35 Books You Said You’d Read Again

Summer is here and if you’re like us, you’re looking for a good summer read for the pool or beach. So we asked our readers to name books that they loved so much they’d read them again. Have one to add? Let us know! 

Here are books we’d read again:

1. To Kill a Mockingbird

2. The Grapes of Wrath

3. Cutting for Stone

4. The Poisonwood Bible

5. I Know This Much Is True

6. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

7. Memoirs of a Geisha

8. Love in the Time of Cholera

9. A Fine Balance

10. Wuthering Heights

11. The Prince of Tides

12. The Kite Runner

13. Lord of the Flies

14. Pride and Prejudice

15. A Prayer for Owen Meany

16. Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

17. Snow Flower and the Secret Fan

18. The Pillars of the Earth

19. The Alchemist

20. The Shepherd’s Life

21. Defending Jacob

22. The Alienist

23. The Devil in the White City:
Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair

24. We Need to Talk About Kevin

25. The Nightingale

26. A Little Life

27. The Age of Innocence

28. What Made Maddy Run:
The Secret Struggles and Tragic Death of an All-American Teen

29. The Historian

30. Goodbye, Columbus

31. A Thread of Grace

32. The Catcher in the Rye

33. The Godfather

34. My Brilliant Career

35. The Notebook


10 Fabulous Day Trips Near the Tri-State Area


25 Ridiculously Refreshing Fruity Cocktails

SHARE:  
Facebook Twitter Google Digg Reddit LinkedIn Pinterest StumbleUpon Email

Author: Heather Zachariah

Former Art Director for Home Magazine, Heather Leahy Zachariah, left her career in publishing after baby number number one. She now works from home as a freelance graphic designer and a chauffeur to her 3 busy kids. "Working on TipsFromTown has been a wonderful outlet for me. It renewed my love of publishing where I can design colorful, enticing pages online and allows me to share the things I love about being a mom." Heather grew up in Shaker Heights, Ohio, a place that still is near and dear to her. " After living in Brooklyn for 18 years and studying Graphic Design at Pratt Institute, she now lives in the Jersey burbs. "I love living so close to NYC, but in my heart, I'm an Ohio girl."