When you are a reader, people always ask for book recommendations. Which book(s) do you recommend wholeheartedly? Three of my go to books I always recommend are Play It as It Lays, What’s Bred in the Bone, and Cold Comfort Farm. Here’s why I picked these three:
Play It as It Lays by Joan Didion is a 1970 novel about a former actress facing the meaninglessness of her life in Hollywood. It’s a spare, powerful novel I think everyone should read, particularly women who I think might get more out of it. As an overlooked classic, it’s an excellent choice for a “serious” book.
What’s Bred in the Bone by Robertson Davies is thoroughly entertaining. Published in 1985 as the second novel in his Cornish Trilogy, it works perfectly as a standalone. It’s a long, shaggy story about a Canadian art collector and restorer caught up in an elaborate scheme to spy on and defraud Nazi’s in Germany during WWII. It falls square into the category of “a good yarn” and is the book I recommend when anyone tells me they just want something good to read.
Cold Comfort Farm by Stella Gibbons is a cozy blanket of a novel. This 1932 modern classic is funny (very funny), warmhearted, and worth binging on a winter evening, followed by the movie version featuring a young and dreamy Rufus Sewell. This one is more popular than the others, and justifiably so. But there are still a few readers out there who haven’t succumbed to its charms and they should really give in.
As you see, the backlist is my happy place. How about you? I prefer the patina of time to the shiny new. I definitely prefer the buzz to wear off before I decide if I want to read a book or skip it for something that’s been percolating on my TBR shelf for a while.





