I am 100% sure there was another book thread, but I couldn't find....
what are your favorite books? I'm asking for your favorite, not my favorite, any book, does'nt need to bee a normal 'classic' novel either.
Awesome topic, Enril! It's always great to see what people are reading or have read.
My favorite fictional novel of all-time is "Lightning," by Mr. Dean Koontz.
I tend to find an author I like, read everything I can get my hands on from them, and then it's a bear of a chore to find another author that I like. Although Mr. Koontz often writes about scary apocalypse-type situations, his stories always end with hope. Someone in his books (though you'll lose beloved characters along the way,) always gets a happy ending. His main characters are the "fall in love with one person forever" types, as he has been married to his own wife all his life, and credits her for the existence of his writing career.
Mr. Koontz grew up dirt poor in a shack (no electricity or running water) in the woods in PA. He has said in interviews that because his family survived on wild game, to this day, the smell of it makes him physically nauseous, because he associates it so closely with his childhood (under the domineering fist of an abusive, violent alcoholic father, but a loving mother who protected him at the cost of her own safety.)
He has said that when he and his wife married, their assets were $300 and a used car. Early in their marriage, his wife offered to support them for 5 years while he took a shot at writing full-time, as she reasoned that if he couldn't make it in 5 years, he never would. It took a bit more than 5 years (though he did become established in that time,) but he became a world-renowned, best-selling author. I LOVE a good underdog story, and he is definitely a living example.
At the time I wrote him my first fan letter somewhere in the 90's, he was receiving over 10,000 fan letters a year (and this was in the days of snail mail.) I wrote 3 fan letters to him during that time, and would you believe, he not only took the time to send back copies of his regular newsletter that he sent out to fans, but on each one, he hand-wrote a personal note, each time addressing something specific in my letters.
Mr. Koontz is known for his humility and amazing (considering what he went through) sense of humor, and one of my letters jokingly commented on the fact that he had A LOT more hair on the back of his book jackets than on past books. He jovially wrote back, in his own handwriting, that this was all thanks to the modern miracle of very expensive -- and, he noted, very painful -- hair transplants, which I'm sure weren't nearly as streamlined as YouTube tries say they are now.
The most astonishing thing is that this world-famous author, swamped with over 10,000 fan letters a year, took the time to not only reply, but to
spell my first name correctly when he hand-wrote it -- which is something even my closest friends miss when sending me a card -- on 3 separate occasions. I have a very ordinary name, but I have a slightly unique variation that most overlook (I don't mind and usually don't correct anyone except for legal identification.)
After I went through my divorce and became involved in a church with very radical members bordering on fanaticism, I was strongly pushed to get rid of anything "worldly" and leave it behind, which included Mr. Koontz's works.
Many, many years later, I am getting back into his books, so far without conviction, and am in the process of writing him another fan letter. I've taken notes while reading several of his recent books, and have prayed to God for help in trying to construct a letter that Mr. Koontz, who writes so much for others to enjoy, will find joy in for himself.
I don't know if I'll hear anything back -- I don't expect to, of course. With the advent of the internet, I'm sure his fan mail volume has multiplied many times over, as he's never stopped writing, and is 79 years old now. I don't know if my letter will even get to him, as I plan to send an old-fashioned snail mail, and to the P.O. box still printed in his older works. But I will pray that my letter gets to him and lets him know how much I have appreciated his work.
I realize my post says virtually nothing about the book that started it all for me, and though I haven't gotten into his later works as much as I did with his ones from the 90's, what I love most about "Lightning" is that it will have you laughing, crying, and thinking until your brain hurts -- all within the same pages.