Fiction
Related: About this forumWhat book(s) do you reread over the years?
I used to reread Winnie the Pooh and Catcher in the Rye pretty much once a year. Haven't reread them in a while. How about you?
playaseeker
(59 posts)The Dog Stars and The Painter
50 Shades Of Blue
(11,056 posts)Runningdawg
(4,632 posts)yellerpup
(12,263 posts)I get the best dreams from reading it.
trev
(1,480 posts)a private journal in which he discusses and illustrates his dreams. Awesome.
yellerpup
(12,263 posts)I'm sure it would speak to me too.
area51
(12,230 posts)and Carole Nelson Douglas's Irene Adler books.
yellowdogintexas
(22,983 posts)and I have gotten to know her. We lunch together with the Liberal Ladies Who Lunch group.
She is a very staunch Democrat! At last year's big fundraiser for Tarrant County Democratic Woman's Club, she donated a Book Club basket and she is willing to attend the meeting with the winner.
She also has a zillion feral cats and the local TNR folks have finally gotten them all TNRd
I adore Midnight Louie!!
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,076 posts)Although it's been quite a while since I've read them.
Replay by Ken Grimwood.
Time and Again and From Time to Time by Jack Finney.
Time on My Hands by Peter delaCorte
bif
(24,547 posts)One of my favorite books of all time. Everything he wrote was great!
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,076 posts)bif
(24,547 posts)More_Cowbell
(2,207 posts)I love Time After Time
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,076 posts)And if you don't know the other books I named above, check them out also.
yellowdogintexas
(22,983 posts)dameatball
(7,607 posts)Ohiogal
(35,714 posts)Ive also re-read every one of Sue Graftons alphabet mysteries.
I re-read No Ordinary Time by Doris Kearns Goodwin. I found it fascinating.
dameatball
(7,607 posts)were unenthusiastic at first, but all of them loved it. I haven't read your list, but will check them out. Have a great evening...
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,076 posts)I've only read it once, but I just loved it.
Some years later my younger son discovered it and called me up to tell me what a great book it is.
mahina
(19,350 posts)Thyla
(791 posts)is a easy re-read, it's probably my most read book along with the Red Dwarf series and Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy lot of 4.
wasterpinky
(2 posts)By far one of my favorite books. I have re read it three time now and always find gems I missed from the last time. Course Hero has a really awesome infographic on the book. Thinking about printing it
sinkingfeeling
(53,827 posts)SeattleVet
(5,628 posts)Love those, and come back to them every few years.
shenmue
(38,538 posts)Cuthbert Allgood
(5,206 posts)I start reading it on Bloomsday (June 16) each year. Generally do a chapter a day. Love that book.
Someday I hope to get to Dublin for Bloomsday. The goal then would be to read the whole book on the 15th in different portions of the city.
More_Cowbell
(2,207 posts)By Connie Willis. She has another one in the same universe that I also really love, called To Say Nothing of the Dog (the title comes from the subtitle of Three Men in a Boat) and that one's more lighthearted, but this one really stuck with me.
(There are other books in the series, but these two are the best in my opinion)
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,076 posts)And I've read it any number of times myself.
It's become the book I recommend to people who think they don't like science fiction.
Currently she's working on a novel about Roswell.
bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)shanny
(6,709 posts)all of John McPhee
Clash City Rocker
(3,544 posts)He was such a gifted writer.
Freelancer
(2,107 posts)That spells, "The Stand", by Steven King.
Hey, its not sophisticated, but I love it.
Glorfindel
(10,047 posts)It actually has characters you can care about. 2nd place: Salem's Lot. *shiver*
and I'm about due for another re-read. It's been a couple years.
Irishxs
(622 posts)Atticus
(15,124 posts)bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)In the 90s I asked a black male colleague from MS if it was true-to-life. He said yes.
Deb
(3,744 posts)Hawaii, Chesapeake, Texas, Space, South Pacific, Caribbean and so on.
Atticus
(15,124 posts)was a treasure we'll not soon replace.
