The knife had broken because it had at last met something it couldn't cut

Dec 09, 2009 23:58

Day 01 → Your favorite song
Day 02 → Your favorite movie
>Day 03 → Your favorite television program
Day 04 → Your favorite book


Day 05 → Your favorite quote
Day 06 → Whatever tickles your fancy
Day 07 → A photo that makes you happy
Day 08 → A photo that makes you angry/sad
Day 09 → A photo you took
Day 10 → A photo of you taken over ten years ago
Day 11 → A photo of you taken recently
Day 12 → Whatever tickles your fancy
Day 13 → A fictional book
Day 14 → A non-fictional book
Day 15 → A fanfic
Day 16 → A song that makes you cry (or nearly)
Day 17 → An art piece (painting, drawing, sculpture, etc.)
Day 18 → Whatever tickles your fancy
Day 19 → A talent of yours
Day 20 → A hobby of yours
Day 21 → A recipe
Day 22 → A website
Day 23 → A YouTube video
Day 24 → Whatever tickles your fancy
Day 25 → Your day, in great detail
Day 26 → Your week, in great detail
Day 27 → This month, in great detail
Day 28 → This year, in great detail
Day 29 → Hopes, dreams and plans for the next 365 days
Day 30 → Whatever tickles your fancy

Oh dear. Another toughie. I was an ENORMOUS bookworm when I was a kid - through high school, really, I could pretty much be found with a book in my hand at any point in my day that didn't explicitly require being in a class or talking to people. I was also a massive re-reader so I've read some books 5 or 10 times. So I have some favorites from my childhood that probably wouldn't still have the same power. But I think I have an answer...

His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman. Now these have never gotten old. I reread them pretty recently, and I can pick them up and reread them at any time really. They're the only old books that I made SURE came to grad school with me - I have an incredibly battered copy of the three books in paperback. There's something about the uniqueness of vision that propels these books above and beyond so many of their peers. Pullman constructs incredible characters to inhabit that world, so you feel grounded and emotionally invested. And the two primary characters, Will and Lyra, are CHILDREN, but he doesn't treat them as inferior - instead he takes their unique experiences and constructs them as full human beings. We watch them literally grow up in the course of the story. And they fall in love, and it is beautiful and fumbling and pure and exquisite. But back to the world-building - the beings that Mary Malone encounters in a parallel world, the mulefa, are some of the most exquisite "other" beings that I have ever encountered in fiction. The concept of a daemon is enrapturing and so deftly handled. I'm sure that a lot of the religious threads go right over my head, but despite that, these books are a thoroughly enveloping experience that I feel for a long time after every read. And the ending is one of those that makes me sob every goddamn time, even though I know exactly what's coming. I think I cry for a whole chapter. Ugh my heart.

I think we can pull out a theme here - if something makes me cry really hard, I love it. Idk! I'm a sucker for the well-done tragedy. When it feels earned, and I feel invested enough to lose myself to that grief, then I think a story has truly succeeded. It's an interesting metric but it's certainly held true for all of my preferences! (Exception: Boondock Saints, haha)

Runner up: Anything by Guy Gavriel Kay. ANYTHING. He transports me!

meme - 30 days, books

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