The book club is now in session…
April 29, 2010Hello there loves, may we pretty please chat about books for a quick second? Below are some of my all-time favorites (I know, I know—I’m such a cliché girly girl…), but I’m in search of something new and figured you could help! What are your favorites that make you laugh or cry? What books do you read time and time again?
Emma, The Sun Also Rises, The Girls’ Guide to Hunting and Fishing, Tales of a Female Nomad, Pride and Prejudice, I Feel Bad About My Neck, What Is This Thing Called Love, The Great Gatsby, The Year of Magical Thinking, Eat, Pray, Love, Franny and Zooey, A House in Fez, Anna Karenina, Little Women, Love in the Time of Cholera, The Book of Laughter and Forgetting…and I will add more as they come to me!
(p.s. I am obsessed with the image above, aren’t you???)
Comments
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I love your list. My all time go to book that I will never get enough of is: Pride and Prejudice.
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i love your list! my fave book of all time is History of Love by Nicole Krauss. i want to read it again and again. xo
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I read Anne Lamott when I’m in the mood for something deep and insightful, specifically Rosie or Crooked Little Heart. But when I need a good laugh, I’m all about David Sedaris. My hands-down favorite is Me Talk Pretty One Day. There’s a lot about what it’s like to be an American living abroad, so hysterical!
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You must (if you haven’t already) give Colette’s short stories and Emilie Zola’s novels a read. They’re divine.
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1. you have great taste.
2. have you ever read anything by edna o’brien? she’s pretty dark, but very much into love and embracing feminity. “august is a wicked month” was my first experience with her and it left me feeling pretty sad, but still, i found it so intriguing. anyway…worth checking out, i’d say.
3. thank you for this post. i’m seriously trying to come up with a book list for the summer. -
Have you read The Help by Kathryn Stockett? I consider it a must-read.
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I have to second Jessie’s comment – The Help is phenomenal! Once I pick it up I cannot put it down!
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I love this! I have so many favorites, but three I always find myself turning back to are About Alice, by Calvin Trillin; Rules for Saying Goodbye, Katherine Taylor; and Playing with the Grown-Ups, Sophie Dahl.
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Katie, thanks for your comment! It’s always a pleasure to hear from a fellow blogging friend, who not only has fabulous taste, but is also in a similar situation:) Congrats on your engagement, and good luck with the law school route… I’m excited to follow your blog. It’s just beautiful.
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I second The Help. I am about 3/4 of the way through and would be completely done if I didn’t have to sleep or work. I’m loving it.
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Oh, I love your list! I would add to it:
Lady Chatterly’s Lover, A Passage to India, & Jane Eyre (though you’ve probably read that last one already!) -
Great book list Katie! And Anna Karenina is one of my top favorites. Don’t know if you’ve read The People’s Act of Love by James Meek, but I highly recommend.
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I would recommend Identity by Milan Kundera. It’s really a thought provoking book about who we love and why we stay in relationships.
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Marking this page in my Favorites; can’t wait to read a few of these that I haven’t read yet by the pool this summer!
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Gone with the Wind, To Kill a Mockingbird, Nineteen Minutes, The Screwtape Letters, Left To Tell,The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, anything by Janet Evanovich is just plain fun, I think you would like THe House of Mirth if you haven’t read it, The Handmaids Tale, One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Interpreter of Maladies (new favorite).
And that is a pretty decent list for now ya? haha.
Can’t wait to read some of the ones you’ve listed that I haven’t read yet!
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i’m just about to start franny and zooey! i love your list… it sounds like i need to catch up!
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I LOVE Barbara Kingsolver. Poisonwood Bible, Animal, Vegetable Miracle, Prodigal Summer, etc. are all so so so gripping. She is such a great writer. I also love David Sedaris for laughs and I get really involved in John Irving. The World According to Garp and Cider House Rules are so good as well as A Widow For One Year. Also, the God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy is great and after I finish reading Hot Water Music by Bukowski I’m going to try and track down a copy of Gone With The Wind. My best friend just read it and can’t stop talking about it, so I’m dying to start it now!
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OH! books are my JAM (i was an english major)! the huz can attest to it because there are stacks everywhere (hey, they are cool decor too!)
okay, i love ALL jane austen of course- i’m assuming you’ve read it all, but if not Mansfield Park is awesome too! and i LOVE C.S. Lewis, everything he has written.
Love The Picture of Dorian Grey and Oscar Wilde in general
The Catcher in the Rye, This Side of Paradise (i like it even more than the Great Gatsby), Sex Drugs and Cocoa Puffs (it’s by Chuck Klosterman) and about pop culture!, Love is a Mix Tape; I Loved, I Lost, I Made Spaghetti (it’s like a cookbook AND a memoir) and ANYthing by Nick Hornby especially High Fidelity…and MORE. i’m going to check out a few you have posted that i haven’t read!and i want to LIVE in that image you posted! :)
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Have you ever tried the site What Should I Read Next? I think you’d love it. It’s basically Pandora for readers.
http://www.whatshouldireadnext.com/search
My personal all time favorites are 1. Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky for it’s truth regarding human nature, 2. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte for the strong and irresistible characters, and 3. On the Road by Jack Kerouac for its adventure.
If you’re interested in food or travel, you might like MFK Fisher. She has quite a cult following.
