
Books

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14th September 2019
07:00am BST

It's hard to pick just one, but the first one that comes to mind is Carlos Ruiz Zafrón's The Shadow of the Wind. The first of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books series, it's actually more of a story-within-a-story - and an incredible one at that.
Set in the period after the Spanish Civil War, it follows a young boy named Daniel who - after being introduced to the labyrinthine Cemetery of Forgotten Books - picks up a novel called The Shadow of the Wind by Julián Carax. But when a mysterious man sets out to destroy the remainder of Carax's books, Daniel sets out to do everything he can to protect the legacy of the ill-fated author.
The Gothic mystery, combined with the social realism and detective fiction, results in a book that I wasn't able to put down - and had such an impact on me that I re-read in every year-or-so, and have done since I was 13.
As an avid reader since childhood I always maintained that there were too many good books out there to choose just one favourite – that was until I read Let The Great World Spin. The story is set in New York in the late 1970s, and involves a host of characters from different backgrounds, including two Irish brothers.
The characters don’t know each other but they’re all affected by the same events, and so the book jumps between different timelines and perspectives. It’s confusing at first but masterful as the stories slowly converge around an occurrence at the Twin Towers.
What I loved most about this book is how beautifully written it is – gritty in parts, poetic in others, Column McCann can express love and loss like no other writer I’ve ever encountered. It simultaneously made me want to write a novel of my own, and left me depressed that I could never come up with anything as moving as this story!
My favourite book of all time is Angela's Ashes.
I've always been a history nerd, so books that tell a story of another time are my thing. I love getting a look into the past, a glimpse into what life was like. Frank McCourt's biography does just that.
It's a story of his life; what it was like in Brooklyn as a small child, and what life was like as a teenager in Limerick. The story deals with poverty, alcoholism, and Irishness as a whole. It's no wonder it won a Pulitzer in 1997.
My favourite is A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara.
I didn't know what I was getting into when I launched into the 800+ page odyssey, but I'm glad that I dived in without any prior knowledge as to how I was going to feel the entire way through.
The book is devastating, and I mean that in the most positive way. It'll leave you upset, enthralled, and completely heartbroken, feeling things for these characters that you've probably never felt for people you know in real life.
Basically, it's a modern classic and I've yet to have anything affect me so rawly and intensely since.
A beautifully sad story. It tells the tale of a young Chinese girl who's mother died at childbirth, and her family therefore resent her. It's a true story, written in the first person, and one I was definitely too young to read as a child.
I remember being so fascinated by the differences in culture. The author wrote it with a reflective mind so her retrospective outlook was also super interesting.
It's been so long since I've read it that I'd be curious how well it is actually written, given I was so young but I've no doubt it's emotive effects would be the same.
I studied this book in college and really had to read and re read it. It givea you an inside glimpse into the mind of a woman going through some type of mental illness (never explained).
One of the most enjoyable, mind-boggling, confusing books I've ever read.
As a reader you can't trust your protagonists voice, and no matter how many times you read it you'll see her and her actions differently every time.
Feels very strange to consider this a favourite book because I did nothing but cry the whole time I read it. There's no happy ending, no knight in shining armour, and not even any named characters.
To learn that the characters unnamed would seem confusing at first but the blatant Irish tone of the novel makes it incredibly easy to determine who is speaking.

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