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What is your comfort book

112 replies

travellingwilbury · 08/02/2011 13:25

If I have read something particularly hard going I always turn to my James Herriot books for a bit of comfort . They are just so cosy and comfy and always cheer me up .

I know they are all pretty much the same
Cow dies / cow lives
grumpy/happy farmer
grumpy dog / farty dog

But I love them

What is yours ?

OP posts:
Georgelassosthemoon · 12/02/2011 18:11

Another one for Jilly Cooper (Rivals, Imogen and The Common Years), Pride and Prejudice and any Bill Bryson. Also the Ruth Rendell Wexford whodunnits.

Jux · 15/02/2011 13:16

The Deptford Trilogy by Robertson Davies; it is so gently profound that I am immediately whisked into a warm bath.

Terry Pratchett is good for a laugh, but doesn't bear too many re-readings.

Shodan · 15/02/2011 13:33

Definitely James Herriot, esp the one with Cedric the farting Boxer.

Miss Read- any of them. So gentle and undemanding and makes me wish I had such an idyllic lifestyle.

YY to Bill Bryson.

And a book called 'Giggling in the shrubbery'- a collection of memoirs of boarding-school girls from the early to mid 1900s. So funny.

Southender · 15/02/2011 13:53

When I'm depressed I re-read "The Listeners" by Monica Dickens, which is about the Samaritans. It always reminds me that my life is OK really.

ReshapeWhileDamp · 15/02/2011 13:59

Pterry Pratchett, esp. the 'city watch' books.
Possession, A.S.Byatt.
The Secret History.
Jane Eyre.
Gerald Durrell's Corfu books.
Posy Simmonds Guardian cartoons, c. 1983. Grin

Raffaella Barker's oh-so-Bunty books about living in Norfolk amid charming, boho chaos. Blush

ReshapeWhileDamp · 15/02/2011 14:00

Ooh, and Cold Comfort Farm.

And Tales of the City!

Servalan · 15/02/2011 14:29

Adrian Mole
Tales of the City
anything by Marian Keyes
Robert Rodi novels

globex · 15/02/2011 15:04

EF Benson
PG Wodehouse

Lucky Jim
The Rachel Papers
A Confederacy of Dunces

NicknameTaken · 15/02/2011 16:19

Adrian Mole books
E F Benson Mapp & Lucia books
E M Delafield Diary of a Provincial Lady
Barbara Pym
Terry Pratchett
Kenneth Grahame The Wind in the Willows
Nancy Mitford Love in a Cold Climate
Jill Tweedie Letters from a Fainthearted Feminist
Rose Macaulay The Towers of Trebizond
In Ruins by Christoper Woodward
The Boy that Books Built by Francis Spufford
Ex libris Anne Fadiman
The End of Elsewhere by Taras Griscoe (reminds me of how uncomfortable exotic travel really is)

I apparently need a lot of comforting in my life.

TondelayoSchwarzkopf · 15/02/2011 16:37

Damon Runyon - pure escapism and such great characters.
Raymond Chandler.
Sherlock Holmes
Miss Pettigrew lives for a day
Adrian Mole
Janet Evanovich
Agatha Christie.

I realise I would like to live in the 1930s amid courteous gangsters and glamorous molls.

JackieNo · 15/02/2011 17:51

You lot keep reminding me of other ones - The Rachel Papers could be one of mine too, and Love in a Cold Climate.

scottishmummy · 15/02/2011 17:56

the grass is singing
1984
unbearable lightness of being

dotnet · 15/02/2011 18:24

I don't especially like Leslie Thomas' novels, but I love his two autobiographical books, This Time Next Week and In My Wildest Dreams.
They are heartwarming, and cheer you up - Leslie Thomas had a rotten childhood in lots of ways - father dies at sea; mother dies of cancer and he and his brother are taken away from their home in Wales to a big Barnardo's orphanage in England. But he makes the best of it, and gets a lot of fun and pleasure out of life even though he has a lot of hard knocks (the worst of which is separation from his brother, who is fostered. They lose touch with one another for several years.)

'In My Wildest Dreams' takes up where 'This Time Next Week' leaves off. Leslie Thomas manages to get work as a journalist (he'd said to the head of the Barnardo's Home that he wanted to be a writer. 'Yes, boy', he is told, 'We'll find you a job as a waiter in a very fine restaurant.')
The pleasure Leslie Thomas takes in life makes 'In My Wildest Dreams' a very funny read at times. I remember one episode when he, as a young reporter, goes to catch up on any news available from the secretary of the local Cacti and Succulent Society. The pair of them end up rolling around together on the floor, until she hears her husband arriving, and pushes L.T. out the door, saying 'We'll have to carry on next week'!

It's lovely to read an account of a life where the writer is so genuinely knocked out by his good fortune in becoming successful, firstly as a journalist and then as a writer of books.

A really nice man, Leslie Thomas, and those two autobiographical books of his are lovely comfort reads.

YorkshireTeaDrinker · 15/02/2011 20:21

All mine have already been mentioned:

Georgette Heyer
Anne of Green Gables series
Chalet school series
Agatha Christie
PG Wodehouse

LadyintheRadiator · 15/02/2011 20:34

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ilikemrclooney · 15/02/2011 21:36

I Capture The Castle

Bill Bryson, perticually Notes from a Small Island/Big Island I think they are called the ones about British and American life.

Twilight. which i love a bit too much. Blush

Greenwing · 15/02/2011 21:45

Georgette Heyer or Jane Austen

noneshallsleep2 · 15/02/2011 21:46

Very low brow, but "Welcome to Temptation" by Jennifer Crusie - a sexy and funny feelgood book - "Nothing but good times ahead....."

Isitlargewineoclockyet · 15/02/2011 22:26

Ooh, another for The Crow Road, Ian Banks, read it over and over..
also..
Jane Austen
Tales of the City
Jayne Eyre
Kate Atkinson - Behind the Scenes...

lalalonglegs · 15/02/2011 22:32

Silas Marner and Cousin Phyllis are both just perfection - and they're short. The ideal books to escape into for an afternoon.

LaurieFairyCake · 15/02/2011 22:38

Forever Amber- Tis a Charles 2nd bonkbuster. It's basically about an actress/whore/mistress.

It's wonderful, and I think gives a real flavour of the London court.

laurentomes · 16/02/2011 09:52

Anything by Jodi Picoult, they always manage to remind me my life could be so much more dramatic worse Grin

TondelayoSchwarzkopf · 16/02/2011 10:55

I worry about people whose comfort reads are Jodi Picoult and The Secret History. Grin

LibraryLil · 16/02/2011 11:50

If I need comfort books to cheer me up I'll work through my collection of Jennings books by Anthony Buckeridge; they always make me laugh.

If I need crime thrillers though, I have an author friend who writes them and sends them to me for proofreading before publication. Quick plug - she has just had her first one published by Myriad this week (Into the Darkest Corner by Elizabeth Haynes) about OCD and stalking, and I've just read the first draft of her next one - watch out for "Revenge of the Tide", hopefully coming out later this year. It is utterly gripping!

moodymama · 16/02/2011 13:12

Pride and Prej - like a big warm hug in my brain!

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