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Thursday, 27 September 2012

Nigella And Me: Tales Of Sex, Drugs, Rock 'N' Roll And Artichokes

I know it's silly, and childish, and bloggish, and inaccurate, and I know it's a game and the choice will be different in the morning — but how about a list of your ten favourite books? Books that have influenced you, delighted you, stunned and startled you, books that have changed your life in some way? They needn't necessarily be literary, or even well-written; they may be books which were important at a much earlier stage of your life and which you wouldn't want to read again. Or they could be books which are so totemic that you have them by your side at all times. I invite you to indulge me and play this game — those who don't comment regularly, or even at all, are very welcome too! I won't hold you to these lists, which should be spontaneously scribbled down off the top of your head. Though I think you may be surprised at how much such a list says about you. Well, here goes — this is mine. Not in any particular order:

1. Georges Duhamel The Life And Adventures Of Salavin
2. Colin Wilson The Outsider
3. Edward Thomas Poems
4. Rainer Maria Rilke Letters To A Young Poet
5. Alfred J. Brown Striding Through Yorkshire
6. Hermann Hesse Steppenwolf
7. Rebecca Solnit Wanderlust
8. John Hillaby Journey Through Britain
9. Iris Murdoch Under The Net
10. Krishnamurti The Penguin Krishnamurti Reader

See — it's easy, isn't it? That only took a minute. Why don't you have a go? 

Oh, and by the way, in case you're wondering about the title of this blog post... I only put it there to attract your attention...

48 comments:

  1. Edward Abbey - The Monkeywrench Gang
    Colin Fletcher - The Man Who Walked Through Time
    George R. Stewart - Earth Abides
    Ray Bradbury - The Martian Chronicles
    Richard Feynman - Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!
    Winston Churchill - the World War II series and English History series
    Gerald Weinberg - The Psychology of Computer Programming
    The Boy Scout Handbook
    Doris Alcorn - Freshwater Fishes of California
    Susan Alcorn - We're in the Mountains, Not over the hill

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  2. The Abbey and the Fletcher — with you all the way, Ralph. I'm ashamed to say I've never read the Churchill!

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  3. Ian McEwan - 'Atonement'
    James Joyce - 'The Dubliners'
    Kazuo Ishiguro - 'Never Let Me Go'
    Hillary Mantel - 'Beyond Black' Jhumpa Lahiri - 'The Namesake'
    Patrick McCabe - 'The Butcher Boy'
    Pablo Neruda - 'Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair'
    Sylvia Plath - 'The Bell Jar'
    Gabriel Garcia Marquez - 'Love in the Time of Cholera'
    The Harry Potter series


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  4. Oh Robert - what a task. It changes with me all the time as I get older - so some of the books on my list are recent reads which have caught me in their grasp so much that they have kept me awake at night and I have had to get up to read a bit more. But here is a rough list.
    1. A book I read in my early teens and which I think was called 'Kurun around the World' by Maurice le Toumelin.
    2. Anything by Iris Murdoch, who is probably my favourite novel writer.
    3.Any Poetry by R S Thomas.
    4.Ronald Blythe - The Wormingford Trilogy.
    5. Colin Thubron 'To a Mountain in Tibet.'
    6. Elizabeth David 'An Omelette and a Glass of Wine.'
    7. L M Montgomery 'Anne of Green Gables' (didn't read it until I went to see Montgomery's house on Price Edward Island a few years ago, but now I read it often.)
    8.John Lister-Kaye 'Nature's Child'.
    9' Ditto - 'Song of the Rolling Earth.'
    10. 'The Snow Child' - can neither remember nor spell the author's name and as I have just lent it out for the nth time, can't check on it, but it is brilliant.

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  5. It's already apparent how wonderfully different all these lists are! Out of your choice, Suman, I particularly latch on to "Dubliners' (the last paragraph of 'The Dead' is one of the most perfect paragraphs ever written by anyone anywhere) and Neruda's poetry.

