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Looking for books to get my mom back into reading!

Gone with the Windsors is on my nightstand. I've haven't read it yet, only taken a peek, but it looks like it would fit the bill.
You're a good daughter!!
I'll plug 84, Charing Cross Road, which is an old friend. I've read it a number of times and love it. It's a series of letters between the author, Helene Hanff and a book seller in England around the time of the 2nd world war.
I second Enchanted April. Loved that! And Guernsey! And how about The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
I second Enchanted April. Loved that! And Guernsey! And how about The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie

I'm just a little younger than your Mom but reading your post brought to mind some titles that might be appropriate.
1) The Shell Seekers
2) Coming Home both by
Rosamund Pilcher
Ms Pilcher is a British author with a lovely gift of writing that easily surrounds and draws you close with her characters and settings. Scenes are described beautifully in many of her books. We are transported to the beautiful Cornwall area of England. Wow, thinking about her writing I easily drift back to this corner of England and its beautiful landscape, so very different than what many people think England to be. I still can hear the sea! The Shell Seekers is a tad shorter and might work well read first. I think I've read this book 3 times, a rarity for me.
Don't be too put off by the length of Coming Home.
A long paperback might have intimidated me as I finally got back into reading, but I remember how the story grabbed me right from the start. Both books have a central character who is introduced as a young girl. We read of her youth and how she grew up pre WWII and how her life was forever changed because of it.
Anyway, those are the first 2 that came to mind. You have some really good suggestions here. I hope your Mom finds something to rekindle her love of reading.
Let us know how things work out.

1) Losing Julia by Jonathan Hull - this book is amazingly beautiful and honest. One of the best reads I've read in a long, long time. On the surface, it's about life, love and loss, war and aging and duty and honor... but it's the stuff that fills in the space between these things that really makes it amazing. Patrick Delaney is the main character, and we get his story through three different times in his life, WWI, then a decade after WWI ended, then his 80s... these three times shift in and out of each other effortlessly and mesh together to form this gorgeous story that, I don't know... just feels so perfect. And this is a DEBUT novel. It does deal with war, so there is some violence and a little graphicness, but not too much, and not frequently. I highly recommend this one. Can't gush enough. It's suprisingly funny too. :)
The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield - this one is a gothic mystery, and it is beautifully written and deals with family and secrets and a sense of who we are and where we belong. I loved it. I won't gush as much about this one, because it is a mystery and I don't want to accidentally give anything away. This is definitely a book for book lovers.
A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly - this is an amazing coming of age story for fans of the written word. Mattie Gokey is a wonderful main character, and brave and true to herself and her friends, and longs to be and do more than her duty will allow. Highly recommended.
The Book Thief or I Am the Messenger by Marcus Zusak.
Book Thief first - this is a BEAUTIFUL story about a young girl growing up in Nazi Germany and trying to survive and cope with everything around her. This one is narrated by Death, which is a little odd in itself, but pulls the story together in my opinion, and gives us a unique perspective of things. One of my favorites.
I Am The Messenger is another great growth story. The characters in this and Book Thief are young, but I don't think that this is a detriment at all. Zusak's stories kind of transcend age, I think. This one DOES have a younger feel, as the main character is kind of brash and.. young. But the way that he handles the things that are thrown his way is touching and beautiful... all the more so because it's unexpected.
The Help by Kathryn Stockett - This is just a gorgeous book with a very honest and heartbreaking story to tell about the struggle for Civil Rights in the South. I listened to it on audio, and loved the narrators voices. Beautiful and horrible and personal and honest. Definitely recommended.
OK... I think that's enough for now. These are all books that I've loved and have affected me in some way. Even if your mom wouldn't be interested in any of them, I hope that others will be intrigued and want to read some of these.
I have a lot more where they came from too! :P

Memoirs of a Geisha




Memoirs of a Geisha a while back and it's one of my all-time faves. The movie is very good too.
Hope your mom likes it.


Also, my eyesight isn't all that great so I don't really mind the LP. It just takes some getting used to for me.

I think that your mother could not go wrong with L.M. Montgomery. When I restarted reading for pleasure after getting my graduate degree (and I was quite read out at the time), I started with doing a reread of L.M. Montgomery's Emily of New Moon series (followed by the Anne of Green Gables series), lovely, engaging and just enough literature so as to not make me feel guilty. However, I also found that time-travel books and fantasy (like the Outlander series) and Mediaeval mysteries got me back into reading. And, Jasper FForde's Thursday Next series was lovely as well.

Laura, the movie is really good!

Chandra and Gundula, I'm glad you mentioned LM Montgomery--I have a feeling her books are just so much a part of who I am after all these years I could have overlooked it completely, silly me! Good to know that it helped you get back into reading, Gundula.. I do think she liked the Anne books way back when, so I will have to suggest "The Blue Castle" ;->
And I'm glad for the back-up on "Guernsey Literary" and "Enchanted April"--thanks again! I will let you know which of these strike her fancy and we can go from there :-)
Have any of you read Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia??? She heard about the movie and thought it sounded good so she's interested in the book. That's the only thing recently I know she's expressed interest in. I also thought she might My Life in France (which I absolutely loved) because she liked the "Julie and Julia" movie.

