Every week, I'll be making a pinned post inviting you to share your favorite books with the slop-hungry hogs of Hexbear . Each week will be loosely structured around a particular genre, time period or other theme .
For the opening week's theme: Books you have read at least three times
Optional nerd discussion questions
What keeps or kept you coming back to them? How did your relationship to the text change across multiple readings?
If you have suggestions for future themes, DM me!
If you want to be pinged when I post the thread in the future, respond to this comment in the thread
Ooh I've been meaning to ruin my life (get into the Aubrey-Maturin books), and check out Stefan Zweig
You've hit some good shit on here. Sadly I've only read Catch-22 twice (fake fan)
A warning about the Aubrey-Maturin books: once you start them, you will have to force yourself to read other books (my strategy is to read something else between every book but it is not easy). And every circumnavigation of the series reveals depths you had missed on prior readings. If you like audiobooks, the versions narrated by Patrick Tull are perfect, in my opinion. Because he understands the jargon (and the jokes) his narration helps you get the feel for what's happening before you fully absorb the language.
On Zweig (you may already know this), but The Grand Budapest Hotel was based on a long-short-story of his and the Kirsten Dunst Marie Antoinette movie was based on his biography of her (Marie Antoinette, not KD). The World of Yesterday is a really special book though. Zweig was a collector of original manuscripts and an art critic more than an artist himself. He lived in Austria before, during and after WWI. However, he had to escape from Austria and then from Europe fleeing the Nazis. He wrote this book, his memoirs, in Rio de Janeiro without any of his collections or note or anything and all from memory. He and his lady friend committed suicide shortly after he finished the book and before WWII had ended, so unlike most writers, his backwards-looking lens was not refracted through the defeat of the Nazis.
Letter from an Unknown Woman is another great Zweig adaptation. I'm pretty sure there's a Chess Story movie but I think I remember hearing that it was a disappointment. That novella is especially fascinating given your last sentence. It's been a long time since I've read it but I remember being shocked that it was written during the war.