What book could you best create from memory?

*Are you there God? It’s me, Margaret. We’re moving today. I’m so scared God. I’ve never lived anywhere but here. Suppose I hate my new school? Suppose everybody there hates me? Please help me God. Don’t let New Jersey be too horrible. Thank you. *

That is so cool.

For me, it’d be Larry Niven’s A World Out of Time, although several others of his, such as Ringworld, would come a close second.

Lois Lowry.

Mine’s Gone With the Wind, no question. My mom used to say maybe I could get into the Guiness book if I could recite it all at once. I think I still know it…
“Scarlett O’Hara was not beautiful but few men realized it when caught by her charm as the Tarleton twins were. Too sharply blended in her face were the features of her mother, a Coast aristocrat, and her father…” aw shucks.

Probably A Christmas Carol. I’ve read it every December for the past few years. My first instinct was to say Green Eggs and Ham. :slight_smile:

I can probably do most of Heinlein’s works, and early Niven. Let’s see…most of Pratchett, **L. Neil Smith’s ** Libertarian wank-fests, and bunch more. I can’t help it…I read! :smiley:

maybe green eggs and ham.

My memory is about as retentive as a stick of butter.

I think I could pull off adequately, from memory, Shermer’s book ‘why people believe strange things’, as I’ve read that six or so times.

But even then…

I presume you’re limiting this to books I didn’t write? :wink:

If that’s the case, I’d have to go with:

Every Who down in Who-ville liked Christmas a lot.
But the Grinch, who lived just north of Who-ville did not.
The Grinch *hated * Christmas, the whole Christmas season!
Please don’t ask why; no one quite knows the reason.

It could be his shoes were a little too tight,
It could be his head wasn’t screwed on quite right;
But I think the most likely reason of all
May have been that his head was two sizes too small.

Definitely Ender’s Game by Card. Read it multiple times and it has a plot conducive to that sort of recreation.

Hooper Humperdink? Not HIM! by Dr. Seuss. I read this to my oldest child so many times that I can quote it! Not as fast now as I could then, but if I stop and think about each page, I can truly reproduce that book!
From:
*I’m going to have a party, but I don’t think
That I’ll ask Hooper Humperdink.

I’ll ask Alice, I’ll ask Abe
I’ll ask Bob, and Bill, and Babe…*

to:
A party big and good as this
Is too good for anyone to miss!
And so you know, I sort of think
I WILL ask Hooper Humperdink!

I’m curious. What makes you rate that particular book as the author’s supreme effort in the series?

[QUOTE=Chanteuse]
*Hooper Humperdink? Not HIM!QUOTE]

I’d forgotten about Hooper Humperdink… I have a stolen copy from the library. My mum borrowed it for me when I was a kid and we moved house before she returned it. Years later I found it in the bookshelf and discovered my first library card in the back. The library card dates from when I was about 3 months old and is (sad, but true) one of my proudest possesions - how many other people can boast still having thier first library card?

Aside from Dr. Suess the book I could get closest to recreating from memory is ‘The Great Gatsby’ by F. Scott Fitzgerald - I had to read it for a school assignment and for some reason it’s become my ‘comfort’ book, so I’ve read it (seriously) at least 30 times…

Fahrenheit 451, maybe?

More seriously, it’s been a while but I too might manage Green Eggs and Ham.

Where The Wild Things Are - Sendak

The Raven - Poe

:eek:

“The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe”
“The Once and Future King”
“Calvin & Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book”
“Kama Sutra”
Here’s to hoping that the last one is the one I’ll be asked to “recreate”. :smiley:

I probably know the script for Monty Python and the Holy Grail (Mønti Pythøn ik den Hølie Gräilen) better than anything else. I’ve also read Lord of the Rings about 15 times.

I could probably do a pretty good job of recreating just about any book I’ve read that I’ve enjoyed; I’ve got an almost photgraphic memory when it comes to reading, to the point that I can tell you the physical location of some event in the book - ie, I can say “Harry told Marcus to go kiss a fish on the left side of the page, about 5/8 of the way down the page, about 200 pages into the book.” Makes it handy for going back to look stuff up.

At any rate, I’d probably be best at Stephen King, simply because I’ve read most of his stuff several times.

Thinking again, I’d have to go with this one too; I think I could create the entire series, AND the Dirk Gently series with a decent degree of accuracy.

Through the Looking Glass, (with Alice in Wonderland coming in a close second.)

I’ve read them both so many times, and in particular I take any opportunity to read Through the Looking Glass to any child that will tolerate it.

I know that I can reproduce all the poetry verbatim, and I’m pretty sure I can manage most of the prose.

One of the most shocking things to me is how many people don’t recognize Jabberwocky when they hear it. “I didn’t know you spoke Gaelic!” :confused:

Thornton Wilder’s Our Town