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Sunday, December 7, 2014

Book Project ~ Participation Request!

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I’m working on a major book list project. It’s a combination of my own must-read suggestions and a “best books to read” challenge for myself this coming year—something similar to Amazon's 100 Books to Read in a Lifetime.

So give me your top 5-10 must-read books.

Classics. Modern fiction. Non-fiction. Historical fiction. Children’s books. Poetry. Short stories. The best of the best.

My book list includes books I loved, obscure (The Little French Girl) or well-known (To Kill a Mockingbird), books I hated but everyone should read anyway (1984), and books that made me think (Hamlet).

Help me create my “best books to read” 2015 Challenge!

 

Share your best books. Tell me what genre. And give me a reason.

22 comments:

  1. The Red Keep. It's the fiction book I got my husband to read that turned him into a fiction reader. Now he understand my desire for more fiction books and takes a turn reading most all of the fiction books that the children read.

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  2. I loved Chasing Francis: A Pilgrim's Tale by Ian Morgan Cron. I've read it twice now and want to read it again and take notes. Thanks for all your book posts. I love them!

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  3. White Oleander – Janet Fitch
    Financial Peace – Dave Ramsey
    The Two Sides of Love – Gary Smalley & John Trent
    The Signature of All Things – Elizabeth Gilbert
    The Glass Castle – Jeannette Walls
    A Tree Grows in Brooklyn – Betty Smith
    New York – Edward Rutherford
    In the Sanctuary of Outcasts – Neil White
    Breaking Night: A Memoir of Forgiveness – Liz Murray
    A Thousand Splendid Suns – Khaled Hosseini

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  4. Oh...I love book lists and recommendations! I have read quite a bit but I am only listing those that I feel are worthwhile. The Odyssey - Homer (Robert Fagles), The Red Tent - Anita Diamanti, Bloodroot - Amy Greene, The Signature of All Things - Elizabeth Gilbert, The Winter Sea - Susanna Kearsley, 3:16 The Numbers of Hope - Max Lucado, Bitter Sweet & Bread and Wine - both by Shauna Niequist, and 1000 Gifts - Ann Voskamp. I started Mere Christianity by C.S. Lewis but I am taking it very slow. So far I am liking it! I believe that is it although I have a suspicion that I am forgetting some.
    Thank you, Gretchen

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  5. Anne of Green Gables (sweetest story ever)
    To Kill a Mockingbird (favorite novel ever)
    A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (slice of life, a way to “walk in someone else’s shoes”)
    Night (holocaust autobiography. Must read)
    Davita’s Harp (and really any book by Chaim Potok – deeply contemplative novels about the ways religion &/or ideology shape our life)
    Mere Christianity (C.S. Lewis breaking Christianity down to its most important bits in an understandable way, must read)
    Animal Farm (political dystopia, must read)
    Warriors Don’t Cry (autobiography/memoir of integration experience following Brown v. Board of Education, must read)
    The Little French Girl (simply a beautiful novel)
    The Glass Castle (fascinating modern autobiography)
    Mallory’s Oracle (whole series, actually, by Carol O’Connell – my favorite mystery-suspense-pulp-fiction series of all time)
    The Giver (dystopian novel, cautionary tale warning against giving up freedom/independence/individuality as a trade for safety & presumably pain-avoidance)

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  6. Love that you're doing this and asking us to contribute. Most challenging for sure. In no particular order but trying to be broad with poetry, fiction, theology, spirituality and some I just loved:
    Island of the World by M. O'Brien Gilead by M. Robinson
    Til We Have Faces by CS Lewis
    Godric by Fredrick Buechener
    Reversed Thunder by E. Peterson
    The Everlasting Man by GK Chesterton
    Prayer by Hans Urs ron Balthasar
    Poems by GM Hopkins
    The Power and the Glory by G. Greene
    The Brothers K by DJ Duncan (a must read for you as you are from Oregon!!)

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  7. Gilead (of course)
    The Violent Bear It Away (Flannery O'Connor)
    The Ragamuffin Gospel and Ruthless Trust (both by Brennan Manning)
    Peace Like a River
    Anna Karenina
    Jane Eyre
    East of Eden (Steinbeck)
    Winnie the Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner
    The Jesus Storybook Bible

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  8. I am convicted that I own, but have yet to actually read many of the best books. Nevertheless, here are my favorites that I think would better anyone:
    The Bible
    Angela's Ashes
    Grimm and Anderson's Fairy Tales
    The Chronicles of Narnia
    A Tale of Two Cities
    Jayber Crow
    Gone With the Wind
    Walden
    Hamlet
    I think adults can tend to overlook classic works written for children and we should not. There is much to be gained.

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  9. I second Anne of Green Gables, To Kill a Mockingbird, and The Brothers K (my current read--maybe a little premature to recommend, but it is the most wonderful blend so far of family drama, humor, and deep theological musings. It may even inspire me to read The Brothers Karamazov, which is nothing short of miraculous! )

    Other favorites:
    Understood Betsy ( right up there with Anne, plus a lot to chew on as a parent)
    Pride and Prejudice
    The Shallows (well-written, thought-provoking nonfiction about technology)

    What a fun project!

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  10. Wow, this is hard!

    You've read a lot of books I'd put on here, so I'll try to put some on that I've not noticed if you've read or not:

    Walking on Water by Madeline L'Engle
    The Prodigal God by Tim Keller
    Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
    Middlemarch by George Eliot
    The Maytrees by Annie Dillard
    The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
    The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
    The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery
    Possession: A Romance – A. S. Byatt
    The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald

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  11. I'm loving all the suggestions so far! Keep them coming! :D

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  12. The impossible chore. 5-10 only?! :)

    Someone beat me to one of my absolute favorite novels--
    Godric by Buechener.

