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Books you thought no one else has read

846 replies

tweetysylvester · 07/03/2025 20:00

It's so fun to find rare books to read, or just look up or hear about less known books, so thought I'd start a thread about this. Nostalgic novels, YA books, current titles you discovered very randomly...

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14
Pallisers · 13/04/2025 17:03

InigoJollifant · 22/03/2025 11:12

I bought a book called Hostages to Fortune at an honesty stall about 25 years ago, one of my favourite books - never heard any reference to it by anyone until it was republished by Persephone Books a few years ago - made me feel very smug at my discerning tastes!

Just finished this. Thank you so much - what a lovely book.

FrostyMorn · 15/04/2025 21:02

AlbertCampion · 12/04/2025 00:08

This seems like a good place to ask: I’m searching for a book I’m sure I read with my book group about ten years ago. It’s narrated by a young man who is estranged from his parents. Gradually, we find out that his father can’t forgive him because he sat with his suicidal brother when he took pills and didn’t get help. It was very sad - the narrator explains at the end that his brother had tried to kill himself numerous times and he had come to realise that the best thing he could do to help him was to make sure he felt safe and loved as he ended his life. It made a real impact on me, but I can’t find anyone who remembers it at all! Am starting to think I dreamt it. Does it ring a bell with anyone?

@AlbertCampion
This sounds like The View on the Way Down by Rebecca Wait. Desperately sad! I listened to it on audible having read her more recent novel I'm Sorry you Feel That Way which I found really funny - not fully appreciating the subject matter (and rather stupidly I listened to it on a holiday - did rather cast a shadow!). But it's beautifully written.

AlbertCampion · 15/04/2025 21:30

Thank you so much @FrostyMorn! That does sound like it - I’ve ordered a copy and will reread. It has been bugging me for ages so I can’t thank you enough!

FrostyMorn · 16/04/2025 08:35

@AlbertCampion You're welcome - hope it is the one - and I'd very much recommend the other Rebecca Wait book I mentioned too.

FlorbelaEspanca · 01/05/2025 19:19

Feeltoooldtostudybutdoingitanyway · 07/03/2025 21:23

The Children Who Lived in a Barn by Eleanor Graham

I've read that.

FlorbelaEspanca · 01/05/2025 19:23

InigoJollifant · 07/03/2025 22:16

I’ve read the Land of Green Ginger by Winifred Holtby - how odd there are two of that peculiar title!

also read Silver Snaffles, the Lone Pine, the Children Who Lived in a Barn, Monica Dickens, Snow Spider, the Solitaire Mystery.

how about ‘The London Child’ series by Molly Hughes?

Holtby was a Yorkshirewoman. The Land of Green Ginger is the name of a street in Hull.

FlorbelaEspanca · 01/05/2025 19:46

The case of the silver egg by Desmond Skirrow. A Blytonesque plot of children outwitting criminals when the police are too stupid to, but so much better done. It's very funny - by using child characters he sends up the thriller genre (James Bond carries a pistol and drinks Martini; the hero here carries a water pistol and drinks strawberry Nesquik), it gives an atmospheric portrayal of south London and the Surrey commuter belt of the mid-1960s, and at what Orwell called the narrow technical level it's superbly written.

Anything by Rodie Sudbery, but especially The pigsleg. Sudbery is now sadly in eclipse; I remember her daughter writing that she had started a PhD because her children's books could no longer get published.

Moving up to adult books, Katherine Govier. She's Canadian, and I think only three of her ten novels have been published here, Random descent, Between men and Three views of crystal water. I got the rest direct from Canada: I especially recommend Angel Walk and The Three Sisters bar and hotel. And Canada is popular at the moment: why not explore these?

MrsMappFlint · 04/05/2025 23:26

I've just finished, Mr Bowling Buys a Newspaper by Donald Henderson, first published in 1943.
Raymond Chandler called it the best book he had ever read.

It wasn't the best book I have ever read. Set just after the war, Mr Bowling goes about murdering men because he wants to be hanged. A bit strange but under 200 pp.

I'll be surprised if many people have read it.

Terpsichore · 04/05/2025 23:50

MrsMappFlint · 04/05/2025 23:26

I've just finished, Mr Bowling Buys a Newspaper by Donald Henderson, first published in 1943.
Raymond Chandler called it the best book he had ever read.

It wasn't the best book I have ever read. Set just after the war, Mr Bowling goes about murdering men because he wants to be hanged. A bit strange but under 200 pp.

I'll be surprised if many people have read it.

I read that a couple of years ago, @MrsMappFlint - do you listen to the Backlisted podcast? Andy Miller, one of the hosts, was singing its praises because it had been reprinted, so I grabbed it when I spotted a copy secondhand. Agree that it was entertaining enough, but not earth-shattering. I’ve got another of Henderson's books to try, which I haven’t got round to yet.

ChessieFL · 05/05/2025 05:55

I’ve read Mr Bowling too! Think it got discussed on our 50 Books thread at
some point.

MrsMappFlint · 05/05/2025 11:32

@Terpsichore and @ChessieFL

Well, that's put me in my box! 😂

YourAmplePlumPoster · 05/05/2025 18:36

Cider with Rosie, don't know if it's been mentioned.

pollyhemlock · 05/05/2025 19:03

YourAmplePlumPoster · 05/05/2025 18:36

Cider with Rosie, don't know if it's been mentioned.

I did Cider with Rosie as an O level set text in the days when O levels were a thing ( I’m quite ancient) . Not sure it would be set now what with the murder, attempted rape, underage sex and incest. Certainly emphasises the darker side of rural life.

YourAmplePlumPoster · 05/05/2025 19:12

I did it too probably about the same time as you. Back in the day as they say. A glorious book. Probably banned today,

Coffeeforayear · 05/05/2025 20:12

Also read Cider with Rosie for O level. Thought it was great and would really like to reread it .

pollyhemlock · 06/05/2025 09:43

In the late 60s early 70s there seemed to be a rotation of 3 novels set for O level: Cider
with Rosie; Lord of the Flies and To Kill a Mockingbird. Occasionally Hardy’s The Woodlanders was set by way of variation. LOTF and TKAM still feature on the English syllabus but not CWR, as far as I can see.

SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 06/05/2025 13:03

I did O level English Lit in the early 80s, and we did To Kill A Mockingbird, @pollyhemlock - and it completely spoiled the book for me. Having to pick it apart in such detail took away any pleasure in it. I am an avid reader and often reread books, but this is one that I have never, and will never reread. I haven't read her other book either.

I know that you need to study a book in depth, to pass exams, but surely it is counterproductive to do it to such an extent that there is no pleasure left in the book at all?

pleasedonotfeedme · 06/05/2025 13:06

pollyhemlock · 06/05/2025 09:43

In the late 60s early 70s there seemed to be a rotation of 3 novels set for O level: Cider
with Rosie; Lord of the Flies and To Kill a Mockingbird. Occasionally Hardy’s The Woodlanders was set by way of variation. LOTF and TKAM still feature on the English syllabus but not CWR, as far as I can see.

What, no Kes? My school had cupboards literally full to bursting of school editions of Kes from the 70s that we were made dutifully to trudge through in the 90s, on the basis that if you were growing up in a poor area of a depressing Northern town, what you’d absolutely love to read about is growing up poor in a depressing Northern town.

We also had Cider With Rosie and To Kill a Mockingbird, but Of Mice and Men also featured heavily as well.

pollyhemlock · 06/05/2025 15:43

Interestingly Kes didn’t seem to feature at all . I suspect it may have been a class reader in the 70s but not in our all girls’ convent in the southeast! A friend of mine who was the school librarian had a prolonged argument with Chief Nun about whether it was permissible to have Catcher in the Rye in the school library. In the end she allowed it in the Restricted section.

Matildatoldsuchdreadfullies · 06/05/2025 18:29

My great uncle was a friend of Laurie Lee. My copy of Cider With Rosie has a personal message to my uncle.

When I was in a church (appropriately enough in the Cotswolds) waiting for the banns to be read for my marriage, we got to the prayers for the sick. My sister’s name featured fairly prominently (she was in ITU at the time). I should have been upset, but I found myself giggling, remembering Laurie Lee’s boast that he’d been the subject of the Sunday prayers for weeks in CWR. My sister, like Laurie Lee, had several weeks of prayers, but did pull through.

MissRoseDurward · 06/05/2025 18:51

Occasionally Hardy’s The Woodlanders was set by way of variation.

It was The Woodlanders, with FFTMC for the top set, at my school in 1969. I'm not aware of TKAM ever being set - my siblings followed me up the school, so I think I would have known.

We had extracts from CWR and LOTF lower down the school for reading and comprehension.

Fifiesta · 06/05/2025 20:34

marthasmum · 28/03/2025 06:34

Nobody’s family is going to change! That made a big impression on me.
also the Children of Green Knowe - part of a series I think?

The Children of Green Knowe is the absolute top of my favourite childhood books.

pollyhemlock · 06/05/2025 21:10

MissRoseDurward · 06/05/2025 18:51

Occasionally Hardy’s The Woodlanders was set by way of variation.

It was The Woodlanders, with FFTMC for the top set, at my school in 1969. I'm not aware of TKAM ever being set - my siblings followed me up the school, so I think I would have known.

We had extracts from CWR and LOTF lower down the school for reading and comprehension.

I don’t remember FFTMC being a set text but I do remember everyone swooning over the film . Terence Stamp as Sgt Troy! We did Under the Greenwood Tree in what would now be Year 10. Not sure that it would enthral contemporary teenagers.

TragicMuse · 06/05/2025 22:26

I did Far From The Madding Crowd for O level in 1981…

Followed by Tess in 1983.

It looks like the exam board were heavily in tragic mode at the time!

Books no one else has read…

Naughty Sophia by Winifred Letts. Very naughty girl, an arch-duchess, after one rudeness too far, gets sent to a poor family to learn her manners.

My stepmother had a copy which I read many times. I have recently got my own after years of searching.