10 Books to Fit Your
Mood
By Tiffany Lewis
Summer
is supposed to be the time for light, fluffy reading on
the beach. But I try to balance my physical diet of freezer
pops with a mental diet a little more substantive. Here
are 10 books guaranteed to uplift, inspire, or just make
you laugh. These are books I’ve come back to over and over
again, and I’ve never been disappointed.
1. A Man For
All Seasons, by Robert Bolt
A dramatized account of the true-life events surrounding
Sir Thomas More and King Henry VIII. This is actually a play, and a good
supplement is the classic movie. In the end you’ll want
nothing more than to hold true to your beliefs.
2. A Girl Named Zippy, by Haven
Kimmel
A collection of laugh-out-loud stories about a little
girl growing up in a tiny town in Indiana. The accounts are full of humor and
innocence, a good reminder that childhood should be a time
of freedom and self-discovery.
3. Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy
There’s
a reason this was considered a classic long before Oprah
even knew how to read. Though much of the story centers
around the affair of the title
character, the book is ultimately about the simplicity of
true love. It’s long, but worth reading to the last page.
4. Davita’s
Harp, by Chaim Potok
This
novel is about a Jewish girl as she grows into maturity.
It deals with the beauties and complexities of growing up
and examining one’s beliefs.
5. The Hiding Place, by Corrie Ten Boom
The
real-life story of a Christian family sent to the concentration
camps for housing Jews during WWII. This will inspire you
to be a better Christian and find the blessings in life’s
trials.
6. Crossing to Safety, by Wallace
Stegner
A novel about the relationship between two couples who
are lifelong friends. The writing alone makes this book
worth reading, but Stegner is
also a master at illuminating the follies and strengths
of human nature.
7. Ex Libris:
Confessions of a Common Reader, by Anne Fadiman
This
is a book for readers who love reading. The collection
of essays, dealing with everything from the author’s obsession
with mail-order catalogues to the essential need for the
perfect writing utensil, is full of pithy humor and amusing
anecdotes from history.
8. To Kill a Mockingbird, by
Harper Lee
I
believe this to be the most perfect story ever written.
It is primarily thought of as a book about racial issues,
but really it’s a book about love and childhood. One of
my biggest goals in life is to be a parent just like Atticus
Finch.
9. Gift from the Sea, by Anne
Morrow Lindbergh
Every
woman can identify with the musings of Lindbergh, wife of
Charles Lindbergh, as she tries to define her role as a
mother, wife, and woman through this collection of essays
10. Forever Erma: Best-Loved Writing
From America’s Favorite Humorist
Okay,
this one is more cotton candy than it is broccoli, but no
one captures home life better than Erma. On a hot summer
day when the laundry is piled higher than Everest, the dog
goes to the bathroom on the carpet, and you’re just about
ready for September to roll around so you can ship the kids
back to school, kick up your heels and escape to a good
book. The dirty socks can wait.