Coming Back For More of the Same
Aug. 1st, 2004 08:38 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
While most discussions about books tend to be trying to divide between those worth reading and those not worth reading, I'm wondering today what it is that distinguishes those worth reading once between those worth reading over and over.
A book that's worth reading once can have good ideas and good plot, but good ideas can only be novel once, and a good plot, while that can still be part of the appeal, it isn't sufficient to be coming back for, because once you've read it once, you already know what happened. What I'm wondering today is, what is it about a book that makes it worth reading again even though you already know what's happened in it, even though you already know what nifty ideas it has.
Here's a few: style, snappy dialogue, a love of words, scenes you want to savour. For example, I absolutely adore the proposal scene in Lois McMaster Bujold's "A Civil Campaign", and also the Nikki-refuses-to-come scene just before that. It's just so delicious I want to read it again and again. But what makes a scene delicious may vary from person to person.
Ideas?
Re: then there's Jane Austen...
Date: 2004-08-01 05:32 am (UTC)Never heard of "Redeeming Love", but your other three choices give me the impression you really like angst! I mean "The Sparrow" and "Children of God" were really good, and they're on my shelf, but I don't see me re-reading them very often, because they were so harrowing. And I prefer "Speaker For the Dead" over "Ender's Game" because it has a more hopeful feeling.
I recently re-read the Lioness Rampant series, by Tamora Pierce. I remember loving it when I was 13, but it didn't quite live up to expectations at 25. :)
I read those much later than 13, and I didn't like them; too pagan.
Beside, with so many UNREAD books still in the world, and limited reading time, I'd really rather read something new!
With so many books in the world, I know I can't read but a drop in the ocean of them, so I'd rather read something I know I enjoy -- at least some of the time.