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The Ten Books That have stayed with you / Influenced You

Seek the Fair Land by Walter Macken and Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4 by Sue Tiwnsend . I read both these when I was 13 when i was stuck inside all summer with a broken arm and they played a huge part in my love of reading developing.
Then Dracula because its just a book that got right inside my head and i've loved everytime I've read it.
Next is Thief of Time by Terry Pratchett because it introduced me to the world of what became my favourute author.
Then The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly, firstly because its amazing and secondly it was one of the first books Trelawn introduced me to.
The Hobbit because its level of imagination shows how fantasy can be at its best.
Harry Potter because its a set of books that can capture anyones imagination young or old and a series which never dissapointed me.
Wool by Hugh Howey because it came from nowhere and drew me right in.
American Gods by Neil Gaimanbecause it was a book that i really missed reading when i finished it.
World Without End by Ken Follett because i honestly felt i lived every page .

Jane Eyre
The Shadow of the Wind
Gaudy Night
Mallory Towers
Harry Potter
The Hundred Year Old Man
The Bronze Horseman
Bleak House
Goodnight Mr Tom
The Ballad of Reading Gaol

I forgot to respond to this when Jodell posted it. Got distracted by group stuff.
Let me see...
To kill a Mocking Bird- Harper Lee
Lord if the Flies- William Holding
Catch 22- Joseph Heller
Player of Game- Iain M. Banks
Use of Weapons- Iain M. Banks
Strumpet City- James Plunkett
Paddy Clarke, Ha Ha Ha- Roddy Doyle
The Subtle Knife- Philip Pullman
Slaughterhouse V- Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
These are three first ten books I can think of that made me go "whoa" when I read them. I'm sure there are more, but I didn't want to think to hard on it to keep in the spirit of the original post by Jodell.
Let me see...
To kill a Mocking Bird- Harper Lee
Lord if the Flies- William Holding
Catch 22- Joseph Heller
Player of Game- Iain M. Banks
Use of Weapons- Iain M. Banks
Strumpet City- James Plunkett
Paddy Clarke, Ha Ha Ha- Roddy Doyle
The Subtle Knife- Philip Pullman
Slaughterhouse V- Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
These are three first ten books I can think of that made me go "whoa" when I read them. I'm sure there are more, but I didn't want to think to hard on it to keep in the spirit of the original post by Jodell.

Iain Banks - The Wasp Factory
Audrey Neffenegger - The Time traveller's Wife
Iain M Banks - The Player of Games
Sarah Winman - When God Was a rabbit
Richard Dawkins - The God Delusion
Jeffrey Eugenides - Middlesex
Donna Tartt - The Secret History
Tony Buzan - Master your memory
Jonathan Franzen - The Corrections
Irvine Welsh - Trainspotting
p.s. Who / what is Jodell? is that a reference to another thread or something?


Good call. Great book. Probably the best thing I read in my younger years.

Don't think too long on it but post what comes to mind. Some explanations can help but..."Thank you Paul... Could we do one about Irish vs American food to?? I really want to know if its true that black pudding has pig blood??????

The End of the world as we know it:
Mostly Bob
A crowbar in a Buddhist garden
The Outsiders
The Reader
The Glass Castle
Dirty Red
Dusty
The Giving Tree
these are some that stayed with me, got lots more but just out the top of my head.



Seek the Fair Land by Walter Macken and Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4 by Sue Tiwnsend . I read both these when I was 13 when i was stuck inside all summer with a broken arm and th..." I read the hobbit in high school.


The End of the world as we know it:
Mostly Bob
A crowbar in a Buddhist garden
The Outsiders
The Reader
The Glass Castle
Dirty Red
Dusty
The Giving Tree
Wuthering Height
these are some that stayed w..."







Others don't like you, don't want you there, treat you like crap so you set out on your own.
Heathcliff proves them wrong by becoming successful. But by then Cathy is married.
So Heathcliff is hurting badly and acts out. Most men act out in evil ways when hurt.
I myself grew up in foster care and I always felt like the outsider, and crushed on a boy I could never have because, who was I just a kid who was in foster care. So it hit a nerve with me.
If you never felt like the odd one out you know. That is what I took from it. Of course when I read this book I was a teenager. I wanted Heathcliff to get the happy ending. Choose a different girl, have a happy ending. But as we all know in books as in life there is not always a HEA>


Here's ten (maybe twelve) books that left the most profound effect on me though
Infinite Jest, David Foster Wallace - didn't know you could do that with a novel. Complex, funny, sad, needs at least two bookmarks, hugely influential
Ulysses, James Joyce - again, didn't see how you could do all that in a book. Just how could seem one write a book like that?
The Last Temptation, Nikos Kazantzikas - raised Catholic in Ireland in the 70s/80s; opened a new way of thinking about God, faith...: the big stuff
Laughing Gas, PG Wodehouse - probably not his best novel but the first of Plum's I read. Opened a wonderful world of books to me and showed me where so many other humorists got their influence
The Secret Diary of Adrain Mole, Aged 13 3/4, Sue Townsend - came along when I was 13 and 3/4 and was just perfect. Still funny
Empire Falls, Richard Russo - first Pulitzer winner I actively sought out. Ever since, the Pulitzers are my go-to prizes.
Jaws, Peter Benchley - Pulp, but the first "adult" book I read. At my age, the were no YA categories: you read the whole children's library, then plunk full on into the adult section. Never looked back. (Notable mention here could also go to The Godfather by Mario Puzo or The Rats by James Herbert)
The Modern Library, Colm Toibin & Carmen Callil - a list book that came out around the turn of the 20th century. A hundred books, written in English, published between 1950 and 1999. A great dipper and has pointed me in some great directions. Still one of the best lists. Totally subjective and as opinionated as goes with that.
Christine, Stephen King - read this when it came out first. I don't remember why I chose this particular one and not any of his others that had come out by then. I'm still reading him thirty odd years later
Lord of the Rings, JRR Tolkien - this list isn't entirely about the good stuff. I hate LOTR so much! To this day, I'm allergic to anything with elves, dwarves, gold, dragons, etc. - the whole fantasy thing. It's had an influence on my taste in book-cover fonts! I can't even bring myself to say George RRRRRRR Martin's full name. To me, he's just George Martin and let the Beatles/Game of Thrones fans sort it out themselves.

