The blog has been silent lately, mainly because I just got back from a week in Indiana, where my sister married the love of her life. (Trust me, a post is forthcoming.) While on said "vacation," I read a total of 1-1/2 books. That's it! It was nice to have a break, and now I'm ready to jump back into my normal insane reading schedule :-) I'll have a slew of reviews in the next several weeks, but for now, I thought it would be fun to do something different.
I've never done one of these weekly memes before, but several bloggers I follow have started doing Top Ten Tuesday from
The Broke & The Bookish, and I thought it looked like fun! I'm sure I won't be doing these all the time, but if a Top Ten Tuesday catches my eye, then I'll jump in.
This week's topic is
Ten Authors I Own The Most Books From. Since I didn't really feel like going through my bookshelves and Kindle to count everything, this is just an estimate. I'm very confident in the top five, but the rest are guesses :-) I thought it might be fun to give you a glimpse at my bookshelves as we go along. (If the pictures are too small, click on them, and they'll get bigger.)
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This is just the 1st shelf—the shelf below is about half full of Kingsbury books! |
1.
Karen Kingsbury—There was a time when I bought each and every Kingsbury book as soon as it released. That all ended with
Loving, the last book in the Bailey Flanigan series. I began reading, then I flipped to the end to find out
who Bailey chose in the end: Cody or Brandon. The result was what I feared. I put the book down and haven't read another Kingsbury book since. I
know it's ridiculous, but I spent so much time (and money) invested in Bailey's journey, and I just can't get over the way it ended. (Full disclosure: At one point in the series, I
wanted Kingsbury to end it exactly as she did, but then things changed, and
I felt betrayed as a reader.) I do have two Kingsbury books that I haven't read yet, including
Coming Home, which wraps up the Baxter series. I should really read them ... someday.
I just counted, and I have
44 Karen Kingsbury books. Goodness!
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Lori Wick & Dee Henderson. For a while, I kept all my Wick books. Recently, though, I decided to just keep my favorites and try to sell the rest. So if you're in the market for cheap Lori Wick books, check out my half.com shop! |
2.
Lori Wick—From 7th grade until I discovered Karen Kingsbury in college, Lori Wick was my favorite author. I loaned out
Sophie's Heart so many times that it's practically falling apart, and I've still read it more times than any other book. Fun fact: Wick is the only author on this list that I've seen in person. Her son attended the same college as I did, and one Sunday morning I turned around in church and saw her about six rows back!
3.
Susan May Warren—I liked the first few Warren books I read, but I didn't love them. Then I read
Sons of Thunder. I was hooked, and now I read everything she writes. I just finished
When I Fall in Love, and I absolutely could not put it down. (Review coming next week.) I can't wait for the next in the series!
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It doesn't look like many books, but The Chronicles of Narnia and The Essential C.S. Lewis both contain several books. |
4.
C.S. Lewis—Lewis is the only author on the list whose fiction and non-fiction I own. Of course
The Chronicles of Narnia is a favorite; I also love
Mere Christianity and
Till We Have Faces.
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I've loaned out several Dekker books. They go (of course) where the gaps are. If you're interested in the book flowers, you can see how I made them here. |
5.
Ted Dekker—My friend Jodi gave me
Green, my first Ted Dekker novel, about 10 years ago. After devouring the Circle trilogy (now a quartet), I moved on to his other novels. Some I loved (
Skin,
Immanuel's Veins), some I loathed (
Boneman's Daughters). I haven't read any of his newer novels ... or even all of the novels that are on this shelf!
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The end of Susan May Warren & most of my Robin Jones Gunn. |
6.
Robin Jones Gunn—What Christian teenage girl in the 90's didn't love the Christy Miller series? I got into the game a bit late—Book 8,
Starry Night, is the first book I read in the series. Then in high school, I started reading the Glenbrooke series, and I own all eight books. Most recently, I read the Katie Weldon series and was surprised at how much I liked Katie, as I didn't really enjoy her in the Christy Miller series. I also have a couple Robin Jones Gunn books on my to be read shelf.
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I have two types of bookshelves: those that hold books I want to display, and those that hold books I keep for sentimental reasons. This shelf holds the latter. |
7.
Lisa T. Bergren—I first came across Lisa T. Bergren in high school. My high school library had the
Full Circle series, and reading
Refuge made me really, really want to visit Montana! I didn't read any more of her books for a long time, but I recently
reviewed the Grand Tour series and loved it. I also have a few books from her
River of Time series on my Kindle ... must make time to read them! (Hello, it's YA and time travel. Of course I'm going to love it!)
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The end of Karen Kingsbury, a few Denise Hunter, and the beginning of Susan May Warren. I've loaned out a ton of my Hunter and Warren books. |
8.
Denise Hunter—Hunter is, hands down, my favorite romance writer. I got started with her
Nantucket series, and I've read practically everything she's written since.
The Convenient Groom is one of my all-time favorite books, but I haven't reviewed it. I should probably read it again and remedy that!
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The Austen shrine. |
9.
Jane Austen—Is it OK to admit that the only Jane Austen book I've ever read is
Pride & Prejudice, and even then, I skipped some in the middle? But I display the books prominently, right beside the film adaptations of her novels. (My favorite?
The BBC production of Emma.)
10.
Dee Henderson—Henderson's O'Malley series remains is one of my all-time favorites. I also read some of her True Devotion series and enjoyed them. I haven't read any of her recent novels—I've read some negative reviews, and I don't want to spend money on books I may not like.
So there's my list. What about you? Leave your top ten in the comments, or leave a link to your own top ten post.
+JMJ+
ReplyDeleteFunnily enough, the author who took the #1 spot on my Tenner is also a writer whom I decided "to break up with." I wouldn't say that I felt betrayed as a reader, though . . . just terrible shortchanged. To make a long story short, she had THREE Catholic characters in different books casually decide to convert in order to get married to people who weren't even very religious in their own denominations. One of those characters had grown up in a convent! It was both unrealistic and indulgent; and as a religious person myself, I decided it was a deal breaker.
That would drive me crazy! I've seen it happen with Amish books--an Englisher comes to the community, falls in love, and converts. Always makes me want to chuck the book against the wall.
DeleteI've never read any of Lori Wick's books but she must be well loved as she has tons of books out!
ReplyDeleteI'd recommend starting with The Princess. It's been my go-to Wick book for the last several years. I adore Sophie's Heart, but I don't think it holds up as well as some of Wick's more recent books. She's apparently stopped writing, which is too bad--I'd love to get my hands on a new book!
DeleteThanks for stopping by :-)