azuire: (yatta!)
[personal profile] azuire posting in [community profile] inkstains
Reminders: Editing Post, and Week 2 Topic!

Hello everyone! Today we're having an open T&T thread, for book recommendations!

Each recommendation should give a brief summary of the book and why this book has earned a place as one of your favourites. A simple 'because I liked it' usually isn't enough to convince someone, so tell us why we should pick it up ourselves. :-)

I'll go first!

title: If on a winter's night a traveller
author: Italo Calvino
why: You are trying to read a book called If on a winter's night a traveller. As you venture further into the book, it comes apart at the seams: the walls between fiction and reality start to fade. Little mysteries in the plot come together (like how the titles of the chapters make up a coherent sentence). A definite must the next time you want an armchair adventure.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-07-28 07:02 pm (UTC)
draigwen: (Default)
From: [personal profile] draigwen
Title: The Eyre Affair
Author: Jasper Fforde
Why: It's a book about books. About visiting books and living in the 'book world'. Where the characters in the books are real, in a sense. It's very very quirky. It's followed by a series of books so don't read this unless you're willing to read the rest of the series!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-07-29 12:32 am (UTC)
pipisafoat: image of virgin mary with baby jesus & text “abstinence doesn’t work" (ted reads)
From: [personal profile] pipisafoat
title: A Planet Called Treason
author: Orson Scott Card
why: I love most anything by OSC, and I have absolutely nothing against rereading them, but this is one I pick up exactly once a year - it's close enough that I remember why I love it and don't get antsy to read it, but it's far enough apart that I'm still surprised by what happens a little bit. It's a fun sci-fi/fantasy read, but it's got a lot of social commentary underneath that, which is what I really like.

The other book I read each summer, which I haven't yet this year because my friend is borrowing it, is also a huge amount of social commentary, though without the sci-fi coating:
title: Atlas Shrugged
author: Ayn Rand

(no subject)

Date: 2010-07-29 07:27 am (UTC)
mercredigirl: Text icon: Some books leave us free and some books make us free. (Emerson) (some books)
From: [personal profile] mercredigirl
title: a suitable boy
author: vikram seth
why: the description is so sensory it draws the reader in; it has as its backdrop the independence of an ENTIRE COUNTRY and manages to make that work; and it blends comedy with tragedy in an effortless mix of bitterness and wryness. it doesn't shy away from big themes (queerness! race! caste! religion! colonialism!), and it packs a hefty punch.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-07-29 10:52 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] cheratomo
Title: Confession of a Shopaholic
Author: Sophie Kinsella
Why: Although it pretty much is a guilty pleasure, it's earned a nearly top spot for having a ridiculously addictive inner monologue. I have never read an inner monologue that is so fluid and entertaining before. I can seriously read each book in this series in a day because it's so addictive.

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inkstains: Text-only: 'Imagination is the highest kite one can fly', superimposed against a sunny sky. (Default)
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