I was talking with my non /lit/ gf about books (more like me telling her shit that I read) and she seemed interested. She doesn't read but she told me she would read if I suggest her a good book.
So /lit/ time to be useful for one fucking moment in your life. Suggest me some books that are ok to give to a gf and make her read more. I have this once chance to make my beautiful gf into a beautiful /lit/ patrician gf
Probably something like the bell jar
Areas of interest?
Generic answer: 100 years of solitude
>>8432464
no one cares about your slag gf
Buy her a copy of Hogg
>>8432470
She's into tech, IT, computers and everything PC, electronics and computer shit.
But I don't think she wants to READ about stuff that she works with. Suggest me something easy to grasp, easy to understand, fun.
No fucking greeks, I already tried.
>>8432475
Areas of interest means non-professional. If none, good luck and go with the generic answer.
>>8432464
For Her Own Good: Two Centuries of the Experts Advice to Women
give her this thing :)
If you yourself actually read you would be able to tell her yourself but whatever.
>HG Wells
>A Hero of Our Time
>Hesse
>Steinbeck
>Bataille
>Pasternak
>Chesterton
>Bulgakov
>Salinger
>Kesey
>Wilde
>Lot 49
etc etc
>>8432497
I can barely discuss what I read with literature and history scholars let alone a simple, naive girl who never reads.
>>8432464
Judging by Goodreads, and my intuition, women respond well to reading Theodore Sturgeon. I believe it is the melodrama and emphasis on the transforming power of love. In any case, he is a peddler of thought provoking and entertaining speculative fiction, well regarded by critics and readers alike, including myself.
I recommend More Than Human and The Dreaming Jewels in particular.
Women seem to like Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-5 also.
>>8432475
Starting with the Greeks is silly, for most people. She should start with the classics of children's lit that she should have read growing up but probably didn't. They're easy to read, pleasant, contain valuable cultural touchstones, and for the most part they're fucking great.
My essential list:
Lewis Carroll: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland 1865
Louisa May Alcott: Little Women 1868
Mark Twain: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer 1876
Robert Louis Stevenson: Treasure Island 1883
Beatrix Potter: The Tale of Peter Rabbit 1902
Margery Williams Bianco: The Velveteen Rabbit, or How Toys Become Real 1922
Lucy Maud Montgomery: Anne of Green Gables 1908
Kenneth Grahame: The Wind in the Willows 1908
James M. Barrie: Peter and Wendy 1911
E.B. White: Charlotte’s Web 1952
Seriously, everybody should read these, and if you haven't, you're not well-read. Buy her a nice edition of Wind in the WIllows with the Sheppard or Rackham illustrations.
>>8434056
I second this post.
Alice in Wonderland is one of the comfiest reads. I have a treasured edition of it that I keep with me always.
books I've given my gfs and they loved
-the virgin suicides
-Vurt
-lolita
books I thought they would like and they hated
-never let me go
-infinite jest
>>8434056
>Wind in the Willows
I still have one with illustrations by Kincaid, always loved it as a child
thanks Grandma
Peter Pan
>>8434085
>lolita
Tell your girlfriend I want to drink her bath water.
>>8432464
Gone girl, all the light we cannot see, sookie stackhouse shit
>>8432464
give her some vonnegut. Easy enough for entry lit, but also has some meaning behind it
>>8432464
>women
Barnes. Can't go wrong. Bitches love him.
William Gibson
Start with Neuromancer or start with Pattern Recognition. If she likes them then there are two successors to each book.
>>8432464
Don't OP.
My gf of four years recently expressed interest in reading, so I gave her the bell jar, girls love the bell jar. She didn't understand it and it was a chore.
She's now slowly working her way through the first harry potter.
>>8432571
Well what do you read?
>>8436891
Can boys like the bell jar?