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.
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.

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Although I also think of John Barnes' Kaleidoscope Century as comfort reading, perhaps because it agrees so thoroughly with my view of humanity.
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Mira Grant's Newsflesh books are the closest thing I have to comfort reading (possibly closest I've ever come to having it), which is a bit disconcerting given how many heartrending things happen to characters I love that much.
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My comfort reads: Komarr and other Vorkosigan books (but that one especially), Gaudy Night, some of Suzanne Brockmann's Navy SEALs books, Barbara Hambly's less-grim fantasies. I seem to be comforted by stories with action, romance between people who respect and like each other, and emotional difficulties overcome.
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I keep needing to add new ones as the old ones threaten to wear out and need to be retired for a year or two.
P.
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And no, these things certainly are not rational.
It's sad when things fall off your comfort list, for whatever reason.
P.
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without looking at anyone else's
A Brother's Price by Wen Spencer.
The Harper Hall trilogy.
A College of Magics.
Tamora Pierce.
Sharon Shinn's Fortune and Fate.
Some other things I'm not thinking of and will smack my head over momentarily I'm sure.
RE: without looking at anyone else's
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*deep breath*
Right. To those, I'd add several books by L.M. Montgomery and Louisa May Alcott, Emma Bull's Finder and War For The Oaks, and about half of the Discworld series.
On the other hand, I also have a small stack of books (most of the complete works of William Gibson, The Dubious Hills, and L'Engle's A Severed Wasp) which I turn to specifically when I want to become un comfortable in a particular way that I can't really explain. The example that comes immediately to mind is that I always pack my copy of Gibson's Pattern Recognition when I'm traveling, and inevitably re-read it in airports.
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Alcott has been on my comfort list and will be on it again, but I'm having to give her a rest at the moment, except for Little Men. When I was about eight, my mother gave me her childhood hardcover set of Alcott, but she was missing that one, and I didn't start reading it for about ten more years, so it has less wear on it.
I'm fascinated that you have discomfort reading too, or stirring-up reading, or whatever one might call it. The Dubious Hills was exceedingly uncomfortable to write, so I'm not surprised it is on that list. And I certainly see why A Severed Wasp is there. I sometimes reread only portions of it if I have read all my other L'Engle.
I've never been able to get on with Gibson's work, but maybe I should give it another go.
P.
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From the novel end, Mirable and Hellspark, Carter Beats the Devil, All Star Superman (not technically a novel), The Velveteen stories, Tam Lin, The Child Garden, The Westing Game, The Last Unicorn, A Deepness in the Sky, A Fire Upon the Deep, A College of Magics, most L'Engle books, but not House Like a Lotus, and there are probably quite a lot more that I'm not thinking of, because it's nearly one a.m., and I have to get on a conference call in an hour, because my job.
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Dorothy L. Sayers makes perfect sense to me. I can go back and back to her books and get a little something different every time. A comfort read seems to need to be repeatable and complicated.
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I adore Diane Duane and all her works, but they are more stimulating than soothing, somehow.
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