discovered Celia Dale who was writing similar dark mystery novels in the 60s and 70s. I was unaware of her then, and most of her books are now sadly out of print and quite expensive second hand.
Like some others, I enjoyed reading most when I was a child when you can totally lose yourself in a book and you have no conflicting demands on your time as regards work or household matters. A favourite was ‘The Lost Staircase’ by Elinor Brent Dyer of Chalet School fame - a gripping stand-alone novel for children.
Middlemarch. Just a work of utter genius.
David Copperfield. I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve read it. So I also enjoyed Barbara Kingsolver’s reworking of it - Damon Copperhead. Re an earlier post about The Remains of the Day: Ishiguro was born in Japan. There are parallels between the rigidity of the Japanese Salary Man and the persona of Mr Stevens, the butler, whose identity is swallowed by the British class system at the time at which the novel is set.
"Where the crawdads sing" , "Tess of the d'Urbevilles", To kill a mocking bird - all tearjerkers !
As a bookoholic I read many and varied . Love autobiographies, biographies , and range across the fiction. Black Beauty was a favourite as a child but I also love Girl from the Limberlost and have read it both as a child and an adult. Pride and Prejudice , is a constant love , Jane Eyre which I read at the age of about 9 for the first time and scared myself with the fire and mad woman scene trying to read it in the half dark when I was meant to be asleep but couldnt stop reading it. My Family and other Animals ., the Roddy Doyle books I agree. I never wanted to see a film of books I loved for a long time as they never portrayed the people as I had imagined them and messed about with the story often, but I do enjoy seeing P@P with the great Alison Streadman as a superb Mrs Bennet and just cant remember the actors name that played Lady Catherine de Burgh, whose remarks that "she gave no compliments to her mother" matches the great" a Handbag" in the importance of being Ernest. Oh this is torture to me - I could spend hours adding to todays list and a totally different one tomorrow. But of choice of course I want the actual book not a kindle or anything and a lovely edition where the paper is lovely to touch. Naturally, any book I have will not have corners turned down or writing in it! whatever the day brings and however late it is I must always end with some reading in bed. Happy reading all
The Woman in White by W. Wilkie Collins. Head and shoulders above everything else IMHO. Would definitely take this to my desert island. Read it 15 times, always a delight and will soon start reading it again - it's simply wonderful!
Silas Marner by George Eliot, so poignant, you will not fail to be moved by this book.
Just realised this thread is about novels and some if my choices are non fiction. Ah well, still love them.
I only really read horror books. James Herbert is my favourite author with Stephen King and Richard Laymon a close joint second. My all yime favourite book is The Magic Cottage. I have read it so many times and I'm never bored by it.
I read a lot of books and have many favourite authors. I usually enjoy a good thriller and Sarah Denzil, or Shari Lapena and C L Taylor would be top of my list. I also read some K L Slater books and James Patterson. But I enjoy dipping in to a Stephen King from time to time or Virginia Andrews for some more light hearted family moments. One Book I would recommend is The Maid by Nita Prose - Mystery tied up with amusement and very very well written.
I agree with your choice Sevensider!
How could I have omitted these!
The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test by Tom Wolfe (found in a Welsh holiday cottage in 1975 and stolen as it perfectly captured the hippie movement)
Suite Francaise by Irene Neverovsky, never finished because as a Jewish woman during WC2 she was arrested by theNazis and sent to the gas chambers. The novel was eventually published by her husband.
All the Light We Cannot See. Anthony Doerr. Beautifully written and set in Germany and France during WW2 - a period in social history which I find of particular interest - it deals with the way in which the lives of the two key characters - a young, blind French girl, and an increasingly reluctant Hitler youth - become inextricably connected and interwoven. Deeply moving and thought-provoking.
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