The Next Best Book Club discussion
Book Related Banter
>
What Was "THE BOOK" That Made You A Reader?

My first ever book to lead all books was the classic children's novel The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett, which I read as a child and am now reading to my daughter. But I think I also felt addicted to The Faraway Tree trilogy by Enid Blyton.
I've been a reader since. My first adult WOW moment was To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee and remains a favourite.
I love the power a book has!

I read Wurthering Heights fairly young but not too many other 'classics.' And for a period of time I couldn't get my hands on enough true crime.

I've always been a reader. My mom used to take me to the library as a kid and I'd check out as many books as they'd let me.
As a growing tween, I switched from books like Redwall and Sweet Valley High to The Death Gate Cycle and Stephen King.
I think Stephen King's IT was the book that moved me into hard-core author-obsessive reading. Before him, I was reading as a pastime. But once I got a taste of true grown-up literature, I was actually HUNGRY for it.
As a growing tween, I switched from books like Redwall and Sweet Valley High to The Death Gate Cycle and Stephen King.
I think Stephen King's IT was the book that moved me into hard-core author-obsessive reading. Before him, I was reading as a pastime. But once I got a taste of true grown-up literature, I was actually HUNGRY for it.

As an adult I'd read a lot of books before this, but it was Stephen King's Dark Tower series that really got me back into it.
A few years later I read and loved Anna Karenina, War & Peace, lots of Jane Austen, and my favorite book (which I've read three times) - The Count of Monte Cristo.




As a growing tween, I switched from books like Redwall and Sweet Valley..."
Oh, Sweet Valley High. Those and the Girl Talk series were my bread and butter in middle school :)

As a teacher, it's so sad to me that required reading is counter-productive to creative lovers of reading. Sigh. Sometimes it comes down to choosing the least sucky book from the "approved" list. I was a lot like you and sought out my own reading.

Tolkien is like fantasy with literary substance. As a non-fantasy fan but fellow reader of Tolkien, I totally get that.



Oh my... I read Atlas Shrugged. I enjoyed the first half but felt that Ayn assumed I was too dumb to understand what happened, which is why she explained it to me in the second half.

Oh my... I read Atlas Shrugged. I enjoyed the first half but felt..."
Good point; I thought she felt most people were done and that book turned my off Ayn Rand (it was my third book by her; I read two shorter ones first).

Oh my... I read Atlas Shrugged. I enjoyed the first..."
I like a few of her essays but I'm not the biggest fan of objectivism, generally speaking. Mind you, I did appreciate having a life-long question answered: Who is John Galt? :)

It was Fountainhead by Ayn Rand and Oliver Twist by Dickens.


Charlie wrote: "Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. My dad gave it to me to read when I was a Jr. in high school."
That book is a thorn in my side! I've tried to read it on three separate occasions in my life and have wall-chucked it all three times! Ayn is infuriating. I feel like she is talking down to me the whole time. I don't think I ever got further than page 70...
That book is a thorn in my side! I've tried to read it on three separate occasions in my life and have wall-chucked it all three times! Ayn is infuriating. I feel like she is talking down to me the whole time. I don't think I ever got further than page 70...

Bobbsey Twins from my aunt (hand-me-down 1st editions)
Babysitter's Club
Sweet Valley Twins and Sweet Valley High
Nancy Drew (the 80-90s editions)
The authors who really sucked me in were Beverly Cleary and Judy Blume (grade school) and then Stephen King and Christopher Pike (middle-high school). That sort of locked me into the mystery/suspense/horror genre for about 15 years. I've branched out to popular fiction, but those are my go-tos.
But three books that really stuck with me from my childhood are:
From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (I have since read this with my son!)
A Begonia for Miss Applebaum
Just as Long as We're Together

Bobbsey Twi..."
I can remember reading Carrie for the first time in high school. I had to take a sick day and had a high fever. I sat in bed and didn't put it down until it was done. I felt like the little boy in Princess Bride: completely transfixed and it totally took my mind off of how lousy I felt :)

Bobbsey Twi..."
I loved the Babysitter's Club and Sweet Valley Twins/Sweet Valley High. I read them all in 5th & 6th grade. I think those were my favorites at that time.

And after that I gobbled up Harry Potter, one of my favorite series! You're not alone Isaurathewriter :)

Oh my... I read Atlas Shrugged. I enj..."
A character in Atlas Shrugged. I'm not a fan of objectivism, either, but in the first two novels I read by her, that wasn't the point, whereas Atlas Shrugged was a novel all about that. It turned me off her books forever.

Same thing with me, in middle school, and The Eye of the Dragon. My first Stephen King and I read on a sick day. I remember feeling terrible in the morning but not so bad in the afternoon.
I wish I could do that again!


It was the most delicious escape. I love falling in to a book like that :)



My parents were huge readers, too. And they read to us. But we had no library to speak of in my home area, so we read what they bought, what we could get at school, etc. When my dad did sabbaticals in a larger city, we loved the library.


That's awesome. I grew up in a similar small PA town ( or village as it's so aptly called). Had to laugh at the gas station and dollar general "hot spots"; that sums it up!




I have loved books - my mother read to me all the time - and I started with Nancy Drew and Judy Bolten. I actually liked Judy better.
Jumped into adult books early and have loved Gone with the Wind, Steinbecks books, and historical novels. Forced myself to read many of the "classics" , Got into Sci-fi in high school and a whole bunch of To Be Read books in my bookcases.
Books mentioned in this topic
Tiger's Curse (other topics)The Children of Noisy Village (other topics)
Karolcia (other topics)
The Chronicles of Narnia (other topics)
Atlas Shrugged (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ayn Rand (other topics)Kate DiCamillo (other topics)
Herman Melville (other topics)
Gabriel García Márquez (other topics)
Jules Verne (other topics)
More...
I got Carrie Phillips at my school's book fair and felt me first true connection with the characters and their conflicts.
One of my favorite TV shows as a teen was Dawson's Creek (showing my age here) and in one episode a class discusses Wuthering Heights so I thought hey, why not read it? After that, reading became my addiction :)
What was your reader-defining book(s)?