Thursday, 30 September 2010

ALPHABOOKS

I just recover from answering one meme (the one asking me to list my frequently watched movies) when, knock me down with a feather, along comes another one: this time courtesy of my friend SCB at Where there are Meadowlarks...

Here are THE RULES (for there must always be RULES) as laid down by SCB:

1. Go through the alphabet, and for each letter, think of a book you've read that starts with that letter (A, An, and The do not count).

2. You must write down the FIRST book you think of for any given letter. This may make for some odd choices, but them's the breaks.

3. You must have actually READ the book. (I thought of lots that started with some letters, but I hadn't read them.)

4. If you think of a more impressive-sounding book for a particular letter, but you've already written your first thought down, you CANNOT change to the more impressive-sounding book. As an example, you have to leave "Fifty Famous Fairy Tales" (the Whitman Publishing pink and white one) on the list, even if you come up with fifty more impressive books afterwards.

5. If you can think of a book for X, you win... my lasting admiration (I can't afford real prizes!)

6. You can then tag as many people as you like. The more the merrier.

So, here's the list I drew up...

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland – Lewis Carroll

Brave New World – Aldous Huxley

A Christmas Carol – Charles Dickens

Doctor Dolittle – Hugh Lofting

The Exploits of Moominpappa – Tove Jansson

Fahrenheit 451 – Ray Bradbury

Gormenghast – Mervyn Peake

The Hobbit – J R R Tolkien

It's Too Late Now – A A Milne
(The autobiography of Pooh's creator)

Just So Stories – Rudyard Kipling

A Kid for Two Farthings – Wolf Mankowitz

The Lord of the Rings – J R R Tolkien

Mary Poppins – P L Travers

Noddy in Toyland – Enid Blyton
(Nostromo by Joseph Conrad would have sounded better, but there it is!)

The Once and Future King – T H White

Peter and Wendy – J M Barrie

Quentin Durwood – Sir Walter Scott

Ring of Bright Water – Gavin Maxwell

Something Wicked This Way Comes – Ray Bradbury

Treasure Island – Robert Louis Stevenson

Utopia - Thomas More

The Voyage of the 'Dawn Treader' – C S Lewis

The Wind in the Willows – Kenneth Graham

EXterminator! – William S Burroughs (Oh, well, it was worth a try!)

Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories – Dr Seuss

Zen in the Art of Writing – Ray Bradbury


I suppose it's not too surprising that there are two titles by Tolkien and three by Bradbury – plus, of course, Carroll, Milne and Peake – but the preponderance of children's books suggests that I have already entered my second childhood which is, I guess, pretty accurate!

I hesitate to tag anyone, but (if they'd like to do it and have the time) then I'll tag Gill, Sheila, Sharon, Suzanne and anyone else who fancies having a go...

17 comments:

  1. Thanks for that Brian! I shall try and comply, and try to avoid the same titles as you! How long have I got?
    backto..... my bookshelves!!

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  2. Thanks, Brian, I'll give it a go. But I'll have to try and get your list out of my head first!

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  3. Best of luck, Suzanne and Sheila! No precise time-limit – sometime within the reach of human memory would be good! ;)

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  4. This was more difficult than I expected. An analyst might find the emphasis on Victorian fiction of interest, but I think it's because once you've thought of one (like A Christmas Carol, the genre is in your subconscious). Anyway, here goes:

    Alice in Wonderland Lewis Carroll
    Brideshead Revisted Evelyn Waugh
    (A) Christmas Carol Charles Dickens
    David Copperfield Charles Dickens
    Espresso Tales Alexander McCall Smith
    Far From the Madding Crowd Thomas Hardy
    Gone with the Windsors Laurie Graham
    How Green was My Valley Richard Llewellyn
    I Capture the Castle Dodie Smith
    Jane Eyre Charlotte Bronte
    Kim Rudyard Kipling
    London Belongs to Me Norman Collins
    Mansfield Park Jane Austen
    Naught for your Comfort Trevor Huddleston If it should only be fiction, then
    (The) Nine Taylors Dorothy L Sayers
    Orlando the Marmalade Cat Kathleen Hale
    Polo Jilly Cooper
    (The) Quiet Gentleman Georgette Heyer
    Rebecca Daphne du Maurier
    Silas Marner George Eliot
    (A) Town Like Alice Nevil Shute
    Under Milk Wood Dylan Thomas Not sure if this will be allowed
    Venetia Georgette Heyer
    Wolf Hall Hilary Mantel
    (E)xcel for Dummies !!!
    (The) Yellow Book – (annual list of gardens open to the public) If it should only be fiction, then I’m stumped
    (Dr) Zhivago Boris Pasternak

    Thanks for the invitation - it was an enjoyable diversion!

