The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë
The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck
My Antonia by Willa Cather
Caramelo by Sandra Cisneros
The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay
The Green Years by A. J. Cronin
An American Tragedy by Theodore Dreiser
Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier
One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Mrs. Kimble by Jennifer Haigh
The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri
Christy by Catherine Marshall
Life of Pi by Yann Martel
Boy’s Life by Robert R. McCammon
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry
Liars and Saints by Maile Meloy
Mama Day by Gloria Naylor
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner
Dracula by Bram Stoker
The Magnificent Ambersons by Booth Tarkington
The Amateur Marriage by Anne Tyler
The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
Great blog! My personal favourite from your list is Dorian Gray- so powerful and raw! Don`t know how many times I`ve read it! Congratulations on being Freshly Pressed!
Thank you! I love Dorian Gray, too. It is timeless.
I agree with you!
Rosy (liveereaad.wordpress.com)
I can’t believe you know Christie by Catherine Marshall! I LOVE that book. I first read it when I was a teenager and until a couple of years ago I read it every year. Time to bring it out again. This made me so happy. Also love Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Namesake – partly because of growing up in Pakistan and facing some similar identity issues and partially because I now live in Cambridge where so many of her books take place. Have you read her short stories? Interpreter of Maladies is one book and the other is The unaccustomed Earth.
Christy was made into a television series when I was a teenager. It didn’t last, but the book is wonderful. I am a huge Lahiri fan. I have read all of her work and I can’t wait until she writes more.
I bought a copy of Christy years ago when Catherine Marshall was signing books at a small shop in Alexandria, Virginia. It is one that stays on my shelf throughout all my cullings. I’m sure I’ve read it more than once, and will no doubt read it again. Her Julie (fiction) was also very good, as are her inspirational books, especially Beyond Ourselves.
I just added Christy to my “to read” list on Goodreads… since both of you loved it so much… So great to find this blog!
Thanks. I am glad you are here!
I grew up being force-fed the classics and it took awhile for me to appreciate reading again. I now have some new books to try from your list of favorites. Two of my favorites are “Ethan Frome” by Edith Wharton and “Of Human Bondage,” by Somerset Maughm. Have you read those? Did you like them or not? Please answer truthfully (according to your blog on how to tell someone you don’t like the book they gave you.) I’m so glad I found your blog and I’ll be reading it. Nancy
I love Edith Wharton. I have read most of her books, including Ethan Frome, which is great. I also like Of Human Bondage. I am currently thinking about reading Maugham’s The Razor’s Edge. Do you know that one? Is it worth my time?
Thanks for reading!
Sorry, I haven’t read “The Razor’s Edge,” but it’s probably worth a look. I can’t imagine that Maugham would disappoint. Please let us know if you read it.
Hello, Ms. Emily,
Great list. Hmmn, I’ve read and enjoyed several on your list – Buck’s, Cather’s, Dreiser’s, Marquez’s, Mc Murtry’s, Naylor’s, Stoker’s and Wide’s. I’ll go check the others.
I’ve read some of the works of the other authors above but not the works listed as your favorites. ^^ Really, I have miles to go… Glad I came across your site, congrats on being FP’d and cheers aplenty!
Thank you! I am glad you stopped by. Let me know if you read any of those on my list.
Wow, I love Wilde and García Márquez too.
Among my favorite authors are Kafka (The Process, The Metamorphosis), Hemingway (almost all of his books), Dickens (The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club), Mario Vargas Llosa (The city and the dogs).
I heart Anna Karenina by Tolstoi, and A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole, In cold blood by Truman Capote and Crime and Punishment by Dostoievsky. I rather read classics
I’m with you on Hemingway. He’s great. Anna Karenina and A Confedracy of Dunces are fantastic, too. Yes, classics are what I lean toward as well.
I loved Life of Pi and Mrs. Kimble, as well. I will have to check out the others on your list. Rebecca was recently recommended for my book club.
I think you are the first person I have met that likes Mrs. Kimble, too. I picked it for a neighborhood book club years ago and everybody hated it. I felt so dumb!
My step mom recommended it to me. She said it was one of her favorites too. It’s a great book.
I get to see the names of so many books I have wanted to read but couldn’t. I have just read The Namesake out of these mentioned. Looking forward to reading the rest of them as well.
Did you like The Namesake?
Yes, it was good. I liked the narration and the intricate details of various aspects of an Indian house wife, settled abroad.
What in particular did you like in Dracula? I am researching some local history and found Bram as a child was exposed to the horror of thousands dieing during a Cholera outbreak.
I’ll have to think about that. I may do a post on it someday. I think I was pleasantly surprised at how approachable it was and how fascinating the occult can be when written well. The Historian is a contemporary version of Dracula that is quite intriguing as well.
a definite favorite of mine is Willa Cather’s “my Antonia”… funny because I haven’t read many books at all in my life in comparison with the number you read especially! It’s an english teacher here in France that gave it as an assignment for the class to study it a long time ago in the 70′s…and I adored it. I like your last post. thank you. and congratulations for the 500 followers
Thank you! I am glad you like My Antonia. It is a marvelous book!
