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Other Challenges Archive > 30-day Challenge! - Day 5: A book that makes you happy

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message 51: by siriusedward (new)

siriusedward (elenaraphael) | 2005 comments Kathleen wrote: "Come to think of it, just looking at my bookshelf makes me happy. :-)"

This is the truth


message 52: by Jen (new)

Jen (jennsps) | 179 comments Amen. Any book is a happiness. :)


message 53: by Loretta (new)

Loretta | 2200 comments :)!!!!


message 54: by Tasha (new)

Tasha me too!!

I actually have Anne of Green Gables out right now from the library and hope to get to it this month. It's also on my women's century challenge.


message 55: by Brina (new)

Brina I agree with Loretta but if I had to pick I would say anything by Julia Alvarez because she always makes me laugh.


message 56: by Hayley (new)

Hayley Shaver | 161 comments Yep. Those would be the ones.


message 57: by Rhedyn (new)

Rhedyn  (fernffoulkes) Guess How Much I Love You
It's a children's book my mumsie used to read to me.


message 58: by Renee (new)

Renee | 727 comments Anne of Green Gables would have to be mine. I loved that book when I was younger, and read it a couple years ago with another group and still loved it. Anne is just such a likeable, and fun character, I can't help but smile when I read about her troubles!


Maggie the Muskoka Library Mouse (mcurry1990) My current read, whatever it may be. Books are just the bright spot in my day. :)


message 61: by Lynn, New School Classics (new)

Lynn (lynnsreads) | 5120 comments Mod
I reread Heidi by Johanna Spyri a couple of years ago. It made me so happy. I loved the book as a child and also a 1960s Disney version of the movie. It was well worth rereading. Anne of Green Gables would be a second place choice. It was the first book I read during lockdown when it first began. Anne was the perfect book to help me develop perspective on a crazy world.


message 62: by Sara, Old School Classics (new)

Sara (phantomswife) | 9407 comments Mod
My immediate thought was Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, which made me laugh. But, made me happy is another thing, isn't it. I think The Secret Garden, which made me happy as a child and again as an adult.


message 63: by Milena (new)

Milena (milenas) | 542 comments Lynn wrote: "I reread Heidi by Johanna Spyri a couple of years ago. It made me so happy. I loved the book as a child and also a 1960s Disney version of the movie. It was well worth rereadi..."

Heidi made me really happy also.


message 64: by Anne (new)

Anne  (reachannereach) | 489 comments 84, Charing Cross Road and any book in with Jeeves and Wooster written by P.G. Wodehouse.


message 65: by Michaela (new)

Michaela | 386 comments Not easy to say, but probably the Golden Age mysteries or some historical mysteries, as I like the happy ending.

Otherwise children´s books with nice drawings and a positive message, like The Very Hungry Caterpillar or Das kleine Ich-bin-ich (in English Little I-Am-Me by the Austrian author Mira Lobe.


message 66: by Sherry (new)

Sherry Elmer | 17 comments Not all books make me happy; not even all books that I love make me happy. Cormac McCarthy's The Road would be an example.

Books that do make me happy include Leif Enger's Peace Like a River; Anne of Green Gables by LM Montgomery; and Cranford by Elizabeth Gaskell.


message 67: by Terry (new)

Terry | 2377 comments Michaela, when I saw that you wrote The Very Hungry Caterpillar, it made me happy all over again. That book, along with Goodnight Moon, may tie for the book read most often, not 3 or more times, and not 30 or more times, but possibly 300 or more times. Both were favorites of my daughter’s when she was a child, so they bring me happy memories. Also, If You Give a Mouse a Cookie…


message 68: by Jen (new)

Jen (jennsps) | 179 comments The Monster at the End of This Book


message 69: by Renee (new)

Renee | 727 comments Jen wrote: "The Monster at the End of This Book"

I love that book! I used to do my Grover voice whenever I would read any Grover books to the kids. Grover Goes to School was another favourite because he has a bit of a meltdown and that part is just really fun to read :)


message 71: by Joseph (last edited Sep 12, 2021 05:27AM) (new)

Joseph Fountain | 296 comments Sherry wrote: "Not all books make me happy; not even all books that I love make me happy. Cormac McCarthy's The Road would be an example...."

I agree Sherry. For me, there is a big difference between being satisfied (some may call that happy), with a reading experience, and being happy. I haven't read The Road, but would say the same thing for McCarthy's Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West...or many many other sad books, that I am glad I read.


message 72: by Robin P (new)

Robin P Books in the Bernie and Chet mystery series by Spencer Quinn


message 73: by Tara (new)

Tara  | 71 comments Anne (On semi-hiatus) wrote: "84, Charing Cross Road and any book in with Jeeves and Wooster written by P.G. Wodehouse."

Yes!


message 74: by Cynda (new)

Cynda | 5192 comments Babette’s Feast. I realized that I am ready to return to fairytales, folktales, and myth, and winter's tales.


message 75: by Wreade1872 (new)

Wreade1872 | 934 comments Everyone's a Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too by Jomny Sun Everyone's a Aliebn When Ur a Aliebn Too by Jomny Sun .

Joy tinged with just the right amount of Sad to make the perfect alloy of catharsis resulting in Happy.


message 76: by Robin P (new)

Robin P Matt wrote: "Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë.

Probably not the obvious choice for this category, but this book just absolutely grabs me."


Wouldn't have expected that one! Not because I don't like it (I don't!) but because it's so tragic. I suppose it takes you out of your own life for sure.


message 77: by Laurie (new)

Laurie | 1895 comments There are a few that make me smile thinking about them right now and all but one are from my childhood:
Winnie-the-Pooh
All Things Bright and Beautiful
The Essential Calvin and Hobbes: A Calvin and Hobbes Treasury
Adulthood Is a Myth


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