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...but what about the books?

Wombat

First Post
There have been a lot of threads recently about what kinds of movies need to be seen, how often, and suchlike, but far fewer about books.

Being a bibliovore, I thought I'd start one. ;)

What books have been important to you in your life? What books have tempted you back for that second, third, fourth, or even greater read?

In other words, which books really feed you?

I'll place my own answers in after I see a few responses. :)
 

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It's hard to think of many that I read over and over again like Lord of the Rings I've lost track of how many times I've read that; over 15 and maybe as many as 20 times.

I've read the Harry Potter books several times; usually when a new movie or a new book is about to be released and I want a refresher. And of course, once I start, I end up reading the whole series again, usually over the course of a week or less.

Oddly enough, one of my favorite books that I have to have read at least half a dozen times, and probably more, is Indo-European Studies by J.P. Mallory, who is one of the most respected anthropologists in the field, and is the main champion of a revised Marija Gimbutas kurgan theory of the origins of the Indo-Europeans. That one, obviously, is not fiction. I've had a copy on my bookshelf for quite a while now.

Also I have a great fondness for Rafael Sabatini; Scaramouche is my favorite of his, although Captain Blood and The Black Swan are also brilliant. As I said in another thread on the topic once:
Joshua Dyal said:
I dug through an old box in my basement and rediscovered my 1922 printing of Rafael Sabatini's Scaramouche and started rereading that. I really like that book. Now, I know Alexandre Dumas is often regarded as the King of Swashbuckling authors, and I can't argue that he doesn't deserve it, but dang, Rafael Sabatini has got to be the Archduke at least. Scaramouche takes place in France in the late 1700s and features a lot of revolutionary politics in the background. However, it is very background in a lot of ways, although it does set up some truly remarkable stuff; when the Third Estate of the Assembly (equivalent to the House of Commons in British Parliament) is formed, the scions of the First Estate (the House of Lords -- the second estate, the clergy, has no specific seats in the Assembly) turn to spadassassins, expert swordsmen who position themselves to end up in duels with their bourgeouis political rivals. The whole set-up of the Third Estate approaching a somewhat apolitical fencing master, who accepts based on his driving need for vengence, to be a "ringer" in this particular game sets up some of the best dialogue and action sequences ever put to a swashbuckling novel. There are parts of this book that I literally can't read sitting down; I have to get up and pace back and forth because I'm so excited. Other times, my wife asks me what the heck is going on because I'm reading with this silly grin on my face.

There was a movie that was very loosely based on the book with Stewart Granger, which redeems itself somewhat from monkeying with the brilliant plot by featuring what is supposedly the longest and certainly one of the most intricate classical fencing scenes ever put to film.

Some other Sabatini books have had better treatment by Hollywood; Captain Blood with Errol Flynn, Basil Rathbone and Olivia de Haviland is still the mother of all pirate movies, and it follows the novel fairly closely (I'll be reading that one next) about the British doctor unjustly taken to Port Royale as a slave after aiding wounded revolutionaries. After escaping during a pirate attack, he and his croneys swim out to the pirate's ship and capture it, and then operate as "patriotic" pirates, who are only pirates because they have to be, not becausetheyaretruly... [head between legs... breathe... breathe...hyperventilating into paper bag...]

Uh, sorry there. Got a little excited. I do love my swashbuckling, I do. And as far as I'm concerned Rafael Sabatini does it as good as anyone I've seen. I actually prefer him slightly to Dumas.

Anyway, after I finish that, I'll be reading R.L. Stephenson's The Black Arrow. Oddly enough, I don't have any fantasy on my current schedule at all right now. I'll have to find a good one for October. Maybe a good spooky one.

EDIT: D'oh! It's a 1923 printing, not a 1922 printing! I was getting this mixed up with my copy of Captain Blood. As I said later, though, it's the fourteenth printing in less than two years; the first printing was 1921. Must have been a darn popular book in its day.
Also, one of my classics of childhood that I still reread over and over again is Edgar Rice Burroughs. Oddly, the first book in each of his series is brilliant, and then sadly the quality seems to drop off sharply. I still haven't ever managed to read all 24 of the Tarzan books, for instance. But Tarzan of the Apes and John Carter of Mars, Pirates of Venus and At the Earth's Core are still some of my favorite books to whip off my shelf and read when I need to kill a few hours.

And although he often frustrates me with his clumsy prose, I continually come back to Lovecraft for his brilliant ideas. "The DreamQuest of Unknown Kadath" is my favorite; a novella set in a Dunsanian sword & sorcery dreamland that's actually quite a bit different than his more well-known pseudo-horror stories.

Although he frustrates me even more, Robert Jordan has had several read throughs. He does just enough right to entice me to catch up again and see if he's ever done anything with his new novels. He rarely has, and I had already more than once written him off as unreadable and given up, but masochistically, I keep coming back for more. Currently I'm "rereading" on Audiobook as I commute to hopefully be caught up for the October release of book 11.
 
