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The ReadDown

19 Authors on the Best Books They’ve Ever Received

by Abbe Wright

There’s no question that getting a book as a present is great no matter what the title or when it happens. But what about those books that we’re given that are so special they alter the course of our lives in some way or change the way we think about the world? We spoke with some of our favorite authors about the book they received that has given them the most joy over the years.

  1. 1
    Letting Go Book Cover Picture
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    Letting Go

    by Philip Roth

    “My dad gave me the novel Letting Go by Philip Roth. Dad read very little fiction—only one book of fiction a year. He was a political scientist, and he read dozens and dozens of non-fiction, academic books every year. But he always became enthusiastic about his one, annual book of fiction, which he would then recommend to everyone. He loved Roth. I like the novel, because it is Roth’s second—and unfamous—book; the writing shows his earnestness. He was looking for his voice then. I love the early novels of writers, for that same reason.” —Josh Barkan, author of Mexico

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  2. 2
    Fear of Flying Book Cover Picture
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    Fear of Flying

    by Erica Jong

    “Knowing it is my favorite book, for my 34th birthday, a boyfriend once gave me a signed first edition of Erica Jong’s Fear of Flying.  Having always read tattered paperback versions, I had no idea the original was adorned with a spectacularly ornate cover that’s evocative of a Hieronymus Bosch.  I’m not a big collector of anything but no matter how often I pare down my belongings, I never get rid of this.  (Even though the boyfriend was long-ago lost to history, his accompanying birthday card remains tucked inside the book.)” —Lisa Napoli, author of Ray & Joan

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    $18.00

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  3. 3
    Encyclopedia Brown, Boy Detective Book Cover Picture
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    Encyclopedia Brown, Boy Detective

    by Donald J. Sobol

    “One afternoon when I was seven years old, my mom and I went to our local bookshop, The Twig, in San Antonio, Texas, where she picked a book out for me that I was sure I was going to hate: Encyclopedia Brown, Boy Detective by Donald J. Sobol. But from the first page to the last, I was hooked, falling in love with Leroy Brown, Idaville’s ten-year-old boy sleuth, and I ended up owning every one of the twenty-eight books in the series. I was pretty good at figuring out the whodunits and decided that I was going to be a detective myself when I grew up. Instead, I became a writer, which, I see now, is a lot like being a detective, except that as a writer I have both to create the mystery and solve it at the same time. There’s a real art to writing suspense and while I’m not sure I’ll ever master it, I can definitely say that reading Encyclopedia Brown whet my appetite for it and taught me quite a lot about the form. Even now, I’m not sure that I would have been able to write, Tell Me How This Ends Well, my latest novel, if I hadn’t been exposed all those years ago to Leroy Brown.” —David Samuel Levinson, author of the forthcoming novel Tell Me How This Ends Well
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    $6.99

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  4. 4
    When Breath Becomes Air Book Cover Picture
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    When Breath Becomes Air

    by Paul Kalanithi

    “When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi. Kalanithi’s brave memoir chronicles in exquisite prose his brave battle with terminal illness, but rather than verge into depressing territory, it is a triumphant and inspiring read.  His words make one rethink our perception of time—to not only imagine what we might achieve in the future, but to cherish the beauty that surrounds us in the present.” —Alyson Richman, author of The Velvet Hours

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  5. 5
    The Adventures of Tom Sawyer Book Cover Picture
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    The Adventures of Tom Sawyer

    by Mark Twain

    “On my eighth birthday my mother gave me a hardcover copy of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. The inscription read: ‘Here is the brother you said you wanted.’ I was having trouble in school—particularly reading—and a psychologist had recently tested me and informed my mother and the school that I was, in the parlance of the day, ‘retarded.’ My mother steadfastly refused to accept this, saying, ‘You just haven’t found anything you care enough about to read.’ It turned out I was dyslexic and perhaps mildly autistic. It took me months, and when I was done, I could read, and I had indeed been given a brother—two, in fact, and I have visited with them every year since my eighth birthday.” —James Anderson, author of The Never Open-Desert Diner

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  6. 6
    In the Heart of the Sea Book Cover Picture
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    In the Heart of the Sea

    by Nathaniel Philbrick

    “Many years ago I was boarding a plane to Las Vegas, planning on doing two things I really enjoyed: gambling and reviewing All-You–Can-Eat buffets (I was young. Thankfully, I got both habits out of my system.). Also boarding was a large passenger sneezing and wheezing. Here was someone who desperately needed a bowl of chicken soup and a flight refund. While he squeezed his way down the aisle looking for his seat, everyone on the plane was thinking the same thing I was—I hope he doesn’t sit next to me. As he settled in next to me, I imagined the worst. Needless to say, by the end of the flight, we not only became friends who still keep in touch twenty years later, but he recommended a book which changed my life. During the flight, he sold me on In the Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philbrick.

