Get the List here! 95 Books to read – recommended by the Fellowship of The Kitchen’s Garden Farmy Friends

 Morning darlinks! How do you like your new name? The Fellowship of the Kitchen’s Garden Farmy Friends. Try and say that; at speed, three times in a row,  after a few wines, with a glass in one hand and standing on the opposing  foot.

Here is the list of Books and Authors for you to save. Compiled by the ‘The Fellowship of The Farmy Friends’ -maybe that is easier .

You have given me a wonderful, comprehensive, eclectic pile of books to read.   Just the list itself is a gift of gold for this reader. And I am so grateful that I can present them all on one page for You, as thanks. 

I have just cut and pasted them in the order they were received. And any applicable comments are from the contributer.  I cannot make an easy to print thingy, so may I suggest you copy and paste into your own document and print from there.  I am definitely printing a bunch of these and giving them away as christmas surprises in the christmas cards!

Books we are going to love reading: here at thekitchensgarden.com

  1. Hilary Mantel’s “Bring in the Bodies”
  2. Wolf Hall
  3. Hunger Games Trilogy
  4. Doug Tallamy’s Bringing Nature Home.
  5. When in Doubt, Add Butter by Beth Harbison
  6. Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier; (Wonderful!!)
  7. Sir Terry Pratchett
  8. The Tiger’s Wife
  9. I am currently listening to (long commute) In the Moon of Red Ponies by James Lee Burke. The writing has my stomach flipping as I listen.
  10. James Less Burke is my husband’s very favorite author of all time. He just finished Creole Belle.
  11. CS Lewis. The secret to good writing is telling the truth. I think that is Lewis’ brilliance.
  12. Flannery O’Connor
  13. The Snow Child: A Novel, by Eowyn Ivy (miss c notes that this was nominated by three readers!!)
  14. George R R Martain’s Dance With Dragons
  15. This is where I leave you” by Jonathan Tropper. Highly recommended–hilarious and poignant.
  16. Bill Jones Jr. Our fellow blogger and camera gifter. His new collection of short stories Juice and Other Stories. Miss c looks forward to reading them soon.
  17. George R. R. Martin’s Song of Ice and Fire series
  18. Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver.
  19. Sweet Tooth by Ian McEwan.
  20. Barbara Kingsolver  The Lacuna
  21. The Woodcutter by Reginald Hill,
  22. ‘A Fraction of the Whole’ by Steve Toltz,
  23. A Discovery of Witches’ by Deborah Harkness.
  24. ‘The Whole Hog’ by Lyall Watson – some amazing tales and facts about Pigs!
  25. The Poisonwood Bible remains one of my favorite works of fiction of all time.
  26. The Shell Seekers by Rosamund Pilcher, if you like urban fantasy (I didn’t know I did until I read this series)
  27. The Dresden Files is a must-read.
  28. The Mists of Avalon
  29. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.
  30. “Wait for Me! Memoirs of the Youngest Mitford Sister”, by Deborah Devonshire.
  31. I’m a real fan of Graham Robb. Try “The Parisians” and ” The Discovery of France: a historical geography”.
  32. Most essential, if you haven’t already read them, is the series of “Dance to the Music of Time” by Anthony Powell
  33. Alice Munro
  34. The Man in the Rockefeller Suit, by Mark Seal, so interesting and a true story.
  35. City of Thieves by David Benioff.
  36. The Floor of Heaven by Howard Blum.
  37. State of Wonder by Ann Patchett.
  38. Eternal on the Water by Joseph Monninger. The characters are so rich and I was so sad to get to the last page. I wanted it to continue forever.
  39. A Painted House by John Grisham. It is not his usual legal/thriller fiction. It is about a young Arkansas boy whose family sharecrops in the 1950s.
  40. The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde.
  1. Atonement by Ian McEwan
  2. Anything by Connie Willis
