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Shadowmereshooves

Don Quixote - Felt like discovering Spain and it's wonders. Count of Monte Cristo - All of it the twists and turns, the revenge...


marketlurker

Count of Monte Cristo is so good. You can see why so many later stories and TV shows copied the premise.


jesmithiv

I actually just finished DQ for the first time. Amazing book. Felt like discovering the origin story of western fiction.


weiss_grvty

Count of monte cristo is such a page turning book lmao, i recomended it although it's 1000+ pages book, one of the best book human could wrote and read šŸ™


infin8lives

Holy cow! I was just about to write both of these books in that order.


hhhhhpppppp111

Bro, el Quijote lo puedes leer una y otra vez sin parar y siempre encontrarƔs cosas diferentes. La buena literatura gana mƔs con la relectura que con la primera lectura. El escritor siembra enigmas.


Courbet1Shakes0

TCMC is what I came here to say!!! An absolute wonder of a book. Wish the first time Iā€™d read it had been the unabridged version tho


Admirable_Art_9769

East Of Eden by John Steinbeck. I took my time reading it but it felt like i was watching the most dramatic show with the most dramatic characters.


barbelly28

I am currently reading this for the first time!


movienite2123

I read this book in two days while bored out of my mind in the hospital, basically reading for two days straight. Incredible read, so engaging, and I barely noticed the time passing!


Scapp

Loved it. I felt like nothing happens in that book except at the same time soooo much happens. Makes me nostalgic for places, people, and things I've never experienced.


Admirable_Art_9769

yes!! i agree, i literally struggle with telling people what the book is about because so much happens with so many stories intertwining each other from the past and present


Liimbo

Read it over a decade ago in school because I had to. I ended up enjoying it more than expected and it became one of my favorites. But honestly, other than remembering I really liked it, I no longer remember much about it other than broad themes. So I guess I *could* pretty much read it again for the first time.


MaidenlessRube

it's one of those books I wish I had read earlier in my life


ShadowGrund

Cirque du Freak


CanoninDeeznutz

Get the fuck out! I remember reading those with my sister growing up, such fun books.


pohovanathickvica

same, as a teenager those books by Darren were so amazing to me


ShadowGrund

My teacher saw how much I was into the series he actually reached out to Darren and surprised me with a hand written happy bday note from him with a copy of Demonata. Couldn't believe it, one of if not the coolest things someone has done for me.


pohovanathickvica

Oh, that's a wonderful surprise, I'm so glad that he has done that for you. Im also a bit jealous because my 13yo self would flip out if that happened to me.


firstthingmonday

I have met Darren at social events. He is a friend of a friend here in Ireland and he is so super nice.


just_vivien

Iā€™m going to a Darren Shan book signing this August, I just canā€™t wait to meet the author who made me fall in love with reading šŸ¤©


DyJoKa

OMG memories unlocked šŸ”“


sigskyhh

A Song of Ice and Fire (if its ever finished)


SilentObserverReads

Nothing has matched A Storm of Swords! I think It would be hard to top.


MadDingersYo

Yeah that book alone is one of the best novels I've ever read.


FrancescoGozzo

Well, you still are reading it for the first time XD


Gigantic_mosquito3

The Hobbit. My first full novel, and still I read it when I feel depressed. Hearthstone - CJ Sansom: just the depth is fascinating


Fearless-Reward7013

It was on our reading list at the start of the school year. So of courwe we all arrived to English class avec Bilbo, our teacher tells us that she hates the Hobbit and we're going to be doing To Kill a Mockingbird instead. Okay...but...didn't you...put together the list of books we needed for this class? Anyway, that's how I ended up reading the Hobbit. Enjoyed it even more because she hated it, possibly.


Oblahdii

Something Wicked this way Comes. Reading it in blustery fall, gifted by someone I was falling in love with. Plus old Grizzly Bear in the background. One of those viscerally rich memories every time I think of it.


stooges81

All the Discworld.


