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What is the best book you have ever read?

140 replies

KatyDidItAgain · 28/08/2013 20:49

What was it, and why was it so good?

Mine is Nevil Shute's Trustee from the toolroom for his wonderful portrayal of the main character, Keith.

OP posts:
Portofino · 28/08/2013 20:56

I still love "the Godfather". Not very literary but it has a bit of everything. Love , death, loyalty, betrayal, money..

JumpingJackSprat · 28/08/2013 21:04

assassins apprentice by robin hobb - as it introduced me to the character of The Fool.

TooMuchRain · 28/08/2013 21:09

Picking one is very difficult, but I recently re-read An Equal Music and it is just beautiful, often I find I read things where I really love the style but am untouched by the story (or vice versa) but with that one I really felt drawn into the whole musical world as well.

Greydog · 28/08/2013 21:10

Agree with Portofino - the Godfather. My Fav book ever! (so much so that I'm having a Godfather birtday party!) My other all time fav is Mist over Pendle

ShatnersBassoon · 28/08/2013 21:19

The Grapes of Wrath. Compulsive reading, and it haunted my thoughts long after I'd finished it.

FayKnights · 28/08/2013 21:28

Another vote here for The Godfather . Also The Lollipop Shoes by Joanne Harris is my favourite go to book.
I love these threads, I come away with lots of new ideas.

notnowbernard · 28/08/2013 21:30

To Kill A Mocking Bird

It totally sucks me in, every time

KenDoddsDadsDog · 28/08/2013 21:30

The Bell Jar , Sylvia Plath

MyBoysAreFab · 28/08/2013 21:30

One Flew over the Cuckoos Nest.
Also Billy Liar.

notnowbernard · 28/08/2013 21:31

'Room' had me utterly hooked

ExitPursuedByABear · 28/08/2013 21:31

Not read any of these.

No idea of my favourite.

ExitPursuedByABear · 28/08/2013 21:32

Whoops. Have read some of these

MyCatHasStaff · 28/08/2013 21:32

The Women's Room was my favourite for ages, but I love The Time Traveller's Wife now.

DoItTooJulia · 28/08/2013 21:34

1984, hence my name.

Anything by Kingsolver or Attwood or Allende, but I really enjoyed The Seamstress and The American Wife.

PlateSpinningAtAllTimes · 28/08/2013 21:34

Lord of the Rings and His Dark Materials (does a trilogy count?)

MamaMary · 28/08/2013 21:36

The God of Small Things bowled me over.

Amongst Women is very powerful.

The Remains of the Day is one of the most beautifully written, understated and moving novels I have ever read.

Jane Eyre is one I will always return to. I will probably keep re-reading it and Wuthering Heights until I die or can no longer read.

But I don't have one favourite. Sorry OP Blush

Yddraigoldragon · 28/08/2013 21:37

World Class, Jane and Burt Boyar. I had a paperback as a teen, lost it, bought a second hand ex library copy from the US, which fell apart but I still have the bits! I have since picked up an old paperback and have it on kindle...

It tells the story of the birth of open professional tennis, follows fictional characters from junior level to Wimbledon, and I have to read it again every year in June.

ExitPursuedByABear · 28/08/2013 21:37

How can you choose?

All those books ......

MrsHowardRoark · 28/08/2013 21:39

This is such a difficult question to answer but if I had to pick one then I'd go for Brideshead Revisited.

It is such a beautifully written book that completely draws you in.

Or Blindness by Jose Saramago.

It's an impossible choice!

Dollybird86 · 28/08/2013 21:40

The colour purple

thecatfromjapan · 28/08/2013 21:40

I can't think of "best" - i think I'm too much of a fiction flibbertigibbet to have a "best".

At the moment I'm besotted with Penelope Fitzgerald. Her books are now on Kindle (hurray!) and I've just finished "Offshore", which was brilliant!

I was reading it at the same time as Grace Coddington's memoirs and the intersection with the 60s King's Road was very fortuitous.

Fitzgerald is funny - but not aggressively so - and generous towards her characters. She does really fascinating things with language in "Offshore", letting meaning slip to and fro by means of the specialised nautical language. I also found it quite optimistic.

ILoveMimislabel · 28/08/2013 21:44

Written on the body by Jeanette winterson. Really poetic and full of love angst. It's written so you don't know the gender of the character and I love that about it.

MyBoysAreFab · 28/08/2013 21:44

Oh, and just remembered another - Little Women. It is impossible to narrow it down to one!

RubySparks · 28/08/2013 21:44

A few... William Wharton 'Birdy', Douglas Kennedy 'The Woman in the Fifth', anything by Robert Ryan and Amitabh Ghosh 'The Glass Palace'.

KatyDidItAgain · 28/08/2013 21:49

I'm agreeing with so many of these - Room was excellent, so was The Lollipop Shoes. As for the others, I have sent samples of them to my kindle to have a look at later.

OP posts: