RHYS BOWEN: Recently on one of the Facebook groups I browse occasionally I saw a posting about five books that have stayed with you. This got me thinking about which books I would select. I came up with a list pretty quickly and could certainly go beyond five books.
But here are my five:
Passage, by Connie Willis. It’s about near death and what happens after death. So thought provoking. That book has haunted me since I read it. If the list was longer I’d also include her Doomsday Book, which I felt was a masterpiece.
The Handmaid’s Tale. I suspect this might be on everyone’s list. It seemed like speculative fiction when we first read it, didn’t it? And now….
Possession, by Byatt. That book had so many layers to admire, including the body of work of two fictitious poets. Wow. I wish I could have written it.
The Lord of the Rings: I had to include this since it was the first book I read as a teenager that completely obsessed me, swallowed me into another world. I have read it so many time since then that I think I know it by heart, but I still get chills when I read it again.
Prince of Tides, Conroy. Another book that was so clever as well as so evocative. Talk about sense of place!
I realize this is my five, without including any mystery novel. So what do they all have? Thought provoking. Sense of place. Certainly not comfortable reading although LOTR does have a sem-satisfying ending.
If I had to include a mystery novel, it would be Reginald Hill’s On Beulah Height. Or
Dennis Lehane’s Mystic River, or… Dreaming of the Bones by our own Debs. All three way beyond what a reader has come to expect from a mystery novel.
And as I write this I feel a sigh coming on. I suppose as I come closer to the end of my career I’d love to have written that definitive novel like one of these. Would any of my books ever make a list like this? Maybe the closest would be the Venice Sketchbook.
Your turn Reds. What books are on your lists?
LUCY BURDETTE: We’re covering our ears at the phrase “come closer to the end of my career” Rhys! This is a hard question, because it depends on how the books stayed with me and what was going on in my life at the time. I’m leaving out the Reds though I adore and admire every book my friends have written.
During my growing up days, I would have chosen GONE WITH THE WIND. That’s the book I took to school to hide in my textbooks so I could keep reading about the incredible saga of Scarlet O’Hara..
Julia Child’s MY LIFE IN FRANCE for her astonishing voice and sense of adventure and love for food and France.
Galit Atlas, EMOTIONAL INHERITANCE. This is from a psychoanalyst who explored the ways that people carry forward trauma and secrets from their families with little idea about how it’s affecting them.
Kent Kreuger’s IRON LAKE introduces a complicated and appealing character, a compelling setting, and powerful conflict–I’ve read everything he’s written since.
THE LOST VINTAGE by Ann Mah tells the story of a present day sommelier who returns to her family’s Burgundy vineyard and discovers layers of historical trauma. Tied with THE ART OF INHERITING SECRETS by Barbara O’Neal. The character inherits a crumbling English estate and a title after her mother's death, leading her to uncover family secrets, explore a new life in a charming village, and navigate a new romance.
What stays with me? Compelling setting, complicated but good-hearted characters with messy family backstories, and usually a happy ending:)
HALLIE EPHRON: What stays with me is always characters. Especially ones I can relate to.
So starting off with my earliest, Sara Crewe from Frances Hodgsen Burnett’s THE LITTLE PRINCESS earned a place in my heart as the little orphan girl who ends up marooned at Miss Minchin’s school for little girls. Fortunately I missed the1939 version with Shirley Temple who (imhop) was far too saccharine to play the feisty, clever, moody Sara.
Then ELOISE, star of the illustrated children’s book by Kay Thompson and illustrated by Hilary Knight. This precocious six-year-old is every nanny’s nightmare.
Then ANNE OF GREEN GABLES by Lucy Maud Montgomery. Anne is a plucky (see a theme, here?) homely, orphaned redhead who is sent to live with her aunt and uncle, Matthew and Marilla. My own children loved it as well.
Several more grownup novels: WATER FOR ELEPHANTS by Sara Gruen; STONES FROM THE RIVER by Ursula Hegi. And finally one with an adult female heroine (published barely pre-women’s lib) with whom I so identified, Carol Shields’ THE STONE DIARIES.
HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Oh, gosh, I think of this from time to time, the books I hope to write.
My five? Books that have stayed with me.
BLACK BEAUTY. Weird,I know, but this is the first book I read where i realized there was such a thing as theme. I remember it so well, finishing and then thinking..wait, I think this is about more than a horse. I bet I was…ten?
THE GOLDEN COMPASS by Phillip Pullman. I was in college, and absolutely transported. Still am. I put Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, in this section, too. I had never stretched my imagination like that before. Life-changing, both of them.
THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING, by TH White. I still think about this book all the time: justice, honor, community. Magic. How the boundaries on maps are only on those maps. People created them. And it has been a problem ever since.
WINTER’S TALE, by Mark Helprin. Absolutely magical. A perfect book. An adventure, time travel, love, justice, journalism, possibilities. (NOT the movie, run away, run away.)
SO what’s my fifth? Ah, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD? Gillian MacAllister’s WRONG PLACE, WRONG TIME (I know, but that book is a total wow.)
Oh, wait, I know, Edith Wharton’s THE CUSTOM OF THE COUNTRY. Still so timely, female empowerment, the mores of society, ambition, and no one is better at dialogue.
JENN McKINLAY: Like Hallie, Anne of Green Gable was a pivotal read for me. I just loved Anne with an “e” so much.
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by CS Lewis. My first fantasy and forever my favorite.
One for the Money by Janet Evanovich where I learned how to write found family and over the top capers.
Circe by Madeline Miller which proved to me I could love literary fiction.
Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher. One of the most imaginative fairy tales I’ve read. Loved, loved, loved it!
JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Gosh, this is hard! Like Jenn, my earliest will be THE LION, THE WITCH AND THE WARDROBE. Hooked me on fantasy and made me an Anglophile in one fell swoop.
PETER PAN for Barrie’s gorgeous omniscient narration; a children’s book that’s even more meaningful for adults. “All children, except one, grow up.”
Orwell’s ANIMAL FARM, which I read fairly young and therefore without expectations. I was blown away by how real and painful his metaphor became, and will never forget the last line: "The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which."
THE STAND by Stephen King. I read it the year it came out in (impossibly thick) paperback, and it lingers as one of the most terrifying views of an apocalypse ever.
SEPTEMBER by Rosamund Pilcher - so many characters brought to life! Such loving descriptions of the setting and mores of the well-to-do Scots and English. Plus a galloping, irresistible plot. It’s like rolling up Dickens, Trollope and Barbara Bradford Taylor in one enormous doorstop.
So, my takeaways? All except for King are British authors. I like big, expansive stories. And I love fantastical worlds that seem completely grounded in reality.
DEBORAH CROMBIE: So interesting to see where overlap and where we differ! And so hard to narrow down to five.
A WRINKLE IN TIME by Madeleine L'Engle. 6th grade. The first book that really introduced me to the power of good prose, and world building.
THE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE by C S Lewis. More fabulous world building, and surely a big contributor to Anglophilia.
LORD OF THE RINGS by J R R Tolkien. Ditto, but more so!
THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING by T H White. Gorgeous, funny, heart-rending, and it started me on an obsession with Arthurian England that lasted for years.
It occurs to me now that all four of these books are about good vs evil and moral choices, and I still think about these stories every day.
GAUDY NIGHT by Dorothy L. Sayers, in order to get in a mystery. This is the book that showed me what you could do within a mystery. And it made me fall in love with Oxford.
RHYS: Isn't it interesting that we have overlapped so much? And when I wrote my list I didn't think of children's books I've loved all my life. Black Beauty... oh how I loved that book. And The Hobbit. And the Chronicles of Narnia. I still re-read them.
So, dear Reddies, how about you???












Oh, goodness, it's a bit of a struggle to keep the list to just five . . . .
ReplyDeleteTHE LION, THE WITCH, AND THE WARDROBE by C. S. Lewis
A WRINKLE IN TIME by Madeleine L'Engle
CHARLOTTE'S WEB by E. B. White
FOUNDATION by Isaac Asimov
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD by Harper Lee
Oh dear, how to choose?
ReplyDeleteI can’t but if I did, the list would be variable, depending on my mood.
So I will try to pick the authors that have most intrigued me, also a changeable list
Agatha Christie: On every list I’d make for any reason
John Irving; “ Keep on passing those open windows”. “ Trouble floats”
Guy de Maupassant: Read over and over again
John Steinbeck: Magnificent canon.
Sigrid Undset: Nobel Prize 1929. Kristin Lavransdotter bathes twice in her lifetime, once when she is born and once when she dies, decades later.
Honorable mention;
Every author who has published because writing a book is a great accomplishment that I shall ever admire and never achieve.
Thank you Jungle Reds
So hard. All the following books took me out of myself and immersed me in a world not my own:
ReplyDeleteThe Wonderful Wizard of Oz (and Baum's subsequent Oz books)
Black Beauty
A Wrinkle in Time
Gaudy Night
And, sorry if I'm playing favorites, but Julia's In the Bleak Midwinter
Ack. I left out Little Women and the related books that followed.
