There's a competition being run by a book shop in London,
Win a book a month for the rest of your life. It's a book of their choice, based on what you tell them about your preferences - and presumably they hone their recommendations over time, although it doesn't say that. A nice prize
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My first thought was The Call of the Wild, then I read the small print and realised it was far too early.
When I think of influential books I think of books that have influenced my writing style, so I'm leaning towards The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Then there are books that have influenced me to get interested in a genre or a period in history; so Dr No, Biggles of 266 or I, Robot.
I love and admire Toby Litt but I wish he would go back to writing cheerful books, like Beatniks (see also Douglas Coupland).
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I was also both entranced and daunted (reading- and storage-wise) at the idea of a new hardback a month.
If any of us wins, let's share :)
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Done!
The reason I'd like to give for my book is actually a bit of a spoiler...I bet they frown on that sort of thing!
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(Also, it's an excellent book!)
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Probably, it would be the first Martin Gardner book I read, back when I was ten or so, which got me fascinated with mathematics.
Other contenders would be the Patrick Moore books I read when younger; the BBC Micro User Guide; Gödel, Escher, Bach; The Road Less Travelled; Guns, Germs and Steel; A History of God; Zen Flesh, Zen Bones; or The Penguin Book Of Historic Speeches.
…though some of those compile texts which are much older, which feels like cheating. I mean, would I be allowed the ESV? (-8
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Nowhere does it say it's looking for fiction, but the examples given are, and prose at that. But I don't see why it would have to be. But even limited to fiction, the date makes it harder. No Alexandre Dumas, no Victor Hugo, no Thomas More. No Plato. How can it be most influential without Plato?
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I will have to check exactly when S&A was first published, but Coot Club would probably qualify.
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For me, reading the S&A books made me realise what it was that I'd always wanted to do. My first Action Man (3rd birthday present) was a sailor and I've always wanted to sail and go to sea. Reading books about kids who had boats and were allowed to go off on their own in them showed me there was a world I belonged in. I set up a fund to have sailing lessons, but didn't manage to sail at all until I was 13 and we stayed at a French holiday centre that had boats. It took me until I was about 30 to get my RYA cert and when I was 34, I finally moved to somewhere with a nearby sailing club.
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