39 Comments
User's avatar
Barry McWilliams's avatar

Lord of the Rings re-read. Currently in book two and realised Iβ€˜m here for Treebeard. His choice quotes, IMHO

β€žI am not going to tell you my name, not yet at any rate. For one thing it would take a long while: my name is growing all the time, and I've lived a very long, long time; so my name is like a story. Real names tell you the story of the things they belong to.β€œ

And

β€žβ€¦the smell of the air! I used to spend a week just breathing.β€œ

Caroline Donahue's avatar

That last line is gorgeous. Love!

Emma Gannon's avatar

This Laurie Colwin re-issue. Look how cute the cover is! https://uk.bookshop.org/a/153/9781474615990

Liza Debevec's avatar

I discovered Laurie Colwin last year through her food writing. Such a gem.

Caroline Donahue's avatar

I've got to get on this one!

Caroline Donahue's avatar

Omg I keep seeing those covers and drooling!

Anna Brones's avatar

I'm pulling out my copy of Moominvalley in November for good measure!

Anna Brones's avatar

Tove Jansson is always here for us 😍

Claire Shaw's avatar

We're deep in Famous Five land as a family holiday might now. My little one is addicted. Also venturing into Peter Brown's Wild Robot.

Caroline Donahue's avatar

How sweet- I ended up getting a copy of Mr. Tiger Goes Wild on your recommendation. Love me some Peter Brown!

Claire Shaw's avatar

I'm going to do a reading of that. It's so poingent.

Liza Debevec's avatar

I just finished Scaffolding by Lauren Elkin and Notes to Self by Emily Pine. For non fiction/self help I am reading The five things we cannot change by David Richo.

Caroline Donahue's avatar

David Richo is so fantastic- I loved that book. I've got Notes to Self in my giant teetering pile, and can't wait to get to it. I've been eyeing Scaffolding as well - what did you think?

Liza Debevec's avatar

I liked Scaffolding, especially as I am a Francophile and love Rohmer movies. But also, I found beautiful parallels to Annie Ernaux and Colombe Schneck’s books (some of which Elkin translated). And there was something also linking this to another recent read- All Fours by Miranda July. I just love how women write these days and the insights we get in to the female psyche, in so many ways it is a great time to be a woman (and I am not minimizing the violence and hatred against women and - Scaffolding actually has that as subtle leitmotiv- there is just now such a wonderful abundance of good women writers being published).

Caroline Donahue's avatar

I am adoring women's writing these days. You have definitely convinced me! I've got Ernaux on the nightstand, too. (Picture my nightstand as the size of a New York City avenue block and that almost captures the volume of books I want to read at all times.) So much to read!

Rebecca Baugniet's avatar

I loved Notes to Self. Read it two years ago and went back to it just recently. I love the honesty and nuance with which she tackles challenging relationships. Going to go look for Scaffolding now!

Carolyn Henderson Lukas's avatar

I am working my way through Meditations for Mortals by Oliver Burkeman. The subtitle of this non-fiction book is - Four weeks to embrace your limitations and make time for what counts. He is also the author of Four Thousand Weeks. This book has been illuminating.

Caroline Donahue's avatar

I just finished that one last month β€” loved 4000 Weeks as well. So glad you’re enjoying it. What’s been your favorite discovery?

Claire Venus ✨'s avatar

'Your Soul Had a Dream, Your Life was It by Rebecca Campbell - obsessed.

Caroline Donahue's avatar

Oooh - this sounds juicy!

Erica S's avatar

I'm reading How to Write One Song by Jeff Tweedy. He's so cheerful and encouraging. Not fiction, but very uplifting 🎸

Caroline Donahue's avatar

This is not fiction exclusive! This sounds excellent. I've been reading more nonfiction this year, which I've really enjoyed. Thank you for sharing this.

Kern Carter's avatar

40 Rules Of Love by Elif Shafak

Caroline Donahue's avatar

She's so wonderful. Are you loving it?

Santina Kerslake's avatar

The Silence Factory by Bridget Collins - The Echo of Old Books by Barbara Davis

Caroline Donahue's avatar

Lovely- thanks for sharing these!

Anne Bishop's avatar

Table for Two by Amor Towles, short stories set in New York and Los Angeles. Not as gripping as his novels but I would recommend it.

Caroline Donahue's avatar

Sometimes a short story is just the ticket. I read Tuesdays in Winter by Lily King about this time last year and it was exactly what I needed.

Miranda van den Heuvel's avatar

The extraordinary life of Sam Hell.

Finished it in one day.

The Women by Kristin Hannah about the women in Vietnam.

Anything from Fredrick Backman 😍

Caroline Donahue's avatar

Great ones! I love a book you read in a day. Such a treat.

Grace Jeschke's avatar

The last comfort/inspiration book I read is Matt Haig’s The Life Impossible. For easy comfort I usually browse romance and YAβ€”some authors I’ve read multiples: Talia Hibbert, Beth O’Leary, Erica Bauermeister, Natalia Sylvester. Some other books that jump out for me: The Time-Traveler’s Wife, Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine, Before the Coffee gets Cold, The House on the Cerulean Sea, Parakeet. Also anything by Ali Smith. I’ll take a well-written memoirβ€”especially if it has funny momentsβ€” Hungry Heart by Jennifer Weiner is one of them.

Also lurking for other ideas. Currently slogging through multiple NF books … will need to slide into a novel soon! πŸ“š

Caroline Donahue's avatar

House in the Cerulean Sea! πŸ’―So good! We are all slogging together. Weβ€˜ll read our way to recovery and resistance. πŸ’ͺ

Rebecca Baugniet's avatar

I love this collection of comfort reads! I have been in need of gentle reads this year. Recent favourites include This is Happiness by Niall Williams, Where to Begin by Cleo Wade, 52 Things to Look Forward To by Sophie Blackall, and Darling by India Knight.

User's avatar
Comment deleted
Nov 21, 2024
Comment deleted
Caroline Donahue's avatar

I’ve got this one up next on audio. So excited!