A special note: I am not listing the Bible on my list because it is THE BOOK, the one book that has ultimately changed my life more than any other, and I believe with all of my heart that it was not written by mortal men, but is the inspired Word of God. The Bible therefore has a separate category all its own so that is why you will not find it on the list, even though I am tempted to put the Psalms of David, Job, Romans, and Revelation as four of the books on my list...
Again, in no particular order:
My Top Twenty-Five -- Give or Take a Few
- East of Eden ~ John Steinbeck
- Brothers Karamazov ~ Dostoevsky
- Chronicles of Narnia ~ C.S. Lewis
- The Lord of the Rings Trilogy ~ J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Fountainhead ~ Ayn Rand
- Absalom, Absalom and Go Down Moses ~ William Faulkner
- The Great Divorce ~ C.S. Lewis
- Night ~ Elie Wiesel
- King Lear, Hamlet, Twelfth Night ~ William Shakespeare
- The Man Who Was Thursday ~ G.K. Chesterton
- All the King's Men ~ Robert Penn Warren
- Shadow of the Wind ~ Carlos Ruiz Zafon
- One Thousand Gifts ~ Ann Voskamp
- Frederick Buechner's Autobiographical Series: Telling Secrets, Sacred Journey, Now and Then
- Can You Drink the Cup and The Wounded Healer ~ Henry Nouwen
- The Scent of Water ~ Elizabeth Goudge
- Anna Karenina ~ Leo Tolstoy
- Hyperspace ~ Michio Kaku
- Wise Blood ~ Flannery O'Connor
- The Sparrow ~ Mary Doria Russell
- Tale of Two Cities ~ Charles Dickens
- Pride and Prejudice ~ Jane Austen
- The Glass Castle ~ Jeanette Walls
- Prince of Tides, Beach Music, South of Broad ~ Pat Conroy
- Cry the Beloved Country ~ Alan Paton
- Out of Africa ~ Isak Dinesin
- The Dispossessed ~ Ursula Le Guin
- The Dune Series ~ Frank Herbert
The BEST of the REST, at least according to The Mom...
- Pensees ~ Blaise Pascal
- Seven Storey Mountain ~ Thomas Merton
- Ulysses ~ James Joyce
- Paradise Lost ~ Milton
- Odyssey ~ Homer
- Inferno ~ Dante
- The Art of the Commonplace ~ Wendell Berry
- Pilgrim at Tinker Creek ~ Annie Dillard
- To Kill A Mockingbird ~ Harper Lee
- The Tapestry ~ Edith Schaeffer
- Peace Like a River ~ Leif Enger
- Ragamuffin Gospel ~ Brennan Manning
- A Wrinkle in Time ~ Madeleine L'Engle
- Winston Churchill, The Last Lion Multi-volume Biography ~ William Manchester
- Of Human Bondage ~ Somerset Maugham
- Walking the Bible and Where God Was Born ~ Bruce Feiler
- Reading Lolita in Tehran ~ Azir Nafisi
- Anne of Green Gables (Series) ~ Lucy Maud Montgomery
- The Dark Is Rising (Series) ~ Susan Cooper
- The Children of Men ~ P.D. James
- The Collected Poems of Robert Frost ~ Robert Frost
- Exodus ~ Leon Uris
- Jane Eyre ~ Charlotte Bronte
- Wuthering Heights ~ Emily Bronte
- Age of Innocence ~ Edith Wharton
- Huckleberry Finn ~ Mark Twain
- On Walden Pond ~ Henry David Thoreau
- Lost Horizon ~ James Hilton
- Tess D'Urbervilles ~ Thomas Hardy
- Contact ~ Carl Sagan
- Candide ~ Voltaire
- The Road ~ Cormac McCarthy
- Kite Runner and A Thousand Splendid Suns ~ Khalid Hosseini
- House of Sand and Fog ~ Andre Dubus
- A Lesson Before Dying ~ Ernest Gaines
- The Awakening ~ Kate Chopin
- Beloved ~ Toni Morrison
- Time Traveler's Wife ~ Audrey Niffenegger
- The Historian ~ Elizabeth Kostova
- The Help ~ Kathryn Stockett
- Edgar Sawtelle ~ David Wroblewski
- Integrity ~ Stephen Carter
- Redeeming Love ~ Francine Rivers
- Catcher in the Rye ~ J.D. Salinger
- 1984 ~ George Orwell
- The Stranger ~ Albert Camus
- Metaphorphosis ~ Franz Kafka
- Faust ~ Goethe
- Doctor Zhivago ~ Boris Pasternak