    And Pat — the Thubron too is fresh in my mind. I liked it a lot, but I wouldn't call him my favourite travel writer, as his style can be a bit dense (I could easily have included Patrick Leigh Fermor, however.) Re. the Murdoch - yes, one of England's best 20th century novelists, I agree. I remember so well the impression reading her first novel 'Under The Net' had on me (see my list). Here was a novelist who wasn't afraid of 'not being English', of absorbing 'foreign' ideas such as existentialism! However, of her subsequent books I think some are much better than others ('The Bell' is a really good one, I think) and sometimes you weary of her complicatedly interwoven style. Couldn't get on with Lister-Kaye at all, I'm afraid. But the Elizabeth David is a classic.

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  6. Robert, absolutely agree about the last paragraph of 'The Dead'. It just lingers on, and more so when it's snowing.

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  7. Can't do this now but might come back to it. And I'd quite like the Solnit book for Xmas if anyone asks.
    x

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  8. Perfect timing, Robert. I just finished Clarissa and wanted to ask everyone I know for recommendations for the next book! How did you know?

    I am a slow, and thus not prolific reader. But here goes:

    1. Clarissa, Samuel Richardson. I have been enveloped by it these few months. Very long, and worth every epistolary page.
    2. Fugitive Pieces, Anne Michaels
    3. Memories, Dreams, Reflections, Carl Jung
    4. Birth of a Poet, William Everson
    5. Four Quartets, T.S. Eliot
    6. Loving What Is, Byron Katie
    7. The Soul of Rumi
    8. Letters to a Young Poet, Rainer Maria Rilke
    9. Winter's Tale, Mark Helprin
    10. The Gifts of the Child Christ and Other Tales, by George MacDonald (early, lifechanging)

    I too enjoy Fermor, as you know, but not having gotten too far, I can't list his in good conscience. I also highly value Krishnamurti and Osho and many other writers whose works impacted me greatly.

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  9. P.S. What a great title for your post!

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  10. JA Baker – The Peregrine
    Wilfred Thesiger – Arabian Sands
    Charles Dickens – Great Expectations
    Joyce Cary – Mister Johnson
    Sara Maitland - A Book of Silence
    Beatrix Potter – The Tale of Mr Tod
    John Gray – Straw Dogs
    Wu Ch'eng-en – Monkey
    Laurie Lee – As I Walked Out One Midsummer Morning
    On Love and Barley: Haiku of Basho – Lucien Stryk

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  11. Off the top of my head—

    T.S. Eliot — The Complete Poems and Plays
    Somerset Maugham — The Razor's Edge
    Eckhart Tolle — A New Earth
    Emerson — Collected Essays
    Hans Kung — Christianity: Essence, History,
    and Future
    Willigis Jager — Search For the Meaning of Life:
    Essays and Reflections on the
    Mystical Experience
    Lao Tzu — Tao Te Ching
    Thoreau — Walden and other works
    John Fowles — The Aristos
    John O'Donahue — Anam Cara: A Book of Celtic
    Wisdom

    To these, of course, I would add everything written by Thomas Merton and all of the nonfiction of Henry Miller.

    Will be commenting more frequently now, Robert. Just returned from walk of The Cotswold Way.

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  12. Thanks for your list, Ruth - and hope you find some ideas in other people's lists! Apart from the Rilke, which is on mine too, you won't be surprised to hear that I'm in sympathy with your Jung, Eliot and Rumi. (I've just realised that I intended to put Kerouac's 'On the Road' on my own list, but it somehow got left off. But of course we could all write many top 10 lists and they would probably be different every time.)

    Thanks for contributing to this, David — that's a fabulous list! "The Peregrine' is very special, isn't it? As is the Laurie Lee, which thrilled me when I first read it, and inspired me to go on long walks. That Sara Maitland book I've been intending to read since I saw it reviewed. Joyce Cary is an interesting choice. He's little read nowadays, I suspect. I read 'The Horse's Mouth' a long time ago and loved it. Must read the one you mention.

    Hello George, and welcome back! Hope you had a great time in the Cotswolds. Looking forward to hearing more about your walk.To all of us who know you, your list comes as no real surprise!

