10 Books that changed my life one way or another

in #19842 years ago

I was once an avid reader. A good book would have me immersed in a whole new world that allowed me to escape from whatever I was running from. I'd like to rediscover that.

As a first step, I spent some time posting some book covers of books that left a mark on me on social media.

Ten was nowhere near enough, but you have to stop somewhere.

Honourable mentions - books that didn't make the cut

Some of these books are better than my top ten. Some like To Kill a Mockingbird are acknowledged classics. Others like Blood Music are mind-bending. My top 10 is simply the ten books that had the most impact upon me. So here are the honourable mentions in no particular order.

  • Dandelion Wine by Ray Bradbury. Nostalgic but gripping.
  • Carrie by Stephen King. The first part was pulled out of the rubbish bin by his wife Tabitha. Just as well.
  • The Books of Blood by Clive Barker. A collection of short stories that pushed the horror genre envelope.
  • Schindler's Ark by Thomas Kenneally. Schindler brought to life with remarkable storytelling. The line "Their livers glowed like embers," uesed to describe two men drinking has sat with me forever, asdoes the story. Spielberg's movie IS NOT AS GOOD.
  • Blood Music by Greg Bear. Bear in my opinion is the best SCi Fi writer on the planet because he understands the folly of humanity. Blood Musicin my opinion is his best work.
  • To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee. I'm pretty sure that this was the first book that told me that the world can be an ugly place.

I could go on but you have to draw a line somewhere. Besides, I want to get to the meat and potatoes. Here are my all-time top 10 books that influenced me. They are placed in reverse order but could flip around on any given day. All of these are highly recommended. Some might be hard going but every one of them is worth it.

Number 10 The Complete Works of H.P. Lovecraft
H P Lovecraft

Lovecraft had a hell of an imagination. Either that or he had a good LSD supplier. His writing these days would be described as pretentious and way too wordy. But there's no doubt that he could tell a story. Anyone who has aspirations of being a dark fantasy or horror writer should read Lovecraft. He created an entire mythos around Chtulu but for all his wordiness and imagination, he understood that the best way to grab a reader by the throat and not let go was to build the tension and leave things unsaid rather than go for the gross out.

Spellbinding at his best. Always entertaining. Every horror writer who is anybody has paid homage to the Lovecraftian world at some stage or another.

Number 9 I Wish I Had Duck Feet
Theo LeSieg (Dr Seuss)


How do I explain this? It was the first book that I owned and read all by myself. At one point I could recite it word for word. I had no idea until writing this that Theo LeSieg was a pen name for Dr Seuss but on some level, it always felt like a Dr Seuss book. Now I know that it was. Duck feet, whale's spout, elephant's trunk and tiger's tail. I wanted all of those things until the reasons for not having them were pointed out

I'll probably get banned from Facebook for mentioning Dr Seuss, not that I care much.


Number 8 The Hobbit
JRR Tolkien

Perhaps it is because I read the Hobbit first, but I always enjoyed it more than the trilogy that is Lord of the Rings. the Hobbit in my opinion is not as ambitious and focuses on the story rather than any symbolism. The language is at times difficult. Tolkien is almost, but not quite as wordy as Lovecraft and that tends to wear you down after a while. the Hobbit is a simple story that gave rise to a whole sword and sorcery world for me to explore. (Special mention here to a book called Neq the sword that I read in primary school and had forgotten all about until I started writing this.)
The sword and sorcery theme is something that followed me into early adulthood as I followed bands like Led Zeppelin, Dio and to a lesser extent Iron Maiden who all seemed to be on more than nodding terms with the genre.

Number 7 QB VII
Leon Uris

Again, a book that was read in my junior primary years. This was perhaps the first adult book that I ever read. Some of the lines in it have always stuck with me. Uris has his critics, but this left a huge impression on me and introduced me to some really deep concepts like the nature of evil, the power of reputation and the indescribable cruelty that we humans are capable of. Uris intentionally draws Dr Adam Kelno as a likeable character that can be empathasised with. His denouement is at once devastating and just.

