Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Giac Date: 15 Sep 00 - 09:03 AM B. Traven's seven-book series known as the "jungle novels." (Probably his best known novel was The Treasure of The Sierra Madre.) Stranger In A Strange Land, Robert Heinlien (is that spelled right?) As a youngster, anything by Walter Farley (the Black Stallion series, Island Stallion series and those about harness racing). C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia Previously mentioned: The Quincunx, and Ivanhoe.
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Kim C Date: 15 Sep 00 - 10:56 AM Lately, it's The Black Flower by Howard Bahr. I'm on my second pass. I loved this so well I wrote a song about it. Recommended for EVERYONE who loves a good story, whether you normally like historical fiction or not. Also, his second book, The Year of Jubilo, is pretty good too. (For the record, I want to say that I did NOT like Charles Frazier's Cold Mountain, a popular Civil War novel a few years back. I did, however, really enjoy Killer Angels.) The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins Lonesome Dove (but stop there; the others in that series pretty much suck) Anything by Louis L'Amour, especially the Sackett stories Anything by Charles Dickens or Victor Hugo Shakespeare, Shakespeare, and more Shakespeare I love reading historical diaries and letters. I also enjoy theological works by Charles Swindoll. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Jim Dixon Date: 15 Sep 00 - 11:16 AM The Death Ship, by B. Traven is also a great novel. On the plight of poor sailors being exploited by ruthless and greedy ship owners. The Death and Life of Great American Cities, by Jane Jacobs. A very readable essay on city planning, or the lack of it. A strong argument in favor of diversity, especially mixed neighborhoods - mixed rich and poor, mixed commercial and residential, and so on. A Pattern Language, by Christopher Alexander, et al. About architecture, but not just architecture, more about the human environment. It convinced me, among other things, that it's better to own a variety of coffee mugs than a matched set. The Uses of Enchantment, by Bruno Bettelheim. A psychologist on the importance of fairy tales to children, but his insights can be applied to any art form, and any kind of people. "A great book is one that tells you what you already know, but didn't know how to put into words. Or tells you what you already know, but didn't have enough confidence in yourself to say. Or just tells you that you're not alone." You can quote me on that. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Bert Date: 15 Sep 00 - 11:19 AM Not in any sort of order... It Can't Always be Caviar - Johannes Mario Simmel The Golden Keel - Desmond Bagley Trapp's War - Brian Callison 73 North - Dudley Pope The Canterbury Tales - Chaucer The Doctor who Saved Babies (can't remember who by) Wilt - Tom Sharpe Any of the 'Dover' books by Joyce Porter The Land God gave to Cain - Hammond Innes The Moon is a Harsh Mistress - Heinlein The Alice books - Lewis Carrol Sundials - A. P. Herbert Bert - there's loads more I'll think of the moment I hit submit. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST Date: 15 Sep 00 - 11:28 AM "Johnny Got His Gun," -- Dalton Trumbo "A Separate Peace" -- John Knowles
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: SINSULL Date: 15 Sep 00 - 11:52 AM It depends on the time of day, day of year, year of life... but: Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand The Deptford Trilogy by Robertson Davies The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins Moby Dick by Melville anything by Trollope A Prayer For Owen Meanie by John Irving The Nightingale Song, The Perfect Storm, The Raft of the Medusa, Ovid's Metamorphoses, Euripides, Lucretius, Sappho,...not there yet..., Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, Seven Years in Tibet, and endless amounts of horror, science fiction crap, anything on the Spanish Inquisition, Angela's Ashes, anthing on or by Sir Richard Burton (explorer not actor)...back to work. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Wesley S Date: 15 Sep 00 - 11:55 AM Here's a few off the top of my head : Bury my Heart at Wounded Knee - Dee Brown /// The Cowboy and the Cossack - Clair Huffacker /// Little Big Man - Thomas Berger { ?? } /// Ragtime - E L Doctrow /// Tunnel in the Sky - Robert Heinlien /// Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar - Edgar Rice Burroughs /// Any Travis McGee book by John D McDonald /// I've Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up To Me - Richard Farnia |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST,Luther Date: 15 Sep 00 - 11:58 AM LEJ, dunno -- wouldn't be the Sartre novel, would it? |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Metchosin Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:06 PM well the heart remembers what the mind forgets... Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's The Little Prince and The Robe by Lloyd C. Douglas, again not the best but of some personal impact.
