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A book recommending game!

I spent most of 2012 in a reading rut. You know the sort of thing I mean--reading all sorts of books, always hoping that I would fall in love with the next one, but never quite getting there. This year, I'd like to feel passionate about my reading again. And I'd like it if you, dear LJ-friends, would help me break out of my rut.

Here's how it'll work: I'll give a general description of my taste and the sort of things I like (longtime readers probably already know more than enough about my taste in books!), and you tell me about an author you think I might like or describe the last book that knocked you head over heels. BUT! This is not a one-way street! If you'd like to receive recommendations too, post a comment that tells us about you as a reader, and if I've got any good recommendations for you I'll share them. Others can chime in too, and soon (I hope!) we'll all be sharing our favorites with each other and adding lots of titles to our to-read lists. If this sounds like fun to you, feel free to pass it around--the more the merrier!


Favorite authors: E.M. Forster, Marilynne Robinson, Virginia Woolf, Colm Tóibín, Pat Barker, Ursula K. Le Guin, Flannery O'Connor, Alice Munro, Michael Chabon, Sherwood Anderson, etc...
Preferred genres: Fiction. Fiction of all sorts: short stories, novels, novellas. I mostly read fiction of the 'literary' variety, but I am happy break out of those bounds for well-written sci-fi, mysteries, or thrillers. Very occasionally I read memoir and essay collections.
Things I like: historical settings, queer characters, queer characters in historical settings, beautiful prose, believable love stories even (especially?) when the endings aren't happy ones, dark elements, real human emotion, coming-of-age stories, tight plots but also sometimes introspective plotless rambles, books that make me work, stories about families, characters I can love.
Last book that really blew me away: To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. You can read my post about here, if that would be useful.


Okay, go!

Date: 2013-01-10 08:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mabith.livejournal.com
Ha, well, with Palace Walk I can see how plenty of people wouldn't like it. I'd read a lot of Mahfouz before that one though, so in large part I was just into his writing style. I can't really say that I cared that much about the characters in Palace Walk either, but I love the writing and I loved learning more about regular, daily life in a place and time that I was unfamiliar with (plus with that one it fed my constant WWI interest).

Honestly I think it takes a lot for me to really care about a fictional character. I care deeply about the real people I read about in non-fiction and can get quite fannish, but with fiction it's not really a strong point for me. Now, fiction with no even remotely likeable main characters (grumble grumble Blithedale Romance grumble grumble) is something I hate reading, but I really don't need to care about the characters to enjoy a book.

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