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The book I keep going back to...

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Aqueda_Veronica
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The book I keep going back to...

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We all have these books we keep re-reading and loving :) I've got four titles I'd like to share.

- "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" - I go back to it every Spring and owe two copies (a paperback in Polish and a hardcover in English). It's been this way for years and I can't imagine anything different.
- "The Little Prince" - I usually go back to this when I am ill, seems to speed up my recovery.
- a collection of ancient Greek myths - simply the book of my childhood...
- "The collected stories" of Edgar Allan Poe - let's face it, no horror fan can skip the Master :) Again, I purchased two different editions.

What about your list?
"From childhood's hour I have not been as others were
I have not seen as others saw
I could not bring my passions from a common spring
From the same source I have not taken my sorrow
I could not awake my heart to joy at the same tone
And all I loved - I loved alone"

E.A.Poe
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tjamesmoss.author
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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Aqueda_Veronica wrote:We all have these books we keep re-reading and loving :) I've got four titles I'd like to share.

- "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" - I go back to it every Spring and owe two copies (a paperback in Polish and a hardcover in English). It's been this way for years and I can't imagine anything different.
- "The Little Prince" - I usually go back to this when I am ill, seems to speed up my recovery.
- a collection of ancient Greek myths - simply the book of my childhood...
- "The collected stories" of Edgar Allan Poe - let's face it, no horror fan can skip the Master :) Again, I purchased two different editions.

What about your list?
Edgar Allan Poe ALWAYS gets my attention, SOME HOW. "Cask of Amontillado...," "Pit and the Pendulum..."
Goodness me...
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marQus3
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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All fantastic choices! My tastes tend more toward fantasy, sci-fi and thrillers. There are a few titles/series I find myself rereading every few years: The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever by Stephen R. Donalsdon, The Gap Series by Donaldson as well, Just about any and all of John Grisham and Brad Meltzer's stuff just to name a few.
Cheers!
Mark

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Where the devils and human, the dreamer is prey and sanity is optional.
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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Well, if the topic is which books have we read at least 5 different times, I have a few of my own:

The Serrated Edge - By Mercedes Lackey and various partner authors
All the books in this series are good, but the first, "Born to Run", is especially impressive. It was written not just to publish a new novel, but also in an effort to raise social awareness about the horrors that young runaways must live on the streets of America. Drugs and underage prostitution are strong themes, and the book came with a page of toll-free help lines any street kid could call if they happened to get hold of the book and wanted to get a little aid like the characters of the story do.

The Discworld - by Terry Pratchett
A very long series, but I have read each book in it at least three times, and some of them five or six. Pratchett is the master of satirizing our own ridiculous world. Even though the Discworld, (a huge flat planet moving through space on the backs of four galactic elephants standing on the shell of the world turtle), is a fantasy world, it is so hauntingly familiar since every foolish human aspect ends up there and magnified. Of the various story arcs within the Discworld series, my favorites are the ones featuring Sam Vimes and the city watch, most of the ones with Death (the not-so-grim-reaper), and half of the stand alone stories, (Pyramids, The Truth, Going Postal). He is the only fictional author I know who does footnotes, and often they are so anachronistic that you can't help laughing out loud.

John Dortmunder - by Donald E. Westlake
Another long series of books. Master Criminal John Dortmunder is the best in the business at putting together a plan. Robbery, frauds, scams, hijackings even. But somehow, he was born with a jinx. No matter how good the plan is, it never quite goes the way it should. The cast of accomplices Dortmunder employs are hilarious and so, so familiar. I've loved reading these criminal farce books ever since I first discovered them 13 or so years ago.

The Terrible Hours - by Peter Mass
This is a non fiction book about the sinking of the submarine USS Squalus. It happened just before the start of WWII during a training dive. The crew spent a long time trapped at the bottom of the ocean before they became the first successfully rescued men from the ocean depths. Before then, any men trapped in a submarine were lost, no matter how shallow the waters were. I keep coming back to this book because it is a kind of biography of my personal hero, Charles Momsen, a man who was inventive and resourceful and completely re-pioneered underwater actions against overwhelming negativity. It is one of the greatest sea stories in our history.
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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DamianLake wrote:Well, if the topic is which books have we read at least 5 different times, I have a few of my own:

The Serrated Edge - By Mercedes Lackey and various partner authors
All the books in this series are good, but the first, "Born to Run", is especially impressive. It was written not just to publish a new novel, but also in an effort to raise social awareness about the horrors that young runaways must live on the streets of America. Drugs and underage prostitution are strong themes, and the book came with a page of toll-free help lines any street kid could call if they happened to get hold of the book and wanted to get a little aid like the characters of the story do.

