The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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What's your all time best novel that you can repeatedly read ?
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Jeffery
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Aug 15, 2014 09:13AM
The Magic Kingdom series by Terry Brooks, especially the first three.
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I'm shocked to find that "Wuthering Heights" and "The Great Gatsby" are mine because I originally hated these books. But I find myself always watching movie adaptations and loving them. I also always find myself talking to people on goodreads about them and rereading from different perspectives. I think they've grown on me.
Joan Didion's "The White ALbum", Vonnegut's "Breakfast of Champions" and Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" I'm afraid to admit how many times I've read each one. But it's more than twenty...And there's a reason for that...
I 've said it before - all 3 Lord of the Rings books. but particularly The Return of the King. Also, Gone With the Wind is a masterpiece.
Definitely The Princess and the Goblin. It's been an obsession since childhood. Same with The Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles. Not the most sophisticated choices, but they hold a lot of memories.
Renee wrote: "Probably The Forgotten Beasts of Eld followed closely by the Kingkiller books and then The Keltiad."Had never heard of this book but your recommendation led me to look it up. Just ordered it.
Keith wrote: "@Chappy -Is that the one that had Viggo Mortensen (Aragorn) as the lead? I saw the movie, and suspected it was probably based on a book. I think I might have to give it a read- I enjoyed the hell..."
Chappy, Lord of the Rings is one of the greatest adventures your reading will ever take you on. I envy you getting to read it for the first time. Read The Hobbit first though. It's a quick, fun read and will make LOTR much richer and meaningful for you.
George wrote: "Lord of the Rings is one of the greatest adventures your reading will ever take you on. "Seconded...although I still think Chappy was just messing with us.
There are a lot of books that are like that for me (it would take me all day to name every single one of them), but a couple that I can immediately think of off the top of my head are The Last Unicorn and Frankenstein.
As the saying goes "so many books so little time" I find it difficult to justify rereading too many books. I did reread all the LOTR and The Hobbit before the movies premiered. Life is too short to do rereads in my opinion. Though I could list many if my "to read list" didn't keep swelling.
The Hobbit (the whole series)Gone with the Wind
Shadow Castles
The Outsiders
and for fun
The Miss Julia series by Ann Ross
To Kill A Mockingbird
I am staggered at the amount of people who tell me they love Shantaram.........biggest load of tish I have ever read!
I am staggered at the amount of people who tell me they love Shantaram.........biggest load of tish I have ever read!
thanks everyone,i'll check the books you've read and add it to my shelf,i'm a newbie in novels so i learned much from you,and guys what about Watchmen by alan moore i just finished it and it's very very good.
Ahmed wrote: "thanks everyone,i'll check the books you've read and add it to my shelf,i'm a newbie in novels so i learned much from you,and guys what about Watchmen by alan moore i just finished it and it's very..."Watchmen is fantastic. Definitely a book that I have reread many times and still enjoy.
There are a few, but the one that tops the list has to be The Hobbit. I'm reading it at the moment, aloud, to my kids (it's their first time hearing the story - they are 5 and 7). There is no better feeling in the whole world than sharing something that holds such an important place in your heart with the ones you love.
The Belagariad series by David Eddings is my comfort reading. I got it first when I was 15 and every now and again go through them. The characters are well formed and the writing just flows.Its not high art but it is wonderful to be in there.
Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky, 1821-1881. The Brothers Karamazov ©1880, orig. Russian.
trans David Magarshack, 1899-1977. ©1956, English trans. Since DM is British, it was more welcome, accurate, original, authentic {cf., «echt», operative word in German} in my opinion.
The Magarshack translation pub. Penguin Classic paperback edition outranks others, merely because I came at this readon from a German Literature scholar POV.
It is a richly endowed Russian novel, steeped in realism which may prove overly-specific with its tediously detailed explication, no surprise if one has read through any similar Russian literary works of the time.
It's an investment well worth every jot and tittle and moment and rereading the parts because it's so very packed, a blessing for the effort.
Most novels have one or maybe two climaxes and dénouements. This novel has from 5 to 7, depending upon your definitions.
T H White's "The Once and Future King". It was one of my college comfort reads, along with "The Hobbit", the Lord of the Rings trilogy and John Steinbeck's "Travels with Charley". Also Christmas Carol" which I read on Christmas Eve every year.