  3. I just re-read juvenile/adult fiction “Island of the Blue Dolphins.” If you read it years ago, I recommend it now as an adult. There are so many more historical implications.
  4. I love the Milly Reynolds mysteries…the Mike Malone series. They’re delightful. They are quick reads, fully of British humor and understatement.
  5. The Secret Life of Bees
  6. The Game of Thrones
  7. A Country Year by Sue Hubbell.
  8. Sylvia’s Farm – the journal of an improbable shepherd. Fun and very well written.
  9. Someone Know My Name by Lawrence Hill.
  10. Runaway by Alice Munro.
  11. Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn, whose protagonist has Tourette’s syndrome.
  12. Kate Moses’  -Wintering, a novel about the last three months of the life of Sylvia Plath.
  13. Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake and The Year of the Flood — most anything by Atwood is good.
  14. A Suitable Boy by Vikram Seth (an old favourite & perfect for travelling because it’s long),
  15. The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
  16. The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox by Maggie O’Farrell
  17. Also the free E-book classics via Kindle etc are fantastic.
  18. New authors via Smashwords,
  19. Cristian Mihai, Dianne F. Gray, Maggie Myklebust’s (Fly Away Home) and Lori Di Nardi who are WordPress bloggers with published e-books.
  20. The Shoemakers Wife a true story and delightfully written.
  21. “Madame Tussaud -a novel of the French Revolution” (she had a wax museum during that time period – you see all levels of society and how they were affected) by Michelle Moran
  22. “The Last Place on Earth.”
  23. Rosamunde Pilcher and Maeve Binchy.
  24. There’s also a series by Patrick Taylor that starts with “An Irish Country Doctor” .
  25. I liked “Domina” – it’s about one of the first women in medical school.
  26. Green City in the Sun” by  Goldsmith.
  27. The Zoo Keepers Wife.
  28. Pillars of the Earth.
  29. World Without End and Fallen Giants .
  30. The Shadow of the Wind.
  31. The Kitchen Garden.
  32. Kim (R. Kipling).
  33. Thorn Birds.
  34. Packing for Mars: The Curious Science of Life in the Void by Mary Roach; (Some parts are laugh-aloud and read-aloud funny…)
  35. In the Woods, by Tana French; (very good murder mystery set in Scotland.)
  36. The Swerve: How the World Became Modern, by Stephen Greenblatt; (Fascinating!)
  37. Making Supper Safe: One Man’s Quest to Learn the Truth About Food Safety, by Ben Hewitt.
  38.  The Town That Food Saved, by Ben. We met him at a conference and he’s an interesting young man. He has a good blog, too.)
  39. The Bloodletter’s Daughter (A Novel of Old Bohemia) by Linda Lafferty. (I had never read anything about this region’s history, interesting.)
  40. Wolf Hall
  1. The Worst Hard Time: The Untold Story of Those Who Survived the Great American Dust Bowl by Timothy Egan
  2. Garden Meditation – Cultivating Peace’ by Timothy McKibben (a monk I have studied with)
  3. The Outlander by Gil Adamson
  4. ‘Into the Land of Snows’ by Ellis Nelson, another blogger..
  5. The Far Pavilions by M.M. Kaye.
  6. The Grass Harp by.Truman Capote, gentle funny, poignant.
  7. The Holy Man by Susan Trott
  8. . I thought of World Made By Hand when reading your NaNo excerpt, so thought that deserved a mention.
  9. Irish writer – Kevin Barry at the moment. We’re reading his short story collection Dark Lies the Island.
  10. I also highly recommend David Mitchell’s first book, Ghostwritten which I have read several times.
  11. For characters that are hard to part with, Ruth Ozeki’s My Year of Meats is hard to beat.
  12.  Wilfred Thesiger’s wonderful travel book, Arabian Sand -a good old fashioned explorer’s tale with some really moving writing in it.
  13. The Tiger by John Vaillant
  14. The sound of a wild snail eating – Elisabeth Tova Bailey
  15. Plainsong by Kent Haruf – set in the midwest – raw and brilliant. Cecilia loved this so much she begged the library lady to let her steal it.