Number 6 Last Exit to Brooklyn
Hubert Selby Jr

Not for the faint-hearted nor the squeamish. Last Exit to Brooklyn has been described as "a punch to the face," and it is an apt description. I read this when I was fourteen or fifteen and I was transfixed from cover to cover. There are no heroes in this book, and nothing good happens to anyone. And yet I was drawn to the flawed humanity in all of the characters. The book is a series of loosely connected stories describing life in the seedier parts of Brooklyn n the 1950s.
It was briefly banned for being obscene. I can see why, but don't regard the book as being obscene. It is confronting, vicious, cold and in your face, certainly not the subject matter that fourteen-year-old schoolboys should have been able to get their hands on, but it feels real. Selby shows a complete disregard for the conventions of grammar, but once you start reading, you don't notice.

Number 5 Farenheit 451
Ray Bradbury

Bradbury was a genius. His three best works were all under consideration for this list. Something Wicked This Way Comes being the first eliminated because it simply doesn't have as much to say as Dandelion Wine or this. Bradbury saw cancel culture coming thirty or forty years before it began to raise its ugly head. Consider this quote and let it roll around in your brain for a while.

"‘Cram them full of noncombustible data, chock them so damned full of ‘facts’ they feel stuffed, but absolutely ‘brilliant’ with information. Then they’ll feel they’re thinking, they’ll get a sense of motion without moving. And they’ll be happy, because facts of that sort don’t change. Don’t give them any slippery stuff like philosophy or sociology to tie things up with. That way lies melancholy.'"

And that's where we are.

Number 4 Of Mice and Men
John Steinbeck

On the face of it, a very simple tale about workers in the great depression, Of MIce and men manages to wring every last ounce of humanity out of what seems to be an unpreventable tragedy which is no one's fault.

This made me cry.

That's something I've never really admitted before.

Steinbeck was every bit the genius that Bradbury was - just a different type of genius.

Number 3 Lord of the Flies
William Golding

There's something intangible about this book that touches way too close to the bone.
The mob rules savagery that this bunch of well educated British boys descend into explores the darkest part of our souls. We all know it and we've all tasted it. There is always a need for an outcast and a fall guy. We all want to belong. Sometimes it's simply easier to blend into the anonymity of the mob than to stand up for what is right. The mob can always justify its behaviour, While we are part of it, we are immune from censure or punishment. How far that goes depends entirely upon circumstances.

Kill the Pig Bash him in is a line much more horrific and chilling than anything Hubert Selby Jnr ever wrote. That's because it could so easily be you or I chanting that line.

Number 2 The Drawing of the Three
Stephen King

King has written some amazing stuff. Most of his best work is not in the horror genre. Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, Apt Pupil, The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon and Mr Mercedes all had me in their spell. King has three strengths that set him apart from most. His storytelling ability, his incredible observations of human behaviour and the characters he creates.
I've always believed his best work was the first three books of the Dark Tower Series. Those first three books were written by a young man with vision and hunger. The last four were written years afterwards and never quite hit the standard of the first three. Perhaps that's because Roland becomes more human as the story goes on, perhaps it's because King was more committed to the story when he was younger. I don't know.
What I do know is that the first two books were under serious consideration for a spot in the top 10 from day one. the Drawing of the three gets the nod, mainly because it introduces a character who is my favourite King character. Eddie Dean reminds me of a friend that I lost a long time ago. His character grabbed me by the throat and wouldn't let go.
If you haven't read the Dark Tower, pay no attention to the movie. It does it no justice.

Ka is a wheel

1984
George Orwell

This should be compulsory reading for every student in every country. Orwell gives a chilling vision of a totalitarian state where "the party" has total control. Thoughtcrime, wrongspeak, badthink and doublethink are all concepts that seemed utterly alien when I read the book in 1980 or thereabouts. Now they all seem frighteningly real.
I have seen the memes that say 1984 was meant to be a warning, not a how-to manual. I don't laugh at them anymore. If we're not there yet, we're getting frightfully close.

War is Peace, ignorance is Strength, Freedom is Slavery .

Welcome to my nightmare



Posted from my blog with Exxp : https://markhodgetts.com/10-books-that-changed-my-life-one-way-or-another/
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I don't know. I have been hearing a lot about Orwell's 1984, but until now I haven't read it yet. Poor me.

