The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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What's your all time best novel that you can repeatedly read ?


and

The Secret Garden is one of my favorite books from my childhood. I just finished rereading it and found I enjoyed it as much as I did when I was young

It's the same for me Ruth! And I find it amazing because usually books from our childhood don't have the same effect on us when we grow up...

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Kendra G. ツ ~There is some good in this world, and it's worth fighting for~
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rated it 5 stars

2. Ivanhoe
3. Red Storm Rising


Besides Percy, I re-read Follett's Pillars and World books, Pauline Gedge's two books about Thu the overreaching Egyptian girl. Gedge's books are a wonder to me, a model for historical fiction writers.

Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe and a lot of his other stuff because you have to if you are going to go down that path.
The Stand a few times and I've read Mark Helprin's A Soldier of the Great War multiple times.
I find myself re-reading To the Lighthouse throughout my life. I think it's because when I read it in college it was the first time I realized a book could be more than just a story.

1)The Hobbit (incl. LOTR)
2)Tale of two cities
3)Pride and Prejudice
I cannot stop reading these books. In fact they are actually quite worn in from me reading it so much. :)

The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings. Tolkien not only invented his own world, he seemed to live in it. Who else would invent his own language, complete with alphabet and grammar?
The Uplift War by David Brin. Brin does a better job of creating believable aliens than any other author I've read.
Shards of Honor by Lois McMaster Bujold. I love the way she develops her characters.

Fitzgerald's writing is exquisite."
Amen to that. So many writers try their hand at that prose-poetry/unusual-poetic-metaphors style, but only a few writers actually do it well. Fitzgerald is one of those rare writers.

*Watership Down
*The Count of Montecristo
*The Sherlock Holmes canon
*The Conan saga
*100 Years of Solitude
*Tom Sawyer/Huckleberry Finn
*The Hobbit/Lord of the Rings
With the exception of Dickens and Tolkien, I read all of these while in my teens, and I keep enjoying them now, four months shy of fifty.



1. The Hobbit (Easter)
2. Witches Abroad (Halloween)
3. Hofather (Christmas)


The Hobbit
Harry Potter
The Secret Garden
Girl of the Limberlost
Hawaii by James Michener
West of Eden by Harry Harrison
The Girl, the Gold Watch and Everything by John D. MacDonald
I am sure I could think of a number of others, given a little time.

It IS that kind of story. Paul Morella does a one man show each year in the MD/DC area where he gets on stage and retells the story and it's great fun. I saw it at the Olney Theater last year

I'll also confess to re-reading Terry Pratchett's Night Watch several times. TP's best as far as I'm concerned. Not only is it centred on my favourite character, Sam Vimes, its a nail biting story which draws out dramatic tension to the nth degree before Pratchett lets everything snap into its rightful place.

I read it every Christmas and I collect different editions of the book and I have ..."
Which movie version is your favorite, Terri?



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