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  5. Look forward to your list, Sharon; and thanks so much for your's, Sheila, which contains several books I've never read and several others that I have read but that refused to take the bait when I was fishing around in my memory for titles!

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  6. Thank you so much for playing along, Brian! I was delighted (but not surprised) when many of your choices were books I'd actually read. (Unlike the books listed by my American friends. Interesting, that.) As for your attempt at an "X" book -- I could have been sneaky and put a vowel in front of the X, too! I chortled at the inclusion of Noddy in Toyland -- and yes, that's one of the titles on your list that I've read!

    Sheila -- your list also had many familiar titles, and I prevaricated for quite some time about using Under Milk Wood, which is what occurred to me first for "U", and finally went with Helene Hanff's "Underfoot in Show Business". But since you chose it, I (who made up the rules) now feel justified in having nearly chosen it. Thanks for participating!

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  7. A couple of gaps, I'm afraid, but here goes:

    Angelique - Sergeanne Golon

    Blott on the Landscape - Tom Sharpe

    Coralena - Michael Mail

    Deadly Deception - Margaret Thomson Davis

    Exposure - Micahel Mail

    Foreign Affairs - Alison Lurie

    Gormenghast - Mervyn Peake

    House of Cards - Michael Dobbs

    Indecent Exposure - Tom Sharpe

    Jian - Eric Van Lustbader

    Kon Tiki Expedition - Thor Heyerdahl

    Lord of the Flies - William Golding

    Middlesex - Jeffrey Eugenides

    Nineteen Eighty-Four - George Orwell

    Old Curiosity Shop - Charles Dickens

    Porterhouse Blue - Tom Sharpe

    Riotous Assembly - Tom Sharpe

    Shogun - James Clavell

    Thornbirds - Colleen McCulloch

    Under Milkwood - Thomas Hardy

    Valley of Fear - Arthur Conan Doyle

    Woman in White - Wilkie Collins

    Yearling - Marjorie K Rawlings

    Zero - Eric Van Lustbader

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  8. That was quite fun, actually, apart from a couple of letters that had me completely stypied! So here goes:
    The Amber Spyglass – Philip Pullman
    Bleak House – Charles Dickens
    The Cider House Rules – John Irving
    David Copperfield – Charles Dickens
    East of Eden - John Steinbeck
    Far from the Madding Crowd – Thomas Hardy
    Gormenghast – Mervyn Peake
    Heartstone – C.J. Sansom
    The Invisible Man – H.G. Wells
    Jamaica Inn – Daphne du Maurier
    To Kill a Mockingbird – Harper Lee (does that count?)
    Lady Chatterley’s Lover – D.H. Laurence
    Mistral’s Daughter – Judith Krantz
    Neropolis – Hubert
    Of Human Bondage – W. Somerset Maugham
    Pride & Prejudice – Jane Austen
    Q – whatever !
    Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier
    Shogun – James Clavell
    Trinity – Leon Uris
    Until I find you – John Irving
    Villette – Charlotte Bronte
    The War of the Worlds – H.G. Wells
    eXodus – Leon Uris (Yes I know but stuck!)
    A Year in Provence – Peter Mayle
    The Prisoner of Zenda – Anthony Hope

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  9. Sharon and Suzanne – Two more fascinating lists and many more books I know by name but have never read. Must get around to some Tom Sharpe sometime (I only know his books through the TV versions) and I must re-read To Kill a Mockingbird and re-watch Gregory Peck in the brilliant movie version.

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  10. To Kill a Mockingbird is one of my alltime favourites. When the BBC did their "Top 100 books", I did my own Top 10 and Harper Lee was way up there! I'm glad you accepted my "K"!

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  11. Ah, yes... Probably shouldn't have, I guess: don't think 'To' is quite the same as 'The' or 'An'... Hmmm...

    I'll leave SCB to adjudicate on that one, but you really can't get away with The Prisoner of Zenda for 'Z'!!! :)

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  12. That's some list of books you've read Brian, I've read some books but not enough to name the alphabet - although I have read Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - although one of my favourite books of all time is Animal Farm.

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  13. Well, Steven, since Animal Farm begins with an 'A' (and is a truly great book) that's a pretty good beginning to any literary alphabet! :)

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  14. Had a go over on the blog. Tagged Stephen Gallagher, who stepped up to the plate and even found a book starting with X.

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  15. Two more excellent literary ABCs from Good Dog and Stephen Gallagher. Oh, dear! So many books ––– so little time...

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  16. Far too late for inclusion, but I belatedly remembered a genuine X-title: my late friend, Antony Miall's The Xenophobe's Guide to the English!

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