I should probably have added Ulysses for the same reason.

Here's ten (maybe twelve) books that left the most profound effect on me though
Infinite Jest, David Foster Wallace - didn't kn..."
Dave, I didn't say life changing just books that kind of stayed with you. On your list Ive read Lord of the Rings while in high school.

Agree with Paul: Ulysses influenced me to stay away from Joyce for another couple of years. It might be a while until I can open a JJ novel again.


Roots
Centennial
Othello
The Outsiders
Romeo and Juliet
Wuthering Heights
Diary of Anne Frank
My daughter list in school:
The Great Gasby
Ethan Frome
The Outsiders
Great Expectations
The Scarlett Letter
Ill bet in Ireland the kids were given different classics than Americans. Or maybe not. If I were a betting person Id say. (Different)



I've listed in order of my reading of the books. Unsurprisingly, for those that know me, it's a very NI centric list!
The list:
The Shankill Butchers - Martin Dillon - a very disturbing account of a UVF mass murder gang that I originally read as a teenager - more than anything before then, it brought home to me the futility of the conflict here
Balling the Jack - Frank Baldwin - not a big novel, but one that introduced me to contemporary fiction-previous to reading this, I mistakenly associated fiction with the classics / books I had to study in school
High Fidelity - Nick Hornby - totally appealed to the music obsessive in me
Eureka Street - Robert McLiam Wilson - one of my favourite ever books, which I first read in a day in Pompeii of all places - Wilson perfectly captured the city I was living in at the time in a poignant but often hilarious way
Divorcing Jack - Colin Bateman - another hilarious but very clever crime novel set in Belfast that has resulted in my shelf of over 20 Bateman books-it's only recently that he's become tired as a writer in my eyes
The International - Glenn Patterson - another book set in Belfast over a single day at the outset of the Troubles-the first novel that I read where the protagonist's sexuality was stated but incidental to the story-this book had a big impact on me, and is probably my favourite ever novel.
The Belfast Anthology - Patricia Craig - a great book that I pored over in my mid twenties and must read again sooner rather than later
Northline - Willy Vlautin - an amazingly evocative novel about a casino worker in Reno - I'm nearly scared to read it again in case I don't enjoy it as much as I did that first time.
The Life and Times of Harvey Milk - Randy Shilts - the biography of an inspirational character and the account of the shocking aftermath of his murder
Let the Great World Spin - Colum McCann - the perfect NYC novel for me!

The Cay,
Lies of Silence,
December Bride
The Grass is singing
Emma, I still like Wuthering Heights in my angst driven teenage world it was better than some tv I had to watch. ha ha ...FLipper.....

Dave - I like your list for its variety and the fact Ulysses is there:)
There are books that impressed me years ago that I'd like to go back to to see if they hold up such as Doris Lessing's The Golden Notebook. I loved Let the Great World Spin so that's be on my list. There may be a way to sort one's Ravelry library by star rating...that's help.

--the Anne of Green Gables series.
--The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger
--King Lear
--The Remains of the Day
--A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
--Colin Dexter's Inspector Morse series (the first mysteries I ever read and started my addiction to them)
--In a Sunburnt Country by Bill Bryson (the first of his I read--and have tried to read all of the rest of his travel nonfiction)
--The Return of the Native (the first Hardy novel I read--and then wanted to read all of his)
--Frank O'Connor's short stories
--Flannery O'Connor's short stories and letters
--A Book of Silence by Sara Maitland
--The Turning by Tim Winston
--William Trevor's short stories
Even though this is a baker's dozen and not 10, I'm certain that I'll remember some life changing book about five minutes after I post this!

Wow! I bet they were beating the punters back with a stick when that came out
@Cathleen. I haven't read Bryson for a few years. I'll have to rectify that, soon.

Dave:
Well my Daughter had to read it for school then we watched the movie. It was quite Angsty, and sad. I don't understand what you mean on your last sentence. You guys have a witty sense of humor but its not the words we use so Yeha I have a hard time keeping up on some of the things you all say on here. Because I don't understand the wording or what your trying to convey....sorry.


Cathleen - I am so glad you included short stories. I'd have to add Alice Munro to my list, and love Frank O'Connor and William Trevor.
Allan - I thought about adding Eureka Street. I think all the comments here will help me come up with a more definitive list of 10.

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Don't think too long on it but post what comes to mind. Some explanations can help but arent required