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  13. Swallowdale by Arthur Ransome
    Waterlog by Roger Deakin
    To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
    Ulysses by James Joyce
    Finnegans Wake by James Joyce
    Moby Dick by Herman Melville
    Mountaineering in Scotland and Undiscovered Scotland by WH Murray
    Briggflatts by Basil Bunting
    All the Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle
    A Year From Monday by John Cage

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  14. Again, knowing you, this list does not surprise me, Dominic! I have yet to tackle 'Finnegans Wake', and have an idea I probably never will! Woolf I love, and 'To the Lighthouse' is quite wonderful. Must get round to reading 'Briggflatts' (I know you and I have discussed this).

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  15. Being a little obsessive by nature, I feel compelled to add another list, as I've left out so much...

    1. Jack Kerouac — On The Road
    2. DH Lawrence — Sons And Lovers/The Rainbow
    3. Somerset Maugham — Of Human Bondage
    4. Henry David Thoreau — Walden
    5. S Vere Benson — The Observer's Book of Birds (my first natural history identification guide)
    6. Jeanette Winterson — Art Objects (literary essays)
    7. William Wordsworth — The Prelude
    8. Constantine FitzGibbon — The Life Of Dylan Thomas
    9. Edward Abbey — Desert Solitaire
    10. JB Morton — Vagabondage (an obscure one, very over-the-top romantic, very 'English', not terribly well written — but instilled in me a lifelong love of walking, the countryside, poetry and country pubs.)

    There's no end to this, is there? It's a ceaseless conversation.

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  16. Almost impossible but off the top of my head:

    1. On The Road - Kerouac
    2. Homage to Catalonia - Orwell
    3. Goodbye to Berlin - Isherwood
    4. A Brief History of Everything - Ken Wilber
    5. Good Soldier Švejk - Jaroslav Hasek
    6. I Am That - Nisargadatta
    7. The Revolution of Everyday Life - Raoul Vanegiem
    8. Just William - Richmal Crompton
    9. The Magus - John Fowles
    10. A Season in Hell - Rimbaud

    Reading back through these I think 'gosh how pretentious I look' and 'not enough female writers'... sigh...

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  17. Rumi – Collected Poems
    TS Eliot -The Wasteland
    Anais Nin - Journals
    Ella Maillart – The Cruel Way
    Annemarie Schwarzenbach – Ou est la terre des Promesses
    Anne Michaels – Fugitive Pieces
    Maggie Helwig – Between Mountains
    Henry Miller – Stand Still Like the Hummingbird
    Dubravka Ugresic – Nobody’s Home
    Irena Vrkljan - The Silk, the Shears
    Danilo Kis - Garden, Ashes
    Nicolas Bokov – La Conversion

    And that's more than 10 and as soon as one starts to think, you want to add more. And more....

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  18. Hardy Jude the Obscure
    Heller Catch-22
    Ellison The Invisible Man
    Emerson Complete Essays
    Thoreau Walden
    Whitman Leaves of Grass
    Roethke Complete Poems
    Hemingway Old Man and the Sea
    Harper Lee To Kill a Mockingbird
    Melville Moby Dick

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  19. Off the top of my head --

    Henry Miller - Tropic of Cancer, Tropic of Capicorn
    Scott Fitzgerald - The Great Gatsby
    Ernest Hemingway - For Whom the Bell Tolls
    Doris Lessing - The Golden Notebook
    Jean Rhys - Wide Sargasso Sea
    Anne Lamott - Hard Laughter
    Carson McCullers - The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
    Robert Heinlein - Stranger in a Strange Land
    Loren Eisley - The Star Thrower
    Baruch Spinoza - The Ethics
    Emily Bronte - Wuthering Heights
    Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre

    I think this is more than 10. Ah well... never one for following the rules well. :)

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  20. The Stream and the Sapphire -- Denise Levertov
    The Magician's Nephew -- C.S. Lewis
    Waiting for God -- Simone Weil
    Mrs. Dalloway -- Virginia Woolf
    The Letters of Vincent Van Gogh
    Beloved -- Toni Morrison
    The Things They Carried -- Tim O'Brien
    A Wizard of Earthsea -- Ursula K. LeGuin
    Always Coming Home -- Ursula K. LeGuin
    The Impossible Question -- Krishnamurti

    Sad to say, my current limited income and my tendency to develop 3-day headaches if I enter public libraries have cut my reading of books back to just a fraction of what it once was. From the age of about 10 to the age of around 56, I was always reading a book. Since beginning blogging in late 2006, much of the time I used to spend reading books has been spent in reading things on the internet. I do read something contemplative every morning when I wake up and just before I go to sleep. I used to be able to read novels before sleep, but now that kind of reading keeps me from sleeping well.

