What's your favorite book that nobody else ever reads?

They made a good TV movie of “Point Last Seen” starring Linda Hamilton. I had to look it up because it sounded so familiar.

Added Towing Jehovah to my Goodreads list. Thanks!

My entry is Lost in Transplantation by Eldonna Edwards. It is her memoir about being an altruistic kidney donor. I swear the only reason her book is not on the best-seller list is because hardly anyone knows about it. It is beautifully written and just a great all-around memoir.

Bones of the Moon by Jonathan Carroll.

Our female protagonist has an abortion. She later falls in love and has another child. However, she is transported to an alien world at night where her aborted child guides her on a quest to recover the mystical bones of the moon…to save her child’s life.

No, it’s not anti-abortion; it just sounds that way in the description.

Siddhartha by Herman Hesse. Short, easy to read and life changing in a good way.

I just did the same and my winner is Help! A Bear is Eating Me!, by Mykle Hansen. It’s about an odious yuppie, who is trapped under his SUV and is, well, …see the tilte. Despite how ridiculous the premise sounds, it might be the funniest book I’ve ever read and I think the audiobook mp3s are downloadable for free from the website.

The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu. I prefer the Waley translation although I’ve read it in a couple of others. The Seidenstricker and Tyler translations are just too rigid.
This is the probably the first novel in any language. The depth of its psychological understanding is profound considering its age.

Anyway, I gave a copy of this book to a boyfriend in return for a book he gave me by Richard Braughtigan–The Hawkline Monster. Yeah, it didn’t last.

Oh, come on. Siddhartha a book that nobody else ever reads? It’s #4,462 on Amazon and #95 among literary classics on it. Over 100 million copies of Hermann Hesse’s books have been sold, and Siddhartha is the best-selling one. It has 277,276 ratings on Goodreads. It has a Facebook page. Doing a quick search, I found 18 study guides to it in English, and there are probably some more. It’s been a major cult book for the past fifty years or so.

Dude…that’s a classic. People read that all the time, don’t they?

Have you guys read it? And if Focoult’s Pendulum can make this list and others, Siddhartha can too.

A Lion in the Way by Elizabeth Cadell

I found this book in the smoking room at work back in the early 2000’s, back before smoking in businesses was made illegal. I started reading it on my lunch break and took it home with me and never brought it back (which was not stealing). I have read this book at least 3 or 4 times per year since then - probably 12 or 13 years now. I love it and I wont give it to anyone because it’s MINE!!!

I honestly don’t think anyone I know would enjoy it so I don’t recommend it to anyone. I don’t know of anyone else who has even heard of Elizabeth Cadell and I’ve read two of her other books and didn’t much care for them.

Yes, of course I’ve read it. It’s one of the most famous novels ever written. It’s considerably more well known than Foucault’s Pendulum, and that had no business being mentioned here either.

Back in the day, you couldn’t swing a hippie without hitting a copy of Siddhartha.

Yes, I read it.

Non-fiction: The Road to En-Dor by E.H. Jones. A highly unusual – and true – prisoner-of-war-escape story. The heroes are British officer POWs in Turkey in World War I: achieve their escape by perpetrating an elaborate con-game on their captors, whom they convince that they (the POWs) are in touch with the spirit world. An absorbing read, and often very funny.

I can’t believe I missed this topic years ago. Lots of good books to put on my Christmas list.

My entry: * Fifth Business *by Robertson Davies. IMO a perfect gem of a book. Not necessarily profound or life changing, just well constructed and rich. I read it every year or two.

All of Robertson Davies’s works are well worth reading.