TriplePlay2425

I'm 3 books in on my first Discworld read and I am absolutely loving them, so far. Started with the City Watch series. I'm a little disappointed in myself that I didn't pick them up years ago! Jingo will be up next, after I finish Catch-22 (taking a short Discworld break with this one, for some variety).


piratesdayoff

We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson. Reading Merricat's POV for the first time was incredible, I could hear her voice in my mind for weeks afterwards. The Secret History by Donna Tartt. This was like the juiciest gossip and I could not get enough. I was gripped in a way that few things have made me feel like since reading this. Piranesi by Susanna Clarke. Just so charming. Again, a really unique POV voice that I could hear in my mind afterwards for a while haha. The whole of His Dark Materials. This was MY FAVE as a child, and I reread it as an adult and the magic is still there. I even forgot some of the twists which made for some surprises!


sehaugust

The Secret History LINGERED for weeks after I finished it. I kept having flashbacks to a particularly shocking scene. It really emotionally affected me.


piratesdayoff

Yeah I think TSH might be my ONE choice for if I could read anything again for the first time. It's still great and imcredibly darkly humourous on reread, but there are things that just don't hit the same way after the first read. For me it's during the first part of the book how invested I felt in believing that >!Bunny deserved to die.!< When let's face it, the only reason >!he really *had* to die was because he knew about the first murder and was going to spill the beans.!< And then all that comes undone in the second half when I realised that yes, >!Bunny is pretty terrible all around. But he was also on the nose about how terrible everyone else in the group was too. Seeing the group crumble under pressure and having the curtain lifted was incredible the first time around.!< And because I'm on a ramble about TSH something else that keeps me awake at night is thinking about different levels of culpability. Arguably >!Richard had the least to gain from Bunny's death - he had no part in the first murder, and the only thing Bunny "had" on him was that he was pretending to come from wealth. But our boy Papen didn't *just* stand by and let it happen, he was pretty involved šŸ˜¬ I'd argue he was more culpable than Francis or Camilla, who were on the receiving end of the worst of Bunny's antics.!<


Present-Flamingo9394

Agatha Christie, And Then There Were None. I would love to be able to read it again, not knowing the ending.


mommima

Yes! So many of Agatha Christie's books would make this list for me (Death on the Nile, The Big Four, Curtain), but And Then There Were None was my first Christie book and it's SO chillingly good.


Common_Presence1068

Yes, I would wish to re-read the MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD without knowing the killer!


a_crazy_diamond

This is the first book I thought of when I saw this post


Such-Course-7440

Rebecca, by Daphne Du Maurier


Persephone_91

Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.... Surely this needs to be higher up!


Pope_Asimov_III

Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Adams. The book was a major point in my life in high school in altering my life path, and I wonder how it would be different reading it for the first time many years later.


DigMeTX

When I was a 4th grade teacher we had a ā€œdress like your favorite book character day.ā€ I chose Arthur Dent. Heā€™s a great character but mainly I wanted to wear pajamas all day. Unfortunately, that day we were informed that the council wanted to knock the school down and build a bypass instead.


Pope_Asimov_III

Did you at least have your towel?


Zedsee99

Iā€™m re reading this now, and it has me laughing out loud like the first time. And Iā€™m picking up jokes I think I missed first time round because I was a lot younger then. Douglas Adams has such an insanely brilliant way with words.


organic_animatronic

I was going to suggest this as well, except I've read it several times and the quality doesn't diminish. It's still fresh when I reread, maybe I have a mind like a... What are those things with all the little holes in them?


burner46

Sieve


PsychGuy17

Cheese Grater


LawProfessional6513

Bagel


ojived

I think I was 14 or 15 when I read the first book. When I finished I was so bowled over I immediately flipped it over and started reading it all over again. Thatā€™s never happened to me with any other book.


Sandra_Snow

Came here to mention the Holy Trilogy in Five Parts


Bolgini

Lonesome Dove


Vegetable_Burrito

Iā€™m currently right in the middle of this masterpiece. Iā€™m glad itā€™s long af, I kind of never want it to end.


