My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Find your new favourite book or recommend one on our Book forum.

What we're reading

Novels between chick lit and highbrow

68 replies

DoItTooJulia · 06/01/2014 19:59

I hate chick lit and stuff that's too highbrow too, so what do I read?

I love Atwood, Kingsolver, Barnes, Allende. I don't mind a historical novel, never really ventured into fantasy, but I like a ripping good read!

Help!

OP posts:
Report
stinkingbishop · 07/01/2014 19:15

Random stuff have read recently:

Oliver Sacks - The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat (really interesting neuropsychology case studies)

New Bill Bryson (if you haven't, just read ALL his books, now!)

Kate Long - sort of above chick lit, well written, evocative of place, Mothers and Daughters was rather poignant

A Million Little Pieces - addiction memoir by James Frey

Ian Macewan is good as serious but eminently readable Booker type fiction

Daphne du Maurier's nice for an indulgent read

Hilary Mantel as above - once you get into the rhythm of Wolf Hall (and the fact EVERYONE is called Thomas!) it's great

Garcia Marquez

Any Khaled Hosseini or whatever he's called - Kite Runners, 1000 Splendid Suns (made me physically sick though) and the new one

Report
DoItTooJulia · 07/01/2014 20:26

I thought it was just me with the everyone is called Thomas thing!!!

Non fiction wise, I love a bit of popular science. I think it was Mary Roach's Stiff that I enjoyed, all about what happens to dead bodies.

I like historical science too. Galileo's Letters was good. I also quite like the history of religion and have read extensively about the Prophet Muhammad the beginnings of Christianity in Britain and Eleanor of Aquitaine. Quite an eclectic mix, but basically, I'll read anything if its good!

OP posts:
Report
notnowImreading · 07/01/2014 20:42

Oh, I've just thought of Patrick Gale. Try Notes from an Exhibition or A Perfectly Good Man.

Alternatively, Miss Pettigrew Lives For a Day is sweet and funny.

Report
MiddleAgeMiddleEngland · 07/01/2014 21:27

Penelope Lively, certainly. Margaret Forster is also really good. Keeping the World Away and Shadow Baby are my favourites, I've read them both several times.

John Fowles, Julian Barnes, Alice Thomas Ellis, Iris Murdoch (especially The Bell) would all be worth exploring.

Poppy Adam's The Behaviour of Moths is another favourite.

Happy reading Smile

Report
KurriKurri · 07/01/2014 22:00

Things I've read fairly recently that fit your criteria :-

This Thing if Darkness - Harry Thompson (brilliant book, I found it fascinating)

The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath

Affinity - Sarah Waters

The White Tiger - Aravind Adiga

The Blue Afternoon - William Boyd

The Thirteenth Tale - Diana Setterfield - real page turner (but was recently on TV so you may have seen it)

Report
stinkingbishop · 08/01/2014 10:37

doittoo Eleanor rocked didn't she! The BBC4 series on the She Wolves was fantastic...watch it if you didn't.

Report
Alfonso1 · 08/01/2014 11:44

Natascha Solomons - Mr Rosenblums list and The gallery of vanished husbands

Liane Moriarty - The husbands secret and What Alice forgot

Report
BranchingOut · 08/01/2014 18:32

Noting some of these reads for hol next week.

Report
marilynmonroe · 08/01/2014 18:48

We read where'd you go Bernadette by Maria semple. V good

Also read silent wife by Asa Harrison

I'm nearly finished the goldfinch by Donna Tartt. Loving it so much I don't want it too end even though its a huge book!

Good behavior by Molly Keane v funny.

Beautiful ruins by Jess Walters. A lovely love story set in America and Italy.

Non fiction

Mitford sisters by Mary Novell

Maggie and me by Damian Barr

Misadventures by Sylvia smith.

Report
littlerach · 09/01/2014 21:31

Margaret Forster, Barbara Kingsolver, Anne Tyler, Ann Pratchet, Doris Lessing.

Report
januarysunsetfire · 10/01/2014 22:42

Seconding The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry - and Perfect by the same author is very touching.

Lisa Jewell - not all are 'highbrow' but her recent The House We Grew Up In is a real personal favourite of mine.

Report
DuchessofMalfi · 11/01/2014 04:49

Has anyone mentioned A M Homes? I'm reading May We Be Forgiven atm. Nearly finished it. It's certainly not chick-lit, but is very readable, very dark and satirical. I'm enjoying it a lot. Very quirky.

Report
ShanghaiDiva · 11/01/2014 05:00

Maggie o'farell
Kate Atkinson
Jonathan Coe
Philip hensher
David lodge
Where d'you go Bernadette
May we be forgiven
Cutting for stone
Little bee
Unexpected lessons in love
Marriage material
Atonement
Big brother

Report
timtam23 · 12/01/2014 23:03

Barbara Trapido?
I liked "Sex and Stravinsky" and "Frankie and Stankie"

Eucalyptus - Murray Bail

Trumpet - Jackie Kay
Also, Red Dust Road - the true story of Jackie Kay's journey to find her father in Nigeria

Non-fiction - I have read and re-read all of Dervla Murphy's travel books

Report
wiltingfast · 13/01/2014 21:13

Any of the Rabbit books by John Updike?

Have you tried 1Q84? V intruiging, really enjoyed it.

Report
overtheHillsandcomingtostay · 14/01/2014 17:53

For me anything by Anita Shreve (left of middle ground!) but
definitely Patrick Gale (in the middle!) and William Trevor (right of middle ground). Definitely agree about Carol Shields esp. The Stone
Diaries.
Very grateful for loads of suggestions: I will try Sue Gee next.

Report
overtheHillsandcomingtostay · 14/01/2014 17:54

Oh yes Barbara Trapido - is 'Juggling' ? one of hers?

Report
ItsATIARA · 14/01/2014 18:06

Dorothy L Sayers (middlebrow Agatha Christie)
John Le Carre (truly great writer)
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (Susannah Clarke)
Neil Gaiman perhaps?

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.