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Oh yeah, I love Hornby too. Makes for an easy and delightful read and the books are better than the movies!
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I love, love good book recommendations and could not possibly be more excited about this post! Now if you’ll just do a post on favorite biographies, my reading list for the next year will be set.
If you like Garcia Marquez, read One Hundred Years of Solitude. Eva Luna and Daughter of Fortune are also good by Isabel Allende. In addition Memoirs of Geisha, The Portrait of a Lady, The Help, Gone With the Wind, Little Women…I could go on and on.
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You MUST read The Poisonwood Bible, Middlesex, and The Help.
Oh how I love books, I’m currently lugging around Lord of the Rings after finishing The Hobbit. Perfect for my ferry commute every day!
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The image looks so stunning!
I love reading books.They put me in this magical world…!
Kisses and have a lovely evening:) -
aw Katie, you are a sweetheart!
I thought An Education was pretty fantastic (and i believe i did shed a tear or two..) and i was like DANG, she didn’t really meet him or get his autograph!
and hollllllleeeeer out to your fiance! English majors! (Can you use the degree? not really by itself, but it was fun getting it…)
And this post has not helped my book addiction… i copy and pasted like everyone anyone said that i hadn’t read…
i need to get a library card i think..
or that netflix for books thing. -
You’ve got the Happy101 Award, come on over to my blog and see!!!
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Victoria -
I second the recommendation for The Poisonwood Bible. It’s really, really wonderful. You won’t forget it.
Also, the best book I’ve read in the last TEN years is The Book Thief. It’s miraculous. I thought i knew what the author was up to, but he really surprised me. I love this book SO much that I told everyone I knew about it (only a tad obsessed?) and then for my birthday, my hubs surprised me with an autographed, British first edition. I cried with happiness.
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“Redeeming Love” by Francine Rivers. I’ve read it 3 times. You won’t be sorry:)
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I love anything by Wally Lamb. Just read The Help for my “literary society.” LOVED.
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“Les Miserables” is my all-time favorite. It was the first book my classic literature-based book club read together over a year ago. An ambitious first pick, yes, but well worth it.
By the time I got to the last words I wanted to read it again!
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Your books are going on my reading list. I’d really recommend The Alchemist (Coelho) and Siddhartha (Hesse) — those are two off the top of my head. All of my “for fun” books are still stuck back in NJ so I can’t peruse my shelves for more suggestions.
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For us older “girls” or for those young women who might want some insight into mothers who grew up in the sixties and seventies, try The Boys of My Youth, by Jo Ann Beard. It is a loosely but beautifully woven short autobiography skipping backwards and forwards in time from some of the author’s earliest memories to events in her late thirties.
“Seventeenth summer, a farmhouse full of boys on the edge of town, a car full of girls heading toward it. It’s Elizabeth’s red convertible, prone to running out of gas and getting stuck in places that cars don’t belong. As soon as we leave the city streets and hit the back roads, everyone except Elizabeth gets up and sits on the edge of the car instead of on the seats. When we go around curves there is a long moment where it feels like we might fall out and be run over by the back tires. We like this feeling. Because we’re too young to die, we assume we won’t. Also, alcohol is involved.”
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I love that you read I feel bad about my neck! You are too young for that one! Reading The Fundamentals of Play by Caitlin Macy…its amazing! Have read almost every single one of your picks..those I haven’t I will add to my list! :)
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My favorite book of all time is “The Unbearable Lightness of Being” by Milan Kundera. Read it and love it.
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Well my all time favorite will always be Jane Eyre but since that is a popular choice I’ll also mention The Guernsey Literary Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows, I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith, Without Reservations by Alice Steinbach, and Reading Lolita in Tehran by Azar Nafisi. It’s clichic but Reading Lolita really changed the way I looked at the world and my life. Love reading! Great topic Kate!
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West With The Night by Beryl Markham
An autobiographical account of her life growing up as a trainer first of her father’s and then of other thoroughbred horses in South Africa before the first world war. But more importantly of her early work as the first woman pilot in Africa.Out of Africa Isak Dinasen
Her life on the farm in Africa and her accounting of her people and the amazing relationships she built with native population of her farm… interwoven with great personal hardship and tragedy. I would have loved to spent an afternoon on the terrace or in front of her fire and have listened to her stories.And for another time, when you want to laugh so hard you’ll want to pee
First Light by Carol Obiso
An American art curator from New York goes to New Zealand to bring an exhibit of Maoris art back for an exhibition. A true story…..no one could have made these up! -
I’d have to say ‘The Outsiders’ by S.E. Hinton and ‘Divorcing Jack’ by Colin Bateman. Absoloutley love them, read them cover to cover too many times to count. I’d love to read Eat Pray Love, I’m a sucker for pop culture haha x
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The Alchemist. Pilgrim at Tinker Creek. Amen.
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When is it not the perfect time to reread Gone With the Wind? :)
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oh boy – i could go on and on listing books!! looks like everyone has made some fantastic suggestions to go along with yours!! i absolutely love anything by David Sedaris or Nick Hornby. And then I’m totally into thrillers – love a good suspense with a twist. David Ellis wrote one of my faves…Line of Vision. total page turner and such a good twist at the end!!






You must read The Plague (Camus), The House of the Spirits (Isabel Allende), Possible Side Effects (Augusten Burroughs), and Speak, Memory (Nabokov)