Hi Gonners,
Tell you what old son ( and I say this tongue in cheek ) you would make a bloody great politician.
How very dare you Sir!
Anyway lets recap for the children, I am trying to explain a little about where Karen Armstrong is coming from regarding the subject of Myth, so for the third ( and final ) time, please give me your favourite all time fictional book, the one that left you thinking, God I never thought of that, or, the one that took you out of yourself, the one that made you look at life a little differently, the one that made you ponder on life, love and whatsitallabout.
Well, first up the books that had that affect weren't non-fiction at all. I remember reading "On Liberty" as a teenager for example, and thinking "now this makes perfect sense to me". Still does in fact. It's a bit like skiing lessons (work with me here): the first one (or few) have a huge effect, and, no matter how many you have after that those further lessons change you in ways that are incremental in comparison.
Something like that anyway.
As for fiction, again funnily enough the books I would describe that way were all ones I first read early on. Here are some of them though:
To Kill a Mockingbird
Strait is the Gate
East of Eden
Brave New World
The Great Gatsby
One Hundred Years of Solitude
Flaubert's Parrot
1984
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
The Scarlet Letter
Under the Volcano (dear god what that book did to me as a young teenager!)
Earthly Powers (my desert island pick)
I've also found Douglas Dunn's collection of poems written after the death of his wife
Elegies to have reached out to me over the years.
Mind you, ask me tomorrow and the list will be completely different of course. I claim nothing for any of these books by the way, other than that they happened to collide with my journey through life in ways that have stayed with me.
Will that do?