This week’s theme from That Artsy Reader Girl is “Books You’d Be a Fool Not To Read”. My twist on this is that I’m going to talk about books I didn’t expect to love, and even some books that I didn’t love at first but came to love on rereading them. So it’s books/series/authors that I’d have been a fool not to read (and reread) — though you could take that as a recommendation on my part!
- Feed, by Mira Grant. I think back when I first read this, half the problem was that I was in a very anxious period in my life. I’m not sure if I was on anxiety medication yet; possibly not, or possibly not the more effective medication I later tried. Anyway, Feed scared the crap out of me by hitting me right where my fears were. I still have anxiety, and health-related anxiety at that, but I’ve come a long way by being curious about it and looking my fears right in the face — and I’m really fascinated by Feed now, too.
- Ancillary Justice, by Ann Leckie. It’s not that I hated this when I first read it, as far as I can remember. But I didn’t quite “get” it either. It was a book everyone had been talking about, and it didn’t seem like my thing. I don’t know quite when that changed, but I think it was while reading the later books — and now when I reread this first one, I love it too.
- Chalice, by Robin McKinley. The first time I read it, I felt like everything wrapped up too quickly and left me with so many questions. The protagonist spends the whole book not sure what she’s doing, and making it up as she goes along; understanding the boundaries of her abilities by finding them. Reading the book again (and again and again), though, the itch of curiosity is more about figuring more out myself and enjoying the questions.
- Shades of Milk and Honey, by Mary Robinette Kowal. As with most of the books on this list, it’s not that I hated the book on first read, but it wasn’t an obvious hit either. I think I gave it two stars. It was before I got into romance novels in general, and I really wasn’t an Austen fan. I just didn’t really… get the appeal, and I don’t think I wanted to get the appeal. It stuck in my head, though, and I later read Glamour in Glass and… loved it. At that point I revisited and found that I liked it, actually.
- A Natural History of Dragons, by Marie Brennan. I know! If you’ve been around here long, you know I loved that book. But I didn’t love it the first time — I think I did give it three stars, “liked it”, but I definitely wasn’t all-in, ride-or-die. I can’t say quite why it didn’t work for me at the time — maybe just mood? But I read Tropic of Serpents, adored it, and reconsidered.
- The Gabriel Hounds, by Mary Stewart. To be accurate, my change of heart on this was more of a general re-evaluation of Mary Stewart’s work and why I was reading it, what I was interested in, etc. I read The Gabriel Hounds without knowing much about Stewart’s work (and quite possibly after having already disliked her Arthurian retellings), and I don’t think I really let myself get into it. I really should revisit again, because aspects of it have reaaaally stuck with me — though Madam, Will You Talk? remains my favourite.
- The Talisman Ring, by Georgette Heyer. I can’t remember if this was my first Heyer novel, but I think so (except for maybe her mysteries). It’s a heck of a romp, and it immediately sold me on Heyer’s work.
- Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, by Susanna Clarke. This one is an absolute brick of a novel, and I remember vividly acquiring it second-hand during my first degree, and tucking myself away in the library to read great big chunks of it between lectures. I actually read it really fast, after entering into the process somewhat dubiously. There are things about it that I hadn’t expected to like — the footnotes, the faux-Regency style, etc — and I’m pretty sure a couple of people I knew had hated it. And yet!
- An Unsuitable Heir, by KJ Charles. I hadn’t read much romance at this point, and I’m not entirely sure why I requested it on Netgalley — but given how much I love Charles’ work now, I’m very glad I did. I read it for the first time during a visit to my parents-in-law in Canada, so I also have a vivid memory of keeping a careful straight face while reading the sex scenes in the living room, ahaha.
- Whose Body? by Dorothy L. Sayers. I think (and time proved) that this was not the best starting point for me with Peter Wimsey. He’s not very emotionally present in the story (at least until the end), so if you’ve read a few classic mysteries, you can come into it a bit jaded and not ready to see the detective as a full-blown character. Clouds of Witness or, later, Strong Poison are probably better for that — though really, I think what does it is the cumulative exposure to Lord Peter across the books. I think they’ve all got better (for me) over time as I’ve learned to see where something is Peter being Peter, rather than a generic detective. The audiobook adaptations with Ian Carmichael also add a lot, as well as both adaptations to TV series (older ones with Ian Carmichael, some slightly more recent ones with Edward Petherbridge).
And that’s it! Ten books I wasn’t sure whether I’d like, or which I liked more on reading again. Take these as recommendations if you wish!
I’m too much of a horror wimp to read more Mira Grant (though I did enjoy the murder mermaids books), but several of these others are on my TBR. Happy reading!
(Sorry for the duplicate comment. WP said it didn’t go through the first time, so I sent it again.)
I’m not that into horror in general, but for certain authors/certain premises, it’s OK. It really depends for me on what the angle is!
Nice twist!
Whose Body? didn’t impress be too much, and I want to try another one by this author.
I was not inspired by the prompt. Instead today, I posted my April TBR: https://wordsandpeace.com/2025/04/01/the-top-7-books-to-read-in-april-2025/
Sayers was a very literary sort of writer, and that didn’t work super well with the “generic detective solves a crime” mould she was writing into. I found Clouds of Witness a better introduction, since the mystery reveals Peter’s character in a way that doesn’t come through as well in Whose Body? (though it does a bit at the end, when his shell-shock relapses).
My comments are having trouble with your blog, also. I noticed it last week, too. The note at the bottom of the page says: There has been a critical error on this website. Hope you can iron things out to your satisfaction.
I read Susanna Clarke for the first time in 2024. Now I need to go back and try her most famous work: Jonathan Strange…
Your comments are coming through fine as far as I can tell (I got three copies, and I’ve had multiple copies from you before as well; I remove the duplicates to keep things tidy). There’s just caching which means they won’t show up right away. So if you don’t see it, it doesn’t mean it hasn’t come through. 🙂 I also have comment moderation on and spam filtering, so when you send the same comment multiple times, there’s a risk it’ll get picked up as spam. I’ll let the person who manages my site know about the error, though.
Not everyone loves Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, by a long shot, but I certainly do.
I’m hoping to read some Dorothy Sayers books this year.
Pam @ Read! Bake! Create!
https://readbakecreate.com/tongue-in-cheek-book-titles-titles-to-make-you-smile/
I really love her work, though it’s less the mysteries and more Lord Peter as a character, for me! (In this case anyway — I’m a big fan of classic mysteries in general, I just don’t think Sayers sits easily in that mould.)
Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell is one of my favorites – I listened to the audiobook and the production was excellent. I also loved the tv miniseries adaptation.
I should watch the adaptation sometime! I’m curious how they managed to adapt the book and maintain the same flavour.