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Dorcas Haller's Five Favorite Books


Here's what Dorcas Haller, Library Department Chair, writes about her five favorite books:
 

The Golden Notebook

The Golden Notebook by Doris Lessing

Lessing (2007 Nobel Prize for Literature) has been a prolific writer.  Her themes of racial inequality, political activism, work, love, marriage, motherhood, and independence, spoke to me strongly in the early 1970s, when I was a young wife and mother.  This novel is written in a very structured way: a woman keeps four separate notebooks, each detailing distinct aspects of her life -- Africa, communist political activism, writing about a love affair, and dream-life -- and finally attempts to integrate them all into one “golden notebook.”  Interspersed with the notebooks is the “novel” of the lives of two women friends and their families.  Although Lessing does not see "The Golden Notebook" as a feminist novel, it certainly was that for me and many other women of my generation.  It is a solid, serious, and satisfying book that still holds great power for me.
 

Middlemarch

Middlemarch: A Study of Provincial Life (1871 – 1872) by George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans)

While I enjoy Jane Austen’s novels for their lightness, I love George Eliot’s novels for their seriousness.  "Middlemarch" presents a picture of the lives of a number of ordinary people in a small town in mid-nineteenth century England.  This was a time of change, politically and culturally.  Industrialization and new ideas were taking hold.  This novel deals with such important issues as the nature of marriage, the status of women, idealism, the importance of education, and class.  "Middlemarch" is seen by many as Eliot’s greatest novel and Virginia Woolf called it “one of the few English novels written for grown-up people.”
 

A Judgement in Stone
 

A Judgement in Stone by Ruth Rendell

“Eunice Parchman killed the Coverdale family because she could not read or write.”  I was hooked from the moment I read that first line of this utterly unforgettable novel by suspense writer Ruth Rendell.  The novel has been translated to film:  in 1986, as "The Housekeeper," and in 1995, by Claude Chabrol, as "La Ceremonie."
 

Lucky Jim
 

Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis

This remains one of the funniest books I have ever read.  Amis’s novel of poor Jim Dixon, an indifferent young history instructor at a “red brick” university in England, describes in hilarious detail Jim’s misadventures, and his impotent rage and frustration, as he deals with the cultural pretensions of his dean and other academics.  Later authors who have followed Amis in writing comic academic novels include David Lodge, Tom Sharpe, and Howard Jacobson.
 

The Ice Age

The Ice Age by Margaret Drabble

I am an admirer of all of Drabble’s novels.  Her characters are real and her treatment of them is generous and sympathetic.  I have many favorites, but perhaps "The Ice Age" is a suitable one for our current economic climate. The novel takes place in Britain in the mid-1970s -- oil crisis, economic recession, political upheaval.  "With debts spiraling out of control, Anthony [Keating] realizes that he and his friends are bound to the engine driving the society in which they live and that should it falter, so will they.  'The Ice Age' is a portrait of a Britain of boom and bust, and greed -- and uncannily predicts the Thatcher years."*

*
Book description from amazon.com


To see if a book is available and where it is located, click on the cover or title of the book.  You may also wish to submit your own list of Five Favorites or view past favorites.

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