Forum search & shortcuts

What's your mo...
 

[Closed] What's your most re-read book?

Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I'm glad I'm not the only one to say Fear and Loathing. Must be at least ten times by now - I've owned 5 copies over the years, but sooner or later it gets loaned and not returned.
(I'm sticking to literature here - non fiction, reference and kids books obviously get more attention!)
For me that is the mark of a great book - wanting others to read it, and replacing it when gone.

Second place is Jude the Obscure (on copy no. three now)

Then Tess, Under the Greenwood Tree, the Woodlanders etc - bit of a Hardy fan! The stories can be a tad trite and predictable, but the prose is just beautiful.

I read every book I like more than once, but as a counterpoint will happily abandon and bin anything I think is rubbish after a few pages (Dan Brown being one example - like wading through a semi-literate child's rushed homework )


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:31 pm
 stox
Posts: 1026
Free Member
 

[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:35 pm
Posts: 2
Full Member
 

Joemc - I agree on Hardy's prose - also a fan. Far from the madding crowd several times - I did rather fancy Bathsheba everdene!


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:39 pm
Posts: 8413
Full Member
 

stox Henry Bowers is both a relative of mine and Harry the Spider.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:43 pm
Posts: 6160
Full Member
 

Dan Brown being one example - like wading through a semi-literate child's rushed homework )

I'm currently reading the second in the Hunger Games trilogy. The first was OK, a bit of a guilty secret, fluff. This second one is just irritating.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:44 pm
 stox
Posts: 1026
Free Member
 

stox Henry Bowers is both a relative of mine and Harry the Spider.

Really??!!! Then that makes you my 2 favourite forum members 🙂
Related how if you don't mind my asking? ...


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:47 pm
Posts: 367
Full Member
 

The Hobbit, LOTR
The first and Second Chronicles of Thomas Covenant.
Struggling to get through the Last Chronicles though..


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:53 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The Collected Ghost Stories of M.R. James. Cover to cover, at least once a year. Love it.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 9:55 pm
Posts: 4687
Full Member
 

I think that there's only a couple of books I recall re-reading:
Bernard Schlink: 'The Reader'
Cormac McCarthy: 'Blood Meridian'


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 10:04 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

River God, book that got me into Wilbur Smith.
Normally read it when on holiday relaxing.
Pretty much read every Wilbur Smith since


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 10:12 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Posts: 2
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]

More times than I care to remember, unfortunately I can be a bit too "Rob Gordon" sometimes


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 10:17 pm
 2bit
Posts: 271
Full Member
 

I reread lots of books & would struggle to name one I've read more than t'others-

When I was younger LOTR, the Hobbit & Redwall.

More recently all of the Iain M Banks (pretty much on rotation), the Scar & Perdido St Station, The Nights Dawn Trilogy, Neuromancer, Green River Rising, the Religion, Good Omens & Wilt.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 10:18 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

When I was a kid, I borrowed Flight Underground (James Hamilton-Paterson) so often from the library that they eventually gave it to me.

I reread lots of books - all Neal Stephenson, especially Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon, but all of his at least 3 times. All Iain Banks of course, especially Feersum Endjinn, The Business and Against a Dark Backgound. Terry Pratchett too.

Basically, if I don't want to read it again, I didn't really enjoy it the first time.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 10:23 pm
Posts: 2944
Free Member
 

I've re-read pretty much every book I have, mainly because I'm too lazy to go buy more.

Ones that I have re-read most would either be 1984, LOTR, or possibly some Iain Banks. I think I've read The Bridge once a year for the past six years.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 10:55 pm
Posts: 4279
Full Member
 

There are many, many books that I've read twice through, most of them mentioned here already.

Honorable mentions

Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes - I've started it twice but never finished it. I'd been reading it on and off for a month when the book was recalled to the Library so I couldn't renew it and finish it. Then I tracked down which translation I had been reading and bought it. The emigrated without it.