    I asked my mom for this book for Christmas and as my Vegas friend promised, the book was extraordinary. So much so, it convinced me to write my own. Up until that point, I wrote comedy pieces and columns in publications but never anything long-form. Speed up to today—20 years later—In the Heart of the Sea has been adapted into a movie and now that I’ve finished my current project (Footnotes from the World’s Greatest Bookstores), I plan to publish that illustrated novel inspired by my favorite book. Called The Sea Below Us, it’s a black comedy about the missing Sir John Franklin. I sent a manuscript to Nathaniel Philbrick—whom I have also met and kept in touch with over the years—and thanked him for the inspiration his book provided. He loved the manuscript.” —Bob Eckstein, author of Footnotes from the World’s Greatest Bookstores

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    $18.00

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  7. 7
    Little Women Book Cover Picture
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    Little Women

    by Louisa May Alcott

    “My grandmother was a complicated woman—angry, loving, gossipy, and vibrant. She lived a country’s length away from me, and we were never close, even though I was named after her. The truth is, her mercurial moods scared me a little. One Christmas morning when I was 10 or so, I unwrapped a heavy package and discovered a beautiful hardcover book complete with illustrations: Little Women. On the inside was my grandmother’s inscription in handwriting as bold as she was: ‘For Sarah, with love.’ I devoured the book that day, then read it again and again. When I was immersed in its pages, I felt more connected to my grandmother than I ever had before; it was as if she truly saw me as the shy, book-loving girl I was, instead of the confident, outspoken one she perhaps wanted me to be. My grandmother died long ago, but I still have the worn, beloved copy of the novel she gave me, with her faded handwriting gracing the opening page. I cherish it still.” —Sarah Pekkanen, author of The Perfect Neighbors

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    $30.00

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  8. 8
    Charlotte's Web Book Cover Picture
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    Charlotte’s Web

    by E. B. White

    “When I was a kid, my step-dad, who raised me, used to buy me books as Christmas gifts. He was an intellectual from another era, and believed that some kind of moral salvation lay in a combination of books, public education, and paying as much taxes as you could. When I was in sixth grade, he bought me the trilogy of children’s books by E.B. White, which included Trumpet of the Swan, Charlotte’s Web, and Stuart Little. The same year, I got a satin comforter from my mom, and I remember lying in my antique brass bed, propped up on those luxurious new pillows, and going on the wild rides of these stories; it seems like I didn’t leave my bed until I’d finished all three. I’d always liked to read, but it was the experience of binging on those three children’s books that really showed me what reading did to me, and for me—the way reading made me feel calm and inspired before I knew what those words meant—and that I was, in my heart, a reader, which really, then, was the beginning of it all, since writers are just readers who need a job.” —Carolynn Carreño, co-author of A Good Bake

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  9. 9
    The Phantom Tollbooth Book Cover Picture
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    The Phantom Tollbooth

    by Norton Juster

    “In fifth grade, I received The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster and spent the next three days wrapped up in the pages, unable to put it down. It was the first book that grabbed hold of me and didn’t let go. When I was a fifth grade teacher, I would read it aloud to my students every year and watch as the story of Milo and the mysterious Tollbooth grabbed them the way it grabbed me when I was that age. I still have that same weather-worn copy on my book shelf and look forward to the day I can hand it off to my son.” —Katie Ganshert, author of Life After

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  10. 10
    The Heart of the Matter Book Cover Picture
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    The Heart of the Matter

    by Graham Greene

    “I’m not sure it was a present but it was certainly given to me, and it’s had a lasting impact on my writing life. It was Graham Greene’s The Heart of the Matter. I was around 14, we were up on Cape Cod for a few weeks over the summer, and a librarian at this tiny library saw me rummaging through the paperback bin. She had seen what I had been reading and she reached in and took out the Greene. And then she said, ‘Keep it, if you like it.’ I still have it. It has a rubber band around the cover.” —Jonathan Rabb, author of Among the Living

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    $18.00

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  11. 11
    Diet for a Small Planet (Revised and Updated) Book Cover Picture
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    Diet for a Small Planet (Revised and Updated)

    by Frances Moore Lappé

    “I moved off-campus after my sophomore year in college and had to feed myself. My quasi-hippie roommate gave me a copy of Francis Moore Lappé’s Diet for a Small Planet, permanently changing how I thought about food and introducing selfish, cloistered little me to the notion of social responsibility. I became a vegetarian, learned to bake bread, and started a garden. My daughters’ friends used to call me Mrs. Nutritious—or Martha—and I loved it. Now, if I’m not writing, I’m either growing plants or cooking them. That slim volume revolutionized my life.” —Sonja Yoerg, author of All The Best People

