Do you guys know any really comfy books to read this season?
Wodehouse is about as comfy as it gets.
>>8824936
thanks man. Just skimmed over a bit of it and it's really good
Dubliners
The Big Sea by Langston Hughes
knausgaard's my struggle
>>8825087
Liar. It shows you don't know what Wodehouse is. If you knew you would know that you can't skim over "it"
>>8825158
He said "a bit of it". Presumably meaning he read a few paragraphs here and there.
>>8824744
The Growth of the Soil, by Knut Hamsun. Comfiest shit about a hard-working Norwegan settler family.
>>8824744
Also Robert Walser's novels.
What do you guys mean by "comfy"
I'm new here.
>>8825864
Nothing too dark or terrible happening, characters are mostly decent people, and everything works out in the end (in some sense). Maybe some light comedy, too. It's a vague term, though, so some comfy books won't fit that definition.
Don Quixote
>>8824744
Silas Marner
The Alchemist
Pretty much any Haruki Murakami. He's the ultimate rainy day comfy author.
>>8825769
seconding w/ any Hamsun book. saying "hard working settler family" won't convince people, but trust me
Cortazar's Rayuela. Paris, wine, love, winter, long intelectual rants. A long and experimental but not tedious or difficult, lesser known, /lit/ 100 book to consume your freetime. What more can you ask for?
If on a winter's night
>>8824744
Candide
Oblomov
Hogfather if you want yule darkness comfy.