Comfort Reads discussion
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What are your very favorite all time comfort read books?

1. Anne of Green Gables
2. Emily of New Moon
3. The Lord of the Rings
4. The Story Girl
5. Jane of Lantern Hill
6. A Traveller in Time
7. The Daughter of Time
8. Outlander
9. All Creatures Great and Small
10. How Green Was My Valley

In approximate order with favorite at the top:
1. A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle
2. Meet the Austins by Madeleine L'Engle
3. The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster
4. To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
5. Harry Potter Boxset Books 1-7 by J.K. Rowling
6. I Never Promised You A Rose Garden by Joanne Greenberg
7. Time At The Top by Edward Ormondroyd
8. Into the Forest by Jean Hegland
9. Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader by Anne Fadiman
10. A is for Alibi by Sue Grafton (the whole series so far)
(EDITED TO PUT ON UPDATE FEED)
And edited to change my list. ;-)
If you do this, please shelve any new books or post a message asking me (or Lee) to shelve them for you. Edited messages don't show up as new so Lee & I might miss seeing changes! Thanks!
What interesting lists so far. I don't know how you guys do it! I'll have to think about this for a while before I post.

1. Persuasion - Jane Austen
2. Thornyhold - Mary Stewart
3. The Long Winter - Laura Ingalls Wilder
4. The Hound of the Baskervilles - A.C. Doyle
5. The Blue Castle - L.M. Montgomery
6. Harry Potter (entire series) - J.K. Rowling
7. Trojan Gold - Elizabeth Peters
8. Trade Wind - M.M. Kaye
9. Ammie, Come Home - Barbara Michaels
10. Idylls of the King - Alfred Lord Tennyson
Lee wrote: "What interesting lists so far. I don't know how you guys do it! I'll have to think about this for a while before I post. "
Me,too. I have seven so far in a list, but I'm not committing anything yet.
Me,too. I have seven so far in a list, but I'm not committing anything yet.
I almost feel like I need to re-read a few of my childhood favourites in order to see if they're still as great as I remember.
Lee wrote: "I almost feel like I need to re-read a few of my childhood favourites in order to see if they're still as great as I remember. "
I feel that way with books and movies. While compiling my list, I thought, have I read this book in the last year? 5 years? Can't put it on my all-time top list if I don't read it over and over
I feel that way with books and movies. While compiling my list, I thought, have I read this book in the last year? 5 years? Can't put it on my all-time top list if I don't read it over and over
Exactly! I mean, I love Anne of Green Gables and quite a few of the books listed above but I haven't read them in many years. In general, I'm not a re-reader with very few exceptions.


Same with me. With the exception of 1 book, I've re-read all my comfort books numerous times.

I keep thinking of more books. I truly could easily have a top 100 list. I keep thinking of books I read when I was young, over & over, but haven't read for ages... And some newer books too!!
What a lovely dilemma to have: too many books to decide what to put on a list such as this!

Indeed! That's also one of the reasons I couldn't list my top 10 in any particular order. With the exception of Trade Wind (which IS my favorite book), I couldn't possibly rank them :)
I have my top two or three, but I'm stalled after that. I really have to scan my bookshelves.
Is it okay to include an author, someone that encompasses many books, any of which I could include on the list?
Is it okay to include an author, someone that encompasses many books, any of which I could include on the list?

Is it okay to include an author, someone that encompasses many books, any of which I could include ..."
Jeannette, The problem with that is that Lee and I are trying to shelve the books, which is why a box set works but an author doesn't work as well.

Jeannette, I understand. I think the only author I have read over and over is Jane Austen. I'm trying to decide if I should put all of her books or just my favourites.


Gundula. So sad. That's too bad! Maybe you could post about them in another thread/other threads. Most of us won't know by title but you could tell us a bit about them and why they were/are comfort reads.

Gundula wrote: "I might do that in the children's literature section and the humorous biography section, but not tonight (I want to actually get some reading done, often I end up posting and forgetting to actually..."
Me, too! :)
Me, too! :)

All right, I think I'm ready:
The Little Prince
Persuasion
The Changeling Sea
Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast
J.R.R. Tolkien Boxed Set
The Man Who Loved Jane Austen
Sundays at Tiffany's
In Aunt Lucy's Kitchen/A Little Shopping: The Cobble Street Cousins #1-2
Cottage Style
Reaper Man
These are books that comfort me; they all make me happy. They are like good friends that I visit over and over.
The Little Prince
Persuasion
The Changeling Sea
Beauty: A Retelling of the Story of Beauty and the Beast
J.R.R. Tolkien Boxed Set
The Man Who Loved Jane Austen
Sundays at Tiffany's
In Aunt Lucy's Kitchen/A Little Shopping: The Cobble Street Cousins #1-2
Cottage Style
Reaper Man
These are books that comfort me; they all make me happy. They are like good friends that I visit over and over.
Thanks to whoever added my books to the bookshelf! I meant to get to it tonight! :)

If you notice you want any of them on different shelves, feel free to edit.

