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Books you've read and loved that we probably haven't heard of

303 replies

IntrinsicFieldSubtractor · 05/01/2015 00:23

Semi-inspired by the best/worst book threads that are going at the moment - I've seen the names of several bestsellers mentioned a lot, but I was wondering whether anyone has any books that they've really enjoyed that aren't as (or at all) well-known. I'd be interested in recommendations for anything I wouldn't otherwise have heard of, and plus it's always nice to see good authors getting a bit more recognition.

One I can think of off the top of my head is The Flight of Lucy Spoon, by Maggie Gibson - I picked up a second-hand copy for free somewhere expecting generic chick lit, and was surprised to find it was genuinely hilarious in a very British-feeling, tongue-in-cheek-silly way (even though it's Irish). It was just a very likeable book, full of oddities that were actually original and heartwarming rather than self-consciously 'look at me I'm so quirky' in that way that all those Ladies' Blah Blah Society books are.

I also loved Dealing With Dragons by Patricia C. Wrede - I must have read it when I was about ten, but a glance through the Amazon preview suggests that I'd probably still love it now. I've forgotten the exact story but the basic premise is a tomboyish princess who escapes an arranged marriage by running away to live with dragons - it's another very funny and well-written book that's not centred around romance, with a clever and independent heroine who has to spend half her time convincing knights in shining armour to leave her alone and stop trying to 'rescue' her Grin I really want to read it again now actually, I might have to buy it!

If anyone has any recommendations of their own to contribute then I'd love to hear them...

OP posts:
captainBeaky · 05/01/2015 20:30

Snow flower and the secret fan. Beautiful.

Dapplegrey · 05/01/2015 20:30

Loved Between Silk and Cyanide and Period Piece.
I also love The Real Charlotte by Somerville & Ross.

echt · 05/01/2015 20:32

The Bryant and May detective series by Christopher Fowler. Start with "Full Dark House". Funny, moving and informative.

Allan Massie's "Caesar", "Augustus", "Tiberius", each novel a re-telling of events from the point of view of the chap in the title.

"Let the Right One In" by John Ajvide Lindqvist, the novel that the film was based on. Very good indeed.

"Homeboy" by Seth Morgan. He only wrote one novel and this is it. You won't be surprised to know he lived fast, furiously and died stupidly and young. A very good read.

TheCountessofFitzdotterel · 05/01/2015 20:34

Anything by Norah Lofts, most underrated historical novelist ever, but particularly The Town House trilogy.

CheerfulYank · 05/01/2015 20:34

Toddler I love She's Come Undone! I Know This Much is True is also really good, have you read that?

JemimaMuddledUp · 05/01/2015 20:38

Martha, Jack & Shanco by Caryl Lewis

ChickenMe · 05/01/2015 20:38

Head Above Water and Second Class Citizsn by Buchi Emecheta. She's Nigerian and her turn of phrase is hilarious.

Helenanback · 05/01/2015 20:50

Anything by Laura Wilson for historical crime fiction.

AliceLidl · 05/01/2015 20:50

I've thought of another one, Brazzaville Beach by William Boyd.

It's about a woman called Hope Clearwater, and it tells the story from three points in her life. It starts and ends with her life living in a small house on the edge of Brazzaville Beach but also moves back to her time at the Grosso Arvore Research Centre and her life and marriage in London before she came to Africa.

It's very good (IMO) but not many people seem to be aware of it.

niminypiminy · 05/01/2015 21:00

Some that have already come up, including

Winifred Holtby South Riding
FM Mayor The Rector's Daughter - one of the most passionate and sad books I've ever read

Sylvia Townsend Warner - any of her books really, though I particularly like A Flint Anchor, about a family in nineteenth century Norfolk, and The Corner that Held Them, about a fourteenth century convent.

EH Young's Miss Mole is an utterly delightful book, and its happy ending is so beautifully unforeseen.

Anything by Elizabeth Goudge. I think my favourite is The Heart of the Family, but I love them all.

McKitten84 · 05/01/2015 21:07

Shamelessly plugging a friend of dp who has published 4 books, I have read them would highly recommend and would many others, please check out the author Tom Wood. Amazing reads, won't be sorry! ??

tonsattingforbjudes · 05/01/2015 21:12

Brilliant thread...would be good to get it moved to the book section so it's not lost.
My offerings are
The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill (this may be well known but I've never met anyone else who's read it)
Hullaballoo in the Guava Orchard Kiran Desai's first book which is delightfully eccentric and full of fun. It sums up many aspects of India for me.
Also recommend Amitav Ghosh's books...some more well known than others. I think The Hungry Tide is my favourite.
Agree with the recommendation of Doris Lessing's Martha Quest

This thread could result in A Big Spend!!!

StrattersThePreciousSnowflake · 05/01/2015 21:30

OMG, other people have read The Plague and I, I thought I was the only one Shock

Gruntfuttock · 05/01/2015 21:35

Stratters on the bookshelves behind me at the moment are The Egg & I, The Plague and I and Onions in the Stew. Smile

MauriceTheCat · 05/01/2015 21:41

Another Vote for the Duncton Moles.... I have a teddy with a twisted nose called Mayweed which I had as a gift when I went to Uni. And also Skalleggrigg (sp).

Please Mr Horwood if you are reading can we have them on Kindle?

lurkingfromhome · 05/01/2015 21:44

Oh fabulous - I have been meaning to start this exact thread for ages but keep forgetting. So pleased someone else has!

My own contributions which I wish everyone would go and read immediately are Joy by Jonathan Lee and The Imperfectionists by Tom Rachman. Both fairly recent, really wonderful but just didn't get the attention they deserved.

applecatchers36 · 05/01/2015 21:46

the last train to Trieste by Domnica Radulescu, is gorgeous told in past tense about love, growing up & escaping Romania under communism. Very passionate, sad and evocative story telling particularly her first love affair as a 17 year old in the Carpathian Mountains. Beautiful and unusual. Still haunts me.

HesterShaw · 05/01/2015 21:47

In no way remotely "literary" but I read a book called Jedder's Land by Maureen O'Donohue when I was about 12 and have re-read it almost every year since. I absolutely love it, but I've yet to meet any other person who has heard of it. Classic "woman in a man's world and wins" type plot but I love it all the same

RhinestoneCowgirl · 05/01/2015 21:54

As a teenager I read a couple of Howard Spring novels, I think he was fairly popular in his time but not read now. One which I loved was called 'The Houses Inbetween' and was a novel about a woman who lived to be 100, it starts from Great Exhibition and ends just after WW2. Thumping good read.

StrattersThePreciousSnowflake · 05/01/2015 22:23

MrsSchadenfreude, I love Greengage Summer, she also wrote The Battle of the Villa Fiorita, which is another wonderful coming of age novel that nobody seems to have heard of.

MrsSchadenfreude · 05/01/2015 22:56

And The Peacock Spring is also good.

I am currently reading Saplings by Noel Streatfeild, which is one of her few "grown up" books. Also very evocative.

MuttonCadet · 05/01/2015 23:03

The book of lost things by John Connolly, it's a wonderful book.

SinisterSantasBusyMonth · 05/01/2015 23:22

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

StrattersThePreciousSnowflake · 05/01/2015 23:28

They made a beautiful film out of it, years ago. Black and white, I managed to find it on Youtube last year.

BillyJoel · 05/01/2015 23:28

The Power of One.
I have not read such a good book in a loooooonnnngggg time. South African story of a young lad. Absolutely brilliant.
And Only The Innocent by Rachel Abbott. Stuck with me and left a lot of unanswered questions.