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What are YOUR bookshelf must haves........? I need educating........................

110 replies

VeniVidiVickiQV · 31/01/2006 20:39

Exactly what it says in the title.....

Im not an ardent book reader, but want to start reading the 'classics'(and DD who will be 3 soon loves her books already).

I have read:
Alison in Wonderland,
Wuthering Heights,
The Hobbit,
Jane Eyre,
Of Mice and Men,
Romeo & Juliette,
A Midsummer Nights Dream

Most of these at school - read Midsummer Nights Dream in years 8, 9 and 10 at school - they didnt seem to think it mattered...

What do think i should add to my list? For adults and children.

OP posts:
mummytosteven · 31/01/2006 21:27

Remains of the Day!

Wordsmith · 31/01/2006 21:28

Franny - I agree with your ! Thomas Hardy is wonderful.

Has anyone mentioned Birdsong (Sebastian Faulks?) The most evocative descriptions of both sex and the WW1 trenches I have ever read.

In a similar vein (WW1), Pat Barker's Regeneration Trilogy. (I'm not a WW1 nut, honestly).

I love Margaret Atwood, but it takes me ages to get into.

Other faves - anything by Barbara Trapido - Brother of the More Famous Jack, the Travelling Hornpipe Player etc.

I also love Lynne Truss's Eats, Shoots & Leaves and Talk To The Hand. Not novels but great rants about grammar and manners respectively.

jennifersofia · 31/01/2006 21:30

Great thanks! Loved the film, will check out the book.

FrannyandZooey · 31/01/2006 21:32

A more modern classic I just finished was "Girl with a Pearl Earring". Absolutely wonderful and very sexy, recommended for Mr. Rochester / Jane Eyre fans

Bozza · 31/01/2006 21:34

All of Jane Austin
Anna Karenina
War and Peace is good (well I loved the peace but found the war heavy going and dull in places)
Lord of the Rings
Birdsong
Jane Eyre

As a child I read just about everything ever published by Enid Blyton several times over.
Roald Dahl - we've just started on Charlie and the Chocolate Factory with DS and I think he is following it better because he has seen the film.

I loved
What Katy did
Little women

But I will read just about anything so may be best to ignore me.

mazzystar · 31/01/2006 21:39

The Periodic Table and If this is a Man by Primo Levi
If on a Winters Night a Traveller by Italo Calvino
Tender Is the Night F Scott Fiztgerald
The Bell - Iris Murcdoch

cull · 31/01/2006 21:42

These are the books I read at least once a year:
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austin
To Kill a Mockingbird -Harper Lee
The Handmaid's Tale - Margaret Atwood
The English Patient - Michael Ondaatje
Winter Solstice - Rosamunde Pilcher
Coming Home - Rosamunde Pilcher
A Prayer for Owen Meany - John Irving

for (older) kids:
My Side of the Mountain - Jean Craighead George
The Million Dollar Night - Laurie B Clifford
The Trumpet of the Swan - EB WHite
Incident at Hawk's Hill - Alan W Eckert

I am loving this thread by the way...

Frieda · 31/01/2006 21:48

Here's another Thomas Hardy fan. (But don't read Jude until your children are grown up ? I'd forgotten all about the horrible bit until I saw the film a few years ago).

I like Dickens, too ? esp. Bleak House.

Hazellnut · 31/01/2006 22:17

Sorry for any repeats but.. off the top of my head

Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
Catcher in the rye - J D Salinger
Great Gatsby- F Scott Fitzgeraldn
Three men in a boat/ three men on a bummel - Jerome K Jerome
A suitable Boy - Vikram Seth (v. long but worth it !)
Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
Cider House Rules - John Irving
I captured the castle
Anne of Green Gables
Ballet shoes
Roald Dahl
Paddington Books (v. funny for adults !)

VeniVidiVickiQV · 31/01/2006 22:19

What about poetry actually, since someone mentioned it?

Any books/collections worth having.

Read shakespeares sonnets at school of course..... and some of T S Elliot.

OP posts:
VeniVidiVickiQV · 31/01/2006 22:20

Repeats are fine Hazellnut - im planning to go with the majority

OP posts:
mummytosteven · 31/01/2006 22:22

i'm not much of a poetry person, but I like "Birthday Letters" by Ted Hughes.

More Classics for you:-
The Outsider by Albert Camus
The Mysterious Story of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
Sophies World by Jostein Gardner

alexsmum · 31/01/2006 22:27

my must haves are;
the battle for christabel by margaret forster(glad someone mentioned it)
catcher in the rye
the handmaids tale
the shellseekers by rosamunde pilcher
jane eyre
about a boy and high fidelity by nick hornby.

poetry? collected poems of tony harrison are fab!
wendy cope is fun
carol ann duffy good too.

alexsmum · 31/01/2006 22:30

i find ted hughes really hard going.
i have a collection of poetry called reflecting families and some of the poems, especially the birth and early parenthood ones just make me choke..

mazzystar · 31/01/2006 22:32

Iron Man by Ted Hughes is great tho'

Stevie Smith anyone?

Hazellnut · 31/01/2006 22:33

alexsmum- agree wendy cope is great - we had a v. traditional church wedding but had a wendy cope poem in the middle ...

I would suggest a mixed anthology of poems to see who you like (the poetry on the tube books are quite good - we have a couple and give you a taste of lots of different poets).

Hazellnut · 31/01/2006 22:34

I've always liked first world war poetry too after doing it at school.....

VeniVidiVickiQV · 31/01/2006 22:35

who is Stevie Smith?

OP posts:
alexsmum · 31/01/2006 22:36

one of my first tutorials at uni, the task was to find a poem that described you. i somewhat foolishly chose
' i like to get off with people
i like to lie in their arms'
by stevie smith!

alexsmum · 31/01/2006 22:37

and was it stevie smith who did 'not waving but drowning'?

VeniVidiVickiQV · 31/01/2006 22:38

lol Alexsmum!

OP posts:
mazzystar · 31/01/2006 22:40

yes, that's her
i like the jungle husband
someone said she's a bit like larkin on oestrogen
pmsl alexmum ( were you a very confident 18 year old?)

alexsmum · 31/01/2006 22:44

just a bit of a tart!
at least it was honest!

roosmum · 31/01/2006 22:46

persuasion - jane austen
bleak house - dickens
mill on the floss - george eliot (prefer daniel deronda personally tho)
jude the obscure - hardy (beware, brilliant but harrowing)
ethan frome - edith wharton
to the lighthouse - virginia woolf
howard's end - em forster
women in love - dh lawrence
1984 - orwell
brave new world - huxley
wide sargasso sea - jean rhys (you MUST read this if you've read 'jane eyre'. also LOVE 'good morning, midnight')
oranges are not the only fruit - winterson
remains of the day - ishiguro ('the unconsoled' better, but difficult)

ummm, brain blank!

alexsmum · 31/01/2006 22:48

i really enjoyed tipping the velvet and fingersmith by sarah waters too.

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