    I like looking at all the lists! Thanks!



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  21. The Big Friendly Giant - Roald Dahl
    Light at the edge of the world - Wade Davis
    An evil cradling - Brian Keenan
    Full tilt - Dervla Murphy
    Tracks - louise Erdrich
    Shikasta - Doris Lessing
    The Greek Myths - Robert Graves
    Heroes - John Pilger
    The way that I went - Robert Lloyd Praeger
    Franny and Zooey - J.D.Salinger

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  22. I don't know how I could have left off Austen (I'm ashamed). Mostly Pride & Prejudice, but all of hers are my delight.

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  23. Oh Sabine! Thank you! How could have I forgotten Shikasta by Doris Lessing and The Golden Notebook?

    Solitary Walker -- I have to add to my list to make it fourteen books:

    The Essence of Yoga: Reflections on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, by Bernaud Bouanchaud.

    The Story of an African Farm, by Olive Schreiner.

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  24. Martin — what a great list! I have to check out 6 and 7, but the rest I have read or heard of. Orwell could easily have been on my own list, but I couldn't highlight of one book in particular — for me, it's the whole oeuvre that add up to the man. I was a Fowles addict in my twenties, though not sure I would return to him now. But my favourite choice of yours is the Rimbaud — wow!

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  25. dritanje — this is way the coolest list of us all! I'm totally with you on Rumi, Eliot and Miller. 'Fugitive Pieces' I have always wanted to read. Anais Nin — I've read some of her — was 'introduced' through the Henry Miller connection. The rest I'm looking forward to investigating and exploring... Thanks so much for participating in this!

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  26. loved to see Rubye Jack included Loren Eisely - The STar Thrower which I loved so much many years ago. And Doris Lessing's The Golden NOtebook. But as we were to write down what came into our heads without thinking too much!! more recent books tended to appear.
    Two which made a huge impression on me a long time ago were Freud's Interpretation of Dreams and William James Varieties of Religious Experience. Later followed by Jung's Memories Dreams & Reflections. You just can't get some people to shut up now can you? What have you started O solitary walker....

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  27. dritanje — Lessing — tried but failed. More of a women's thing than a men's thing (he said controversially)?

    Freud — yes — and Jung even more so (see Ruth's choice). Have done several posts about Jung on this blog (label: Jung).

    Strangely enough, I read 'Varieties of Religious Experience' quite recently (always intended to read it after it was mentioned in Huxley's 'Doorways of perception'). Pretty heavy going, though? Much prefer the Huxley.

    As I said in an earlier comment, dritanje, this is an endless conversation! And a lovely one.

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  28. Loren, there are so many writers you list here I admire: Hardy, Hemingway, Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman Roethke...

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  29. Rubye — I shout a particular YES to your first three! In humble opinion 'The Great Gatsby' is one of finest novels (novellas) ever written.

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  30. am — I know you already know how much I like Levertov, Weil, Woolf, Van Gogh and Krishnamurti!

    Glad you're enjoying all these comments as much as I am.

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  31. Thanks for taking part, sabine — I've yet to read the irrepressible Dervla Murphy, and the Praeger is here on my shelf, still unread... Oh, the limitless world of books. The more we read, the more we want to read — and the less we know, probably.

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  32. Not easy, but I’ve bookmarked this post & keep coming back to it to try. Here’s a shot at it, totally arbitrary:

    Autobiography of Red: Anne Carson
    The Great War and Modern Memory: Paul Fussell
    Ulysses: James Joyce
    Danube: Claudio Magris
    My Name is Red: Orhan Pahmuk
    In Search of Lost Time: Marcel Proust
    The Rings of Saturn: W. G. Sebald
    Europe Central: William Vollman
    The Waves: Virginia Woolf
    Mr. Mani: A. B. Yehoshua

    . . . and Wallace Stevens & T. S. Eliot

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  33. Dear Solitary Walker,

    May I still join?