I think of the few that creep in to my 3 times or more bracket must include

The Chrysalids by John Wyndham
The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks

Both classics IMO.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

The only books I have every re-read...

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas - Just brilliant madness.
The Rum Diary - My fave holiday book to have a rum with.
Shantaram - My all time favourite.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:09 pm
Posts: 10763
Full Member
 

A few, including 1984 for me.

My business (Fitted bedrooms etc.) is called Smartrooms101.

It [i]might[/i] take its inspiration from 1984

None of my customers have twigged yet


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:10 pm
Posts: 1099
Free Member
 

Peace at last 🙂 to my kids nightly. lord of the rings 367 times 😉


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:16 pm
 SamB
Posts: 11
Free Member
 

LOTR twice. Better the second time as you know what bits to skip... Tom Bombadil you f***ing waste of space!

Also the whole Game Of Thrones series. Bad as it is, I quite enjoyed a re-read with foreknowledge of what would happen. Dany pooping in the desert is still a terrible ending though 👿


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:24 pm
Posts: 392
Full Member
 

Currently, it's [i]Where is the Green Sheep?[/i], but prior to The Boy arriving... as a kid I read the Famous Five, Secret Seven and Hardy Boys series probably a dozen times over. Terry Pratchett's [i]Diggers[/i], [i]Truckers[/i] and [i]Wings[/i] also got read a few times. As a teenager/adult, I've read a couple of the Discworld novels a few times and Stephen King's [i]IT[/i], [i]The Stand[/i] and [i]Pet Sematary[/i] four or five times each. Oh, and [i]Robinson Crusoe[/i].

These days I've generally got a backlog of books that I haven't read yet, so find it hard to justify re-visiting something I've read before.


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:50 pm
 taka
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

twice

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 29/07/2013 11:55 pm
Posts: 2170
Full Member
 

I have re-read the entire Flashman series by George McDonald Fraser several times and always enjoy them immensely.

I am also enjoying re-visiting some Jack Vance - The Demon Princes is a favourite.

Planning to read some Steinbeck when I am on holiday - I am always amazed by the quality of his work.

P.s. may revisit Cider with Rosie. Did it for O level in 1985 and was inspired to read Laurie's other works. Saw him at Cheltenham Literature Festival a few years before he died. He was an entertaining old buffer.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 12:13 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Oh, if we're counting books I read to the offspring, then it's a lot easier - this is somewhere near the top of the list:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 12:15 am
Posts: 460
Free Member
 

Crow Road - Iain Banks
French Revolutions - Tim Moore as it always makes me laugh


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 12:35 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

'Bravo Two Zero' by Andy McNabb, it actually improves with every read.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 1:55 am
 10
Posts: 1506
Full Member
 

French Revolutions, A piano in the Pyrenees from Tony Hawks, and I'm mid way through Dividing the great, again, after the rewind article this week.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 3:12 am
Posts: 3367
Full Member
 

The monkey wrench gang by Edward Abbey.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 6:40 am
Posts: 8413
Full Member
 

Related how if you don't mind my asking?

He was my Granddads uncle although I don't think they ever met, Bowers was probably already in the antarctic when he was born.

It's an astonishing read isn't it, three men all desperate to turn round and none of them willing to give up no matter how bad things got. I can't help thinking that if the three of them had accompanied Scott to the pole as a 4 man team they might have made it back. Unfortunately Cherry Garrads eyesight meant that was never going to happen.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 7:01 am
Posts: 1635
Free Member
 

Huxley's [i]Brave New World[/i]: IMO better than 1984


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 7:04 am
Posts: 3032
Free Member
 

Two books I have tried to re-read , as I am convinced I didn't get them ...
On The Road - Jack Kerouac
Catcher in the Rye

I still don't get them ... I am truly sorry to say think that Holden Caulfield was just a little shit ....

'Bravo Two Zero' by Andy McNabb, it actually improves with every read.