The Discworld - by Terry Pratchett
A very long series, but I have read each book in it at least three times, and some of them five or six. Pratchett is the master of satirizing our own ridiculous world. Even though the Discworld, (a huge flat planet moving through space on the backs of four galactic elephants standing on the shell of the world turtle), is a fantasy world, it is so hauntingly familiar since every foolish human aspect ends up there and magnified. Of the various story arcs within the Discworld series, my favorites are the ones featuring Sam Vimes and the city watch, most of the ones with Death (the not-so-grim-reaper), and half of the stand alone stories, (Pyramids, The Truth, Going Postal). He is the only fictional author I know who does footnotes, and often they are so anachronistic that you can't help laughing out loud.

John Dortmunder - by Donald E. Westlake
Another long series of books. Master Criminal John Dortmunder is the best in the business at putting together a plan. Robbery, frauds, scams, hijackings even. But somehow, he was born with a jinx. No matter how good the plan is, it never quite goes the way it should. The cast of accomplices Dortmunder employs are hilarious and so, so familiar. I've loved reading these criminal farce books ever since I first discovered them 13 or so years ago.

The Terrible Hours - by Peter Mass
This is a non fiction book about the sinking of the submarine USS Squalus. It happened just before the start of WWII during a training dive. The crew spent a long time trapped at the bottom of the ocean before they became the first successfully rescued men from the ocean depths. Before then, any men trapped in a submarine were lost, no matter how shallow the waters were. I keep coming back to this book because it is a kind of biography of my personal hero, Charles Momsen, a man who was inventive and resourceful and completely re-pioneered underwater actions against overwhelming negativity. It is one of the greatest sea stories in our history.
I think I've just been convinced to read The Terrible Hours. Good job!
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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My absolute favourite book that I ALWAYS go back to is 'Where Rainbows End' by Cecilia Ahern. Everything about it just makes me love it more each time I read it. The adorable story line, the wonderful way it's written in notes and emails and letters, and the characters that I've come to love so much.
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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Anything by Kerouac.

Whether it's letters, journals or novels. His exuberance and amazment with life is inspiring and reminds me to enjoy every minute of mine.
Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful. — Edward Gibbon
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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Categorically speaking (add “anything by” to these):

For literary inspiration: John Irving and Paul Theroux

For literary rule-breaking: Phillip Roth

For poignant humor: Nick Hornby

For political satire: Christopher Buckley, Kurt Vonnegut

For bizarre prose: Tom Robbins

For courtroom drama: John Grisham

For philosophy: Robert M. Pirsig, Fritjof Capra

For SF: Douglas Adams, Isaac Asimov, Theodore Sturgeon

For quotes: Elbert Hubbard (no, not L. Ron)

For grammatical reference: Strunk & White
Author of the novel Then Again - An Adventure in Time Travel
amazon.com/Then-Again-Adventure-Time-Tr ... f_=asap_bc
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DamianLake
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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R. LeBeaux wrote:For courtroom drama: John Grisham

For SF: Douglas Adams, Isaac Asimov, Theodore Sturgeon
I admit to developing a taste for Grisham in high school, but I haven't read the last few since his approach changed. I loved his early courtroom brawls in Rainmaker and Time to Kill and the sheer black cynicism of Runaway Jury, but since novels like Street Lawyer and King of Torts, I haven't been able to get real excited.

I really recommend the Discworld books to you, though. Anyone who connects to the distinctly British sense of humor in Hitchhiker's Guide would love Terry Pratchett's works, whether you are a fantasy reader or not. Lots of non-sci fi fans love Douglas Adams' work, after all. You don't need to read them exactly in order of publication, so I always recommend new readers start with Guards! Guards!, or Reaper Man. They do a great job of introducing you to the Disc and some of the main continuing characters.
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Re: The book I keep going back to...

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DamianLake wrote:I really recommend the Discworld books to you
I’ve seen these books mentioned now several times here on Booktalk, and with your description (and reference to Adams’ humorous prose style), I think it’s probably time I looked them up. For the most part, I gave up on SF many years ago, mainly because all the stories seemed to have been told and most of the new stuff just played on old themes with a lot of elaborate and complex alien and technological gimmicks to make them seem different. I started reading SF in the 1950s, and voraciously devoured all the old pulps, along with everything else I could get my hands on. But by the late ‘70s, I started to see a lot of thematic repetition, and I backed off. Until that is, Adams came along. I do read SF from time to time now, and I occasionally read fantasy as well, the last one being The Time Traveller’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger, which I enjoyed. I have always particularly liked time-travel stories and the way different authors deal with the paradox problems. Anyway, I appreciate the recommendation, and will put Pratchett's novels on my list of things to read. By the way, though you are probably aware of them, I wanted to mention Adams' Dirk Gently novels and recommend them in case you aren't familiar. I've posted this little image I put together on the site before, but I'll add it here again.

Image
Author of the novel Then Again - An Adventure in Time Travel
amazon.com/Then-Again-Adventure-Time-Tr ... f_=asap_bc
http://www.wmpublishing.com/
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