
Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl
Today’s Prompt: Books I wish I could read again for the first time
Do you remember the books that made you love words and writing and books, landscapes and characters, books that stopped time as you read them? That formed your thoughts and helped you escape? I feel like those are the books I would like to read again, that had such a profound effect on my life as I grew up. To feel that magic all over again.



A Prayer for Owen Meany || The Prince of Tides || All Creatures Great and Small
These three books were given to me by my mom, my dad, and my uncle, and I think that helped make them special as well. My mom gave me the whole James Herriot collection when I was probably 10ish, and I adored them. I didn’t always understand them, but it didn’t matter. I understood what these stories represented – kindness, love, and caring for all of our creatures that we share this planet with.
The Prince of Tides was a book given to me by my dad. He loves Pat Conroy (and now me too!) and despite some tough subject matter I was wrapped up in this world. I remember I even stayed home “sick” from school one day so I could finish it. I went on to read the rest of his books, and each were as amazing but none could take the place of Prince of Tides.
A Prayer for Owen Meany was from my uncle. Another book that has stayed with me all through my life, that I think about all the time. I wish I could read it again just to see how masterfully Irving had the ending all planned, right from the very beginning.



The Lake of Dead Languages || King’s Oak || On the Banks of Plum Creek
The Lake of Dead Languages was Dark Academia before that was a thing. I remember reading it and thinking about how I wanted to throw myself into academia the way that these girls did – minus the big secret in this book of course. I love Carol Goodman still, she was my entrance into a world beyond my little town in Michigan, that was all about steel mills and auto factories.
King’s Oak took me down south again, this time introducing me to Tom Dabney, a character I would love to meet and hang out with. Like Luke in the Prince of Tides, he burned a bit too brightly for his world.
On the Banks of Plum Creek of course has to be on here. Who didn’t want to be Laura when they were younger? All those adventures and animals and running wild and living in a sod house! What! I thought that was the coolest thing ever.




