Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ Members Share the Books They've Been Rereading

A comforting balm. A much-needed diversion. Time spent with an old friend. Childhood memories and annual traditions. We asked the Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ community to share the books they've found themselves rereading duringÌýthe past year and what those books haveÌýmeant to them on the second (or third or fourth) time revisiting those pages.
It's clear that books have been a source of solace for many of us! Tell us if you've been rereading a favorite book, andÌýread through all of your fellow readers' responses to our question on and as well!Ìý
It's clear that books have been a source of solace for many of us! Tell us if you've been rereading a favorite book, andÌýread through all of your fellow readers' responses to our question on and as well!Ìý
"I reread Anna Karenina every year, but this year I’ve been rereading comfort reads like Anne of Green Gables," says .
"I reread Northanger Abbey and Persuasion this year. My youngest was having trouble with college English last spring once they went online and there were no actual discussions, so I thought it would be fun for me to be a classmate and we could talk about them together," saysÌý.
"Mary Shelley is so eloquent on the effects of loneliness on the human condition that it's the perfect pandemic read. And she wrote this during the 'Year Without a Summer'Ìýin 1816, when there were food riots and 200,000 Europeans died as a result of crop failuresÌýand floods due to heavy rains. She wrote in her journal, 'It proved a wet, ungenial summer and incessant rain often confined us for days to the house.' So...Mary Shelley was effectively in the same situation as we are today when she wrote Frankenstein," says .
"I haven’t read this book since my early 20s but picked it up again after listening to and podcasts discuss this book as well as the most recent book on him, The Dead Are Arising: The Life of Malcolm X," saysÌý.
"I liked it the first time, but it became an all-time favorite when I reread it this year. It's so poignant, beautifully descriptive, and nostalgic," saysÌý.
"I have a tradition where I read Good Omens every July. It started after I first read it threeÌýyears ago. That particular year of school had been rough, andÌýsomehow I found Good Omens at a bookstore. For me, it’s just one of those books you can think about for months after reading it," saysÌý.Ìý
"2020 definitely called for more Stoicism," saysÌý.
"I reread The Secret History by Donna Tartt, but this time as an audiobook read by the author. I wanted to jog my memory of that particular book, because I keep saying it was so much better than The Goldfinch (it was), but I wanted to be able to back that opinion up with more details. I'm so glad I listened to it this time around! It was wonderful to hear the French and Greek words pronounced correctly, for one thing. Going forward, I'm seriously considering doing any rereading this way; it really freshened up the material," saysÌý
"My friend was trying to persuade me to watch the recent Netflix adaptation, but I’m a bit of a movie snob and had a feeling I wouldn’t like it. When I got COVID and was stuck in quarantine, I decided to give it a fair shake by rereading the book for the first time in a decade and then watching the Hitchcock and Netflix movies in that order (I had the time, after all). I was, unsurprisingly, disappointed with the remake, but I fell madly in love with the book all over again and haven’t been able to stop thinking about it since. Such a gothic gem," saysÌý.Ìý
"Most of Agatha Christie’s work, because it turns out having some sense that there is logic and order and control to be found in death, that death isn’t just random and meaningless and heartbreakingly arbitrary...was a feeling I needed this year," saysÌý.
"I found it a soothing balm. We have lived through tumultuous times before. We survived and we will again.I finished the book, and then started it again, hopeful for the return of 'our better angels,' " saysÌý.Ìý
"Eleanor & Park because it's so pure, heartbreaking, beautiful, and inspiring. So, during the lockdown I reread it, just trusting to find in it some hope. It may seem like another love story in high school, but I completely promise you it is a masterpiece," saysÌý.
"With how hard this year has been (for so many reasons) and people’s strong division of opinion, it was so comforting to read a book about a family that loved and supported each other despite what others thought of them. And how people overcame their prejudices and fear and were happier and better for it. The book is full of love and hope, which is something I think the world needs more of now, and it was wonderful to get lost in the joy of this book!" saysÌý.
"This is the book that makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside, and makes the world seem manageable, even when things are hard. For me, the message of this book is that nothing is insurmountable if you have people who love and support you, and that's what I needed to be reminded of this year," saysÌý.Ìý
"N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy. Because it is the best exposition of our time in fiction that I am aware of, and [I] will probably keep readingÌýthe series every year or two," saysÌý.
Which books have you found yourself rereading? Let us know in the comments below!
Check out more recent articles, including:
45 of the Most Anticipated Sci-Fi and Fantasy Novels of 2021
The Most Anticipated Books of 2021
Check out more recent articles, including:
45 of the Most Anticipated Sci-Fi and Fantasy Novels of 2021
The Most Anticipated Books of 2021
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Kelli
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Jan 04, 2021 02:49AM

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I'm like you. Once you've read a story you already know the characters and know what happens in the book. If I started rereading books I'd never get through my 'to be read' list.
I just re-read all of the Twilight Saga so I can read Midnight Sun

One of my top 10 books!! I must have reread it at least 10 times since I was 12-13 years old :D


I reread a few pages every day


page 34, and can't put it down. Not a thriller, but totally engaging, and I can tell, full of wisdom.




Uncle Tom's Chldren- Richard Wright. His greatest work.
Waiting For Nothing- Tom Kromer. American depression classic.
Cane- Jean Toomer. America's first experimental novel. stunning.
Puerto Rican Obituary-Pedro Pietri. Searing, hilarlious poetry.
The Collected Poems of Sterling a. Brown- the most underrated poet in American Literature. TS Eliot, eat your heart out.
Yokahama California and Other Stories- Toshio
Elbow Room- James Alan McPherson.stories. 1987 Pulitzer.
In The Mecca- Gwendolyn Brooks. Poems about a project!
The Butterfly's Burden- Mahmod Darwish. One of the two poets of the twentieth century.
The Cantos- Pablo Neruda. One of the two top poets of the 2oth century.

Thinking about rereading both The Witching Hour and Cry to Heaven as I'm curious to know if while rereading I'll recall having the same visual representations of the plot.

Haven't reread this novel in a few years but in high school I used to read it every summer. One of my favorites.



I also go back to Edgar Allan Poe when I need some comfort reading.