Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Book lists!

The other day I was thinking about a few of the books that have meant the most to me and le voila!  The idea for a column magically appeared.

I love magic.

I would also love to read lists of books that have mattered to you.

6 comments:

  1. The Poisonwood Bible
    A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
    To Kill a Mockingbird
    These Is My Words

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  2. These is my words
    A tree grows in Brooklyn
    Good choices by Sarah

    And I'd add:
    The elegance of the hedgehog
    An unquiet mind: Memoir of moods and madness

    That last one was definitely a book that hit me hard because of the emotions of that time and it was just the book I needed then and again a few years later.

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  3. You are magical, Ann.

    I like Sarah and Lauren's lists a whole lot. I'll add:

    Peace Like a River
    Prairie Songs
    Jane Eyre
    Angle of Repose

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  4. I just heard another person whose taste I respect rhapsodize about this book in the most reverential way. So now I have to set aside my policiers and read something substantial evidently. Maybe I should wait till it's not so hot...I could, possibly, have a better frame of mind.

    Underworld, by Don Delillo
    Cloudsplitter, by Russell Banks
    Written on the Body, Jeanette Winterson
    Harriet the Spy, by Louise Fitzhugh
    The Beauty of the Husband, by Anne Carson

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  5. Its seems to me that such a list is fluid. Nevertheless, These books would make my fav's on a fairly regular basis. In n
    o particular order:

    Huckleberry Finn (it got me reading again)
    Cat's Cradle (it got me reading what I liked)
    Catcher In The Rye (helped read for nuance)
    Rumpole of the Bailer (Inspired, in part, career choice)
    A Long Way Down (Its just good writing)
    Holy Scripture (no explanation provided)
    Cool Cat (Because I wanted to be bad in the 70's)
    Any book by A. Cannon.

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  6. In your column you mention that you question yourself if someone doesn't love a book that you love. Even though I might be insecure in so many other areas of my life, I am true and loyal to my books. I find myself judging other people based on how they feel about a book I love. I don't entirely dismiss them, but if someone dislikes a book I love, I know that they can never be a true "kindred spirit" I adored All the Light We Cannot See and was particularly moved by when Werner, trapped in the bombed out celler, hears Clair de Lune on the radio. Oh my heart!

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