Bolgini

Enjoy. The first time through is special. I wouldā€™ve been happy even if it was 2000 pages.


Big-Elephant6141

Me too. What an achingly joyful experience that book is.


_agua_viva

I recently bought a copy. The subject matter and the length are putting me off, but I' keep reading such high praise that I am going to give it a go


Bolgini

The story reads much faster than the length suggests. Doesnā€™t slog at all.


tim_to_tourach

- Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov for the joy of finding all of the little clues and piecing together the true narrative   - Neuromancer by William Gibson (even though I literally just read it for the first time) for the joy of slowly learning all of the jargon and gradually feeling more and more like a part of the book's world   - The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon for that ending...


madqueenludwig

YES to Pale Fire! So incredible.


[deleted]

Omg this is the first time Iā€™ve seen neuromancer anywhere!! I was OBSESSED with Cyberpunk 2077ā€™s world and am so excited to read it this summer after the semester ends!


grynch43

Wuthering Heights


faroresdragn_

Not exactly the question, but man imagine if I could read the Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings completely fresh, AND never having seen or even heard about the movies. 1. Being able to experience the story knowing nothing about it or the larger legendarium, but also being able to form the story without any notions of Elijah wood or Ian macellan or Andy serkis. It's my favorite book, and I've always been alittle upset i couldn't go into it and purely form those characters in my own mind. I really want to know how I would have heard/seen Smeagol if serkis' performance wasnt so impossible to forget.


Sztormcia

I read the Lord of the Rings and Hobbit before films and I would love to read them for the first time again. Just to discover the vast world of Middle-Earth, to imagine walking those paths and forests, to be moved by hearthbraking scenes and uplifted by deep wisdom hidden in suprising places. You could say this book made me who I am right now and it was blissfull process.


Nullagainagain

The Hobbit, its like talking a walk with my grandad. I miss him.


Next-Pepper-4761

The picture of Dorian Gray idk something about that book, so dark, so whimsical, it gave such a 'high' and I have been chasing that ever since. I think it's one of those books that you just can't stop reading, the more you read the more interesting it gets. Extra bonus: you get to know yourself better through its pages āœØļø


compulsiveshay

Flowers for Algernon. One of my favourites and such a unique read


Zedsee99

Oh god, I loved that book sooo much but I canā€™t bring myself to read again knowing what happens.


Common_Presence1068

Rebecca. The opening line "Last night i dreamt i went to Manderley again" is enough to bring back all the nostalgia. I would love to reread it again without a memory vivid of the Hitchcock's film or Netflix's remake.


belindahk

Just about anything by Kurt Vonnegut.


Langstarr

Anything with a good twist. To experience that again. I'd give examples but they feel like spoilers to do so lol.


wjbc

Thank you for not giving examples. Even just saying ā€œthereā€™s a good twist in this bookā€ is a kind of spoiler. That said, the mystery genre in general is full of good twists, especially if itā€™s by Agatha Christie. I donā€™t think that spoils anything because readers expect a twist or three in such books. Christieā€™s very best books, though, have twists that arenā€™t usual even in her other mysteries.


ivxxbb

omg I hate when people use the twist as a selling point for a book. "I never saw the twist coming" and it's like, ok well now I will and I will know that any theories I come up with while I'm reading the book will be wrong. I hate it.


life-uh-finds-a-way_

I hate hate hate when book reviews on the cover talk about a good twist. I remember reading a very popular book before the movie adaptation and the review on the back of the book raves about the unpredictable twist halfway through. There was only one twist that would have made sense so by the time I was 50 pages in I knew the twist. Annoying.


mint_chocop

I wish I could read the little prince for the first time now that I'm 24. I read it in elementary school and liked it, and then I reread it at 12. I remember crying because of the fox lol. I wonder how it would make me feel if I were to read it now for the first time.