Thank you , Mr Partridge ....


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 7:35 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Slaughterhouse 5 - Vonnegut
The Fan Man - Kotzwinkle
Fear and Loathing - Thompson


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 8:26 am
Posts: 2
Free Member
 

The road to Wigan pier & down and out in Paris and London by Eric Arthur Blair ( better know as George Orwell )


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 8:41 am
Posts: 578
Free Member
 

The Stranger - Camus


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 8:44 am
 stox
Posts: 1026
Free Member
 

It's an astonishing read isn't it, three men all desperate to turn round and none of them willing to give up no matter how bad things got

It is. I can just re-read 'the winter journey' chapter over and over. It's inspiring.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 9:31 am
Posts: 9226
Full Member
 

I quite like re-reading books, I think it's because it's safer than trying something new which is, I fear, to my own detriment. 🙁 Particular favourites are -
The Dambusters, by Paul Brickhill - the first and still the best war story I've ever read, an incredible story cleverly told with gentle humour. He also wrote The Great Escape which is another corking read, if slightly different to the film.
The Hour, by Michael Hutchinson - THE best book about cycling I've read, in the "finish it the first time, turn to page one and start again" category. Heavily loaded with information, laugh-out-loud funny.
The Stand, and Different Seasons, by Stephen King - really enjoyed his earlier stuff when I was a lad, although he's gone a bit overblown for my liking of late. Loved The Stand, just an immense world to immerse yourself in - and Different Seasons has the stories on which Shawshank redemption and Stand By Me were based. Fantastic novellas, and for my money the best writing he's ever done.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 9:33 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

-The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy: A Trilogy in Five Parts
-Dune
-Duck in the Truck - My 3ry olds favourite.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 9:53 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Starship troopers,
Fantastic and so much going on. Realy got the training down pat takes me back to my basic.
Not with monsters and space obviously. Althought the drill sargent was a total bastard 😆


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 9:58 am
 FOG
Posts: 3025
Full Member
 

When I was a kid I had what I called 'Sunday night' books which were familiar stories I would reread before facing another crap week at school. As an adult? I still have loads that fall into this category anything by Ian M Banks or Jack Vance being favourites.
What a great pity to lose Ian Banks, he seemed such a normal bloke but with extraordinary talent


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 10:48 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Got to be The Hobbit. I've read TLOTR a couple of times but lost count of how often I read the Hobbit, especially as a child.

In more recent years though, most likely one of Brian Lumley's short story collections or Clive Barker's Books Of Blood, followed by H.P. Lovecraft's Omnibus series.
Short stories are great when you're short of time, so I tend to re-read them a lot.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 11:22 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I don't re-read that often, but those I do form a particular pattern:

Jon Stewart - Naked Pictures of Famous People
David Sedaris - Me Talk Pretty One Day
Garrison Keiller - We Are Still Married/Radio Romance/Lake Wobegone Days
Woody Allen - Without Feathers
Groucho Marx - Beds, Memoirs of a Mangy Lover, Groucho & Me
Steve Martin - Pure Drivel, Born Standing Up, Shopgirl, The Pleasure of My Company


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 11:28 am
Posts: 2889
Full Member
 

On Extended Wings - Diane Ackerman

An account of her struggles learning to fly light aircraft and getting her pilots licence. She's a poet by trade, and the prose is fantastic.


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 11:37 am
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

[i]On The Road - Jack Kerouac
Catcher in the Rye

I still don't get them[/i]

I thought On the Road was garbage!


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 11:39 am
 DezB
Posts: 54367
Free Member
 

ps. the best film ever of the best book ever, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, is on BBC1 tonight 🙂


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 11:40 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I thought On the Road was garbage!

+1

DezB is not only a fox - he has a discerning literary taste. That's a proper power combo. 😉


 
Posted : 30/07/2013 11:42 am
Page 3 / 4