Skittles
(161,470 posts)and the James Herriot books
Cousin Dupree
(1,866 posts)And so well written.
Skittles
(161,470 posts)when I watched the commentary on the movie The Haunting (based on the book), the director Robert Wise commented that when he was reading that book, someone tapped him on the shoulder and he about jumped out of his skin! He did a great job.
yellowdogintexas
(22,983 posts)old Victorian farmhouse during a very windy storm.
Tree branches scratching the wooden siding, etc.
Scared the beJesus out of me.
bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)Craig's book is an extensive history and explains a great deal about the background of WWI and WWII.
I took several courses from Craig in grad school in the 60s.
democrank
(11,250 posts)Also Grapes of Wrath, Beans of Egypt Maine.
FBaggins
(27,935 posts)Of course.
But most of Heinlein as well.
solara
(3,874 posts)The Stand - Stephen King
Dune Trilogy - Frank Herbert
Mists of Avalon - Marion Zimmer Bradley
Dragon Riders of Pern - Anne McCaffrey
Stranger in a Strange Land - Robert Heinlein
Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens
Princess Bride - William Goldman
Temple of Gold - William Goldman
Jitterbug Perfume - Tom Robins
I can't seem to read all of these every year any more, but they are my go to fiction feasts for sure.
Your first 4 plus It for me.
Maybe one a year LOTR
Maybe a few a year of Game of Thrones
The Belgariad series, I love the characters
I love other McCaffrey books, The Ship that Sings (?) comes to mind but I loved the Dragon Riders from long ago.
Polly Hennessey
(7,629 posts)Others:
The Secret Garden
A Canticle for Leibowitz
Stranger in a Strange Land
yellowdogintexas
(22,983 posts)A Song of Ice and Fire: Book 1 2 and 3 Three times each. Book 4 Two times Book 5 only once. When I can finally preorder Book Six, I will start my reread again
Auntie Mame, Around the World With Auntie Mame and The Joyous Season (my favorite) by Patrick Dennis. I would dearly love to see The Joyous Season made into a movie or short series. It is so funny. I have mentally cast it several times over the years
To KIll A Mockingbird (hasn't everyone>
Jane Eyre Gone With the Wind.
Tolkien
Tom Sawyer
The Godfather
Two from Shirley Jackson that are completely different from all her other work:
Life Among the Savages and Raising Demons. These are about her very large family who live in a large drafty old farmhouse in Vermont. I have probably read them 4 or 5 times each. Absolutely hysterical and another potentially great series.
Non fiction: A History of the Plantagenets includes The Conquering Family, The Magnificent Century, The Three Edwards and The Last Plantagenets. Thomas B Costain who also wrote some great fiction set in the Medieval and Early Renaissance eras
dhol82
(9,491 posts)Still love the wizarding world.
Although the movies are faster.
happybird
(5,320 posts)There is a lot of horrid garbage and straight up porn, but if you take the time to look (and avert your eyes when necessary- and it's necessary, a lot. Lol!), there are some wonderful writers and stories out there. I like the ones that focus on the Marauders' time at Hogwarts and the first war.
dhol82
(9,491 posts)Did get to see Cursed Child though. Cool special effects!
Cartoonist
(7,567 posts)Mystery and Science Fiction
The Blue Flower
(5,682 posts)Never fails to make me laugh
Kurt V.
(5,624 posts)Thunderbeast
(3,590 posts)"Even Cowgirls Get The Blues"
"Another Roadside Attraction"
Best read while enjoying something from a neighborhood cannabis emporium (six within 15 minute walking distance).
Perfect way to revisit my "lost youth"!
randr
(12,515 posts)"Jitterbug Perfume" my fav. I have read it out loud for at least three friends.
Tikki
(14,800 posts)We have reread it nearly every year since.
The Tikkis
LuvNewcastle
(17,083 posts)but I haven't done that in many years. I can read anything by Kurt Vonnegut or Robert Anton Wilson over and over again.
mainstreetonce
(4,178 posts)And the poetry of Shel Silverstein