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What 4 books do you most vividly remember reading?






Assimov was a prolific writer. It was probably 40 years ago that I read Fantastic Voyage. Another of his novels I enjoyed was I, Robot. I have never seen the movie but I don't it can touch the book. Even though it has been decades since I read either book they stayed with me. To me that says something about the impact they had.

2. Eleven Hours
3. The Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy
4. The Talisman And Black House

More recently I have to say that I loved reading the Harry Potter series and have to say that seeing them as children's books is doing a disservice because the writing and storylines have so much for every age.
This year, I finally read To Kill a Mockingbird and that really impressed me a bit and right now I'm reading Burial Rites and I have to say, I think this one is not only five-stars but one I will remember for a long time!

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie
Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie
Murder in Mesopotamia by Agatha Christie

Yeah, it's been more than 10 years since I read these books, but I still remember them, which indicates how a good writer she is.


Salem's Lot by Stephen King

The Drop by Michael Connelly

The Sentinel by Jeffrey Konvitz


The first thriller I remember reading and being unable to put down was The Odessa File by Frederick Forsyth.
Fantasy: The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings
SF: a tie between Dune and The Foundation Trilogy
Mystery: Murder on the Orient Express
The book I hated reading the most was required in high school...The Lord of the Flies...you couldn't get me anywhere near that book ever again.

To Kill a Mockingbird
Gone With The Wind
Goodbye Mr. Chips


I have never read a book twice but if I did these four (to date) would be the books that I would read again. All of them are EXCELLENT story telling!!!


Mona - Lawrence Block
An Equal Music - Vikram Seth
The Long Walk - Richard Bachman (Stephen King)

Yeah, it's been more than 10 years since I read these books, but I still remember them, which indicates how a good write..."
So true! As I have all of her books, I should start reading them again!!


Salem's Lot by Stephen King

The Drop by Michael Connelly

The ..."
Have read a lot of Michael Connelly and always enjoy. I recently bought The Drop and look forward to getting into the book.

Goodness, Mary! I forgot Wuthering Heights -- another terrific book!

mary i liked evergreen ,message in a bottle and wuthering heights

Gone Girl - "Gillian Flynn
Irene Hannon - "Buried Secrets"
Dony Jay - " The Warrior Spy"


[bookcover:Fantastic V..."
GoodReads has a "Find me a book" Group. They are True Wizards. You describe the book as you remember and post.

Agree! Just like when you see a book that says "abridged" when its been edited down.

Gone Girl - "Gillian Flynn
Irene Hannon - "Buried Secrets"
Dony Jay - " The Warrior Spy""
So is the book better or worse than the movie? Re: Gone Girl.


I think Gone Girl is a book that I will remember vividly for a bout 3 years. I remember The Girl with a Dragon Tattoo vividly also, mostly because I liked the film also. This could be true for most books in the mystery genre.

13 Days by Robert Kennedy
PT 109 by Richard Trigaskis
The Federalist Papers (I have a family connection to this book as one of the authors, John Jay, is up the family tree several generations.)
Helter Skelter by Vincent Bugliosi

2001: A Space Odyssey--Arthur C. Clarke
Private Down Under--James Patterson
Elixir--Gary Braver
North and South--John Jakes

The Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
Before the storm - Diane Chamberlain
Fallen Grace - Mary Hooper

The Spy Who Came in From the Cold - a great mystery.
A time to kill - A masterful story teller.

I have been a fan of John Jakes since he was writing the Brak the Barbarian series of sword and sorcery tales back in the 1970s, prior to his hitting gold with The Bastard the first of The Kent Family Chronicles.




1. Jaws by Peter Benchley: Read it over two nights as a 14 year old and couldn't put it down, though didn't go swimming in the sea for a long time afterwards.
2. A Kiss Before Dying by Ira Levin.
Levin is just amazing. No one particular genre but each of his books is unique and riveting. This one was the first though, with a twist halfway through which they couldn't carry off in the film but as a reader makes you gasp.
3. The Little Drummer Girl by John Le Carre
An absolute masterpiece about recruitment to a terrorist organisation and the chesslike work of superspies. One of very few books I've read twice.
4. The Bourne Identity by Robert Ludlum
A scenario which has been repeated many times since, but never quite as brilliantly as this... man wakes up on a beach, with no identity, and no clue as to who he is. Gradually finds out the shocking truth. Run a close second by The Osterman Weekend, three friends meeting for a weekend are tipped off that one of them isn't who he says he is. But which one? Paranoia abounds...
It's hard to choose four so I slipped in five! See what I did there?


I agree with you on Ludlum, the man wrote good stuff. I'm pretty sure Osterman was the first Ludlum book I read, it might have been The Scarlatti Inhertance



To Kill a Mockingbird
The Sound and the Fury
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
When Saigon Surrendered: A Kentucky Mystery

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie
The Lying Tongue by Andrew Wilson
The Budayeen Cycle by George Alec Effinger
Revival by Stephen King
J by Howard Jacobson
Just a few...

Books mentioned in this topic
I Let You Go (other topics)Joyland (other topics)
The Kind Worth Killing (other topics)
Pretty Girls (other topics)
A Study in Scarlet (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
George Orwell (other topics)Haruki Murakami (other topics)
Fyodor Dostoevsky (other topics)
Leonard Seet (other topics)
Jodi Picoult (other topics)
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Me, too. "When Will There be Good News" will be my next read after I finish my current read.