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If you could only save one Book which would it be?

(144 Posts)
Humbertbear Fri 02-Feb-18 09:31:25

We told our grandchildren the basic story of Fahrenheit 451 and this led to a discussion of which book they would want to save. The 6 year old pointed out that probably the most important book was, in fact, Fahrenheit 451 as it reminds us how important is our freedom to read what we choose.
What book would you save from the fire? Mine would have to be To Kill a Mockingbird.

Grandmama Sat 03-Feb-18 18:55:44

Inspired by my late grandfather who once read the Bible from cover to cover, several years ago I decided to do this. Every day I try to read a chapter from the Old Testament, one from the Gospels and one from the rest of the New Testament. I have finished my third reading of the OT and am part-way through my third of the Apocrypha. Because the NT is shorter I've read that several times more.
As for books - I'd choose Diary of a Nobody or Wind in the Willows or The History of Mr Polly or a PG Wodehouse. They always cheer me up.

saoirse1961 Sat 03-Feb-18 18:58:12

The series of Outlander books love them. I’ve read them several times each!!!

Clematisa Sat 03-Feb-18 19:11:37

The Lion The Witch and The Wardrobe, read it when I was about 6 or 7 and then "found it again!" when I started teaching in 1975 - and since have loved it all my life! And now I'm retired... have read other books and films about C.S. Lewis ... what an amazing writer... he spent time and wrote back to all the young "writers" who wrote any letters to him. I also loved his book of "letters" which I still have ... And can anyone watch the film Shadowlands with Anthony Hopkins and not shed at least 1 tear? www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLKS0XGRYi8

humptydumpty Sat 03-Feb-18 19:35:52

Eloethan just started this thread and was delighted that you loved Black Like Me, too; it's one of a handful of books that I really, really wanted to keep a copy of, even if lack of space means I have to lose all the (hundreds!) of others; and I haven't found many people who have read it.

I always enjoy your threads, and feel that we are of a like mind and would have been friends in RL, and this is another indicator smile

Neilspurgeon0 Sat 03-Feb-18 19:52:42

Got to be poetry I afraid but I genuinely cannot decide between three: the complete works of Rudyard Kipling (which travels everywhere with me), The Golden Bower or Woodbine Willie by Studdert-Kennedy. Burns is up there too. I am such a verse klutz that I carry poetry books in my backpack even when I am going on the bus. Currently reading Carol Duffy’s The World’s Wife for about the hundredth time.

Ok final choice, and I will just make it the one,

The Shropshire Lad.

Eloethan Sat 03-Feb-18 20:54:19

humpty Thank you.

MargaretX Sat 03-Feb-18 21:13:52

Gone with the Wind

NanKate Sat 03-Feb-18 22:20:51

‘Wind in the Willows’ by Kenneth Grahame if I was choosing as a child

and

‘Cross-stitch’ by Diana Gabaldon at an Adult.

durhamjen Sat 03-Feb-18 23:02:55

Does a photo album count as a book?

Rosiebee Sat 03-Feb-18 23:25:32

Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons. Whenever life becomes a bit overwhelming, I re-read this book. Flora the"heroine" brings order to everyone's life and then to mine. Also there are some wonderful phrases such as " I mun cletter the dishes" ( I have to wash the dishes) which have become part of our vocabulary.

gmelon Sun 04-Feb-18 00:49:16

"nonnie" I have the book about Anthony Nolan. I bought it 2nd hand over thirty years ago.

gmelon Sun 04-Feb-18 00:55:10

clematisa Shadow lands ... my husband cried so much that he refused to ever watch it again .

Peaseblossom Sun 04-Feb-18 01:03:32

Not one, but all the books with Detective Harry Bosch as the main character by Michael Connolly.

grannybuy Sun 04-Feb-18 01:05:24

My hardback copy of Anne of Green Gables which my mother received as a school prize in 1939. I loved it and read it many times.

giulia Sun 04-Feb-18 08:29:20

Tudorrose You reminded me - my mother reading "The Egg and I" during a very unhappy period of her life, and laughing till the tears ran down her cheeks! The book got lost, unfortunately.

chicken Sun 04-Feb-18 08:57:05

"The Vizard Mask" by Diana Norman. I've read it three times and it still grips me , and there are enough themes in it to fill three books. Can't recommend it highly enough!

gma Sun 04-Feb-18 09:10:23

Probably The Diary of Anne Frank. My copy is very well worn, it’s a Pan paperback from 1958. Read to us at school and I saved up pocket money and bought it. 3/6p I think. It’s very fragile now, with pages yellowed and well worn. It’s a sad reminder of the horrors of war, and I was devastated when I discovered how it ended. I was only 12 at the time and knew nothing about the suffering of the Jewish population. We visited Anne Franks house in Amsterdam about 30 years ago. We went early in the morning as soon as it opened and consequently were the first visitors, and I was so moved by the atmosphere, it was as if they had all just left. The view from Anne’s bedroom was exactly as she described, with the chestnut tree and the clock tower. A very emotional visit and a book which I would not want to lose, especially in a fire.

giulia Sun 04-Feb-18 09:11:21

I am surprised nobody has yet mentioned LARK RISE TO CANDLEFORD by Flora Thompson. Anyone who enjoys Laurie Lee and Cider with Rosie would enjoy this. So nostalgic of unspoiled England.

Grandmama Sun 04-Feb-18 11:43:46

Clematisa: When I was teaching lower juniors I always read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe to the class in the run up to Easter.

DanniRae Sun 04-Feb-18 12:23:49

Hi giulia - I am planning on re-reading "Lark Rise to Candleford" as soon as I finish my current book. I haven't read it for a long time but I think it says somewhere in it that someone was "dabbing out a bit of washing" - I love that way of describing wash day! smile

DanniRae Sun 04-Feb-18 12:28:00

PS. I loved "Cider with Rosie" too!
"A Child in the Forest" and "Back to the Forest" by Winifred Foley are excellent too.

giulia Sun 04-Feb-18 13:28:24

DanniRae I don't remember that phrase but the book is so full of a dreamy- rural- bees-buzzing feel, I just wish I had lived in that period.

Patticake123 Sun 04-Feb-18 18:33:40

An impossible task but if I’ve got to choose, I’m going to cheat and choose two - The ragged trousered philanthropists by Robert Tressell , the story of how working people were ripped off by everyone would be the first and Red Dust Road by Jacqui Kaye - a biography with great resonance for me, my sneaked in second choice.

DanniRae Sun 04-Feb-18 20:20:10

giulia - Maybe I'm getting confused and it's in another book! I'm looking forward to re-reading it anyway.

giulia Sun 04-Feb-18 22:56:39

DanniRae I'll join you and re-read mine again too.