So thrilled to see Caramelo and One Hundred Years of Solitude on your list! It always makes me happy to see people branching out beyond Cisneros’ The House on Mango Street, and that you truly liked García Márquez- One Hundred Years is a beast. A big, beautiful beast that I should re-read. So much good stuff is out there in Latino/Latina and Latin American literature.
I totally agree! I liked Mango Street, too. Have you read Alvarez? She’s great as well.
HUGE fan of Alvarez! I read and wrote on In The Time of the Butterflies, and read How the García Girls Lost Their Accents for a Caribbean Latino/a Literature class. Have you read any Junot Díaz? I’ve only gotten to The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, and Drown is on my reading list.
I love An American Tradgedy but I also love Robert Benchley’s mickey take of it in the Benchley Roundup, I think it might be called Compiling and American Tradgedy.
I loving Thomas Wolfe and Dickens at the moment though.
Nice blog by the way.
Thank you!
I’ll have to check that out.
I loved The Namesake.The Good Earth and A tree grows in Brooklyn are on to-read list.Nice blog:)
Thanks. Anything Lahiri writes is pretty wonderful!
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Am new to your great blog for last couple of weeks. Bryce Courtney’s, The Power Of One is my favourite book of all time. Also loved Pearl Buck’s The Good Earth and have the follow up, Sons on bookshelf waiting to be read
It’s nice to have you here! And I can’t believe that I didn’t know there is a follow up to The Good Earth. Thanks for letting me know!
The good earth is the first of a trilogy, although I only discovered about the third on amazon today.
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It’s wonderful to see Daphne Du Maurier’s name on your list. I loved Rebecca, my high school English teacher recommended it to me and it change my life. Now I’m an English major with the hopes of one day teaching at the high school level. Love your blog!
Thanks! It is nice to meet you. I have a post on Rebecca on here somewhere. I am glad you are here!
I made a motion to “follow” you first because the picture of your bookshelf looks remarkably like mine. Second because, our favorite books list is also similar. When I was 14 or 15 my mother told me she would give me $50 if I could name the title character in “Rebecca.” I read that book 4 times before admitting I could not. I love to write and have many ideas in my head, but fail to find the style and know-how to put them down to paper. Maybe following your blog will help, even so, it certainly will be a fun read. I’m glad I found you. Thank you.
I am thrilled that you are here! I love the Rebecca story. Your mom is one clever lady! It sounds like we have similar tastes, and I am always happy to meet people that I can identify with. Welcome!
I like your list. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is in my to be read soon pile as well as many of the others you listed such as The Power of One, An American Tragedy, and Life of Pi. I was happy to see Christy by Catherine Marshall there, too. I loved that book as a kid but always thought of it as one of those books that no one I knew read or had even heard of.
I’m glad to know you’ve heard of Christy! I know quite a few people who love it, but it is somewhat “older” in the sense that it isn’t contemporary anymore. I bet you’ll like The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. I couldn’t put it down!
Gr8 to see “The ‘Picture of Dorian Grey on ur list”………..one of my favourites……………..recently read Adiga’s “White Tiger”…….fascinating read that
I haven’t heard of that one. I’ll try to find it at the library.
Plz do its worth it…
I am an avid reader of historical romance and historical fiction. I find that love stories in a different time and a different culture speak to me a little more than the vampire romances and sexually driven bondage stories of today. I like to have characters that I relate to and care for. I must recommend my most recent find, “Shanghai Love” by author Layne Wong ((http://laynewong.com/). The main character, Peilin, is a woman of honor and tradition. She is betrothed to marry a man but he is killed before her wedding. Bound by duty she takes his name and adopts his family as her own. A young, vibrant character, married to a ghost and stuck in what seems to be a hopeless situation. The story takes place in World War 2 and brings Peilin to Shanghai to look after her deceased husband’s family herbal medicine shop. She is introduced to a new world and new people. Shanghai is also Henri’s destination as he has graduated from medical school as Hitler is rising to power. The young Jewish refugee soon meets Peilin and you can guess what happens from there! It’s beautifully written and allows some time for their relationship to grow and develop. You really want these two to end up together and be happy
I hope you check it out! Thanks for sharing your favorites with us!
That sounds like an interesting book. I am not into the teenage vampire romances either.
Christy by Catherine Marshal is a classic and should be on everyone’s “To Read List”. I’ve read it a few times since I was a teenager (a long time ago) and I enjoyed both TV series based on the book. Of course, the one starring Kellie Martin was my favorite.
It is a fantastic book, isn’t it? I like what you say about how it should be on everyone’s list. Yes it should!