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Mbo Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:10 PM --Chanteyranger, sounds like a great book. I'm a big buff on the WWII war in the Pacific...and I lived on Okinawa for 3 years, I would love to read it. --Branwen, does the book have more about that mean little princess and her lassos? --Marion, how could I forget The Hitchhiker Trilogy?? Love that stuff. "Sheesh, you guys are so un-hip, I'm surprised your bums don't fall off" --Zaphod Beeblebrox --Jim Dixon, my sister is a Doyle scholar, and member of the Arthur Conan Doyle Society. She loves that stuff and has read Holmes many times, as well as tons of other stuff, and is currently trying to compile a comple collection of his poetry. All of this has rubbed off on me too! Long live Doyle! I think I forgot to mention the "Dragonriders of Pern" series. My favorite one is a toss up between (no pun intended!) "Dragonsdawn" and the second book..arg, can't remember the name! Dragonquest? I also forgot The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever. Good stuff! --Matt |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Metchosin Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:15 PM Mbo, I was a Thomas Covenant fan at one time too. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Bagpuss Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:17 PM Mbo - I loved The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. I have read all of Stephen Donaldson's stuff. Also, that's my favourite quote for the hitchiker books! As well as "Life, don't talk to me about life" My favourites are probably The Sandman by Neil Gaiman - and all of Gaiman's short stories. He does some great retelling of folk tales / fairy tales. Also everything by Iain Banks - except A Song of Stone, which was uncharacteristically bad. KT |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:20 PM I'm coming in late, so I see that Mbo beat me to Lord of the Rings. I'm only BEGINNING to appreciate it, though, because I've only read it six times. Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Dave (the ancient mariner) Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:29 PM Not found the book yet, here are some of the ones I enjoyed the most. A Man Called Intrepid by Wm. Stevenson Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome Sharpes Rifles (whole series) Bernard Cornwell Grey Seas Under, The Boat That Would'nt Float and The Serpents Coil by Farley Mowat Every book written by the following Authors Winston Churchill, Walter Lord, James Herriot, Allister MacLean, Douglas Reeman, C.S. Forester, Thomas Raddall, Elizabeth Longford, Robert Service, Tristan Jones, Eric Hiscock, Hal Roth, Lillian Beckwith and I have such a large collection in my library I know that I could swamp this thread. Yours, Aye. Dave (who does not watch TV) |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: catspaw49 Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:35 PM I wonder if Douglas Adams could talk to Alanis about irony? Spaw |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: annamill Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:39 PM There are so many good books I have read...Hesse, Gibran, Twain, Heinlin, etc., but the one book that reallu affected my life will not be very popular here I'm afraid. I've heard her name bandied about with contempt more than once, but she changed my life and I respect her very much. Atlas shrugged by Ayn Rand is my very favorite book. It made me sit up and look around. It made me question what I had always just taken for granted. But above all, it made me realize that making and having money wasn't bad!! I no longer wanted to be a parasite, or a boulder pusher. I wanted to be creative, innovative, a doer!! Sorry folks. Love, annamill
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Bagpuss Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:40 PM Apologies to the poster called KT. That's my handle on another site, and sometimes I forget it's not my handle when I sign off here! Bagpuss |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:59 PM If anyone can explain Joyce's Ulysses to me without suggesting I get advanced degrees in Catholic studies, mythology, and Irish history, I'd appreciate it. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Naemanson Date: 15 Sep 00 - 12:59 PM Thomas Covenant - The hero I hated with all my heart and couldn't stop reading about, both times through the series. And Pern! Ah, to go back to the skies of Pern. I'm surprised The Little Prince took so long to show up on this list. Also, where is the Velveteen Rabbit? I left off of my list the book I reviewed recently - Drive Dull Care Away. It is about the art and craft of collecting folk lore. Excellant depiction of the trials and travails of lugging a heavy tape recorder over the rutted tracks on PEI. "Hey, boy, ye be wanting a drink?" |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: annamill Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:04 PM Naemanson, I'm reading Anne McCaffrey now. Her Pegesus series. Not Pern I'm afaid. I loved her Crystal Singer. Love, annamill |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Irish sergeant Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:05 PM Asking a writer what his favorite book is asking for trouble. Anything by Mark Twain, Stephen King or Edgar Allan Poe. Especially Shakespeare. Killer Angels- Michael Shaara Bloodletters and Badmen - Jay Robert Nash To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and any of Ambrose Bierce's Civil War stories. (Check him out Kim C, very fascinating man) Bruce Catton's Civil war histories. The Maigret mysteries by Georges Simenon. Dame Agatha's mysteries. More Later. Kindest regards, Neil HTML line breaks added. -JoeClone 19-Feb-2001. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Linda Kelly Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:21 PM Precious Bane, Mary Webb No Name, Wilkie Collins Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck A Prayer for Owen Meanie, John Irving Pride and Prejudice, Jane Austen and my all time favourite: Little Dorritt, Charles Dickens. HTML line breaks added. -JoeClone 19-Feb-2001. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Doctor John Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:22 PM C. A. Stothard's Monumental Effigies S. Runciman's History of the Crusades The Alice Books De Sade's Works Emsley The Elements The Oxford English Dictionary (The Big One) Homer's Odyssey (in English) Robert Graves' The Greek Myths C V Wedgewood's History of the Great Rebellion, sadly never finished. Anything with lots of good illustrations!! Dr John |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Doctor John Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:24 PM ... and I obviously need a book on HTML! |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Lonesome EJ Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:30 PM DocJohn,thank God you didn't read The Odyssey in the original Homeric Greek.I would have been way too intimidated to speak to you! .>} LEJ |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Metchosin Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:34 PM Dear Guest, you might try reading Ralph Loerich's The Secret of Ullyses, although it is probably out of print and it too is a long and difficult slog based upon psychosomatics and metaonerics. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST,useless Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:41 PM I would have to say God's Word and A Time To Kill by John Grisham. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST,cheryl Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:44 PM Best so far ... John Irving's "A Prayer for Owen Meany." Also, for you Moby Dick fans (it's on my top five, too), a new novel called "Ahab's Wife," has been out for about a year. A fascinating posit. Can't recall the author right off the top of my head but I don't think it's out in paperback yet, so it should be easy to find at the bookseller. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: SINSULL Date: 15 Sep 00 - 01:54 PM Mbo, A.C.Doyle is under investigation for murder - Really! It seems he stole the idea for the Hound of the Baskervilles from another author (sorry I don't remember the murder victim's name), had an affair with his wife, and convinced the woman to poison her husband with laudanum. Scotland Yard is conducting an investigation and they may exhume the body. I forgot to add any Clive Cussler/Dirk Pitt/NUMA books to my list. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Bert Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:05 PM Songs of Peace, Freedom and Protest - Tom Glazer |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Morticia Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:09 PM That Josephine Tey book......wasn't it Stranger in Time or something like that? I have it but as the house is full of books and runs over three storeys, I haven't a prayer of finding it. My list varies too but Oranges are not the only Fruit..Jeanette Winterson Speaker for the Dead..Orson Scott Card Mansefield Park..Jane Austen The Barrytown Trilogy..Roddy Doyle and of course Angela's Ashes because it mentions members of my family and is exactly how my parents grew up. I could go on.........and on......and on.......but these are the ones that sprig immiediatley to mind. I've finally got round to reading On the Road by Jack Kerouac just now......jury's still out on if I like it. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Steve Latimer Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:14 PM Many of my favourites have been mentioned. The Deptford Trilogy, Owen Meany, Of Mice and Men, The Grapes of Wrath and amny others I may have missed it, but I didn't see a single Hemingway title listed. The Old Man and the Sea and For Whom the Bell Tolls are two of my favourites by Ernest. Maugham's 'Of Human Bondage' may be my favourite of all time. Favourite Hitchiker's Guide Passage: "He wouldn't try to beat the system, He would just use it. The frightening thing about the Vogons was their mindless determination to do whatever mindless thing they were determined to do. There was never any sense in trying to appeal to their reason because they didn't have any. However, if you kept your nerve you could sometimes exploit their blinkered, bludgeoning insistence on being blinkered and bludgeoning. It wasn't merely that their left hand didn't always know what their right hand was doing, so to speak; quite often their right hand had a pretty hazy notion as well." I often have to deal with one of the largest companies in the world, and as I am transferred from one 'wrong person' to another I often use the above passage as a calming mantra. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Bill D Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:14 PM hmmm...Bert, I have that book...haven't looked into it for years. Maybe I'll dig it out. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: kendall Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:31 PM Not in order of importance. MOBY DICK, SILVERLOCK (John Myers Myers) THE ODYSSEY, LONESOME DOVE.MANILA GALLEON (F. VanWyck Mason) SPEAK TO THE WINDS( by Ruth Moore)THE RUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYYAM. Plus selected stuff by Shakespere, the greatest writer of the English language of all time. Thanks for the plug Naemanson! Stories told in the kitchen is the funniest thing I ever wrote! LOL |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: kendall Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:34 PM Last but not least..anything that C.S.Forrester ever wrote. Hornblower is my alter ego. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: mousethief Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:43 PM I judge my favorites by whether or not I'd be willing to go back and read them again. The ones I've read the most times include (in no particular order):