Gutenberg Project (www.gutenberg.org). It’s a website where you can download, for free, books for which the copyrights have expired.

Good morning. I packed and ordered and cleaned yesterday. But finished nothing.  I will lug my bag out to the barn this morning and weigh it. Get a fright, panic a bit, then resign myself to overweight. It is the presents. And I will not leave them behind. They are finds that I have collected over the last year or so, I would rather leave my clothes behind, but I need them to pack around the fragile gifts!!

Tonight we meet with the builders for a final consultation and I will give my little camera to the Kiwi Builder who is heading up that team. John will not be working while I am away so he is joining the team of minders of the Farmy and they have decided to do the whole day by themselves today.  Then John and I will do the weekend.  Then I am gone.

The Tall Teenager (Triple T as ChgJohn calls him) was given a camera for his birthday so I shall bribe him into taking a few shots of the animals for you and I, once in a while. Teenagers work for pizza!

Three more sleeps until I fly out to California for the first stop. Six nights before I climb aboard the plane for New Zealand.  We will not be back until Christmas day. Are your virtual bags packed yet? Ready to  come along as the Farm Weblog morphs into a Daily (mostly)Travel Blog with Food? Such fun we will have.

 

Soon I will stop being the headmistress and I will be the Mama again. Such a joyous sound.

Have a lovely day.

celi

91 responses to “Get the List here! 95 Books to read – recommended by the Fellowship of The Kitchen’s Garden Farmy Friends”

  1. Too many books-not enough time! Thank-you so much for this amazing list!! I was en-route to Kauai and could not contribute but would like to also suggest The Outlander series by Diane Galbaldon. Cutting for Stone-great read!! I’m currently reading Crow Planet-you’ll never look at crows the same! I can not wait to depart with you to NZ!
    So excited for you Mama!! 🙂

  2. What a fantastic line up of reads and thank you so much for sharing it with us. I just picked up Barbara Kingsolver’s Lacuna at a used book store last week, so am looking forward to reading it next! Definitely cutting and pasting THE LIST. Sounds like all is just about ready for you to depart on your trip. I know you must be tingling with excitement! 🙂

  3. The book I recommended didn’t make the list! Ahhh well. There’s enough holiday reading here for everyone, anyway. Good luck with all you have to do between now and your departure xx

  4. Have a great trip. When was the last time you visited NZ? Thanks for the book list, must find time to do some reading. Looking forward to reading about your trip.

  5. I’m beyond excited by your trip as I plan to tag along virtually to NZ just like I tag along with you on the farmy.

  6. Thrilled over the list. (nice to see CS Lewis – he would have been 114 yesterday)
    Chuckled over the bag weigh-in. (I thought of you when unpacking the manger scene yesterday- have a wooly lamb my parents brought back from NZ that fits right in)
    Rest up and try to sleep – (Ha! like that’s possible)
    For some reason the image of Dorothy linking arms with the Scarecrow, Lion, and Tinman – followed by Toto comes to mind – like we are all off to see the wizard…
    Have a magical time!

  7. A bit late for your list,but Ifind the books below an interesting and off beat insite to parts of theUSA. May be little dated at times. They are by an American writer- William Least Heat-Moon.

    River Horse (aboat a boat jounery across America)
    Blue Highways (a jorney around America on the “blue roads on Road Maps)
    Roads to Quoz (a American Mosey )

    Enjoy yor visit home, but watch out for Hobbits and their assocites.
    Trollag ( relationsif ‘H.s’ usualy silver miners from the Isle of Man )

  8. Thanks for the reading list – lots for me to have a go at there.
    I think I will leave Mum (VivinFrance) to look at the list when she has WiFi again (hopefully in a few days time) as it is far to long a list to read out over the phone. I have trouble enough keeping up with all her blogging friends good wishes!
    Enjoy your trip to NZ, I shall be eagerly awaiting your travel blog. I have friends in Dunedin who we visited 6 years ago and had a ball. Tried and failed to get a sabbatical out there a couple of winters ago.
    Sally

    • I am so glad viv is getting better, what a worry, and yes absolutely don’t even think about reading it to her over the phone, it was a lot of fun, she may enjoy it later on and when she is well tell her i want her input.. you are being so wonderful.. give her our love.. c

  9. Some great titles there, and so many to check out – thanks to you and your readers for their input.
    It’s the first day of summer today here in Oz, I guess NZ are on the same seasonal zone, so you are headed for some very hot weather Celi; shorts and T-shirts a-plenty! It’s 33c here today.
    Have safe trips on all your flights, and I can’t wait to hear about your NZ. We are going there in February (Auckland and Coromandel Peninsula) to a family wedding.

  10. The list, the list, I have a most important list!! In all seriousness: feel secure when you leave, enjoy the journey, be enriched to meet those face-to-face, find the Shaky Isles better than before and DO tell us about it!!

  11. O my goodness – what a wonderful listing of books and authors to look for. Being Canadian, i was very pleased to see Margaret Atwood listed. Here’s another Canadian author who writes the most wonderful (a little scary, slight bloodthirsty, Tolkienesque) fantasy – Guy Gavriel Kay. Look especially for “The Fionavar Tapestry”, a trilogy that has, of course, Canadian content and connections. They are such beautiful stories even with the scary parts, you’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll learn about yourself. Have a wonderful trip, can’t wait for you to share your travels with us.

    • Thank you, good suggestion, I don’t mind scary at all! My husband won’t read anything with scary bits.. ! and welcome to the lounge of comments, we are going to have a great few weeks, .. c

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