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    $18.00

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  12. 12
    One Morning in Maine Book Cover Picture
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    One Morning in Maine

    by Robert McCloskey

    “When I was young, my Great Aunt Frances gave me a Caldecott or Newberry award-winning book each Christmas. I still have many of those books, including my favorite, One Morning in Maine by Robert McCloskey. Aunt Frances had no children of her own, but she wanted to pass her love for reading on to the next generation. I was blessed to be her favorite niece and the recipient of her gifts. I spent hours poring over those books. They stirred my imagination, gave me a love for a well-told story, and prompted me to explore writing. When I became a mother, I took those books down from the shelf and read them aloud to my five children, and the magic continued! Now I write English historical novels targeted at adults, but I have many teen readers, and it’s a thrill to think I’m writing books that are inspiring the next generation of readers and writers. —Carrie Turansky, author of the Edwardian Bride Series and Shine Like the Dawn
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  13. 13
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    The Secret History

    by Donna Tartt

    “When I was covering the (Bill) Clinton presidential campaign in ‘92, one of the final campaign stops took me to Raleigh, NC, not far from my then home base of Greensboro, NC. A dear friend (who, like me, aspired to write books someday) arrived at an enormous rally to wave hello—and, since it was my birthday, deliver a gift for me. The place was so packed and we in the press corps were on such a tight deadline, he and I literally saw each other long enough for him to pass over a wrapped package. It was Donna Tartt’s novel, The Secret History, the new, hardcover edition, with a gorgeous cover—a book we’d both anticipated because we’d read how meticulous a writer she was.” —Lisa Napoli, author of Ray & Joan
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    $18.00

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  14. 14
    Illumination Night Book Cover Picture
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    Illumination Night

    by Alice Hoffman

    “I received Alice Hoffman’s Illumination Night as a gift when I was in high school. It was my introduction to magical realism, though, at the time when I received it, I don’t think I was aware of how significant of a gift it really was. After reading Illumination Night, I was inspired to read other novels by other magical realists— Gabriel García Márquez, Isabel Allende, Leslie Silko Marmon, Louise Erdich—and then eventually write my first novel, The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender.” —Leslye Walton, author of The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender
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    $15.00

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  15. 15
    Radical Acceptance Book Cover Picture
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    Radical Acceptance

    by Tara Brach

    “A good friend gave me Tara Brach’s Radical Acceptance, a book about ‘awakening from the trance of unworthiness.’ Like many of us, I spend a great deal of time judging my accomplishments, criticizing my thoughts, scolding myself for my lack of spiritual progress. Brach speaks beautifully about cultivating self-compassion and uncovering a natural friendliness towards yourself. I have read the book twice and will read it again because the turn toward self-acceptance is such a radical re-orientation that it helps me to hear Brach repeat her guidance—in her clear, simple, and loving way.” —Maggie Rowe, author of Sin Bravely: A Memoir of Spiritual Disobedience
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  16. 16
    The Last Unicorn Book Cover Picture
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    The Last Unicorn

    by Peter S. Beagle

    “In third grade, my family moved across the country in the middle of the school year. The world was covered in snow, which I’d never seen before, and I was very, very lonely for a while. During that time, my mom was constantly coming home with used paperbacks she picked up on her way home from work. She had no interest in reading them herself and did not vet them. Nevertheless, she had a mysterious knack for knowing exactly what I would like, which is how I came to own both The Silmarillion and an academic anthology of Victorian children’s literature called Beyond the Looking Glass before I was nine years old. By far the most important of these gifts of comfort, however, was Peter S. Beagle’s wise, gentle fantasy classic The Last Unicorn. I read it aloud to myself so many times over the course of my elementary and middle school years that I still have almost the entire first chapter memorized. It begins, ‘The unicorn lived in a lilac wood, and she lived all alone.’ What a sentence for a lonely child, or for anyone who has ever despaired of finding her tribe. Beagle’s musical prose and eloquent humanism were a great comfort to me then, and still are now.” —Amy Gentry, author of Good As Gone
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  17. 17
    Youth Book Cover Picture
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    Youth

