Sooo . . . keep your copy of “A Kiss From …” on top the “Cake” story in the erudite crowds, and leave Cake in the guest room so you can get a giggle from the in-laws, eh? I’ll have to look for these. Thx!
I just finished listening to the audio version of this. I think it’s a great example of character based writing! Loved it! 
The Guernsey Literary And Potato Peel Pie Society by Annie Barrows and Mary Ann Shaffer. I like both the film and the book. It’s a fun and sweet read.
Cold Comfort Farm was one of my wife’s most enjoyed books (admittedly, there may have been up to a thousand in that list, she read a book every two days, or even faster).
When we saw the film, she really enjoyed that too, and said it was pretty faithful to the novel.
I think the Winnie the Pooh books are a delight, for any age of reader.
I’d forgotten how sad the ending was, though.
Still on my list of books to read is The Tao of Pooh, which is tongue in cheek serious philosophy I gather. Maybe like The Good Place TV series in that respect?
If you like young adult fantasy, Annette Marie has three great series so far.
That sounds like something I’d really like! I’m looking for peaceful stories these days.
Science fiction is not one of my favorite genres. But one of my favorite books is “Stranger in a Strange Land” by Robert Heinlein. I can’t understand why in the world this book has never been made into a movie. But on the other hand, they would probably just muck it up. Hmm. I wonder who they would get to play Valentine Michael Smith? Or even better, Jubal Harshaw? Who would you pick for those two characters?
Sherri Tepper The Gate To Woman’s Country
Thank you @Gretchin for reminding me of this book. I read it many many years ago. I definitely want to give it a reread from a perspective more experienced at life now.
The humor translates at least as far as Sweden because I love the books by Taylor. Fast paced and hilarious!
There is apparently a movie in development but you need to subscribe to IMDBPro to get the details unfortunately so that’s all I know.
Absolutely! But the funniest is probably the first, Naked. And in that, the essay about his grandmother. Funny but tragic, too.
@LivStrom, you might be interested in listening to the audio books too. They are equally fun, funny and (in my opinion) read with precisely the right voice and intonations.
I always have a comfort read that I come back to when I need some brain space. The last few years it’s been Ami McKay’s The Witches of New York. She writes in such a submersive way and I’ve read it enough times now that the characters feel like friends. The follow-up holiday novella, Half Spent Was the Night, is also delightful.
The Tao of Pooh and The Te of Piglet are delights, and I’d like to think Milne would find Hoff in good company.
My favorite aspect is that they’re good for all ages; something for everyone to gain.
This is completely outside of my normal reading genres, but I picked up a book my wife had just finished a couple of nights ago. “Uprooted” by Naomi Novik. It is about witches and dragons, but not the kinds of witches and dragons you might usually imagine. Totally not my kind of book, and I am completely drawn into it.
I love those books! Hoff did an exceptional job of explaining Taoism using Winnie the Pooh. And the stories are funny, too!
Anybody who likes fairy tales, fairy tale retellings, or just good middle grade fiction might enjoy Chris Colfer’s The Land of Stories set. It’s six books. I’m 100 pages into the last one and have loved them all so far.