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.

no subject
Although I also think of John Barnes' Kaleidoscope Century as comfort reading, perhaps because it agrees so thoroughly with my view of humanity.
no subject
no subject
no subject
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.
no subject
no subject
no subject
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.
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
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.
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
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
no subject
no subject
no subject
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
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.
no subject
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.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
I adore Diane Duane and all her works, but they are more stimulating than soothing, somehow.