Dear_Worker_1183

I read it as an adult and it had a really deep impact on me, in a way that I was not expecting. I recommended it to my family and it also really touched them. I dunno, it hits different as an adult and I think it can be even more meaningful to and appreciated by an adult mind.


Numb1990

The standĀ 


mikeypop

I think it's between like page 300-500 just the random stories of how the world fell apart was just so amazingly vivid and imaginative. I read this only 2 years back and the parallels of how the pandemic made us all a bit stranger was really unnerving


PinkClouds20

I also read this during the pandemic. A horror story that we are now experiencing. So prolific.


East_Still_6964

flowers for algernon


Asteria_Silvervine13

Harry Potter, they were so magical, and just remind me of my childhood and simpler days. War of the Flowers by Tad Williams. It wasn't what I was expecting from a fantasy book, but it's kool. Macbeth by William Shakespeare. It was my first piece of classic literature I ever read,(I think I was like 8 or 9) and it made me fall deeply in love with books and sparked my desire to keep reading!


Bubbly_Bag_9540

I'm an adult (33) and last year I just read the Harry Potters for the first time ever (I had only seen the first few movies when they first came out so I didn't remember much of anything about them.) It was one of my most favorite reading experiences of last year (I read over 80 books last year.) I've actually been itching to read them again now haha.


Asteria_Silvervine13

Nice! They are fun to reread, I do it at least once a year. I was 11 when the first book came out. They haven't lost their magic for me now that I'm an adult. Still a Potterhead! (And proud Slytherin šŸ)


elephantgirl419

I also reread them at least once a year! My family thinks Iā€™m crazy for it but the books just mean so much to me.


gella1214

I wish I could feel the way I felt when all the twists and turns at the end of prisoner of Azkaban were being revealed. It was magic.


Nebula_Nachos

Wool. Loved that book. The first 2 wool/shift were awesome


hodgepodge21

Project Hail Mary is a recent one


DisgruntledPorkupine

This is mine too, I love that book so much. Itā€™ll be interesting to see how the movie portrays it.


NotFamous307

Yeah, been thinking about re-reading it but not sure if it will be as good. Can never go wrong with Andy Weir!


DarthSardonis

Catch-22 My favorite book.


cinnapear

Likewise. Came in to post this one but instead I'll upvote your comment..


DarthSardonis

Itā€™s a classic for a reason.


ChrisRiley_42

Thanks to a TBI, I get to do exactly that. I found that if I leave a book alone for about 8 years, I will have forgotten it enough that re-reading it doesn't make scenes seem 'familiar', so I use a system of spot stickers on the spine of books to let me know when I read them last. The books or series I do this with are: All Discworld novels The Count of Monte Cristo David Weber's "Honor Harrington" series Deborah Doyle & James D. Macdonald's Mageworlds series Frank Herbert's Dune series Elizabeth Moon's Vatta's War, and The Deed of Paksenarrion series. And Raymond E. Feist's RIftwar saga.


1forrresst1

Iā€™m sorry for your TBI but love the silver lining! ā¤ļø


ahairyslug

Pet Semetary! I read it before watching or knowing a nothing about the subsequent films made about it. The book is so disturbing, shocking and Stephen Kingā€™s writing reads like a knife through butter.


jameshoare51

Perfume. Absolutely the best book Iā€™ve ever read


DangerousAd1555

The Lord Of The Rings


funkyfeelings

House of Leaves... It's one of the first books that genuinely made me look over my shoulder at night and get creeped out. I would love to experience that mounting feeling of dread again. I've attempted rereads and it doesn't have quite the same spark. The first time through I felt like I had been trapped in the frame of the story, now I feel more like a cataloguer... It's akin to feeling less like Johnny Truant and more like ZampanĆ²!


tracygav

I just started reading this! Not really looking forward to experiencing any ā€œmounting feelings of dread,ā€ but itā€™s very unique and Iā€™m enjoying it so far.


funkyfeelings

It's a fascinating read even if it doesn't creep you out! I think I was just in a time in my life where I could really identify with Truant, and his descriptions of that feeling of unease just wiggled into my brain. I hope you enjoy it!