Lord of the Rings - Tolkein (over 10x)
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Metchosin Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:51 PM Mousethief, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance was one of my husband's favourite books. Unfortunately he leant it out and it was never returned, so you have just given me an idea for a Christmas present, thanks. If you liked that book you will also enjoy The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Rana who SHOULD be working Date: 15 Sep 00 - 02:51 PM For sheer imagination it has to be: The Gormenghast Trilogy by Mervyn Peake Though the Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov follows very closely. Woman in White, and the Moonstone by Wilkie Collins were books that kept me reading till 4 am - a thing I hadn't done fro years. Auto da Fe by Elias Canneti was great - how could you resist a book about "an evil minded chess playing dwarf of evil propensities" or such like. Use to read Alice in Wonderland/Through the Looking Glass each year I almost forgot - Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco. Rana |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Lonesome EJ Date: 15 Sep 00 - 03:23 PM Yeah,Mouse,Zen and the Art had a big impact on me.Turned me from an anti-tech tree hugger to a tech-accepting tree-hugger,no small feat.Remember the first line of the Japanese Bicycle Assembly Instructions? "Assembly of this bicycle requires great peace of mind." |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Naemanson Date: 15 Sep 00 - 03:27 PM Every time I read through this thread I remember more books that line up as my favorites. Annamill - I love most of McCaffrey's work. If you want a strong feminine hero with a truly tragic story try C. J. Cheryh's Morgaine series. I love them. As the stories develop she goes through an awesome emotional reversal in her relationship with Vanye her companion and bodyguard. Kendall - If you like Forrester's Hornblower you should try Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey and Maturin. O'Brian has a wonderfull sense of language that makes reading the books a real treat. I had to get some reference books from the library to understand some of the technical details of sailing an 18th century ship and I had to read with a good dictionary at my elbow. It's been years since I needed to do that.
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Whistle Stop Date: 15 Sep 00 - 03:33 PM In no particular order: One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (much better than the movie) and Sometimes A Great Notion by Ken Kesey To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee (one more vote!) The Power of Myth (Bill Moyers interviewing Joseph Campbell) The Grapes Of Wrath and East Of Eden by John Steinbeck (my favorites, but any Steinbeck is worth reading) Mila 18 by Leon Uris (again, all his books are good) The Killer Angels by Michael Shaara Goodbye Darkness by William Manchester (my favorite, but everything by him is good) The Crystal Cave, The Hollow Hills, The Last Enchantment, and The Wicked Day by Mary Stewart (a four-book series) The Prophet and Jesus, Son of Man by Kahlil Gibran Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry (I wouldn't have thought of this, but was reminded by other folks who posted; not a life-changing experience, but a great yarn) Not So Wild A Dream by Eric Sevareid Civil War histories by Bruce Catton Anything by Peter Guralnick And all the other ones that I'll remember as soon as I post this. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST,dan evergreen Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:08 PM A few which have not been listed: Theodore Dreiser: An American Tradgedy Sister Carrie The Genius Albert Camus: The Spectator The Plague |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Peter T. Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:12 PM Dante's Purgatorio -- especially the first cantos, when he returns from hell to the world of light, the meeting with Sordello, and the moment he loses Virgil on the top of the mountain -- all heart piercing, nothing like it anywhere else except in Shakespeare. Twelfth Night -- Life there on stage. Real life captured, breathing. How did he do it? Stendhal's Chartreuse de Parme -- if Mozart wrote prose, this would be it. The Great Gatsby -- the whole book is still the best thing on America. Le Grand Meaulnes -- probably the best key to the romantic side of the French character. but in the end for me it is Tolstoy's War and Peace or Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov. God knows how one would choose between them. Probably War and Peace. Natasha and Andre and Pierre...., they are just too amazing. Have to start it again!!!! Someday I will have to learn Russian just to read it in the original. (Yeah, dream on). yours, Peter T. Best poem ever: maybe Dylan Thomas' Fern Hill. Like pure heroin. Best current book: Willa Cather's O Pioneers! What a woman!!!!
