Ten on Tuesday . . .
The Ten On Tuesday prompt for today is a special one in honor of Beverly Cleary's birthday and Drop Everything and Ready Day. It is: 10 Books That Made YOU Want to Drop Everything and Read.
Wow . . . I was always the kid with the book growing up. My first "real" job in Junior High was working at the public library shelving books for 75 cents an hour :-D
Some of these are children's books - some are not. I would sit down and read any of them again at the drop of a hat . . .
And those last three titles have made the cut every time I have downsized my books. If you read Henry James and then read Hemingway, you will see very clearly how he completely changed the trajectory of American literature.
A good list :-)
Wow . . . I was always the kid with the book growing up. My first "real" job in Junior High was working at the public library shelving books for 75 cents an hour :-D
Some of these are children's books - some are not. I would sit down and read any of them again at the drop of a hat . . .
- Nancy Drew. Any time there was a new one, I was ready. I learned about pen names - seriously, who knew that "Carolyn Keene" wasn't a real person?! :-D
- The Hardy Boys - ditto
- The Famous Five - I only had a few of these because they were British (gifted to me by a friend of my mother's). I would have read them all, I'm sure.
- The Boxcar Children - my cousin found The Boxcar Children cookbook in a used book store a few years ago and snapped it up for me :-D
- The Man Who Was Magic - actually, I loved pretty much anything by Paul Gallico.
- Kay Thompson's Eloise - who didn't love Eloise. I still love Eloise :-)\
- The Stand - I couldn't put it down. Just don't read it if you have a cold . . .
- 'Tis Pity She's a Whore - a tragedy by John Ford - published in the 1630s. There was a film made of it in 1971 that I saw in college, which is when I read this play (theater/music major here :-) ). I recall that the film was extremely powerful, and Charlotte Rampling was in it - she's pretty much always brilliant.
- Awake and Sing - another play, this time by 1930s playwright, Clifford Odets. Who doesn't love Clifford Odets???
- The Sun Also Rises - Mic drop.
And those last three titles have made the cut every time I have downsized my books. If you read Henry James and then read Hemingway, you will see very clearly how he completely changed the trajectory of American literature.
A good list :-)
Comments
The Boxcar Children I read a few years later, after we moved north. That was a fun series.
All of this feels like a lifetime ago... Why aren't adult books as fun as children's?
I think there are some adult books that are fun - or at least compelling. I think you've given me a blog post idea, Ely :-)