The book that started your love of reading.
Discussion
As a child I had no interest in reading, probably due to the utter crap on the school reading lists etc.
On a very rainy family holiday in Wales I found this on a bookshelf
http://www.wilbursmithbooks.com/books/standalone/e...
Eagle in the Sky by Wilbur Smith.
I was probably about 14.
After several abortive attempts to read it something finally clicked, the film screen in my head sprang into life and I read it in one sitting.
Since then I've probably read a book a week (apart from periods where I can't seem to find a book I like ).
Which one started you off?
On a very rainy family holiday in Wales I found this on a bookshelf
http://www.wilbursmithbooks.com/books/standalone/e...
Eagle in the Sky by Wilbur Smith.
I was probably about 14.
After several abortive attempts to read it something finally clicked, the film screen in my head sprang into life and I read it in one sitting.
Since then I've probably read a book a week (apart from periods where I can't seem to find a book I like ).
Which one started you off?
Stuart70 said:
Capt WE Johns, then Willard Price, then Alastair McLean, the Ian Fleming then Hemingway.....
Good topic OP. An interesting list and I devoured all of these and more besides! But the book that started my love of reading was Swallows ans Amazons by Arthur Ransome. Followed avidly by Swallowdale, Peter Duck, Coot Club, Missee Lee, Great Northern, We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea, Secret Water, Picts and the Martyrs and every one in the series by Ransome. Bought each one with book tokens and present money and still have (or my eldest daughter still has) every one still in the original covers. Then onto a list not unlike Stuart70 with Angus McVicar and the Red Plant and all of Asimov, Arthur C Clarke and on and on and on. Bit more Catholic in my tastes now but not in my religion! I am currently reading Contested Will by James Shapiro (Shakespeare's authorship disputes) and Under the Greenwood Tree (once again) by Hardy. IMO there is no such thing as a bad book: some are better than others.
To this day I thank Arthur Ransome for giving me (and millions of others) the love of books. Possible debt to Miss Tweed (who taught me to read (poor soul)) as well.
Steffan said:
Stuart70 said:
Capt WE Johns, then Willard Price, then Alastair McLean, the Ian Fleming then Hemingway.....
Good topic OP. An interesting list and I devoured all of these and more besides! But the book that started my love of reading was Swallows ans Amazons by Arthur Ransome. Followed avidly by Swallowdale, Peter Duck, Coot Club, Missee Lee, Great Northern, We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea, Secret Water, Picts and the Martyrs and every one in the series by Ransome. Bought each one with book tokens and present money and still have (or my eldest daughter still has) every one still in the original covers. Then onto a list not unlike Stuart70 with Angus McVicar and the Red Plant and all of Asimov, Arthur C Clarke and on and on and on. Bit more Catholic in my tastes now but not in my religion! I am currently reading Contested Will by James Shapiro (Shakespeare's authorship disputes) and Under the Greenwood Tree (once again) by Hardy. IMO there is no such thing as a bad book: some are better than others.
To this day I thank Arthur Ransome for giving me (and millions of others) the love of books. Possible debt to Miss Tweed (who taught me to read (poor soul)) as well.
Apologies for that and thank you for the skid down memory lane...
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