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Micca Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:17 PM Hesperis and Morty, the Josephine Tey book about Richard III is called "The Daughter of Time" from the proverb "Truth is the daughter of time" As for my own faves, The Triumph of the Moon by Prof. Ronald Hutton is engaging me at the moment, but my favourites vary with time, mood and need, I read certain books over as a sort of comfort, if I have flu' or something and others for Information, but the one thing that is clear is that books, and access to books is essential, a contributing factor when I moved here was its proximity to a Public Library, and my wife constanly wishes I would "thin out " the book collection, but I am resisting. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Max Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:21 PM Stranger In A Strange Land (and its follow up The Cat Who Walks Through Walls), Robert Heinlien Sidhartha, Herman Hess The Confessions, St. Augustine The Hitchhiker's Guide Series, Douglas Adams Brave New World, Huxley Henry IV, Shakespeare The Little Prince, That French Guy (Exubiere?) Hammer of the Gods (The Led Zeppelin Story), ??? Plato's Cave & Plato's Republic and everything else by Plato, Everything by Georges Bataille (Visions of Excess), Aristotle, Leibnitz, Spinoza, Michele Foucault (Madness & Civilization and Discipline and Punishment). I am sure I am missing some important ones. |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Jim Dixon Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:28 PM Reading this thread keeps reminding me of more. Anyone read "Perfume" by Patrick Suskind? It's a real page-turner of a novel. Not especially profound, but I found it fascinating. It's about a man with a super-sensitive sense of smell. Once you accept that premise, it's otherwise completely realistic. (Except for the very end.) |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: guinnesschik Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:30 PM Wow, good choices all. I have to say that mt favorite are, in no particular order:
THE MISTS OF AVALON by Marion Zimmer Bradley
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Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: SINSULL Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:38 PM Song of the Dodo and the Jewel in the Crown Trilogy. This is an amazing thread. Less than 24 hours and over 100 posts - must be a record. Reassuring too - no one mentioned Michener. I thought I was all alone in the world in finding his stuff drivel! Mary, who re-read the "Hephaestus Beetle, twice) Oh, LEJ. I read the Iliad, Odyssey, Euripides, Aeschylus, Sappho, et al in ancient Greek. How come I don't intimidate you? |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: Naemanson Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:41 PM At first I thought it would be educational to copy out this thread and sort it for those books with which I share an interest with you guys. Then it occurred to me that the truly wonderful thing would be to sort through the list for those I haven't read and read them! Good thing I have a good library within easy reach. Good thing winter is coming. Good thing I have nothing else to do this winter.(Hah!) |
Subject: RE: Best book you ever read. From: GUEST Date: 15 Sep 00 - 04:48 PM Cool! You people have mentioned some great books! my personal fave authors have been named a few times, but i'll do it again. The Lord Of the Rings by JRR Tolkien. Everyone knows this is a classic, and it is my favorite book. It gets better every time i read it. Leaf by Niggle, also by Tolkein. Lesser known, but almost more beautiful in its brevity than any of his other works, i feel. Til We Have Faces by CS Lewis. Gorgeous book. The Last Unicorn - this book always makes me feel more deeply for days after reading it. the Princess and Curdie, by George MacDonald
Pax,
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