My birthday was this week, and to celebrate it, here are 45 books I have loved during
the past 45 years.
Because I'm limiting this list to books
that are available in English, I've had to leave out a lot of my
Finnish favourites, and so the "self-portrait" is not quite
accurate. But it's a fair glimpse into my reading history and what
sort of books appeal to me.
Ten favourites from my childhood
A.A. Milne: Winnie-the-Pooh
Elisabeth Beresford: The Wombles
Kenneth Grahame: Wind in the
Willows
Eleanor Estes: The Moffats
Astrid Lindgren: Vi På Saltkråkan
(Seacrow Island)
Enid Blyton: the Adventure series
Laura Ingalls Wilder: Little House
in the Big Woods (and the series)
L.M.Montgomery: Rilla of Ingleside
L.M. Alcott: An Old-Fashioned Girl
James Aldridge: The Marvellous
MongolianThe last one gets to represent my horse phase. Most of the horse books I devoured were by Finnish or Swedish authors, probably not available in English.
From teen years and early twenties
Mary Stolz: By the Highway Home
John Steinbeck: Travels with
Charley
J.R.R. Tolkien: Lord of the Rings
Douglas Adams: The Hitch-Hikers
Guide to the Galaxy
Fynn: Mister God, This is Anna
It was difficult to think back to those years. I know I read a lot, but what did I enjoy the most? I must have forgotten many good books, but if I remember a book as a significant reading experience about thirty years later, it must have been important.
Jane Austen - and other fiction favourites from the last two decades
Jane Austen: Persuasion
Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice
Jane Austen: Mansfield Park
Jane Austen: Northanger Abbey
Jane Austen: Sense and Sensibility
Jane Austen: Emma
Elizabeth Gaskell: Cranford
Barbara Pym: Excellent Women
Josephine Tey: The Daughter of
Time
Dorothy L. Sayers: Gaudy Night
C.S. Lewis: The Screwtape Letters
Adrian Plass: The Sacred Diary of
of Adrian Plass Aged 37 3/4 (and the entire series)
Adrian Plass: Stress Family
Robinson (and its sequel, The Birthday Party)
Jeff Lucas: Helen Sloane's Diary
(and its sequel, Up Close and Personal)
Robinson, Marilynne: GileadFor all other authors, just one favourite book (or series) has to represent them. But Jane Austen and Adrian Plass are special.
A bunch of biographies and other Christian non-fiction
Sheldon Vanauken: A Severe Mercy
Joni Eareckson: Joni
Corrie ten Boom: The Hiding Place
Norman Grubb: Rees Howells:
Intercessor
Brother Andrew: God's Smuggler
Elisabeth Elliot: Through Gates of
Splendour
J. Gunnar Olson: Business
Unlimited
Nick Vujicic: Life without Limits
Eric Metaxas: Bonhoeffer: Pastor,
Martyt, Prophet, Spy
Karen Swallow Prior: Fierce
Convictions
C.S. Lewis: Mere Christianity
John White:
The Fight
Loren Cunningham: Making Jesus
Lord
Jennifer
Saake: Hannah's Hope
Tim Kimmel: Grace-Based Parenting
The last category was a hard one to
select and limit. I've read so much. I tried to pick those books that
meant a
lot to me at the time I read them and that have stayed with me a long time after I read them; the ones I'd
recommend and buy as presents to others etc. But I could have added many
others, too. (And again it's not the full picture, because many
influential books have been by authors whose works have not been
translated into English.)