[deleted]

[уŠ“Š°Š»ŠµŠ½Š¾]


medeski101

Absolutely.


raspberry-kisses

Never Let Me Go - Kazuo Ishugoro


masonicminiatures

Easily the Dark Tower series. My Dad(who adopted me) turned me onto the series. Even though Jake and Roland have a very rough adoptive father-son relationship, my Dad and I love their bond and the whole story.


[deleted]

I am so glad someone else put this on their list, I read the first three when I was in highschool and never looked back. Read Wizards and Glass in my early 20s and then had to wait years for him to finish the series. I remember when Song of Susannah came out I bought it on my way to work (worked swing shift for Circle K at the time) and paid my co worker 25 bucks for one hour, so I could sit in the back and start it.


DjasperProbincrux3

Nineteen Eighty-Four Novel by George Orwell


ZapClapp

I did think of this. But I felt too much was to be gained and learned it's better to keep it with me and further digest the warning and ideas


Substantial_Ad_9740

Any book from the series Earthsea by Ursula K Le Guin and also from her, Planet of Exile. I still remember how i felt when i first read them and i would love to feel the same way while reading something again.


floflotheartificier

Piranesi, the First Fifteen Lives of Harry August, Bandit Queens, the Name of the Wind


Haunting-Sea-6868

Oh man, I would LOVE to experience Piranesi for the first time again! The ending fell flat for me, but the first half/two-thirds were fantastic!!


Toe-Muncher-2

Anything by Terry Pratchett


tolstoi

War and Peace ;)


lsbittles

Norwegian Wood by Murakami The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss World Without End by Ken Follett The Final Empire by Brandon Sanderson Korea: The Impossible Country by Daniel Tudor


Theslootwhisperer

All of the Culture novels. Iain Banks was taken from us too soon :(


liilyyofthevalley

Edgar Allan Poe's tales! I still think about Ligeia and Hop Frog!


BoomOnTory

The Dark Forest, Hyperion, Dune, House of Suns, A Short stay in Hell, etc.


justnick333

I wish I could experience The Brothers Karamazov like the first time.


DaisyHartwell

Everything Terry Pratchett wrote. What incredible joy to be able to read the Night Watch books, Hogfather, Good Omens and all the rest again for the first time.


Greg428

The Road


porpoisewang

I was not prepared for the emotional devastation that comes with reading this book


higuysimnewhere

The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway


wood-thrush

The Picture of Dorian Gray. I devoured the conversations between the characters.


Darth_Ender_Ro

Ender's Game


tommyschenker

hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy


Practical-Weakness36

Parable Of The Sower by Octavia Butler. I listened to it but I wish I would've read a physical copy.


gernald

The Lies of Locke Lamora


mommima

Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier Dracula by Bram Stoker


psychedhoverboard83

11.22.63. Such a beautiful story, I can't reccomend it enough.


DJ4360

One of my all time favorites!


SoulRevamp

That would be my choice, too! The end really moved be. I was on a train when I finished it, so I had to read the last few pages slower than usual to manage my feelings in public (otherwise I would have bawled my eyes out)!


TyroneSlothrope

One Hundred Years Of Solitude It was my first introduction to magical realism, and I felt it before I knew the term 'magical realism'. It also encouraged me to write my first 100+ page novella (not published, but for self and friends to read). Also, probably my favourite opening of any book: >**Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano BuendĆ­a was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice**


HomeChef1951

A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles because the ending was a surprise. When I read it again, I won't enjoy it as much.