Thirteenth Tale by Dianne Setterfield is my absolute favourite and A Year by the Sea by Joan Anderson is one that I always re-read every year.I also read Twelve Days of Christmas by Trisha Ashley in the run up to Chritmas every year too.
Frankenstein. I've read it more times than any other book I have read.
I'd have to go with:Jim Butcher's Dresden Files
The Forever War by Joe Haldeman
and Mating Rituals of Migratory Humans by Jason Richter
When I was a teen it was The Talisman by Stephen King and Peter Straub; now, I'd say As I Lay Dying by Faulkner.
I have read several books and book series multiple times, including Frankenstein, The Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, Moby Dick, and To Kill a Mockingbird. However, the book I return to more than any other since I first read it in eighth grade is The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
I reread 'The Lord of the Rings' every few years and "The Once and Future King" by T.H. White. Dickens and Austen also stand up to frequent rereadings. Oh! and "The Dark Is Rising" series by Susan Cooper.
Lord of the Rings trilogy. Have kept reading it lately to remind myself that Middle Earth is NOTHING like the hideous place portrayed on film by the horrid Peter Jackson - worst thing to come out of NZ in a long time! LOTR is full of honour, courage, poetry, light, colour and humour, and is the greatest 'quest' tale ever told IMHO.I've also re-read a number of times the William Gibson trilogy - Neuromancer/Mona Lisa Overdrive/Count Zero. It always amazes me to read how prescient he is.
Dramapuppy wrote: "I don't usually reread my very favorite books but one I've read a ton is The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime."Me too, I've re-read it lately for the third time to help with understanding of the autism spectrum in my uni course. It is a wonderful story.
Mary wrote: "Lord of the Rings trilogy. Have kept reading it lately to remind myself that Middle Earth is NOTHING like the hideous place portrayed on film by the horrid Peter Jackson - worst thing to come out o..."
Duane wrote: "Probably "A Canticle for Leibowitz"... it keeps sneaking up on me here and there and I keep browsing through it"Oh, thanks for reminding me of that title. I haven't read it since I was a young adult, and I'm way past that description now. It is a really fascinating book. Now that you've prompted my memory, I must put it on my TBR list. Thanks Duane.
Mary wrote: "Duane wrote: "Probably "A Canticle for Leibowitz"... it keeps sneaking up on me here and there and I keep browsing through it"Oh, thanks for reminding me of that title. I haven't read it since ..."
I was so pleased for the reminder about this book I looked it up on wikipedia. It was first published in 1960 and has never gone out of print. As the chief cook and bottle washer in my household, I am sometimes reminded of 'Canticle' when I write out a shopping list.
I can always always ALWAYS read "The Catcher in the Rye" by J. D. Salinger. It has to be my favorite novel.
My favourite book counts for this! The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien, partially because it's a good story and partially because it was the story my Dad would read to me before I went to bed, voices and all.
Aside from that I've always found Northern Lights (Philip Pullman) and Sabriel (Garth Nix) good to read again. Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is slowly growing on me so it would probably be unfair to exclude it from this list!
With Sabriel I found the setting incredibly fascinating for some reason and I'm looking forward to the new one that's out sometime in the next month or two... perfect excuse to go back and read it again!
Aside from that I've always found Northern Lights (Philip Pullman) and Sabriel (Garth Nix) good to read again. Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice is slowly growing on me so it would probably be unfair to exclude it from this list!
With Sabriel I found the setting incredibly fascinating for some reason and I'm looking forward to the new one that's out sometime in the next month or two... perfect excuse to go back and read it again!
Not sure if it would be considered a novel but my all time favorite story is A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens.I read it every Christmas and I collect different editions of the book and I have 5 DVDs of the story.
I usually don't re-read books, but for these two I've made exceptions:
The secret garden and
The Lord of the Rings (complete trilogy) ^_^
For the first half of my life it was "Love Comes Softly" by Janette Oke (must have read it 20+), but then I discovered A Voice in the Wind by Francine Rivers which opens with an incredible description of Rome sacking Jerusalem. I go to it repeatedly only to discover I loaned out/gave away my last copy!http://www.francinerivers.com/books/v...
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