    1) The great Gatsby - Scott Fitzgerald
    2) Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair - Pablo Neruda
    3) "Madera Verde" (Inmature Wood?) - Mamerto Menapace (he is a Benedictin monk in Argentina, still alive)
    4) 100 years of solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    5) Malena is the name of a Tango - Almudena Grandes
    6) The Book of the Embraces - Eduardo Galeano
    7) Awareness - Anthony de Mello
    8) "Uno y el Universo" (One and the Universe?) - Ernesto Sábato
    9) The Etruscan Smile - Jose Luis Sampedro
    10) Budapest - Chico Buarque de Hollanda

    Lovely post! So nice to read each of lists!

    Warm hug,
    Cris M

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  34. Another great book I have read lately is "Everything is connected. The power of music" (El sonido es vida. El poder de la musica) written by Daniel Barenboim, the pianist.

    (Just noticed that I listed within my favorites "Budapest", written by one of the greatest bossa nova musicians, the (obviously Brazilian) Chico Buarque.)

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  35. excellent idea!
    off the top of my head and very fast:
    1. Dostoevsky - Karamazov
    2. John of the Cross - Poems
    3. Dickens - Great Expectations
    4. Marx - Theses on Feurbach
    5. Lash - On Pilgrimage
    6. Francis - Canticle of the Creatures
    7. Eliot - Middlemarch
    8. Greene - The Power and the Glory
    9. White - Riders in the Chariot
    10. Swift - Waterland

    do I get the Bible and Shakespeare?

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  36. Thanks for your excellent list, Susan. I've heard so much about that Danube book, and think it will be right up my street. Sebald is a favourite writer of mine.

    Hi Cris, and good to hear from you! There are lots of unfamiliar (at least to me) names here which I'm sure many of us will investigate further. Love the Fitzgerald, the Neruda and the Marquez. I would very much like to read that Barenboim book. He conducted all the Beethoven symphonies in London recently, and the performances were magnificent.

    Andy (pilgrimpace) — thanks for your superb list. I remember recommending to you that Jennifer Lash book ('On Pilgrimage') some while back. Great, isn't it? I can't refuse a priest the Bible, Andy, so please have it — oh, and the Shakespeare as well, since I'm in a generous mood (the first time anyone's mentioned Shakespeare).

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  37. dritanje — a correction, I meant Huxley's 'A Perennial Philosophy' not 'The Doors of Perception'.

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  38. Dear Solitary Walker,

    Same happens to me, several writers mentioned by you are unfamiliar for me. As Argentinian, I am influenced by Latinoamerican literature and also Spanish writers like Jose Luis Sampedro or Almudena, and in my English courses, literature was a must so I had access to English or American writers.
    I really enjoyed this exercise as it gave me the chance to go back in my mind and remember how I happened to read those books.

    (Jose Luis Sampedro is a 91 yo Spanish economist, who decided to explore in literature in a superb way... that novel, The Etruscan Smile is just amazing. Barenboim book is deep and conscious, a very nice reflection... I need to stop, I get passionate talking about books!!!!!)

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  39. Susan Schied - thank you,how could I have forgotten W G Sebald? Rings of Saturn yes, although I've enjoyed all of his.
    Solitary walker, I did read Aldous Huxley's Doors of Perception but haven't read a Perennial Philosophy. I read W James 'Varieties' when I was very young and just finding out about these things and had more tolerance for heavy going stuff.

    More recently, Robert Moss's Conscious Dreaming (and all his other books!). And I want to add Marina Tsvetayeva's Collected Poems and Basho's - Narrow Road to the Deep North.
    And while I'm at it, I want to give you belated thanks for the quote which I discovered on your site, Martin Buber's 'every journey has a secret destination...' which I used as the theme of an essay I wrote for La Traductiere magazine - so thank you! Maybe we should all start another blog about books we love!

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  40. Thanks, Cris — passionate is good!

    And thanks again, dritanje, for your extra comment. Another blog may be stretching it a bit for me — I already have four!

    Wow, my own comment here has made a total of forty comments now!

