Melbourne Mum's Top 5 Fave Books
Over the next couple of weeks, while I'm taking a bit of "maternity leave" I'm going to have a few guest posts for you. This one is from one of my fave bloggers, Kim at Melbourne Mum, and today she has been kind enough to share her top 5 fave books. It's an awesome list and you should totally check em out, especially Margaret Atwood, who is one of my favourite authors, and The Handmaid's Tale which is also a Top 10 fave for me.
When Kylie tasked me with putting together my Top 5 Books OF ALL TIME, my brain went into overdrive (note: this happens often). But an overdriven brain does not beat Kylie’s over-ripe uterus, so here I am I am (and it nearly killed me to narrow it down). These 5 books are, for various reasons, my top 5, mostly because the very act of reading the books, usually involves a story for me.
1. The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood. Who doesn’t love Margaret Atwood? (well, her stories at least). I saw her in 1995, having dinner with her husband at York Street Kitchen in Stratford, Ontario. She is tiny in stature, but one hell of an imposing dude. Her presence is tangible and intimidating. This book is much the same - one of the best science fiction/thriller books ever. Haunting and real.
2. Wild Swans, Jung Chang. You know you’ve read an amazing book when you finish it and start crying (note to self: try NOT to let this moment be on a crowded peak-hour tram). Before you start yelling “Sook!” let me tell you, this is a powerful and gripping read. An autobiographical tale of Chang’s own female lineage – from the days of the archaic practice of foot-binding to her own painful navigation through the Chinese Cultural Revolution and beyond. I love dramatic autobiographical narratives. Evocative. Raw. And a rollicking good read.
3. The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath. I have never been mentally ill, but have always been fascinated by it, fascinated with how it manifests, and how people deal with it. Sylvia Plath is like the literary poster child of mental illness and depression. The way she writes about it is so immediate, plaintive and heartbreaking because she lived it (and to a tragic end). It doesn’t get any more authentic than this.
4. The Exorcist, William Peter Blatty. Anyone who knows me knows this is a predictable choice. In terms of terror reads, it wins hands down (although Stephen King can churn out a decent horror, let it be said). I read this first when I was a young teenager and took it to a YMCA camp, where I lent it to a girl I met. I heard later that she’d taken the book home, her mother (a staunch Catholic) found it, and burned it. It has had a special place in my heart ever since.
5. Lord of the Flies, William Golding. Probably the only book I read at school that has stayed with me. Whenever I watch “The Walking Dead” the overarching story makes me think of Lord of the Flies. The descent into savagery. The pain of pre-pubescent male dynamics. I’d love to see this story rewritten with female characters and explore how (or even whether) the result is the same (or maybe no-one needs to read what would arguably turn into a bigger horror than “The Exorcist”.)
Have you read any of Kim's fave books? I've always wanted to read Lord of the Flies, I must see if it's available on my kindle. A big thanks to Kim for sharing her top picks with me today. You can catch Kim on her blog, Melbourne Mum, by clicking here, and you can also find her on facebook and twitter, and follow her amazing photos on Instagram.
If you would like to share your Top 5 fave books with me an everyone else shoot me an email to kylie(@)kyliepurtell(.)com.
When Kylie tasked me with putting together my Top 5 Books OF ALL TIME, my brain went into overdrive (note: this happens often). But an overdriven brain does not beat Kylie’s over-ripe uterus, so here I am I am (and it nearly killed me to narrow it down). These 5 books are, for various reasons, my top 5, mostly because the very act of reading the books, usually involves a story for me.
Melbourne Mum reading one of her fave books |
2. Wild Swans, Jung Chang. You know you’ve read an amazing book when you finish it and start crying (note to self: try NOT to let this moment be on a crowded peak-hour tram). Before you start yelling “Sook!” let me tell you, this is a powerful and gripping read. An autobiographical tale of Chang’s own female lineage – from the days of the archaic practice of foot-binding to her own painful navigation through the Chinese Cultural Revolution and beyond. I love dramatic autobiographical narratives. Evocative. Raw. And a rollicking good read.
3. The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath. I have never been mentally ill, but have always been fascinated by it, fascinated with how it manifests, and how people deal with it. Sylvia Plath is like the literary poster child of mental illness and depression. The way she writes about it is so immediate, plaintive and heartbreaking because she lived it (and to a tragic end). It doesn’t get any more authentic than this.
4. The Exorcist, William Peter Blatty. Anyone who knows me knows this is a predictable choice. In terms of terror reads, it wins hands down (although Stephen King can churn out a decent horror, let it be said). I read this first when I was a young teenager and took it to a YMCA camp, where I lent it to a girl I met. I heard later that she’d taken the book home, her mother (a staunch Catholic) found it, and burned it. It has had a special place in my heart ever since.
5. Lord of the Flies, William Golding. Probably the only book I read at school that has stayed with me. Whenever I watch “The Walking Dead” the overarching story makes me think of Lord of the Flies. The descent into savagery. The pain of pre-pubescent male dynamics. I’d love to see this story rewritten with female characters and explore how (or even whether) the result is the same (or maybe no-one needs to read what would arguably turn into a bigger horror than “The Exorcist”.)
Have you read any of Kim's fave books? I've always wanted to read Lord of the Flies, I must see if it's available on my kindle. A big thanks to Kim for sharing her top picks with me today. You can catch Kim on her blog, Melbourne Mum, by clicking here, and you can also find her on facebook and twitter, and follow her amazing photos on Instagram.
If you would like to share your Top 5 fave books with me an everyone else shoot me an email to kylie(@)kyliepurtell(.)com.
Comments
Ai @ Sakura Haruka
I thought it might also amuse you to know that I got busted reading The Exorcist under the desk when I was in Grade 7. My teacher was horrified and I got a detention!
I am definitely adding wild swans to my must read list
Visiting from FYBF and Sweet Little Pretties
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