The book you like most discussion
What was the book that had a significant impact on your life?
message 1:
by
Viel
(new)
Oct 29, 2023 07:48PM

reply
|
flag


Not sure which book had the biggest impact on me, though. I'll have to think about it.





I read it in my early teens and ended up being somewhat like the character, albeit in the music world not the theatre.
This was coincidence and not because I emulated him purposefully, but to this day - decades later - no one has spoken to my nature in quite the same way as that book did. In difficult times, I often picked it up again, or considered it's light hearted approach to chaos, and it got me through.
It also definitely informed one of my own books; "Rock Star" which is a satirical reflection on the journey I took through the London music industry. Ultimately, "Schultz" helped me survive the joys and pitfalls of it, I have no doubt.
(shameless plug: I am eager for reviewers of said book, if you might be interested, see my profile and DM me for a copy)

I loved that book, and it took me to Tarifa with nothing but a backpack and a guitar, and I was so disappointed to find the place now full of kite surfers instead of the world he described in that book. Naive of me, and obvious when I realised, but it also prodded me to continue on to Morocco the next year, and so this book actually inspired a number of great adventures for me.
Good call, ser!

and
Fiction: The Gate to Women's Country by Sheri Tepper

Dune - I was young, my Dad gave it to me and that was a big deal since it was a very "older people" book for me at that age... but it radically bombarded my perceptions of politics, religion, human society and behaviours and many many things and sparked interests in philosophy, social anthropology, reading about other religions, etc, etc that all added to helping my mind grow and evolve past what it might have been otherwise.
VALIS - my parents used to be pretty liberal about letting me pick books and for a long time we went every sunday to this wonderful little bookstore and this was one I picked up when I was maybe... 10? 11? .. which in hindsight, maybe not the brightest choice because this was my introduction to PKD's work and while I loved it immensely, it is in essence him at his most theological and philosophical (which I learned years later) and was another book that exploded my perceptions of the world we live in and the things we are taught and take for granted/as gospel by the societies around us - in its own way, it put me on the first steps to the concept of humanism and was the first brick in the foundation of my life-long love of the works of the author.
Asterix and Obelix - simple, clean, dense, fun, riotously cheeky and witty and some of the most timelessly brilliant books ever created, in my humble opinion. I read them over and over and over and continue to do so even to this day - there is something truly remarkable about these tales by Goscinny and Uderzo about this tiny Gaulish village that transcends so much. Simply love them.
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - if you know this one, then you know it and not much need to explain. It is a voice unique to me even now and has so much in it to love. This whole series is pretty much at the top of my desert-island reading list.
For the Man Who Has Everything - a one-off comic that I bought with my own saved up money at a book fair as a kid. It was my first experience of the legendary Alan Moore's work. I had read many comics as a child but this was different, this had adult concepts and thought-provoking moments, including some very heart-wrenching stuff that was unique to the young me and spoke so nicely about the ideas of regrets, dreams and wishing and the pains that come with it.
So... yeah, off the top of my head, these are the ones I'd feel okay putting here. There are a few more I'm sure that would fit the bill but I don't want to push the boundary of the topic-brief of "a book" :D

Oh that was lovely! I came across a single edition that had I think 3 books in the series together - I had never heard of it and it was a genuine delight. I even remember watching the movie which I maintain was very much under-appreciated (as are many Brendan Frasier movies).
Conceptually wonderful and I remember thinking and being surprised that it was not a much more popular book/series at the time.

I first read this book as part of a class in college. At the time, it was probably my darkness, low point of my life(realizing it now looking back) and my perspective of it was more negative cause I was feeling the same way as the character did.
I recently read the book again, knowing I had a connection to it somehow and after a few years, I really did change my outlook in a more optimistic way and I had more of a positive reaction to the book.
In the book, you never knew if the main character was doing better and was finally going to have a good life or if she was in this cycle that would ultimately leading her to unalive. I will always say that it’s not necessarily my FAVORITE book of all time but it is one that I was grateful enough to change my perspectives.

One year later the film came late at night during the week on German TV and I had no VCR before the summer of 1980. So I stayed awake and watched the Jodie Foster & Martin Sheen film and was as thrilled as I was with the book (Laird Koenig had written the screen play).
On the next day I went to a record store in Braunschweig in my lunch break and bought both Chopin piano concertos by Arthur Rubinstein. - 30 years later I met my third husband with whom I'm still happily married. Somehow we talked about TLGWLDTL and he told me that he went to a record store on the next day after watching the movie to buy Arthur Rubinstein's first piano concerto. In that moment I just knew that we are soul mates. :)
From 1988 on I started wearing duffel coats just like Rynn Jacobs, I read more about Sylvia Plath, I visited the Emily Dickinson homestead in Amherst, MA. There were so many things that influenced me in this book.

forever thankful

Pratchett will have that effect! :D





Is that the one by Sara Donati?

I read it in primary school. Before then, I had known the world could be unfair to women, but my eyes had yet to be opened to the true extent of that reality.
A more recent one is Reflecting on the Names of Allah by Jinan Yousef. It's done wonders for my relationship with God, and is largely responsible for this new peace and resilience that I have just become acquainted it.




As an adult? The Last Conversations of St Therese of Lisieux, for one. So many, but that one did keep me sane at a time of enormous stress--and in those days I wasn't a Catholic.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Fault in Our Stars (other topics)Delilah Green Doesn't Care (other topics)
The Prophet (other topics)