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  41. Enid Blyton, the 'Secret Seven' series (let's face it, it's all the same book)
    RL Stevenson, 'Treasure Island'
    Edward Abbey, 'The Monkeywrench Gang'
    Masanobu Fukuoka, 'The Natural Way of Farming'
    Charles Bukowski, 'Post Office'
    Jack Kerouac, 'On the Road'
    Legs McNeil, 'Please Kill Me: The Uncensored Oral History of Punk'
    George Orwell, 'Keep the Aspidistra Flying'
    Jim Thompson, 'Pop. 1280'
    Alan Booth, 'The Roads to Sata: A 2,000 Mile Walk Through Japan'

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  42. Greatb stuff, Goat — must check out the Booth, the McNeil and the Fukuoka.

    I was more of a Famous Five man, myself.

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  43. When I discovered & became obsessed with the SS books as a boy, they were remnant ancient editions in my one-teacher school library. I still recall the thrill of those beautiful dust jackets. They had the FF books as well but they seemed strangely grown-up to me! I would kill for some of those first-edition SS books - one day when I'm wealthy...

    The Booth is a classic of walking lit. The Fukuoka is sublime, part practical how-to, part Eastern philosophy, part eco-treatise. I would recommend his most famous book, 'The One Straw Revolution', to new readers, though. The punk book is GREAT reading, melding together interviews by the protagonists to form an enthralling narrative about the origins of punk -- the (original) New York Punk, though it does inevitably overlap with the snotty, gob-specked UK version!

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  44. Thanks for your extra comment, Goat. Another three books I HAVE to read!

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  45. Hi Robert, I've been thinking on this for weeks now, even though I know ou said just to spontaneously scribble them down. Here are my "ten" at last.

    The Great Gatsby - F.Scott Fitzgerald
    We Need to Talk About Kevin - Lionel Shriver
    How to be Good - Nick Hornby
    A New Earth - Ekhart Tolle
    The Memoirs of A Survivor - Doris Lessing
    The Other Hand - Chris Gleave
    The Little Drummer Girl - John Le Carre
    The L-Shaped Room - Lynne Reid Banks
    When The Wind Blows - Raymond Briggs
    Little Women - Louise May Alcott
    Heidi - Joanna Spyri
    What Katy Did - Susan Coolidge
    The Wisdom of No Escape - Pema Chodron
    The Art Of Happiness - The Dalai Lama
    Arafat. Terrorist or Peacemaker - Alan Hart
    Feel the Fear and Do it Anyway - Susan Jeffers
    Women's ways of Knowing - Mary Field Belenky, Jill Mattuck Tarule
    The Penguin Book of English Verse - P.J. Keegan
    Ireland - A Terrible Beauty - Jill and Leon Uris
    The Life Of Mahatma Gandhi - Louise Ficher
    Roots - Alex Haley
    The Gifts of Imperfection - Brene Brown
    The Return of the Native - Thomas Hardy
    The Chalet School Series

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  46. Hmm, Jan... despite not being spontaneous, and despite your list being 24 not 10... I forgive you!

    Some interesting inclusions here... Love the Fitzgerald, Tolle, Dalai Lama, Hardy, Le Carré. I only saw the film of the Shriver. Devastating!

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  47. Coming over from Jan's blog and can't resist joining in (in no particular order)...

    1. The Bible. Any translation for informing how I live, the King James Version for the majesty of the language.
    2. Charlotte's Web by E.B. White. The book that made me a life-long reader.
    3. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. My perfect heroine.
    4. Atonement. A beautiful novel that captures the messiness of life and the consequences of our sometimes horrible choices.
    5. Little Golden Book - The Wolf and the Seven Little Kids. My mom would do the different voices when she read this to me. My favorite fairy tale. I wish I still had my copy.
    6. The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver. A fascinating story that illustrates how people, place and time form us.
    7. Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. The first Shakespeare play I read and still my favorite. Who can resist star-crossed lovers and a blood feud.
    8. Anything by Agatha Christie. I love mysteries. Agatha Christie introduced me to adult mysteries and is the Grande Dame to me.
    9. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. A frightening look at the thin veneer of civilization.
    10. A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens. My favorite tale of redemption.

    It is a pleasure to meet you Solitary Walker.

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  48. Thanks for taking part, What Remains Now. Dickens, Conrad, Shakespeare, the Bible — yes! Always preferred Dorothy Sayers to Agatha Christie, though.

    Good to meet you too. Some great pics on your blog, btw!

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