Which is a book that you feel like you could read and reread and never get tired of? The one you always find captivating and entertaining no matter how many times you read it, that always feels fresh to you.
For me, ‘Wuthering Heights’ by Emily Brontë does it. It’s such a brilliant, well written, evocative book, with such distinctive prose and characters and characterisation of people and places and stories within. I love it and I love how poetic it feels to read it.
mrmulticultural99 on
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
ImaginaryFudge5994 on
Herry potter
mommima on
The Harry Potter series. I read it on repeat each time a new book came out and have re-read it as an adult as well. It holds up.
Trocrocadilho on
When I was a teen I was always re reading The Picture of Dorian Gray
LazyAccount-ant on
catch 22.
kleighk on
Like Water for Chocolate. Magical realism.
Wild_Preference_4624 on
[The Hands of the Emperor](https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/af2bba9c-8f41-4a3e-b87a-8532a44ccb67) by Victoria Goddard! It’s a (very long) be as beautifully written slice of life book about the personal secretary to the emperor of the world, with a heavy focus on platonic relationships.
MostlyHarmlessMom on
*Josh and Hazel’s Guide to Not Dating* by Christina Lauren makes me LOL on almost every page. I’ve read it 4 or 5 times so far.
moonlightmantra on
I’ve reread Judy Blume’s Summer Sisters more times than I care to admit.
DeepspaceDigital on
I read a lot and the only book I have read twice is I, Robot.
MattTin56 on
I’ve never been big on re-reading novels. I barely read Stephen King anymore but every couple years around Halloween I read Salem’s Lot. It reminds me of being young and enjoying that time of year. Plus it’s a great story.
12 Comments
For me, ‘Wuthering Heights’ by Emily Brontë does it. It’s such a brilliant, well written, evocative book, with such distinctive prose and characters and characterisation of people and places and stories within. I love it and I love how poetic it feels to read it.
Jonathan Livingston Seagull
Herry potter
The Harry Potter series. I read it on repeat each time a new book came out and have re-read it as an adult as well. It holds up.
When I was a teen I was always re reading The Picture of Dorian Gray
catch 22.
Like Water for Chocolate. Magical realism.
[The Hands of the Emperor](https://app.thestorygraph.com/books/af2bba9c-8f41-4a3e-b87a-8532a44ccb67) by Victoria Goddard! It’s a (very long) be as beautifully written slice of life book about the personal secretary to the emperor of the world, with a heavy focus on platonic relationships.
*Josh and Hazel’s Guide to Not Dating* by Christina Lauren makes me LOL on almost every page. I’ve read it 4 or 5 times so far.
I’ve reread Judy Blume’s Summer Sisters more times than I care to admit.
I read a lot and the only book I have read twice is I, Robot.
I’ve never been big on re-reading novels. I barely read Stephen King anymore but every couple years around Halloween I read Salem’s Lot. It reminds me of being young and enjoying that time of year. Plus it’s a great story.