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The Memorable Books We’ve Received as Gifts

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The Memorable Books We’ve Received as Gifts

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The Memorable Books We’ve Received as Gifts

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Published on December 21, 2022

Photo: Kira auf der Heide [via Unsplash]
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Photo: Kira auf der Heide [via Unsplash]

The right book can stay with you forever, especially one given as a thoughtfully chosen gift. Whether it’s your first childhood foray into fantasy, or a new adventure found later in life, these are the books that shape us as readers, and lead us to our next literary discoveries.

Below, some of the Tor.com staff remember the books that they’ve received that have gone on to shape (or reshape) their lives. What will you unwrap this year, and what paths will it lead you down?

 

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams

My dad was the sort of parent who never pushed his interests on me. He waited and watched and if he noticed that we happened to have something in common, he would broach the subject one afternoon. Which meant that he got a pleasant surprise when my SFF obsession got much more pronounced around age eight, and thought that it might be a good idea to hand over his battered old copy of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Not a gift, exactly. A bestowal.

Hitchhiker’s is a gateway book for a lot of early fans, of course, but this was an ace on my dad’s part due to how we spent the majority of my early childhood—trading movie impressions (usually of the Robin Williams and/or Monty Python variety) and generally trying to make each other giggle. Up until that point, I had no idea you could make prose funny. It was like having my head winched open, and dumping a bowl of sunshine into it. He handed me the book before a vacation, which meant that I wanted to spend all my time on a sandy beach reading—much to my mother’s chagrin—but that was nothing new in the history of my summer break habits. I read it cover to cover, demanded the next one, and memorized all my favorite exchanges verbatim.

To make my dad giggle, of course.

—Emmet

 

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell

The Sparrow was one of the last books I received as a gift, before I began working in publishing and my loved ones assumed that I would want for neither books nor recommendations ever again. Maybe that’s part of why I remember so precisely picking it up under the Christmas tree in my childhood home, or my initial trepidation when my mother mentioned that her book club had read it. I doubted not her taste, but the taste of a group of moms who spent more time gossiping and drinking wine than analyzing the books—still fun, but I was surprised to hear that they had picked up a sci-fi novel from the ’90s.

That early-20s snobbishness kept me from reading The Sparrow for about six months, but I’ve since read the book at least four times—both cover to cover and a selection at a reading series a few years back. I revisited it this year, the 20th anniversary, to discuss it in conversation with Arrival about how human/alien gift-giving can be disastrous. One of the passages was a reading at my wedding. It’s one of those rare books that has everything: naturalistic characters who contain multitudes; an easy way in to space travel and time dilation for the less scientifically-minded like myself; humor, pathos, the ache of unrequited love and devastating horror in ways that don’t feel contrived. I get something different from it every time I read.

The biggest impact that The Sparrow has had on me is that it’s the book I most often recommend. It was one of the first pieces of media I pressed upon my partner in the first few months of dating, and it was his father’s first impression of me (which, considering that the man is very religious and the book has a very anti-faith ending, had me worried). But both parties loved it, and it’s become a frequent conversation topic that’s led us to share subsequent books: Ancillary Justice, The Three-Body Problem, The Left Hand of Darkness.

—Natalie

 

The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle by Avi

My elementary school librarian gave me The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle to read when I was in fourth or fifth grade, so this wasn’t a book gift in the strictest sense of the word, but I’m going with it.

I’ve always been an avid reader, but not a reader who likes to reread books much, even when I was younger. The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle is one of the few exceptions to this—I must have checked it out at least a dozen times that school year. It was a story about a well-to-do 13-year-old girl from the 1830s taking a ship from England to the United States. During that voyage, she sheds her constricting dresses, becomes a crew member on the ship, and is accused of murder, among other things.

I forget most of the plot, to be honest. But what I remember from this book, what I still think about regularly to this day, is how Charlotte ultimately shed her life as a “proper” lady and took to the high seas. She left the only world she knew, threw off the dictates that society placed on her, and became true to herself. That escape, that freedom Charlotte has at the end of the book stuck with me. I couldn’t articulate it then (or for decades after, really), but I felt just as trapped. Eventually, however, I broke free in my own way, and maybe I’ll give the book another reread this holiday season to see how Charlotte’s story resonates with me now.

Vanessa

 

The More Than Complete Hitchhiker’s Guide by Douglas Adams

By the time I was in middle school, I was a pretty solid fantasy reader. I read The Lord of the Rings every year—my own pilgrimage to Mordor and out again—and spent all my birthday and Christmas Waldenbooks gift certificates on the fattest fantasy novels I could find. I read everything on my mom’s shelves that had an intriguing cover (Kathleen Sky’s Witchdame!) or a feisty, troubled young heroine (Jo Clayton’s Duel of Sorcery series!).

But I rarely picked out anything funny.

