Pendleside Festive Dingbats C/D 6Th Jan
Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by confusedpink. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.lol maxi29 what a snob!
i would imagine that the reason most people have named english language books is that the majority of people on this site have english as their first language. Just because a book seems essential reading to you, dosent mean it is to other people does it? (as 25 people have demonstrated) Also a book dosent have to be a "classic" to move you
Not sure these are suitable Summer reads (on hols I usually read something trashy and instantly forgettable) but books I've really enjoyed and would recommend in no particular order are:
Loilita by Nabokov
End of the affair by Graham Greene
The God of small things by Arundhati Roy
Hunger by Knut Hamsun,
Generation X by Douglas Coupland
The Long Goodbye by Raymond Chandler
Anything by Raymond Carver or Charles Bukowski
Wise Children by Angela Carter
Night Watch by Sarah Waters
The Van by Roddy Doyle
Hmmm...not exactly jolly reading these - to lighten things up a bit I'd recommend Marian Keyes - dead funny.
I just want to say that despite a few minor disagreements this thread demonstrates the breadth of our interests. maxi29 may disagree, but if you scan down all the suggestions, it's quite a spectrum, from maxi's Odyssey through to someone else's Harry Potter. Yes there is a skewing towards work of the last 50 years, but I'm baffled that maxi is baffled by this. I think it's simply the normal run of things. Even Shakespeare got forgotten about until David Garrick revived interest in him about 150 years later. I'd love it if more people had recommended the books maxi listed, but I'm not too confused or perturbed that they didn't. There are some damn fine books listed on the thread regardless, and anyway I'm not sure confusedpink necessarily wanted a list of the "great novels" as such (but he/she will correct me if I'm wrong).
It is a shame though that people automatically think those books can't be summer reading, as though they must be read in some sort of oak-panelled atmosphere of reverence, or something; also, what a pity that someone recommending those books should be called a snob. And I'm sure maxi wasn't saying that books of non-English-language origin have to be read in the original!