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tell me a book you where you said "wow, that was blankety, blank amazing!

129 replies

christie1 · 14/11/2006 21:39

I am in a dry spell, been filling it with some solid mysterys interspersed with Dr. Zhivago, but I am craving a reall good read where I fall in love with the book. Help me please! I read anything from chick lit to classics but find everything I pick up, bores me.

OP posts:
Chamomile · 19/11/2006 22:02

The most recent one " The Kite Runner "

fridascruffs · 19/11/2006 22:09

Headlong, by Michael Frayn. Learned and hilarious (clever clever man! Great if you like paintings).
LOVEd Jonathan Strange, Mr Norrell.
Midnight in the gArden of Good and evil
Any Human Heart by William Boyd (and Brazzaville Beach was great too)
Oryx and Crake, Margaret Atwood.

It's non-fiction, but there's a new biography out of Beau Brummell that's really good.
And a wave to the Georgette Heyer fans, and anyone who likes Patrick O'Brien.

herbgarden · 19/11/2006 22:23

Tully - Paullina Simons
Time Travellers Wife (author mentioned below)...one of the best books I've read in a while
"enjoyed" We need to talk about Kevin - if you can stomach it.

luanmac · 19/11/2006 22:51

The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner James Hogg

this book is small and overlooked, I have never read anything like it before, my brother had my copy and I am always looking in 2nd hand/charity shops for it, this one made my hair stand on end in parts, has anyone else read it?

I like Kingsolver, Faulks and Ian McEwan, I will read anything, never really got into Perfume by Suskind

Prego · 20/11/2006 00:04

Got to agree re John Fowles "The Magus".

And for a classic to be relished over a number of weeks possibly, is George Eliots "Middlemarch" - quite a big read, but she offers an illumination on every page.

NappiesGalore · 20/11/2006 00:28

ive the memory of a goldfish but i do always remember how much i loved Catch 22. it worked for me on so many levels. its just exactly how i would write, if i was a writer, that is (in my dreams!)

moonshine · 20/11/2006 16:48

Absolutely loved A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving, although judging by comments I've seen on other threads it's a love-it-or-hate-it type of book.

Also brilliant is the non-fiction The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat - pretty amazing.

moonshine · 20/11/2006 16:56

Oh just to add A Woman in Berlin by Anon - a non-fiction account of when the Russians entered Berlin at the end of WW2 - truly harrowing.

wheresthehamster · 20/11/2006 17:21

I must re-read Catch-22. I read it so many times when I was in my twenties and it was laugh out loud funny.

comebacksummer · 20/11/2006 17:49

Some really interesting ones here.. and the first people I have ever come across to put Margaret Atwood's 'Oryx and Crake' top of a GOOD reads list.. seems to crop up near the top of a lot of people's 'worst book in recent times' list...just too obvious and simplistic. I used to like her early stuff such as 'Cat's Eye' but it's all been downhill since 'The Edible Woman' imho..
My personal favourites: 'Perfume' (mentioned frequently on here, I see), 'Remains of the Day/Pale View of Hills/Artist of the Floating World' (Ishiguro), anything by Gabriel Garcia Marquez...and recently 'We need to talk about Kevin', by Lionel Shriver... not the best written book in the world but sent shivers down my spine as a mother...
brilliant way to get suggestions for new books to read though!

Earthymama · 20/11/2006 18:09

It's so good to see Georgette Heyer being lauded as I think these are wonderful, really are escapism and an antidote to cold winter days and nights.
I agree re Oryx and Crake and would recommend Sheri Tepper if anyone is interested in trying fantasy with a feminist slant.
Has anyone read the Boudica series by Manda Scott? they are truly amazing

hatwoman · 20/11/2006 18:20

I didn;t rate Oryx and Crake. found the Blind Assassin a complete page turner and also enjoyed Alias Grace and the Handmaid's Tale but O&C was a bit of a disappointment for me

Bink · 21/11/2006 13:37

pesme and texasrose, have you tried Mitchell's Number Nine Dream? I think it's his best, even a tiny bit better than Ghostwritten. I re-read both recently - re-reading being the acid test.

Cloud Atlas suffers a wee bit from having to be a Powerhouse of a Novel (to support all the Booker-y marketing) and his latest, Black Swan Green is, I think, something pushed out to make sure he stays in the public eye (& not worthy of him, really).

And can I just say, with motherinferior, that Helen Simpson is a genius. The Katherine Mansfield of our time.

JackieNo · 21/11/2006 13:40

luanmac - The James Hogg is available on Amazon (only £1.99).

texasrose · 21/11/2006 18:15

Bink those are on my must-read lists. I've only read Cloud Atlas. Which of his would you recommend to read first?

hannahsaunt · 21/11/2006 19:01

Not great literature per se (although maybe things that give thought or pleasure are great) but ones that I loved unexpectedly would be the Big Stone Gap trilogy books by Adriani Trigiani. Beautifully written and quite captivating.

binkacat · 21/11/2006 19:30

WilD Swans
Time Travellers Wife.

Georgette Heyer - Regency book. Only one of hers that I've read and loved it.

Love Northern Lights triology.

JackieNo · 21/11/2006 19:54

Keep coming back to this thread. The Gormenghast trilogy, by Mervyn Peake - made a huge impression on me when I first read them as an 11 or 12 year old, and I still marvel at them when I re-read them.

Pollyanna · 21/11/2006 20:03

recently Kazuo Ishiguru Never let Me Go and
Atonement by Ian McEwan really made an impression on me. (read Atonement before Keira Knightley ruins it forever on film )

drosophila · 21/11/2006 20:13

Dare you not to be moved by

Beloved more detailed info here :
Beloved by Toni Morrison

EllieChocolateOrange · 21/11/2006 20:21

Enough here?

Yes to Shadow of the Wind
Yes to Poisonwood Bible

Would add:
Ursula Under - a brilliant 'yarn' and great for Mums/ Dads
Widow for Year - John Irving
The Lovely Bones - (you can read it in a night, but it is SO gripping)

EllieChocolateOrange · 21/11/2006 20:22

hi pollyanna. atonement is the one book EVER that i couldn't finish!!!

Bink · 21/11/2006 21:58

texasrose, start with Ghostwritten - it was his first - then Number Nine Dream.

mrsnoah · 21/11/2006 22:38

The Red tent by Anita Diamant,
the tale of Dinah in Genesis but elaborated upon.
Utterly enchanting.

marthamoo · 21/11/2006 22:40

Another vote for The Red Tent (which I read because jimjams recommended it, yonks ago) and The Kite Runner which I only read last month and immediately wanted to read again.