Your favourite book?
Posted: Mon Sep 08, 2008 10:42 pm
Or perhaps 'most affecting' book.
For me, Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami. Fantastic writer; most of his work (short stories & novels) is quite fantastical (not fantasy, sort of like an off-kilter world - a few people compare him to Kafka, but I've never read Kafka, so make what you will of it) and excellent, but NW is more autobiographical and grounded firmly in reality.
Before I read that one a few years ago, it was 1984 (if you don't know the writer, you're on your own). Which is one of the classics, of course, but it's setting and storyline is naturally distancing.
For me, Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami. Fantastic writer; most of his work (short stories & novels) is quite fantastical (not fantasy, sort of like an off-kilter world - a few people compare him to Kafka, but I've never read Kafka, so make what you will of it) and excellent, but NW is more autobiographical and grounded firmly in reality.
Before I read that one a few years ago, it was 1984 (if you don't know the writer, you're on your own). Which is one of the classics, of course, but it's setting and storyline is naturally distancing.