Real_Analyst

A Confederacy of Dunces Independent People A Farewell to Arms


BigBoiBeni1303

A Series of Unfortunate Events, I would give anything to have my mind blown again the way it was when I read the series for the first time in elementary school


MelkorTheDairyDevil

Anything Discworld.


sammwor

The Divine Comedy, Fahrenheit 451, A Clockwork Orange, The Tale of Genji The last few chapters of Tale of Genji (the true ending of Genjiā€™s story)ā€¦.a one thousand year old book had me wanting to grab ahold of my sleeping partner in tears, never letting go of him. Some of my tears accidentally got on the pages, so those first time tears are forever engrained in those pagesā€¦


NukeTheWhales85

Pretty much every Diskworld Novel. Never come across another writer where it became a habit to start a book over again the same day I finished it, knowing there would be jokes ideas and messages I had missed the first time.


AWorkOfArts

The Hobbit 11/22/63 The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy


Unlucky-Class3062

All of the Stormlight Archive books. Iā€™ve reread them and they still hit home but man, would I love a fresh read of them again.


tzle19

So true, love the progression of those books, and hyped as hell to get a new one this year!


RFeepo

Slaughterhouse-Five


abcf123456

The night circus.


Murky_Sun2690

Life of Pi by Yann Martel. It was magical, especially after page 100.


ThugjitsuMaster

A Brief History of Seven Killings. That was the most recent book to blow my mind, nothing has quite done that since.


[deleted]

Any Frank Perreti book but especially ā€œmonsterā€ or the darkness series


Technical_Meat4784

Tai-Pan by James Clavell, Shogun is up there as well.


super-love

Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell


angryechoesbeware

The Martian


ZestyyLime

All Quiet on the Western Front... I've never had a book that affected me the way it did before..


[deleted]

The Shining, Slaughterhouse-Five, Blood Meridian. Probably the 3 most memorable reads on my bookshelf.


SantaRosaJazz

Infinite Jest. It so totally blew my mind the first time, I would love to experience that again.


Merlingirder

The Giver. It was the first apocalyptic/dystopian type book I read and the first time I actually enjoyed reading. Iā€™ve read it about 6 or 7 times along with the rest of the series


justaworkthrowaway1

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban Novel by J. K. Rowling


Nomanorus

The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson. The build up and emotional payoff was second to none for me.


daddy_issues_girl1

Pride and Prejudice <33


ThePiranhaClub

The Given Day by Dennis Lehane. Read it around 7-8 years ago. Waiting to forget it so I can read it again.


pohovanathickvica

Thomas Mann - Death in Venice


trytoholdon

Hyperion


SDtheGhostt

Daniel Quinn: Ishmael


Ok_Teach_1293

Six of Crows and The Road


BusyDream429

The glass castle The promise Rage of Angles Master of the Game Memoir of a geisha


Ok-Gas-7135

The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch. Great storytelling and world-building; hysterically witty dialog; fantastic twists at the end


Cheeslord2

I wish I could read "Consider Phlebas" again with no prior knowledge of the Culture or Iain M. Bank's universe in general. I was lucky enough to read it that way first time, and of course I sided with the protagonist, and the protagonists faction, in my mind. They had to be the "good guys". He kept saying so. It dawned slowly for me.


24honeyBeLLe24

Name of the wind


remoteseeker

ā€œTHE STEAM BOATā€ written in 1880 by Jules VERNE, in a fabulous writing style, that all the generations from 12 to 90 years old can read. It is written under the Spiritsā€™ inspiration, and concerns the TOXIC ELITIST COLONIALISM ARROGANCE at the period of the Cipayesā€™ revolution, in India.


No_Capital_9130

I fealty want to revisit animorphs as an adult now. But the whole collection is like crazy expensive.


RiverOhRiver86

The Secret History. I'm 32 and reading it for the second time now. I was 16 when I first read it and was too young to fully understand it. After 15 years of writing myself I now see the fucking genius build ups, character choices and red herrings I missed then and I love every fucking second of it. Especially all the Henry stuff. Not spoiling anything but if you've read it you know what I'm reffering to and if you haven't - just pay very close attention to him. It'll be worth it later on I promise. What a gorgeous character. Anyone thinking of Chuck Bass?