    I second
    Til We Have Faces (Lewis)
    and Gerard Manley Hopkins

    and add
    -Tinkers (Paul Harding; a quiet, moving book that won the Pulitzer)
    -One Foot in Eden (Ron Rash; another that quietly pries one's heart wide open)
    -all of Nobel winner Par Lagervist's novels I've read [The Dwarf, Barabbas, The Eternal Smile, The Sibyl, and more.]
    -Gene Wolfe's Book of the Short Sun books (and more by Wolfe, a wonderful writer)
    -R.A. Lafferty's novels (for the glorious and rollicking use of language above as well as the layers of thought beneath)

    -Chesterton anything

    -Billy Collins

    -Wendell Berry (I prefer his poetry to the novels)

    I have dozens upon dozens more (Tolkien/Karamazov/Tolstoy/SO many children's titles), but those are all names and titles with which you're likely already quite chummy. I tried to add a few to the mix that I don't imagine would be common fare in your literary circles but are oh-so-worthy, and the split second I get off the computer, I'm sure to smack my head and remember 20 more ESSENTIALS that slipped my mind in this mad dash of typing. :)

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  13. Ahh! I love the previous comments so much! I'm trying not to over think it, but just toss out 5 books not yet listed that still haunt me years after reading them.

    The Sparrow - Mary Doria Russell
    Orthodoxy - G. K. Chesterton
    A Wrinkle in Time - Madeliene L'Engle
    Little Women - Louisa May Alcott
    The Best Short Stories of O'Henry - O'Henry


    Can't wait to see the final list!

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  14. A Christmas Carol - Dickens
    All the Light We Cannot See - Doerr
    Walking on Water - Engle
    Falling Upwards - Richard Rohr
    The Gifts of Imperfection - Brene Brown

    Looking forward to this list!

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  15. In case those of us who recommend "Godric" are not emphatic enough--- I'd sort of fallen out of the habit of recommending the book to anyone who crossed my path but now my MUST READ IT is once again ignited and backed up well by:
    http://www.rabbitroom.com/2007/09/godric-a-review/

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  17. Oh, I do hope you'll share all the results and what you have on your list. I'm trying to answer without looking at what everyone else has said. : )

    -Christy by Catherine Marshall (and Julie, but Christy is my favorite)
    -Narnia
    -Anne of Green Gables, et al (and I would include her Story Girl books and Jane of Lantern Hill. Not so much Emily or her short story books though I own them all.)
    -Betsy-Tacy series and most definitely Emily of Deep Valley - my favorite of them all
    -Unbroken
    -Stepping Heavenward by Elizabeth Prentiss
    -The Jesus Storybook Bible

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  18. Uncle Tom's Cabin (the original and the Young Folk's Edition for kids)
    Little Pilgrim's Progress by Helen Taylor

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  19. Books that have stuck with me.
    Fiction

    Michael Phillips/George MacDonald editions

    Emma- Jane Austen

    Miss Read

    P.G. Wodehouse

    Children's Fiction, childhood favorites

    Oh What a Busy Day!- Gyo Fujikawa
    What's For Lunch, Charley? -Margaret Hodges
    Cars and Trucks and Things That Go- Richard Scarry

    Nonfiction

    Let Me Be a Woman(Thoughts for my Daughter)- Elisabeth Elliot

    Rachel Jankovic books on parenting

    Story of Amy Carmichael

    Faithful Women and the Extraordinary God- Noel Piper


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  20. So many good books but I'll just post the ones I keep going back to.

    Wives and Daughters, Elizabeth Gaskell Why: because I find her characters more relatable than J. Austen's and I love them all, good-ish and bad-ish.

    Out of Africa, Isak Dinesen. Why: transporting, colorful, atmospheric, witty, insightful.

    Lake Wobegon Days, Garrison Keillor. Why: read it for the first time as a very young adult and enjoyed the peek into a different US culture than my own. I felt at the time that the author helped me to understand some things that helped me to grow up. And I have read it at least once every two years ever since. It ages well. I know it's not great literature but I love it anyway.

    The Namesake, Jhumpa Lahiri. Why: Beautiful. The three main characters made my soul ache...that's a good thing.

    Persuasion, Jane Austen. Why: the only JA I really enjoy reading over and over. Perhaps it's because in it, as one of her later novels, she shows a bit more maturity in her writing and characterization.

    Bonhoeffer, Eric Metaxas. Why: Amazing person whom I felt that I knew after reading the book the first time.

    Tess of the d'Urbervilles, Thomas Hardy. Why: life does not always turn out well even when we do what we believe to be right. It's a sobering thought, though I draw conclusions about that from a different worldview than Mr. Hardy.

    Any books of ancient Britain (except the King Arthur books) by Rosemary Sutcliff. Why: wonderful young adult, well-researched books from which I have learned much history in an engaging way.

    Grace For the Good Girl, Emily Freeman. Why: I'm still wondering how she got inside my head and helped me to understand myself!

    Short Stories, Leo Tolstoy. Why: I'm a big Tolstoy fan and adore anything he penned. But I believe that his short stories will be less daunting to readers today and yet are equal in quality to the longer works and might lead to them being read, too.

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  21. I forgot to say Great Expectations!!

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  22. I'm excited for your list! Two off the top of my head are East of Eden and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.

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