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Here are all of J.K. Rowling's favorite books

"Emma" by Jane Austen

Here are all of J.K. Rowling's favorite books

"The Woman Who Walked Into Doors" by Roddy Doyle

"The Woman Who Walked Into Doors" by Roddy Doyle

"My favorite living writer is Roddy Doyle," Rowling told Amazon. This novel in particular — about a woman's relationship with a violent man — was one of the most important books in her life. "I don't think I've ever encountered such a believable, fully rounded female character from any other heterosexual male writer in any age," she told O, The Oprah Magazine.

"The Woman Who Walked Into Doors," $12.98

"Team of Rivals" by Doris Kearns Goodwin

"Team of Rivals" by Doris Kearns Goodwin

Goodwin's Pulitzer Prize-winning book about Abraham Lincoln's political skill isn't one you'd necessarily expect as a favorite of an author of British fantasy novels. Rowling was attracted to how skillfully Goodwin conjured Lincoln's America.

"I lived in it the way that you do with truly great books; putting it down with glazed eyes and feeling disconcerted to find yourself in the 21st century," Rowling told The New York Times. "I met the author at a reception in the American Embassy in London last year, and I was so excited that I was bobbing up and down on the spot like a 5-year-old."

"Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln," $14.28

"The diaries of Auberon Waugh" by Auberon Waugh

"The diaries of Auberon Waugh" by Auberon Waugh

"Brideshead Revisited" is one of the quintessential British novels, but Rowling cites a book by his eldest son. Auberon Waugh kept a diary between the 1972 and 1985, which mocked the trends of his day. Rowling keeps a copy in her bathroom. "It's always good for a giggle," she told the Times.

"The diaries of Auberon Waugh," $4.39

"Black Beauty," by Anna Sewell

"Black Beauty," by Anna Sewell

When asked to name her favorite books as a child, Rowling said she loved "anything with a horse on it." Among those, "Black Beauty" is one of her favorite.

"Black Beauty," $4.50

“The Little White Horse” by Elizabeth Goudge

“The Little White Horse” by Elizabeth Goudge

She also included Gouge's childhood classic, which inspired the vivid way Rowling describes the food at Hogwarts feasts.

"Goudge was the only one whose influence I was conscious of," Rowing wrote. "She always described exactly what the children were eating, and I really liked knowing what they had in their sandwiches."

On a deeper level, Rowling was attracted to how cleverly the book was constructed, even though it seemed simple on the surface. "Perhaps more than any other book, it has a direct influence on the Harry Potter books," she told The Scotsman.

"The Little White Horse," $6

"Little Women" by Louisa May Alcott

"Little Women" by Louisa May Alcott

"My favorite literary heroine is Jo March," Rowling told The Times. "It is hard to overstate what she meant to a small, plain girl called Jo, who had a hot temper and a burning ambition to be a writer."

"Little Women," $2.85

"Hons and Rebels" by Jessica Mitford

"Hons and Rebels" by Jessica Mitford

Rowling loves Mitford so much, she named her daughter after her. Rowling's great aunt gave her the journalistic memoir when she was 14, and she instantly became her heroine.

"I love the way she never outgrew some of her adolescent traits, remaining true to her politics — she was a self-taught socialist — throughout her life," Rowling told The Scotsman. "I think I've read everything she wrote."

"Hons and Rebels," $11.69

"Manxmouse: The Mouse Who Knew No Fear" by Paul Gallico,

"Manxmouse: The Mouse Who Knew No Fear" by Paul Gallico,

This book about a mouse who went off on epic adventures was one of Rowling's favorites when she was a child. "Gallico manages the fine line between magic and reality so skilfully, to the point where the most fantastic events feel plausible," she told the Sydney Morning Herald.

"Manxmouse," $0.90

"Ballet Shoes" by Noel Streatfeild

"Ballet Shoes" by Noel Streatfeild

Rowling told the Times that she loves everything by Streatfeild, but she didn't mention a particular book. Streatfeild's website, though, cites "Ballet Shoes" as a book she still revisits.