When my uncle sent me the leather-bound, gilt-edged More Than Complete Hitchhiker’s Guide, it wasn’t the first funny book he’d sent. (I read a lot of Xanth books. I’m not ashamed.) But it was funny science fiction, not fantasy. It took a while for me to commit to reading the whole thing, but I did, and my ideas about stories, about the way the galaxy might look, just bloomed. I’m a very visual reader; there are movies in my head that play whenever I think about a story I’ve read. And these movies looked different than anything I’d dreamt up before. People had fun in these stories. Adams’s sense of the absurd felt so familiar to me that it made the entire universe seem … accessible. And like a thing you could also laugh at, maybe. (Halfway through the book, I realized I’d heard my mother and stepfather listening to the radio production of Hitchhiker, years before. Once you’ve met Marvin, you don’t forget him.)

It’s hard to explain Adams to people who haven’t read him, to explain that you can laugh your face off and also feel like you’re reading some impossible truth about life (the universe, and everything). Adams informs my sense of humor, my references, my ideas about the world(s), in a way that’s somehow more down-to-earth than all the epic fantasy I adore. When I was a kid, those books felt like dreams of living in a different world. Hitchhiker felt like it might know something about being a grownup, here, on a mostly harmless planet.

Molly

 

Jim Henson: The Biography by Brian Jay Jones

I tend not to receive books as gifts. I think because between the books I buy, the ones I borrow, the ones I’m sent to review, the ones I have as pdfs from assorted ediTors—books are the only thing, other than food and liquor, that I collect for myself. Given that, I’m going to talk about a book I bought as a gift to myself, with the caveat that I have not finished this book, and probably never will.

The book in question? Brian Jay Jones’ Jim Henson: The Biography. In the interest of returning to childhood I bought it with Christmas money my parents sent me. On the 26th, family obligations completed for the moment and New Year’s Eve but a distant glow on the horizon, I embarked on what I can only refer to as a truly childlike reading experience: I stretched out on my bed and fell into that book, for hours at a time, coming up only for the most necessary of biological functions. As a person who reads professionally, losing myself in something I didn’t have to review or critique or discuss felt incredible, and I read almost the entire 490-page-long book by midday on the 27th.

But about that “almost”—we all know how the story ends, yes? Jim Henson’s illness, the way-too-early death, the funeral you can watch on Youtube if you want to be unable to function for the rest of the day. So when I got to Chapter 16, “Just One Person”, I gave myself the greatest gift of all and stopped reading.

Leah

 

The Alchemyst by Michael Scott

After years of gifting my much-younger cousin all of the entry-level SFF books that I had loved as a kid (the usual classics from The Phantom Tollbooth to Narnia, alongside ’90s favorites like Neverwhere), she turned around and surprised me one year with the first book in her favorite new series, The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel. She was on the cusp of crossing over from middle-grade to young adult stories, and she was inviting me along for the ride. Honestly I was a little snobby about it at first, hung up on the formulaic set-up—but eventually I got caught up in the fun of the adventure and mythological references. More importantly, reading it reminded me that there was a whole world of new potential entry points to SFF that I was overlooking by simply replicating my old reading list. The Alchemyst helped redirect me to the thriving YA genre, experiencing it with fresh eyes alongside my cousin.

Sarah

 

The Neverending Story by Michael Ende


One of my most vivid book-related memories goes back to the first time I read The Neverending Story by Michael Ende. Some time between its 1979 publication and the 1984 release of the movie, my parents gave me a copy of the novel for my birthday. I’d just turned 10 and didn’t speak or read English (or German) yet, so this was a Dutch translation—a beautiful hardcover edition with a big AURYN in relief on the cover and text printed in two colors, red for the part of the story set in our world, and blue for the parts set in Fantastica.

I was, much like main character Bastian Balthazar Bux, a shy and bookish kid. I immediately identified. To say I got sucked into The Neverending Story would be an epic understatement. What happened to me was probably closer to what Bastian experiences in the story: I found a quiet place to read, and I read, and read, pretty much nonstop until I’d turned the final page. The next morning, my parents found me still awake; I’d read through the night.

At ten years old, I obviously wasn’t familiar with metafiction. Bastian reads the book and thinks it’s just a story, until it becomes clear that it isn’t. Events in the green-printed “fictional” sections of the book begin to impinge on the red-printed “real” world. I can still remember the chill I felt when I realized what was happening. The fact that the book I held in my hands looked exactly like the fictional book Bastian reads made it even more uncanny.

The second half of the novel was also the first time I experienced seeing a character I loved and identified with turn into someone completely different and much less likable. And the first time such a character started losing memories and basically losing himself. Heady stuff for a ten year old.

Of all the many books I’ve been gifted in my life, The Neverending Story is still one of the most memorable. In some ways, I’ve been chasing that same reading experience ever since.

Stefan

 

An earlier version of this article was published in December 2016.

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@drcox
2 years ago

Cool!

My most memorable Christmas books were LOTR and The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien.

 

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2 years ago

I had already read The Hobbit and LOTR in paperback, but I think it was the Christmas of 1966 all I asked “Santa” for was the complete hardback set. I still remember those black covers with red-foil Ring inscriptions. Unfortunately, later during the years I was away from home, they disappeared.

