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What is your favorite book of all time?

179 replies

Fishpants · 19/10/2011 15:33

I'm hoping to gather some ideas and some real people recommendations rather than the Top 100 Novels to Read Before You Die type lists.

Disclaimer: I know it's hard to pick just one, so you can pick more than one if you really must. [hwink]

OP posts:
LadyEvilEyes · 20/10/2011 00:31

The Once and Future King by TH White.
The most beautiful book on the Arthurian Legend I've ever read.

Colyngbourne · 20/10/2011 09:51

Parade's End - Ford Madox Ford - outstanding

Mansfield Park - Austen
Middlemarch - George Eliot
The Cloister & the Hearth - Charles Reade
Fire & Hemlock - Diana Wynne Jones
Aquarius - Jan Mark
Never Let Me Go - Ishiguro
Wuthering Heights -

Cloud Atlas - David Mitchell
Oryx & Crake/Year of the Flood - Margaret Atwood

Hullygully · 20/10/2011 10:07

Middlemarch! How could I have forgot. Yyyyyyy.

And Jane Eyre

And all Austen and The Mayor of Casterbridge

Sossiges · 20/10/2011 10:28

The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho

Hullygully · 20/10/2011 10:29

no no no no no not him the weirdy faux spiritual nonsense man

Sossiges · 20/10/2011 10:30

The Wild White Stallion - Rene Guillot

myncichips · 20/10/2011 10:34

The Regeneration Trilogy by Pat Barker!

PinotScreechio · 20/10/2011 10:40

YY to Tudor fiction here too.

FearTricksPotter · 20/10/2011 10:43

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Ephiny · 20/10/2011 10:49

Margaret Atwood - The Robber Bride
Barbara Kingsolver - The Bean Trees/Pigs in Heaven

(pretty much anything by those two really!)

Terry Pratchett - The Night Watch

Sheri Tepper - The Companions

witchyhills · 20/10/2011 10:51

World Class- Jane and Burt Boyar, it's about tennis.

And a book called the Talisman by Stephen King and Peter Straub

and To Kill a Mockingbird

thesurgeonsmate · 20/10/2011 10:52

I have twenty - The "Master and Commander" series by Patrick O'Brien. I loved them so much that my posting name is the name of one of the books. Packed with incident and great characters. The relationship between Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin is simply a pleasure to behold.

FearfulYank · 20/10/2011 16:49

Kerry and Witchy I forgot about The Talisman! So good. Oh and Ephiny I totally agree about Kingsolver.

FearTricks my middle name is Christine after that book. :) My mom was reading it a few days before I was born and thought it sounded pretty.

GHAHSTLYGHOULYpants · 20/10/2011 17:00

Colyngbourne yes never let me go is AMAZING and the film was such a let down. There is something so haunting about the book, it really stayed with me.

Memoirs of a geisha?! That was such a good story, but I found the writing really limited. There were a lot of "and then..." in the prose.

hully I am with you on NO to the wierdy spiritual man!

FearfulYank · 20/10/2011 17:02

Ghastly have you figured out what book you were talking about earlier?!

Hullygully · 20/10/2011 18:21

Lacuna by Kingsolver is hamazing.

GHAHSTLYGHOULYpants · 20/10/2011 18:50

fearfulyank No! and it is driving me mad, I am going to have to do some thinking about it. It is not a famous author or book, I picked it up in a junk shop in Tokyo and it was about £1, I think it might be set in Canada rather than America and it is around one main family who are Norwegian immigrants and their community.

There are a couple of weddings, and the whole community is poor they give old tea towels that they have stitched to make like new, or a couple of pillow cases. It is a really humble sweet story.

Why can I not recall it!?

bruffin · 20/10/2011 19:03

Is it A tree Grows In Brooklyn?

GHAHSTLYGHOULYpants · 20/10/2011 19:07

bruffin No, but my god i love that film, have not read the book Blush. My mum and I used to watch that all the time and have a good old cry.

No it is about a young boy and his family and they are poor but proud and they are all farmers and his mum has people round her house lots and he sits under the table to listen in to their conversations.

He befriends a very poor girl who is part of a family who live in a shack and she dies in the cold winter. There is a big wedding and as per scandinavian traditions it lasts for days and there is lots of feasting. There is also a big baseball game in it.

Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrgh. I need to talk to a librarian!

GHAHSTLYGHOULYpants · 20/10/2011 19:11

FOUND IT!!!

Box Socials by W.P Kinsella (he is pretty famous Blush )

With the award-winning, bestselling, universally acclaimed Shoeless Joe (the basis for the movie "Field of Dreams"), W.P. Kinsella established himself as a storyteller of unsurpassed wit and an unforgettably whimsical voice. But Kinsella's new novel, Box Socials, is easily the best book of his career. Set in the small towns, ball fields, barns and bedrooms of Alberta, Canada, and populated by some of the quirkiest, rowdiest, hottest-blooded folks in fiction, Box Socials paints a brilliantly comic, full-color portrait of North American life in the 1940s. Here's the story of how Truckbox Al McClintock, a small-town greaser whose claim to fame was hitting a baseball clean across the Pembina River, almost got a tryout with the genuine St. Louis Cardinals - but instead ended up batting against Bob Feller of Cleveland Indian fame in Renfrew Park, Edmonton, Alberta. Along the way to Al's moment of truth at the plate, we learn about the bizarre, touchingly hilarious lives and loves of just about anyone who ever passed through New Oslo, Fark, or Venusberg. Narrator Jamie O'Day, the young wide-eyed offspring of downwardly mobile hillbillies, plunks us down in the middle of the wild six-day Ukrainian wedding of Lavonia Lakustra and her Little American Soldier. He introduces us to the luscious Velvet Bozniak, who knows more about sex than any girl has a right to and who is determined to share all her wisdom with Jamie. And of course he attends a slew of box socials, whist drives, and community dances, where the women gossip and flirt while the men tank up on Heathen's Rapture and haul off to engage in the only sport they know aside from baseball - fistfights. Full of the crackle of down-home folktales, by turns randy, riveting and heart-breaking, Box Socials is the triumph of Kinsella's career.

witchyhills · 20/10/2011 19:11

Kerry-I didn't see you had the talisman too!
I couldn't get into cloud atlas, will try again maybe, and will try your other favourite
Ghoul- that sounds v familiar, were they pioneers?

kerrymumbles · 20/10/2011 19:29

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kerrymumbles · 20/10/2011 19:30

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kerrymumbles · 20/10/2011 19:30

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Bucharest · 21/10/2011 09:22

Is the weirdy faux spiritual man Coelho or Garcia Marquez? Whichever it is, I agree.

Oh,Espedair Street-loved it, used to have big calligraphed passage from it stuck on my studenty wall.