    by J. M. Coetzee

    “It was in 2004. I was twenty-one years old, a student of Comparative Literature at UC Berkeley, with hopes of one day becoming a writer, and although I read all day, I rarely ever received any books. I never understood why. Perhaps those around me thought it better to remind me of other pleasures in life than reading. Nevertheless, on one rainy evening in October, I did receive a gift. It was a novel titled Youth: Scenes from Provincial Life II, written by a South African author, a Nobel Laureate, I had never heard of. His name was J. M. Coetzee. I began reading Youth as soon as I got back home, and ever since then, my relationship with words has taken a completely different turn. Published in 2002 as the second segment of Coetzee’s fictionalized memoir, the first being Scenes from Provincial Life: Boyhood, Youth, Summertime, Youth is about a young man who flees the political turmoil of Cape Town in the 1960s, seeking refuge in London. This is not, however, so much a story about the tribulations of flight and refuge but about a journey of dreams and hopes of self-realization that gradually becomes one of self-loathing, failure, and isolation. The protagonist has come to London with the dream of becoming a great poet. He also wants to find the love of his life, and until then, hopes to lunge into the legendary sex world he has so much mused about. In London, he wants to become the man that he felt in part he could not become in Cape Town. This semi-biographical novel, which is written in the present tense and in which Coetzee refers to himself as “he,” ends with the narrator doing a tedious job as a computer programmer for IBM, having engaged in very few quite sullen, passionless sexual encounters, and the closest he comes to love is with the beautiful Italian actress Monica Vitti, who floats before him unreachable and phantom-like on the screen of a half-empty cinema. He never becomes a great poet. He barely ever writes. Reading Youth, I remember I was thunderstruck. I had never read anything like it before. The lucidity, the honesty, the tenderness. Coetzee unfolds the agonizing disintegration of dreams with what seemed to me an unwavering, at times even brutal, almost mathematical precision. Not one word can be exchanged for another, not one phrase can be written otherwise. It was amazing to me that one can write in such brief, succinct terms—the novel itself is less than two hundred pages—and yet bore so deep into the human soul with all its maddening, fearful, convoluted urge to be set free. You have to learn to write like him, I told myself. Keep it short. Do not digress. Be sparing. Be precise. Treat every word like it is the last word that lives. From reading Youth, I learned to write in present tense when speaking about my past and use “she” when writing about myself. I learned what it means to fictionalize what one has lived and what it means to give reality to what one remembers. It has now been about twelve years since I first came across Coetzee’s writing, and his novels continue to sit on my desk, accompanying my writing every step of the way. I have not come anywhere close to what I wish I could accomplish, but Coetzee’s novels are always there, giving me guidance as well as inspiration, and as I would like to look at it, discipline.” —Sahar Delijani, author of Children of the Jacaranda Tree
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  18. 18
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    Geek Love

    by Katherine Dunn

    “In May of 1996, Christa Faust and I were walking around Hollywood one night, and it came up in conversation that I’d somehow managed never to read Katherine Dunn’s Geek Love. Which is kind of odd, I admit, but then we all have those inexplicable gaps and blind spots in our reading. There was a little bookshop—I can’t recall the name of it—just across the street, and she went inside and bought me a copy, right there on the spot. In those days, I didn’t have much money to spend on books. A couple of days later we drove from L.A. up to Eugene, Oregon for a writer’s conference, and all the way up and all the way back we read Geek Love aloud to one another. And I immediately fell in love with it, and to this day it’s probably one of my ten favorite novels, ever.” —Caitlín R. Kiernan, author of the forthcoming novella Agents of Dreamland
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  19. 19
    Dictionary of the Khazars (M) Book Cover Picture
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    Dictionary of the Khazars (M)

    by Milorad Pavic

    “I was given Dictionary of the Khazars by Milorad Pavić by a woman in a small apartment in the outskirts of Vilnius sometime in the fall of 2009. I had just recently become the sort of traveler who relies much upon the offerings of strangers, and in addition to the aforementioned pseudo-novel, she and her boyfriend were also kind enough to offer me several nights’ rest on a couch in their living room which I shared with a gigantic St. Bernard—a friendly, oafish, slavering beast utterly incongruous to the small Soviet-era apartment in which he lived—Baltic wine and pleasant company. On my last night there, I was offered my pick of a selection of titles from her small library, and despite my best efforts, I was not able to beg off this kindness. For whatever reason I picked up Dictionary of the Khazars, a peculiar work of fake history and magical realism, which was famously released in two additions, each with slight distinctions, so that only by finding a partner could you understand the complete work. Alas, I was never able to duplicate this act of generosity, and the book remains packed away in a box somewhere. Perhaps I’ll find it soon, and give it to some similarly undeserving target.” —Daniel Polansky, author of A City Dreaming
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