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harmonyfb
2 years ago

When I was 14, I asked for a copy of The Silmarillion. It was the only thing I asked for that year. I’ve never been so excited about a gift – I had just finished reading The Lord of the Rings for the first time, and I was besotted.

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2 years ago

I have received many memorable books as a gift that I adore – from the “Sketches of the Lord of the Rings by J.R.R.Tolkien” to “Magic Bites” to “Cordelia’s Honour” to several others, including the translation of “The Eye of the World” which I got one year for Christmas from my parents who knew I love fantasy and which eventually opened up a whole new world for me. But I want to give a special mention to three books.
The first two are “The Poems of the “Lord of the Rings” illustrated by Alan Lee”, a gorgeous little illustrated book that features all the poems you find in the trilogy, and “The Hobbit”.  I got both of them for my birthday at some point, the first from my mom and the second from my brother.  Neither of them has ever been an avid reader. But they knew how much I love Tolkien, so they got me something they expected to make ME happy. And it did. I adore the poem book, and even though I already owned a copy of “The Hobbit”, by brother did not know that and had tried to pick something specially for me, for which I love him dearly.

The third book preceded all the others. When I was a little girl, being a reader, like I was, I wrote to Santa and asked for a fairy-tale book. But then “Rescuers Down Under” came to the stores, a shiny, beautiful book that seemed oh so promising, but was too expensive that I could just have dared to ask for it. So I talked at every opportunity how I do not want a fairy-tale book and wish for that one instead, genuinely hoping that the elves who keep an eye on the children must hear it at some point and relay the information to Santa. Needless to say that when I opened my gifts that Christmas and found that book there instead of any other, my little heart was overflown with joy.

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2 years ago

LOTR for me too, I think I was 12, I spent days and nights reading it :)

Arben
2 years ago

I too was gifted Hitchhiker’s, by the father of a dear friend. (Likewise read a lot of Xanth novels back in the day…) Would you believe I’ve had dreams where I fly by throwing myself at the floor and missing?

Other beloved SF/fantasy books given me in my formative years: The D’Aulaires’ Book of Greek Myths, Octavia Butler’s Kindred, and William Goldman’s The Princess Bride.

For a few magical years there would be a new tabloid-sized comic book (a.k.a. “Treasury Edition” per Marvel’s branding) for me to read by the lights of the Chanukah menorah or Christmas tree.

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MA
2 years ago

YES. I had read The Hobbit and a couple of years later I got Lord of the Rings as a Christmas present. Reading that was like stepping over the border into a new land. I remember NOTHING else about that Christmas apart from being curled up reading at every opportunity.

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rstreck
2 years ago

I remember, when I was about 12, so maybe Christmas 1968, receiving two boxed sets (paperbacks) of both the Foundation trilogy by Asimov, and 5 or 6 books by Ray Bradbury (Something Wicked This Way Comes, Martian Chronicles, Illustrated Man, …). After that, there was no looking back on my love of reading FSF.

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Scone-head
2 years ago

Best book for me was a long-time favourite. Robert Heinlein’s “Glory Road”. My family gave me a first edition for my 60th birthday.

Its, Magical, Enthraling, Wonderful.

 

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2 years ago

Lloyd Alexander’s Chronicles of Prydain for me at age 9 or so, from friends after I had a lengthy hospital stay.  Still remains a favorite.  

SaintTherese
2 years ago

Years ago, someone sent the choir director at the church where I was pastor a free prepub copy of Children of God (sequel to The Sparrow). He didn’t want it, so he stuck it in my mail slot because he knew I liked scifi. Changed my life.

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2 years ago

 Would you believe Tom Swift and His Outpost in Space? It was my eighth birthday and at least a year before A Wrinkle in Time started to tear apart the popular idea that SF was trash; the idea that space could be a place for people instead of remote silver-wrapped heroes was mind-bending. (I was fortunate that the local librarian saw my interest and pointed me to Andre Norton, but I don’t remember ever getting one of her books as a gift.)

And a mundane-but-tied book: Run-Through, the first volume of John Houseman’s memoirs. It convinced me I didn’t have the raw nerve to do theater professionally, and I haven’t done theater for mundane audiences in a long time, but in my continuing interest I’ve produced a handful of SF plays — everything from lightly-staged readings to musicals — at conventions.

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Russell H
2 years ago

I received “The Phantom Tollbooth” when I was nine. I still re-read it once a year.

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2 years ago

YES! Phantom Tollbooth! I had forgotten–I think it was Christmas when I was 12 or so that my siblings and I were gifted the book by a family friend. I was so bored by the beginning that I didn’t read it until I ran out of library books and was desperate. I’ve loved it ever since!

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Nicolene
2 years ago

Books have always been a big part of Christmas at my house. Two that stand out- Michael Hague editions of The Wizard of Oz and The Hobbit. I got The Wizard of Oz one year, and The Hobbit the next.

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Kahuna Puffin
2 years ago

My grandmother gave teen-me a copy of “The Golden Compass” for Christmas. I already loved books more than anything, but that was my first “couldn’t go to sleep until I finished” experience. It was such a strange and compelling world!