Fiction Worth Rereading (Six Recommendations)


Our local library has tables with recommended books on all sorts of topics. One of my dreams in life is to curate one of those tables. 

A good book is worth so much because it can change your life. I'm starting this series as a digital version of those tables. I'm going to take pictures and share a few words about books in different categories. 

My first in this series is on fiction worth rereading. This is literary fiction.

All of these are books that I first read in college. I've reread all of them in the last three or four years, except O'Conner. We only read some of the stories of Flannery O'Connor in college, but I have read the whole book recently. These are not necessarily uplifting books or beach reads, but I've enjoyed all of them at least twice. 

Cry the Beloved Country is probably my favorite from these right now. It's a beautiful book. Very hopeful too. 

The Plague and All the King's Men are the most cynical and jaded. I still think of them often, and I'm sure I'll reread them again. 

My Name is Asher Lev was my favorite book in college, and I still really enjoy it. I particularly enjoyed the vision of beauty, of art, and of what it means to create. 

A Gathering of Old Men by Ernest Gaines is probably the easiest to read. I'm not sure enjoy or like are the right words for this book, but as someone raised in the South this book has a lot of meaning for me. I've come to appreciate the fact that God designed me to be raised in the South. Allowing that to shape me while also grieving over the problems has been an interesting experience in my forties.


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