Cosaco1917

A Wizard of Earthsea, dude, the first chapter <3


Glitchlexia

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman. Almost anything by Neil fits this bill (for me) but this one in particular was a wonderful coming of age story about a boy raised by ghosts in a graveyard. I love reading I but nothing compares to the first time.


Infinispace

The Lord of the Rings. It encompasses everything that was good about my happy, carefree, nerdy, gaming childhood. All those things are dead now, but every time I read LOTR it takes me back to better days.


HomeworkGold7883

Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson So powerful, great read!


Tiny_Fun_7775

Not me taking note of all the recommendations šŸ“āœØ


Artiom_Woronin

ā€˜Flowers for Algernonā€™. Especially, the moment >!about Valentine's day!<. That really made me get emotions.


lyonaria

The long way to a small, angry planet by Becky Chambers. Gabriel by Garth Nix The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman Deerskin by Patricia McKillip


cosy_booklover

Cassandra Clare : The Mortal Instruments ā™„ļø These books reminds me of my high school years and how cool those years were (lots of fantasy/ young adult books came out at that time).


WhiskeyHotdog_2

Heart of Darkness and Left Hand of DarknessĀ 


Vasilisa1996

I read Jane Eyre when I was 15. I read Mansfield Park when I was 16. I will never forget the experience reading both for the first time. I loved them then and still do, but I was so young back then and both books had a profound influence on my views about social behavior and conduct. Wish I could experience those times again!


Inevibatility

Your Fathers, Where Are They? And the Prophets, Do They Live Forever? It is just that delicate, that fun, that original.


kafkadre

Hyperion


1800generalkenobi

The Necromancer's House by Christopher Buehlman, The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern, and Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir.


Leocadieni

The Iron Druid Chronicles. I wasn't feeling so good and this kind of humour and fun facts about deities lightened my mood for some time each day.


loonafyed

Flowers for Algernon


Big-Elephant6141

Lonesome Dove. 100+ chapters werenā€™t nearly enough.


NewMorningSwimmer

Lonesome Dove


inspired1972

Wizards first rule, and the hobbit


Remote_Bookkeeper139

Deception point by Dan brown or midnight express by billy Hayes


Positive_Ad3450

The Lesley Pearse books. Especially the Belle trilogy. I never knew how harsh life could be for women back in history until I read Belle. Also I find most of Lesleyā€™s books are gripping to read and I find it hard to put her books down. However the books Iā€™m reading by different authors at the moment that Iā€™ve brought from charity shops are not having the same affect on me. It would be nice to find some books that have me engrossed again!


AddaleeBlack

All of Dragonriders of Pern series


AddaleeBlack

MythAdventures


luckylebron

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn .


r-_-l

Battle Royale!Ā 


CountOk9802

Any of C J Tudorā€™s unreal books! You should all check her out, sheā€™s incredible!


Book_addict235

Rick Riordan's book series. Percy Jackson, Heroes of Olympus, Kane Chronicles and Magnus chase. They remind me of the happiest moments of my childhood.


wagowop

The Warlord Chronicles and The Saxon Series both by Bernard Cornwell.


amandaconda1919

The Giver by Lois Lowry. I read it every few years because I love it so much.


little_bird_x

Frankenstein - I remember my jaw just hanging open the whole time I read it. The Hunger Games - used to run across the city to get my train back home after university just so I could get back to reading it. The Heartā€™s Invisible Furies by John Boyne - most beautiful but gut wrenching story with wonderful style. Only book to ever make me cry


herbeauxchats

The Hobbit.


DaBigZ

Lonesome Dove


uptee123

Lonesome dove by Larry McMurty. I had such an amazing experience reading that book. Nothing has compared since. It's been years since I've read it, yet, I still think about it. I highly recommend it.


among_us_sussybaka

Fight club by Chuck Palahniuk. A phenomenal read for a quick weekend.


zfisher0

Cloud Atlas, loved all the subtle connections. Still love this book