Delete1984
ReplyDeleteWar and Peace
Siddhartha
Naked In Death
Where Are The Children
Beautiful Joe, by Margaret Marshall Saunders, I have my grandmother's 1893 copy, The Hobbit (Always more important to me than the trilogy that followed) JRR Tolkien, The Complete Poems of Robert Frost, anything by Jane Yolen.
ReplyDeleteMaren, I read Beautiful Joe when I was a child and was stunned by the cruelty man is capable of inflicting. I am also a fan of Robert Frost.
DeleteLiable to change at any time without notice:
ReplyDeleteALICE IN WONDERLAND, or can I count both Alice books as one?
TOM SAWYER, yeah, I know HUCKLEBERRY FINN is the deserved classic but I read TOM SAWYER first and, after many re-readings, it still holds a place in my heart
KING LEAR, to my mind, the one play that out-Shakespeare Shakespeare
THE BURNING COURT, John Dickson Carr at his most John Dickson Carr-ness
MUCH MOJO, I love Joe R. Lansdale's Hap and Leonard and rem ain in awe of whatever they put in that East Texas drinking water.
I'm glad we are limited to five, because I would not be able to decide which of the many Sheriff Dan Rhodes novels by Bill Crider I would place at number six
EXODUS by Leon Uris. It was the first adult book I read. I was 11. It tells terrifying stories of the Holocaust and the story of the founding of the State of Israel. It is a very different tale from the ones that pushed hate-filled mobs into the streets 3 years ago. I highly recommend it.
ReplyDeleteThe Lord of the Rings, Tolkien's masterpiece which I found in an English bookstore in Tel Aviv when I lived there for 2 years in the mid-1970's. It is more than an adventure. I've read it over and over.
Pride and Prejudice. My mother tried to encourage me to read it when I became a teenager but I didn't get it. I finally read it in college and then I couldn't get enough of her works.
Charlotte Bronte's JANE EYRE, for the spooky atmosphere, semi-horror and obsession that is only topped by her sister, Emily's WUTHERING HEIGHTS.
Jack London's Call of the Wild.
Many of the books others have mentioned have stayed with me forever, Beautiful Joe, Black Beauty, then Half Magic, Big Red and the Nancy Drew books, of course. But if I want to name books that inspired me, or pushed me in a new direction, the list changes. MILA 18 was the one that that finally pushed me to go live in Israel for 2 years. Finally, Debs' books led me here. Because of that, my retirement is completely different from what it might have been.
I read Exodus at about the same age, Judy! I remember sitting under a tree in the back yard lost to the story.
DeleteJudy, I will have to reread EXODUS, which I read too young. My mother went back to school in 1971 at Yeshiva University, at that time the only university in the NYC area that would accept an older woman part-time for a master's degree in social work. She read EXODUS at that time and since I read anything around the house, I read it then. I was 12. I remember being moved by it but the details are gone. Thanks for the reminder! Also Kjelgaard's BIG RED. I too loved all his books. (Selden)
DeleteI remember our mother reading CHARLOTTE'S WEB to us when my brother, 8, had cancer. I was five. I can draw a direct line from that novel to my desire for a farm of my own. TORY HOLE, published in 1939, was a local children's novel about an event in my hometown that kickstarted my lifelong fascination with U.S. history and in particular the American Revolution. JOHNNY TREMAIN, when I was nine or ten, cemented that interest. (I remember feeling it was very unfair when my brother was able to travel to Boston and I was not. Somehow I believed Boston in 1970 was still the Boston of 1775. "He doesn't even like horses!") The LITTLE HOUSE books by Laura Ingalls Wilder. A LITTLE PRINCESS. LITTLE WOMEN. ANNE OF GREEN GABLES. MY FRIEND FLICKA. It's interesting to me that most of the books that I have carried with me, I read before I was 15. However, if I broadened the timeline I would add Rumer Godden's IN THIS HOUSE OF BREDE, Josephine Tey's THE DAUGHTER OF TIME, any of the books in Susan Howatch's Starbridge series, and so many more. (Selden)
ReplyDeleteI was very fortunate that my parents subscribed me to a children’s book club from the time I was about 5. From those, the stand out that has remained with me is the Road to Agra by Aimee Sommerfelt. It established my life long interest in the lives of people in other places. Black Beauty because I was a horse adoring girl but also for the morality of the tale, a Wrinkle in Time which made me a firm fantasy and science fiction fan. Then, in college, Siddartha. And finally Russka by Edward Rutherfurd, because although I took my advanced degree in Soviet Studies I never really liked Russian literature, but his books are just incredible for anyone loving historical fiction. Harriet the Spy gets an honourable mention because it added mysteries to my favourite genres in such a gentle way.
ReplyDelete