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I agree completely...more than movies, these books have affected my life.

1. Watership Down. I have honestly lost count of the number of times I have read this book. The only book I've purchased multiple times just to give to co-workers and friends.

2. The First Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. SRD takes his fair share of abuse, but I am drawn to his flawed protagonists and epic (verbose?) descriptions.

3. A Canticle for Lebowitz. The first book my father passed to me to read.
 

If I had to pick one, it would be The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander. That's what got me started into fantasy. If I hadn't read that, I probably wouldn't have been interested in D&D when I was introduced to it a couple of months later.
 

rom90125 said:
I agree completely...more than movies, these books have affected my life.

1. Watership Down. I have honestly lost count of the number of times I have read this book. The only book I've purchased multiple times just to give to co-workers and friends.

(snip)

3. A Canticle for Lebowitz. The first book my father passed to me to read.


I'll take two of yours and add that when I was younger I would make a point to reread Animal Farm every couple of years. What a wonderful flow that book has.
 

Well, the first books to really get me into fantasy were (surprise) Lord of the Rings and the Chronicles of Narnia. As far as sci-fi goes I read some Asmiov when I was a kid and then his first autobiography for a paper in HS, and completely fell in love with the genre between the two.

Ironically, Jordan was a strong recent influence on me. Before I read his books I would usually read a book or series even if I wasn't enjoying it completely. Jordan was the first author where I made a conscious decision to stop reading because I wasn't enjoying it any more.
 

I have reread very few books but those that I have included The Time Machine, War of the Worlds and The Foundation Trilogy. I first read them in school for book reports and reread them about ten years later. I do enjoying rereading short stories by Heinlein, Lovecraft, Poe and Simak.

The books that fed my imagination the most at an early age would have to be the Doc Savage, Tarzan, John Carter, Elric and Conan books. Right now, I'm getting into adult western books such as Longarm and Slocum.
 

There are a lot of important books in my life, but I'll try to restrain myself a bit ;)

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland was the first "real" book I read (beyond Dr. Suess and Dick & Jane). Some people say this book left a larger impact on me that might be imagined... In any case, this is one of the touchstones of my life. When the world goes truly crazy for me, I pick up Alice, read her again, and know that part of my world is stable.

A Wrinkle in Time -- this book probably more than any other got me into reading sci fi and fantasy. I hadn't read this book for years (I first read it in 5th grade) when I picked it up again about 10 years ago. Wow, there was a lot of me in there -- mystical approach to theology, fear of conformity, knowledge that in the face of evil a single brave soul can still make a stand, the importance of standing by family. Marked me good, that book.

War & Peace. I love this book. As I tell people who roll their eyes when I mention it, "Look, it's shorter than Lord of the Rings and the names are no stranger!" Tolstoy created characters of great depth and passion here. I love Pierre and Natasha, I despair for Andre, I want to smack some of them around, I want to hold others and tell them everything will be fine. This is a great human drama.

Le Morte D'Arthur -- I choose this one to stand in for all the Arthurian books I know, read and love. The tales of the Round Table burn deep within me, whether it be the unification of a kingdom or the Quest for the Grail.

A Wizard of Earthsea -- a deceptively simple book about courage, learning, and facing your own darkness. Ursula, thank you!

Siddartha -- this book moved me tremendously and eventually was the impetus for me learning to at least read German, simply because I wanted to know what the tale sounded like in its own language. Beautiful, simple, revealing, and centering. I have given this book away over a dozen times in my life as I have found friends who have needed to read it.

I could go on with many others, but I think this makes a good starting point. :)
 

Books have definitely had a major effect on me, probably as much as movies.

The major ones I can think of at the moment are the ones I can, and do, read over and over again.

Beowulf(alright, not really a novel...)
The Illiad
The Odyssey
Dune
2001: A Space Odyssey(and the other books in the series)

Honourable mentions definitely go to anything Pratchett, Lovecraft, and most all of Michael Crichton's stuff...but those books/stories listed are the ones that have really made an impact.
 

Interesting, I was contemplating starting a similar thread!

I am re-reading Games People Play, a book on the psychology of human interaction. My first read through was one of those paradigm-shifting moments that really changed my outlook. All humans need "strokes" (emotional or physical), and we can learn to ask for them from and to give them to our loved ones without needing to resort to "games" (underhanded or indirect means of acquiring strokes; "games" also allow us to reinforce our essential world-views that may be warped or inaccurate, things like "I'm a failure" or "People can't be trusted"). Also contains a brief summary of transaction analysis (the Parent, Adult, and Child in each of us and how we use them to engage others).

As much as I love Lord of the Rings, the fantasy series that started me on the road to my love of reading was Chronicles of Narnia.

I re-read lots of books just for fun: Dune series; The Name of the Rose; Canticle for Leibowitz; The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language (I curl up with that one and just browse -- it's fascinating). I'm sure I'm forgetting something obvious...
 

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