Get yourself a copy. It's worth it and while you're at it grab Aldous Huxley's Brave New World.

That's another famous book that I've been hearing a lot about. Thanks for the info.

Saw this on Listnerds. I have read The Hobbit, Of Mice and Men (Steinbeck is not a favorite--too depressing in his realism, eve for a jeded engineer like me),) Fahrenheit 451, and 1984.

I agree to a point with Steinbeck, but the story has stuck with me for decades and I guess that when I put the list together, I simply could not leave it off. Very few stories and characters resonate for forty years or more

Those are the four I'd read too, @fiberfrau, along with Lord of the Flies, before I came across this post.

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Last Exit to Brooklyn is my favorite among the ones you mentioned. It's such a strong book in its descriptions and language.

Great list though. They're all good in my opinion.

That's another that I haven't read yet. Might have to check it out.

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It can be tough going. It doesn't skirt around anything. Someone described it as like a punch to the face. Be prepared.

Last Exit to Brooklyn is one of the few books that shocked me. Mind you I was 14 when I read it. Suffice to say, it has left a lasting impression

Impressive list of titles here @markhodge - I can't profess to be an avid reader or ever for that matter, but a list with Bradbury, Tolkien and King is definitely understood, why they are life impacting.

Stephen King is one writer I just haven't got around to reading... yet... Perhaps I'll check him out on Audible.

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Great list. I loved seeing the Dr. Suess book there. I am not a Stephen King fan so I haven't read any of his books. My favorite from the list is The Hobbit. Been a Tolkien fan for years. Thanks for the post.

I loved the Hobbit and I understand not being a King fan. He has written a lot of stuff and not all of it is top shelf. I think his best work s outside the horror genre, but as with most things I'm in the minority.

Funny, @rcaine - I've never been tempted to read Stephen King either, but I'm thinking about putting my misgivings aside...

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Interesting list, especially the ones that were new to me, particularly Leon Uris. I have some Audible credits so I'll see if any of his stuff is available (and if the narrator is any good)...

I've read five of the ten on your list (if I include The Hobbit, which we read in a 1st or 2nd year secondary school English class. We also read Of Mice and Men, probably in the 4th or 5th year as it made a much bigger impression on me - I went on to read The Pearl, and then Grapes of Wrath).

1, 3, and 5 I have read as an adult; I read 1984 with a private student a couple of years ago, my third or fourth reading I guess. Back in the day, "New Speak" seemed like something that could only happen in regimes such as the USSR and Maoist China...

I need to read Grapes of Wrath.
Yes indeed, it's hard to come to terms with how shockingly familiar terms link Newspeak and Wrongthink have now become.
Uris is interesting - haven't read it for over 45 years, but the fact that it made this list is testament to it having left an impression on a young boy.

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Hi Mark,

I just finished listening to the Audible version of Mila 18 by Leon Uris and am deeply impressed by the novel. It helped that the narrator, David de Vries, did an excellent job - enough to make me check out what else he's narrated and buy it on the strength of that alone...

Mila 18 begins in pre-war Poland and follows the lives, struggles, suffering and resistance of the Jewish community to the heroic Warsaw Ghetto uprising of 1943. Highly recommended! So glad I stumbled upon your book list. Thank you.

I'm going to bring this post to people's attention on Listnerds.

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I'd forgotten about Mira. I read that shortly after QB VII - great story. Thanks for the support - much appreciated

You're welcome, @markhodge - I got great value from this post.

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Awesome collection of books
@markhodge
My wife is a huge reader, i try but i am more a visual consumer it takes me ages to get through a book i will be honest even a good one.
Have an amazing weekend:)

I've read your numbers 1 to 5, and three of them are definitely in my top 10.
I ADORE Stephen King. The explanation I have for the later books not being up to par with the earlier ones is that MAYBE, just maybe, he had, or has a Ghost writer. In reality, we really can't know if the author is truly the author. All I know is that when King tried to write under the name Richard Bachman, lots of fans weren't fooled. They knew it was him. Which makes me believe that maybe now, in these last few years, there's someone else doing the writing.
Feasible or conspiracy theory. Not sure. But anything is possible these days!!!

I am going to look up the other books in your list! Thank you for sharing :)