"Ballet Shoes," $6.29

"The Story of the Treasure Seekers" by E. Nesbit

"The Story of the Treasure Seekers" by E. Nesbit

Rowling ranks E. Nesbit as one of her favorite authors, and "The Story of the Treasure Seekers" as her favorite of Nesbit's books. It's no wonder. With children who keep getting into magical adventures without parental supervision, Nesbit's novels are the most clearly influential on Rowling's characters.

"She's the children's writer with whom I most identify," Rowling said. "She said, 'By some lucky chance, I remember exactly how I felt and thought at 11.' That struck a chord with me."

"The Story of the Treasure Seekers," $5.99

"A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens

"A Tale of Two Cities" by Charles Dickens

Rowling read Dickens' masterpiece in her third year of college. She shared a flat with"with an Italian, a Russian and a Spaniard," according to The Scotsman. "She found the Italian disagreeable and would avoid him by spending whole days in her room reading."

She also considers Dickens as the ideal dinner guest.

"Dickens also had an amazing life," she told The Wall Street Journal. "I've just got a feeling that I would have a very good time with Charles Dickens. And he was a performer, wasn't he? I think he could be phenomenal company."

"A Tale of Two Cities," $4.50

“Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette” by Judith Thurman

“Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette” by Judith Thurman

As a close second for an ideal dinner guest, there's Colette, the famously prickly French author. Thurman's biography of is among Rowling's all-time favorite books.

"Colette is terrifying," she told the Journal. "But if she were in a mellow mood, and prepared to tell the truth about her life, you would have the most fascinating dinner in the history of the world."

"Secrets of the Flesh: A Life of Colette," $13.32

"Chéri" by Colette

"Chéri" by Colette

Of all of Colette's books, Rowling loves "Chéri" the most. It's about a romance between a young man and her mistress. "I absolutely bow to Colette," Rowling said. "But I think if she could hear me, she would probably tell me where to get lost, because she was that kind of woman."

"Cheri and the Last of Cheri," $11.50

"I Capture the Castle" by Dodie Smith

"I Capture the Castle" by Dodie Smith

Rowling calls "I Capture the Castle" one of her "favourite books for younger people." It's about a 17-year-old girl who lives in a castle with her family. In a recent edition of the novel, Rowling blurbed it, saying its narrator, Cassandra, is "one of the most charismatic narrators I've ever met."

"I Capture the Castle," $9.87

"Macbeth" by William Shakespeare

"Macbeth" by William Shakespeare

Like any British author — and any author working in the English language — Rowling loves Shakespeare. Her favorite is about a fellow Scot, "Macbeth." Its prophecy and fate-driven plot is an influence on the plot of "Harry Potter."

"Macbeth," $6.77

"The Iliad" by Homer

"The Iliad" by Homer

Rowling referenced the Greek epic at the end of "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," when Harry saved Cedric's body. "That’s where it came from," Rowling told Entertainment Weekly. "That really, really, REALLY moved me when I read that when I was 19. The idea of the desecration of a body, a very ancient idea… I was thinking of that when Harry saved Cedric’s body."

"The Iliad" (Robert Fagles translation), $13.01

"Grimble" by Clement Freud

"Grimble" by Clement Freud

"Grimble is one of funniest books I've ever read," Rowling told Amazon. "Grimble himself, who is a small boy, is a fabulous character. I'd love to see a Grimble film. As far as I know, these last two fine pieces of literature are out of print, so if any publishers ever read this, could you please dust them off and put them back in print so other people can read them?"

"Grimble and Grimble at Christmas," $22.08

"Lolita"by Vladimir Nabokov

"Lolita"by Vladimir Nabokov

"There are two books whose final lines make me cry without fail, irrespective of how many times I read them," Rowling told BBC Radio 4. "One is 'Lolita.'"

(The other one, based on the context of the interview, seems to be "Emma.")

Like many other admirer's of Nabokov's novel of a pedophile who pursues a 12-year-old girl, Rowling loves it for the writing style.

"There just isn't enough time to discuss how a plot that could have been the most worthless pornography becomes, in Nabakov's hands, a great and tragic love story, and I could exhaust my reservoir of superlatives trying to describe the quality of the writing," she said.

"Lolita," $9.75




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