- Mists of Avalon ~ Marion Zimmer Bradley
- Le Morte D'Arthur ~ Thomas Malory
- Bullfinch's Mythology ~ Bullfinch
- The Constant Gardener ~ John Le Carre
- Hunger Games ~ Suzanne Collins
- A Severe Mercy ~ Sheldon Vanauken
- Hudson Taylor's Spiritual Secret ~ Howard Taylor
- Amy Charmichael: A Chance to Die ~ Elizabeth Eliot
- Christy ~ Catherine Marshall
- Catherine the Great ~ Henri Troyat
- Ten Little Indians, et al ~ Agatha Christie
- Works of Edgar Allen Poe ~ Edgar Allen Poe
- The Civil War ~ Bruce Catton
- Band of Brothers ~ Stephen Ambrose
- Lonesome Dove Series ~ Larry McMurtry
- Snow Falling on Cedars ~ David Guterson
- Joy Luck Club ~ Amy Tan
- Memoirs of a Geisha ~ Arthur Golden
- Shogun ~ James Clavell
- Pillars of the Earth ~ Ken Follett
My Favorite Books I Read as a Child and Loved Again When I Re-Read Them as an Adult
- Winnie the Pooh ~ A.A. Milne
- Black Beauty ~ Anna Sewell
- Little Women ~ Louisa May Alcott
- Black Stallion Series ~ Walter Farley
- Last of the Mohicans ~ James Fenimore Cooper
- The Velveteen Rabbit ~ Margery Williams
- The Secret Garden ~ Frances Hodgson BurnettE.
- Where the Wild Things Are ~ Maurice Sendak
- Heidi ~ Johannah Spyri
- Treasure Island ~ Robert Louis Stevenson
- Peter Pan ~ J.M. Barrie
- The Sword in the Stone ~ T.H. White
- Charlotte's Web ~ E. B. White
- A Swiftly Tilting Planet ~ Madeleine L'Engle
- Misty of Chincoteague ~ Marguerite Henry
Special Note: There are so many books that I could have included and did not include, but I tried to list those books that changed or altered my perspective on life, influenced my worldview, or challenged me in some way; I have also tried to remember those books that stayed with me long after the pages were closed. Some might quibble with the fact that the list is so weighted heavily in the area of fiction, but the majority of my lifetime experiences with reading have been for pleasure and therefore I have been drawn to books that offered the best hope of escape, travel, or adventure!
- Diary of A Young Girl ~ Anne Frank
- The Killer Angels ~ Michael Shaara
- The Bright Shining Lie ~ John Paul Vann
- We Were Soldiers Once...and Young ~ Harold G. Moore
- Siddhartha ~ Hermann Hesse
- The Glass Menagerie ~ Tennessee Williams
- The Scarlet Letter ~ Nathaniel Hawthorne
I will never complain that your list is weighted too heavily toward fiction. That is what I like, so that is what I read - without apology. I have a few quibbles, but only a few (Little Women?! So trite. Such stereotypes. No real characters, only cardboard cut outs of types.).
ReplyDeleteI'm thankful that you posted this list because this year I am going to read 6 classics that I've somehow missed thus far. How have I read no Faulkner? That just seems wrong for a Southern girl who loves books. And the only Russian I've read is A Day in the Life of Ivan Ivanisivech. I'll be asking for suggestions... and using your list.
Oh, you can't leave Les Miserables off of this list (-:)!
ReplyDeleteSo many of the books you've listed are either on my physical bookshelves or my Kobo bookshelf, ready to be re-read. Thank you for your llst. Now I have been reminded of some that I had forgotten and will now seek out!
I had so much fun with this list. I printed out a copy to keep in my book club file. There are quite a few that I haven't read! Can't wait to look into them when I am looking for something great. Thank you so much for sharing on Fabulous Friday at Faith, Trust, & Pixie Dust.
ReplyDeleteWarmly, Michelle