Life Changing Books by Allison Symes
Hi, I thought for my first post here I’d share some of my life changing books. They all show the power of stories!
The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey
Tey’s Inspector Grant is confined to a hospital bed after a nasty fall (and it was set some time ago! They’d have him on his feet and out now!). Grant is renowned amongst his colleagues for having an eye for criminal faces and he is brought a picture of someone he discovers is Richard III.
The only thing Grant knows is what everyone thinks - Richard killed The Princes in the Tower to take the throne. Grant decides, with the help of a research assistant going to the British Library for him, to investigate.
Whatever your views on Richard III, this is a great detective story. (Colin Dexter uses the same premise when his Inspector Morse is confined to hospital - see The Wench Is Dead).
The book made me change my views on Richard III. It is renowned for being the catalyst for many joining the Richard III Society.
It is probably still Tey’s best known work.
The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey is renowned for changing people's minds about Richard III. Image from Pixabay. |
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
This is the book to demonstrate irony is wonderful in story telling! Elizabeth Bennett is well ahead of her time as a heroine knowing her own mind. I love everything about this and read it at home when I was 13 at about the same time as I was studying it in English Literature at school. Did I mind reading the book twice? Oh no! The characters gripped me and I regularly re-read this.
It is a wonderful go-to book for a comfort read. I watched the BBC’s Big Read programme in the early 2000s. This novel was championed by Meera Syal who rightly described this as the blueprint for great romantic comedy.
Stourhead was famously used for the BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice featuring Colin Firth as Mr Darcy. Pixabay image. |
Winchester Cathedral where Jane Austen is buried. They have held exhibitions about her in the past. Pixabay image. |
The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
This wonderful trilogy showed me what fantasy writing could do and be. It is for me the ultimate good -v- evil story. The film adaptations by Peter Jackson brought Tolkien’s world to life. What is great here is the fact some of my family would never read the huge paperback of this. They were gripped by the films though. Still got the story into them!
The breadth and scope of The Lord of the Rings makes it one of my favourite books. Pixabay image. |
Being tiny myself means I quite fancy living in a cosy hobbit home surrounded by lots of books. What's not to like? Pixabay image. |
Almost anything by P.G. Wodehouse and Terry Pratchett
Difficult to name anything specific (though I could choose The Code of the Woosters by Wodehouse and Going Postal by Pratchett. The latter starts with the hero being hanged! It is a fabulous story with the most likeable heroic rogue I’ve come across).
What these gentlemen have done is shown humorous fiction is a fantastic art form and make it look easy.
If there is one thing I’ve learned as a writer, it is that anyone who makes writing look easy has been putting in a hell of a lot of work over many years to reach that point.
What would you choose as your life changing books?
Terry Pratchett's magnificent Discworld. Image from Pixabay. |
Comments
I would add 'When will there be good news?' by Kate Atkinson, which helped me as a writer by clarifying a way of using different points of view, and 'The News from Waterloo' by Brian Cathcart, which made me realise I had lots more to learn about history, and to look forward to that.
I suppose I would say Catch 22 by Joseph Heller as when I was a young man it showed me the absurdity of war. Now, coincidentally, I am reading War and Peace for the first time and things didn't change much between 1812 and 1945. Same old, as they say.
But, mustn't be gloomy. i have six Jeeves books, beloved companions, and I was given Down with Skool for Xmas!
Thanks for the post. Made me think.
I shared Pratchett with my Dad too, and with one of my brothers. Pratchett is so funny, you're often surprised by his wisdom and understanding. When Dad was alive, we wouldn hold lengthy, indecisive discussions on who was our favourite character: the Librarian? Captain Vimes? Granny Weatherwax? Angua... Love those books.
Lovely post, Allison, and I like the sound of the Richard III one too (not read it yet).
Great recommendations, and I've been meaning to pick up something by Terry Pratchett - humour is in short supply these days, especially as I sit at home awaiting vaccines (like much of the world).
I'll look up GOING POSTAL.
I'm not one for fantasy, and tend toward suspense/mysteries. I really loved Carlos Ruiz Zafón's THE SHADOW OF THE WIND.
Enjoy the upcoming week,
eden
eden
Hope you find you get hooked to Pratchett as I did.