That would be so nice if you guys did a book club together. Everyone came up with such great suggestions. I'm sure your mom will love them. I just saw Julie and Julia and I thought I should look into My Life in France, too. I never really thought much about Julia Child but that movie got me interested in learning more about her life.




Adding her to your little book club sounds like great fun!!!


Lisa-- Well, it's been so long that mostly what I remember her reading are books she read to us so I'm not sure what she'd choose for herself now. My mom really liked the Emilie Loring books when she was in her teens and twenties and the Elizabeth Caddel books remind me of them a bit so that might be a good choice. She also loved the Laura Ingalls Wilder books (Little House on the Prairie etc) and other historical fiction books for kids like Caddie Woodlawn. I also remember she liked Cheaper by the Dozen when we read it years ago. She also likes the Patricia McLaughlan books such as Sarah, Plain and Tall. I know there are some more of McLaughlan's books out now that I might look into for her.
Another of her favorites is Mama's Bank Account. I think she likes books where individuals overcome hardships by working together as family/friends and keeping a positive attitude.


Scout, You would be the one to think of that (amazing!) book. ;-)

Another great novel, especially if she likes reading about France is A Year in Provence and its sequels by Peter Mayle.
And, for a simply amazing classic story about Wales and Welsh mining (and so, so much more), I can most strongly recommend How Green Was My Valley; just breathtakingly beautiful and heartbreaking at the same time.





Amy wrote: "If your mom likes humor, I can suggest Janet Evanovich's series about hapless New Jersey bounty hunter, Stephanie Plum. I reluctantly read the first one,and then gobbled up the rest. They are sil..."
I second this suggestion!! But tell her to skip the first book, which isn't really the same flavor as the rest. She won't miss a bit by doing so because all of the backstory is explained. Book 6 is my favorite!
I second this suggestion!! But tell her to skip the first book, which isn't really the same flavor as the rest. She won't miss a bit by doing so because all of the backstory is explained. Book 6 is my favorite!


The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society
A Northern Light
The Help
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie
Christy
Thistle and Twigg
The Spellman Files (and sequels)
My Ántonia
I add my vote to The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society, and I'll addFunny in Farsi: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America and The Hindi-Bindi Club


Okay, no one has mentioned Jane Austen or the Brontes. She might like to revisit some of the classics! I also recommend:
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
The Moonstone
The Inheritance
I am not quite 54, but I enjoy YA, so you should suggest some of your favorites to her, Kathryn. I really enjoyed Chalice.
Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day
The Moonstone
The Inheritance
I am not quite 54, but I enjoy YA, so you should suggest some of your favorites to her, Kathryn. I really enjoyed Chalice.

Kathryn, you have a good idea about books your mother has enjoyed including "I think she likes books where individuals overcome hardships by working together as family/friends and keeping a positive attitude." And, there are so many books that fit this, but she also might surprise herself by enjoying a wide range of books. Also, her tastes may have changed somewhat since she last had a chance to read.


I agree, though, that I shouldn't be too limiting in what I offer to her--as you say, her tastes may have changed. Thanks for that great suggestion and also to know that many of you enjoy YA books. I guess I just didn't want to go too far outside what I think are her tastes at first so she'd see something she could be excited about--but as long as books come with great reviews, there really is no reason not to expose her to them :-)

She's loved She's Come Undone and The Glass Castle.
My sister picked up Eat, Pray, Love for her, along with The Lovely Bones and Room. I got her Water for Elephants, which she liked, but it made her cry. So we've been told to lay off the "sad" books for a while.
These might have already been suggested, but they also might be good ideas!

My mom is actually big into reading biographies right now! She loves the biographies of old film and TV stars, especially. Love, Lucy and Here We Go Again by Betty White are two of her favorites.


Thanks! I will check those out :-)
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I want her to read some really great books to start with that will keep her hooked ;-> I just don't know if I'll have the best recommendations. I tend to read classics or YA or books with 20-something protagonists and while I'm sure she wouldn't mind reading any of that if it's GOOD, I'm not sure it's the best to capture her interest right away. Maybe something with characters a bit more her own age--or at least not fresh-out-of-college chick-lit stuff. Something fairly light and good-natured and not 500+ intimidating pages. But I don't think she'd go for stuff like Danielle Steele. I'm thinking maybe something like The Enchanted April but I haven't read it myself yet... Or The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society (which I loved). And I know there is a category of literature called "hen lit" so maybe some of you have read some good selections there? I know Mom loved the Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder, so maybe even something like that although it's for "kids" would be good. THANKS!!!