Franny and Zooey || Remembering Blue || Charlotte’s Web || The Great Gatsby
Franny and Zooey was probably the first book by a classic author that I read and really loved. I know Salinger gets a bad rap but I always liked his work. Franny and Zooey is my favorite though.
Remembering Blue is just like a lovely romantic sad fairy tale. I attended a writing class, a small group of maybe 10 other people, with my dad at Connie May Fowler’s house in Florida (her husband made us dinner!) and it was so cool to talk with her about this book. I wish I wouldn’t have been so young honestly when I went; I feel like I could make more of the whole experience now as an adult. It was an awesome time though.
Charlotte’s Web. Yes, I know reading it all over again for the first time will be tragic but it still makes me cry anyway. Just the love that was in these pages between Charlotte and Wilbur. I read it with Wyatt a few years ago, and it struck me just how much Charlotte was like a mother to Wilbur, protecting him. And reading it with Wyatt for the first time was almost like reading it again myself for the first time, as I was reading it with a different perspective.
The Great Gatsby is another one of the first classics that I read and loved. I wanted to go back and live in the Roaring ’20s so badly, to be a flapper and dance all night in a fringed dress.
And that is it. These books worked magic on me that is not lost, but it would be amazing to feel that first wonder all over again.
These are some great books to re-read and I love the memories that you have attached to them.
Here’s a link to my TTT post
https://rosieamber.wordpress.com/2025/10/14/%f0%9f%93%9atoptentuesday-10-books-i-wish-i-could-read-again-for-the-first-time-tuesdaybookblog-booktwitter-bookx/
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Thanks Rosie!
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Oh yes, I do remember the magic I felt when I first read Under the Banks of Plum Creek! Oh how I romanticized life on the plains as a small child!
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Right?? Me too! I know now the reality, but Laura’s world seemed so cozy and free.
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I really cannot remember if I’ve read the Charlotte’s Web book or the Laura Ingalls Wilder stories. But I think I would like to read them even if only for nostalgia. I love the All Creatures Great and Small TV show so maybe someday I’ll consider reading one of them. 🙂 Thanks for visiting my list today!
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I love to read middle grade still. They are just such comfort reads. 🙂 And I love the tv show too! I couldn’t watch last season. I didn’t want to deal with the war but I am going to catch up soon.
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I seriously considered adding Charlotte’s Web, too. Of course I read it as a kid so it is hard to imagine not having it inside me all along. I agree about James Herriot books, too. So comforting.
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I know. It informed so much of my life honestly, now I viewed animals, especially spiders. Which might explain why I agreed to a certain new pet in my home…
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As I said on Lisa’s post, I don’t know if I could even answer this question as I do re-read quite a bit and don’t even think it makes a different to me if the magic is still right (which it luckily mostly is).
With special books, I don’t have to read them to get that feeling. I love what Anne wrote “hard to imagine not having it inside me all along”.
Charlotte’s Web will never not make me cry. I call the spiders in my house Harry (no idea why) or Charlotte if they stay around in the same spot for a bit.
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I do reread some books. I reread Little House, Watership Down, all the time. And Watership Down will never not feel magical to me. But for me, it is that new discovery that it felt like, of learning of somewhere new, what that life was like, that story. And I will always know it, and so it is comforting, and that is its own magic. But it is different compared to new magic. If that makes sense.
We have a new pet that we rescued from a pet shop. You will see it later this week if you haven’t on IG already.
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Oh yes, I LOVED Charlotte’s Web! There have been some books I really loved as a tween that I went back and read and were bummed that while I did enjoy them they just didn’t hold up as well the second time around (which definitely could have something to do with my age).
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I love it too!! I think it was such a great book, and I loved reading it with Wyatt a few years ago. We took a trip and stayed at an Airbnb on a farm while we were reading it too – it was just a fun moment. 🙂 And sometimes they don’t hold up to my memories either – I assume the same thing. Lol
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I’ve actually never read any of these before but what a great selection of books! 🙂 Here’s my Top Ten Tuesday post – https://justreadjessie.blog/2025/10/14/top-ten-tuesday-books-i-wish-i-could-read-again-for-the-first-time/
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I love the memories you have connected to each of these stories.
Pam @ Read! Bake! Create!
https://readbakecreate.com/birthday-book-tag-happy-50th-to-me/
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Thank you Pam!
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I’ve read A Prayer for Owen Meany twice and it was just as good the second time as the first! I’ve never read The Prince of Tides (loved the movie, though), but I’ve always wanted to re-read Beach Music. That book may be in my lifetime Top 10 list, it’s so good!
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Owen Meaney is such a fantastic book. I have read it a few times as well, although not recently. Beach Music is amazing as well!! He was such a talented author.
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I read A Prayer for Owen Meany in high school. For some reason, it has stuck in my brain. I don’t think I’ll ever forget that book.
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Me either! It is just an amazing book. And even in the book, he says he is doomed to remember the boy with the wrecked voice. It is just one of those books and characters that stay with you.
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Oh definitely yes to A Prayer for Owen Meany!
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It is such an amazing book!
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So fun! Charlotte’s Web is a classic. I wonder if the kids still read in in school these days or if it has been replaced with something else.
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That is a good question!! That would make me sad, if it was replaced.
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I remember reading The Prince of Tides long ago and loving it! I love your list, and i love how nostalgic it is😁
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Thank you Tammy! Prince of Tides will stay with me, and the poem that goes with it “Man wonders, but God decides, when to kill the Prince of Tides.”
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Thanks for stopping by my blog and commenting! I never read Pat Conroy until we did a family book swap one year at Christmas and my sister-in-law put a copy in the swap because she loved it, and it surprised me how much I liked it!
There are many on your list that I could have put on mine! Franny and Zooey (which I read not knowing much about the author); All Creatures Great and Small; The Great Gatsby, and the Little House on the Prairie books, which I read many times.
I’m pretty sure I’ve read The Lake of Dead Languages, but I don’t remember it, so now I need to look it up and maybe reread it! I love the Dark Academia genre!
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Pat Conroy was so talented at writing tragic families in the south, or even just tragic stories, but I loved them. His writing is beautiful.
I think I read Franny and Zooey the same way! I didn’t know much about what I was reading and I loved it.
I love all of Carol Goodman’s books, but The Lake of Dead Languages is my hands down favorite.
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Some of these I’ve read, and some I’ve only heard of. I think I’m going to join in on this one! I think I can come up with ten books!
https://marshainthemiddle.com/
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I bet you can!
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Any book you read is always read is always read by you for the first time. If you think you have read it before, it was a different version of you who read it. Humans are incessantly shifting in perspectives, so “re-reading” a book is always going to add more value.
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I love this. I re-read Watership Down every year, and I think I get something different out of it every spring, because I am different from when I read it before.
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That is me, but with Animal Farm. As a teenager, in India, I was fascinated by how accurately it portrayed our leaders as the pig. As an older person, who is a cog in the wheel of a fortune 500, I need to remind myself that being Boxer isn’t the way to rise up the corporate ladder.
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It really is interesting how we interpret material so differently from age to age, as our circumstances, situations, experiences change us. 🙂
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I loved Charlotte’s Web as a child! Thanks for the memory
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Such a great book!
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I’ve read a number of these and smiled when you mentioned them. But I’ve never read “Owen Meany” and I think I may have to seek that one out. I recently reread “Stuart Little” and was overjoyed still. (I confess, I still have an emotional issue with mouse traps.)
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I think you would love Owen Meany!
I should read Stuart Little with Wyatt. I somehow missed that one!
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Looks like we had some similarities. Hmmm.. *wink*
Seriously, this is a really good list and I need to check out some of those classics I have never read!
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I should go back and read more classics. We will see. Lol.
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A Prayer for Owen Meany has been on my physical bookshelf for a while now, I really should get to it soon. It’s so hard when there are so many new books distracting me!
Haze
https://thebookhaze.com/
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Lol!! I know!! If only we had time for all of them!
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I reread the Little House books … oh gosh, I guess it was maybe 10-12 years ago now? Maybe more, I can’t maths right now, lol … But it was so intriguing to read them as an adult and see how much they played a role in who I was. I set myself a treasure hunt task to get hardback copies of them all, to replace my tattered and taped together paperbacks, and now I want to reread them again, see how they hit differently now. 🙂
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Right? You especially! Lol! I reread them all the time, and I still love them to pieces.
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