Books you read, and reread again and again

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vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
Catch 22
Maus by Art Speigelman
British Rail Motive Power Combined Volume 1982
A Victorian book of sewage engineering - I've mislaid it and I'm trying to find it for another fix of Victorian engineering ingenuity
Smashing Wordpress - getting under the bonnet of the blogging platform. I want to make it dance to my tune.
 

midlife

Legendary Member
Biggles :smile:

Shaun

PS I thought I was the only one who read Puckoon. A bit along the lines of the the gingerbread man by j p donleavy
 

Saluki

World class procrastinator
I have read the Tintin books time and time again, from childhood to now.
The Jasper Fforde books I have read again and again. I love them.
Agatha Christie is a big favourite with me. And Then There Were None is being read (again) at the moment. I like most of them and have read them all now, as far as I know.
I've read the Bible 6 or 7 times, at least. Does that count?
 

Flying_Monkey

Recyclist
Location
Odawa
Difficult to know where to start, I just love reading so much. It's been what's kept me alive at so many points in my life.

In terms of cycling books, the only one I have ever throught was worth reading more than once was Tim Krabbé's The Rider, and that's worth reading many times.

As a kid and teenager and beyond, I used to read The Lord of the Rings annually, although I actually prefer(ed) The Silmarilion, which is more mythic. However, these days the only books from my childhood I revisit occasionally are the Earthsea books, starting with A Wizard of Earthsea, and of course Ursula Le Guin has continued to write them with an older readership in mind, even though they were never your average YA books in the first place. The last book in the series, The Other Wind, is a truly beautiful book at least partly about ageing. Le Guin is without a doubt my favourite SF and fantasy writer.

Scanning my bookshelves here, novels I reread fairly regularly include books including The Golem by Gustav Meyrink, The Arabian Nighmare by Robert Irwin, Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita, Italo Calvino's If On A Winter's Night A Traveller, Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto, William Gibson's Neuromancer, Roberto Bolaño's The Savage Detectives, The Anubis Gates by Tim Powers, Peter Matthiessen's Shadow Country, Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars Trilogy, Tove Jansson's The Summer Book, Beside the Ocean of Time by George Mackay Brown (and of course, his poetry), lots of Thomas Pynchon, Brian Aldiss, J.G. Ballard, Samuel Delaney and Philip K. Dick, Bruce Sterling's Schismatrix, The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco, Alain-Fournier's Le Grand Meaulnes, Diaspora by Greg Egan, Haruki Murakami's After Dark, Q by 'Luther Blissett', The Bone People by Keri Hulme, Frank Herbert's Dune. I could go on... ;)

Short stories by Raymond Carver, Lucius Shepherd, Edgar Allen Poe, M.R. James, Clark Ashton Smith, Ursula Le Guin (again), and lots and lots of poetry...

Of things that have been influential on my life and thinking, I've read and reread Andre Gorz, Ivan Illich and E.F. Schumacher over the years.
 
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SpokeyDokey

68, & my GP says I will officially be old at 70!
Moderator
I can neither read books or watch films more than once.

What's interesting about a book or film if you know how the plot unfolds?
 

Levo-Lon

Guru
Car a motorcycle manuals..love em ..

ive never read a novel twice..why would you...tho i may read Tom Sharp the throwback again as i laughed all the way thtough it..brilliant book for my sense of humour and its 30 yrs since i read it..
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
Car a motorcycle manuals..love em ..

ive never read a novel twice..why would you...tho i may read Tom Sharp the throwback again as i laughed all the way thtough it..brilliant book for my sense of humour and its 30 yrs since i read it..

I'd happily re-read all of Tom Sharpe's books again. Indeed I think I have them lurking in the attic from my last house move accompanied by an unfinished Godel Escher Bach, mentioned in the book hating thread.

Now there's a retirement project for me - unearth the tomes from twenty eight years ago and re-read them.
 
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