sovay: (Morell: quizzical)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2015-02-18 02:16 pm

Come with your broken dreams and your ruined fancies

I dreamed last night that I asked for comfort reading recommendations and came away from the bookstore with a recently reprinted YA novel about a crew of downed airmen raising a baby in a German POW camp in World War II (a childhood favorite of several people in the dream) and a relatively new lesbian mermaid romance with a gorgeous tropical cover (almost certainly influenced by this gifset and photoset). I was looking forward to reading both of them and was somewhat put out when instead I was woken by Harvard Vanguard calling to remind me of a doctor's appointment tomorrow at nine in the morning.

Now I'm just curious. What do people read when they want comfort reading? I re-read Strong Poison (1930) right before the 'Thon and am three-quarters of the way through Have His Carcase (1932), which very possibly counts.

[identity profile] kenjari.livejournal.com 2015-02-19 03:11 am (UTC)(link)
My father was a baby in a German POW camp. Well, I think he would have been somewhere between 14 and 18 months when he (along with his mother and sisters) were taken prisoner, and I do frequently hear kids of that age referred to as babies.