Love in the Time of Cholera.
And I have to agree with Gundula on All Creatures Great and Small


Chrissie, I feel exactly the same as you on those two books!

The Glass Palace
The Hungry Tide: A Novel,
Dancing In Cambodia At Large In Burma....
My point being that it is important to pick a good book when you begin with a new author.
Concerning South America, two conemporary novels that I liked alot are The Seamstress: A Novel, which Lee recommended to me, and The Invisible Mountain which has delightful magical realism, at least in the first portion. However I don't know how you define a "comfort read" - for me anything that truly drags me away from what is bothering me IS a comfort read. It doesn't have to be rosy at all.
Chrissie, have I told you lately that I love you? I simply must get to reading more Amitav Ghosh because you know I loved Sea of Poppies. I am cracking up here! :-)

And LOL about defining a comfort read. I was hesitant on what to put on this thread, especially being a newbie, I figured if I posted Wuthering Heights, as dark as that story is, folks would think I'm crazy tee hee!!

Diane, I was a little worried too in the beginning about books that cover difficult themes. There MUST be more like me, and it seems you too, who are comforted by being pulled away into another person's life. If Wuthering Heights comforts you, well then it does. I LIKE that all these friends can appreciate different types of books. You get pulled to try new books. And if we don't like them, fine, we just say so.

Thanks, Chrissie. Yes, Lee started a really great group. But the main reason it's such a wonderful group is because of all the members, everybody's participation! So many fun, interesting people, and yes, it's nice to see friends here, and make new friends too.

Hurrah to Lee and Lisa!
Chrissie, I do love all the different takes on so many different books and authors and being able to talk about them. And you're right, not everyone needs to agree or like the same thing. Also there are so many books I never would have read if I weren't a part of GR.

Me too!
Thanks for all the kind words everyone. Lisa and I love hanging out with such a great group of people.

- L.M. Montgomery: Emily of New Moon (and the rest of the Emily series)
- L.M. Montgomery: Anne of Green Gables (and the rest of the series)
- L.M. Montgomery: The Blue Castle
- Maria Gripe: Skuggan över stenbänken and the rest of the series (A Swedish juvenile/young adult series, I've usually read this in Finnish translation but I don't think it exists in English... which is a great pity, these remain one of the most wonderful books I've ever read)
- Maria Gripe: Agnes Cecilia
- Elina Karjalainen: Uppo-Nalle and the other books in the series (much loved Finnish children's fiction about a poetic teddy bear and his friends)
- Tove Jansson: The Moomin Series, starting from Comet in Moominland
- Michael Ende: The Neverending Story
Most of these seem to be children's/young adult fiction, fantasy or both. I guess it's very fitting for comfort fiction, since it's often something we associate reading for a long time to escape from the everyday world. These are the ones I'm thinking of the most easily, but I feel I must have forgotten something completely obvious, so I left a few empty spaces to return to when I remember those obvious things!



That was a great novel, but I read it in German. Unfortunately, it was one of the books that did not end up making the trip to Canada with me (I was not allowed to take all of my books, and you know, I'm still a bit bitter at that, even after more than 30 years, I guess when it comes to books, I do hold grudges). Do you know if this book has been translated into English?


Chrissie, that does take the cake (OMG). And, of course, we don't dare argue, they're our parents. By the way, what did your father end up doing with the appliances? I cannot believe that your father would not have checked or been aware of the different electrical currents, I knew that when we moved to Canada, and I was ten at the time.

Did you ever read The Wheel on the School. I know it was translated into Swedish b/c I read it in Swedish! Meindert DeJong was very popular back then in Scandinavia. I loved it. I don't think I ever got around to reading it to the kids. I just read it to learn Swedish.

Actually, I would dearly love to learn to read Swedish. I would love to be able to read Astrid Lindgren in the original, I love her stories.
And, I have not read The Wheel on the School, but I'm going to check it out. Thanks


All Agatha Christie books
The Hound of the Baskervilles
To Kill a Mockingbird
Ethan Frome (rather dark, but I love it)
The Hobbit: Or There and Back Again
The Call of the Wild
Jane Eyre
The Westing Game (YA)
The BFG (YA)
The Castle in the Attic (YA)
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You may list up to ten books, and you can post whether they’re in any kind of order: such as by top favorite on down, or however you experience them.
If your favorite is a series, it’s okay to list the box set as one book if it’s published that way. Otherwise, unless you have a particular favorite book within a series (in which case post that book) please list just the first book of a series.
If you’re very discerning, you might have fewer than ten all time top comfort books, so just list one to nine books. If you have more than ten books, you’ll have to think hard about, and be selective about, which books you want to include on your list.