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What is your favourite novel, and why?

(308 Posts)
Doodledog Sun 26-Feb-23 21:07:07

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 grin.

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?

Mamma7 Wed 01-Mar-23 14:07:18

Ps loved Crawdads sing, Girl on the train

fitwell Wed 01-Mar-23 14:12:54

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

Happysexagenarian Wed 01-Mar-23 14:12:59

Call of the Wild
Little Women
The Secret Garden
The Shell Seekers
Rebecca

humptydumpty Wed 01-Mar-23 14:14:58

The Magus (John Fowles)
A Child in Time (Ian McEwan)
Never Let Me Go (Kashuo Iziguro)

Doreenann Wed 01-Mar-23 14:15:15

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.
.

Neilspurgeon0 Wed 01-Mar-23 14:34:18

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”

Iceni55 Wed 01-Mar-23 14:35:25

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.

Snorkel Wed 01-Mar-23 14:42:54

The Grapes of Wrath
American Psycho (disturbingly brilliant)
Any Ian McEwen
Perfume
Mapp & Lucia
Any Irvine Welsh
Thomas Hardy (Angel Clare - bastard)
Red Dragon
All George Eliot
All Quiet on the Western Front
Sophie's Choice

Granny14 Wed 01-Mar-23 14:44:28

Lots of my favourites already mentioned but I have these 2 to add.
Memoirs of a geisha by Arthur Golden
The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver

I loved She by H Rider Haggard when a teenager. So exciting.

Gundy Wed 01-Mar-23 15:05:00

I knew I was going to love this read today! So before I read every one these posts I’m going to drop mine right away, then go back and leisurely read and make notes!

1) Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towels (fiction; beautifully written; A Russian royal who is placed under house arrest and confined to the most lavish hotel in the city for decades, his life, relationships. Just riveting)
2) The Revolutionary by Stacy Schiff
(biography of one of our founding fathers, a man who masterminded our independence from the mother country. As if I were walking the streets…) Sorry, guys 😏 wasn’t sure if I should mention this book. 😆
Cheers!
USA Gundy

Karen005 Wed 01-Mar-23 15:19:28

I read these posts but have never contributed but felt I needed to share. The latest book that I have read has been one of the best and totally unforgettable. I cried (several times), laughed and never wanted it to end. The book was “A Little Life” by Hana Yanigihara. Truly a beautiful read. I have shared with friends who have also loved it.
Totally agree with others choices especially Thorn Birds, Angela’s Ashes and Little Women. A book I read 30 odd years ago has stayed with me Tara Kane by George Markstein a historical epic which has never left me although I had to change the end in my head as so totally involved.

Crystal46 Wed 01-Mar-23 15:20:36

Good thread!

For me, today,
most of Rose Tremain’s and Ian McKewan’s output
Bleak House
Little Dorrit
Great Expectations
Persuasion
Piranesi
Kite Runner
Darke

Lizzie44 Wed 01-Mar-23 15:22:42

As a passionate reader since the age of 5 (Enid Blyton's "Faraway Tree") it's impossible to choose a favourite or even a shortlist but a book that I have returned to several times is "The Enchanted April" by Elizabeth von Arnim. I'ts a comfort read - easy, gentle, humorous, and has a magical quality that reminds me of the joy of holidays, beautiful gardens and time spent in Italy.

Milest0ne Wed 01-Mar-23 15:30:30

I like the Novels by Robert Neil as I can identify locations and have a map with me. Black William based on Tyne side, Mist Over Pendle, about the Pendle witches. Moon in Scorpio, about west Lancashire. The Devils Weather, about the Lakes.
I also add R.F, Delderfield. Anna Jacobs. Georgette Heyer.

Wibblywobbly Wed 01-Mar-23 15:37:31

Anything by Elizabeth Strout is high on my list, especially Olive Kitteridge and Olive Again. Alice Munro is the best short story writer alive.

lizzypopbottle Wed 01-Mar-23 15:47:21

OMGA (Oh! My Giddy Aunt) Doodledog I hated Great Expectations! We read it in English lessons when I was only eleven years old and I found it creepy (Miss Havisham) and terrifying (Magwitch - I knew he was hiding under my bed!) I've re-read many Dickens novels since then but never that one!

TerriBull Wed 01-Mar-23 15:57:28

manny

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.

Good to know have just started Demon Copperhead,.

grandmac Wed 01-Mar-23 15:59:26

MadeInYorkshire Have you tried a Kindle? They are very light weight and easy to hold in one hand.

Favourite books I could read again
The Long Walk, Slavomir Rawicz (read when I was about 12 and never forgotten)
The Thorn Birds, Collen McCullough
The Far Pavillions, M M Kaye ( and her autobiographies)
Diary of an Ordinary Woman, Margaret Forster
The Light between Oceans, M L Stedman
All the Nella Last series of diaries
The Source, James Michener
The Pillars of the Earth series, Ken Follett
The Kite Runner and 1000 Splendid Suns, Khaled Hosseini
All the books about different cities by Edward Rutherford
Most of Leon Uris books
And Lots more!

Doodledog Wed 01-Mar-23 16:00:09

Iceni55

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.

Ooh yes. I loved this, too. And the others in the series. I also liked the Marion Zimmer Bradley Avalon books.

Saetana Wed 01-Mar-23 16:02:24

Memories of Ice by Steven Erikson - the third book in the high fantasy series Tales of the Malazan Book of the Fallen. Erikson is an amazing writer, not always an easy read but well worth persevering with. This book is full of battles, politics, gods, various human and non-human races, triumph and tragedy - with the necessary humour to lighten where necessary. If you love fantasy then I cannot recommend Erikson highly enough - do not be put off by Gardens of the Moon, first book in the series, Erikson tends to throw his readers in at the deep end and allows them to sink or swim. Swimming is so worth it, I have read this series several times, there is always something new to notice in this intricate and complicated fantasy world.

vintage1950 Wed 01-Mar-23 16:04:51

Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell.
Anglo-Saxon Attitudes by Angus Wilson.

vintage1950 Wed 01-Mar-23 16:09:09

Jane Eyre also. Never enjoyed Wuthering Heights, had no sympathy at all for Cathy and Heathcliff.

Nansypansy Wed 01-Mar-23 16:19:43

Mine are probablyKane and Abel because it was such a meaty story of two men I the same timeframe and how different their lives were . Then I must also say Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitchell. This book surprised me as I wouldn’t normally have been attracted to it (I bought it from a charity shop) simply because inside the cover someone had written “To …… this was the best book I’ve ever read. Love Mum.” I loved it too … so much content and although I’ve watched the original film I wish someone would remake it.

Jodieb Wed 01-Mar-23 16:20:21

Any novel by Tracy Chevalier. The girl with the pearl earring.
The lady and the Unicorn
Remarkable Creatures. To name a few. So we'll written.

Greyjoy1953 Wed 01-Mar-23 16:32:08

My two all time fa ourite books are Fingersmith by Sarah Waters which has some many twists and turns and keeps you in your toes all the way through. The other one is The Dovekeepers which is based around the story of Masada and is about three women and their lives. A brilliant book.