The Writer's Table - Nick Hornby selects the books that shaped his writing

Nick Hornby and the Writer's Table

Nick Hornby - The Writer's Choice

Nick Hornby, author of acclaimed titles such as Fever Pitch and High Fidelity, is the third author to host The Writer's Table at Waterstone's, a major promotion that allows its curator to reveal some of the books and authors that have shaped and influenced their writing, as well as a few personal favourites.

Hornby was given complete free rein in choosing each and every book that appears in his selection. His choices cover a myriad of genres, from the classics (David Copperfield by Charles Dickens), children's books (Skellig by David Almond), science fiction (The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut), graphic novels (Fun Home by Alison Bechdel) and modern fiction (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon). Of course, Hornby's twin passions of football (Brilliant Orange by David Winner) and rock n' roll (Chronicles by Bob Dylan) are also represented.

Read more about Nick Hornby

"There is barely an area of literature that Nick Hornby does not touch in his selection. These are obviously the choices of a writer, but also the choices of a keen reader - these are compulsive, unputdownable books that readers will love discovering." Toby Bourne, Head of Fiction, Waterstone's.

See Kate Mosse's Writer's Table    See Sebastian Faulks' Writer's Table    See Philip Pullman's Writer's Table  

See the Children's Laureate Writers' Table

The Writer's Choice

Field Notes From a Catastrophe by Elizabeth Kolbert

Field Notes From a Catastrophe by Elizabeth Kolbert

"Kolbert talks to the scientists who really know what's going on with our planet, and her conclusions are devastating. A scrupulous, elegant, frightening book."



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Samaritan by Richard Price

Samaritan by Richard Price



"All of Richard Price's novels are brilliantly plotted and utterly convincing. This is as gripping as his best, with an ethical dimension thrown in for nothing."



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Brilliant Orange by David Winner

Brilliant Orange by David Winner



"A clever, erudite, imaginative book about... football. Yes, it can be done, but you have to be as original a thinker as David Winner."



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This Boy's Life by Tobias Wolff

This Boy's Life by Tobias Wolff



"Funny, moving and entirely without self-pity, this book taught a whole generation of writers how to approach autobiography."



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Sweet Soul Music by Peter Guralnick

Sweet Soul Music by Peter Guralnick

"This was one of the all-time top five favourites of Rob Fleming, narrator of High Fidelity, and if it's good enough for him, it's good enough for me. Definitive."

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Scenes From a Revolution by Mark Harris

Scenes From a Revolution by Mark Harris

"The sharpest book about the movie-making process that I've ever read. And like all the best non-fiction, it's about a lot more than its apparent subject."

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Naples '44 by Norman Lewis

Naples '44 by Norman Lewis

"Hilarious, tragic, surreal - a great travel writer's non-fiction version of Catch 22."



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What Good are the Arts? by John Carey

What Good are the Arts? by John Carey

"This book, together with the equally brilliant The Intellectuals and the Masses, should help to remove all those stubborn and lazy prejudices you've been having trouble with."

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Spies by Michael Frayn

Spies by Michael Frayn



A moving, simple, clever, layered novel about the topography of childhood. Michael Frayn is a national treasure and this is, in my opinion, his best book.

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Birds of America by Lorrie Moore

Birds of America by Lorrie Moore

"I know, I know, you don't like short stories. How can I convince you that Lorrie Moore's are as rewarding and as memorable as just about any novel you hold dear?

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The Child That Books Built by Francis Spufford

The Child That Books Built by Francis Spufford

"An awe-inspiringly intelligent memoir about our first contact with books - what they did to us, and why they did it."



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A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews

A Complicated Kindness by Miriam Toews

"A fresh, quirky fictional voice, telling us about a community of which we know nothing. What else do you need from contemporary fiction?"

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Stasiland by Anna Funder

Stasiland by Anna Funder



"Horrifying, of course, but also weird, and packed with extraordinary narrative incident, this book is a people's history of the 20th century's strangest, cruellest and most ambitious thought control experiment."

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The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon

"A deeply satisfying, brilliantly-imagined epic about twentieth century America, as seen through the prism of its comic books, and the young men who created them."

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The Republic of Love by Carol Shields

The Republic of Love by Carol Shields

"A novel about love that is both smart and deeply romantic, and there aren't too many of those. Carol Shields' wise, warm and witty voice is still deeply missed."



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Random Family by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc

Random Family by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc

"An important, astonishingly ambitious piece of extended journalism about two young, attractive, winning and doomed young women, as illuminating and compelling as Michael Apted's 7 Up series."

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Skellig by David Almond

Skellig by David Almond



"Refusing to read this book on the grounds that you are not a child makes as much sense as refusing to read crime fiction because you are not a criminal. A deep and lovely book."



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Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

"Sarah Waters' fiction is serious entertainment, like all novels should be, and Fingersmith has one of the most startling plot twists you'll ever read."



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The World's Wife by Carol-Ann Duffy

The World's Wife by Carol-Ann Duffy

"In which Mrs Van Winkle, Mrs Darwin, Mrs Midas and others tell their side of the story, with bitter humour and a weary perspicacity."



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The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut

The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut

"Vonnegut didn't write an ordinary novel, which means that there are a lot of neglected gems. This, which contains a convincingly mundane explanation for why we are all here, is one of my favourites."

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Sixty Stories by Donald Barthelme

Sixty Stories by Donald Barthelme

"Barthelme's short fiction was enormously influential on a whole generation of American writers - it's also funny, unique, otherworldly."



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David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

"It could have been any of them, just about. But this one is right up there with Great Expectations: comic genius, manic narrative energy, and some - a lot! - of his most memorable characters."

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Father And Son by Edmund Gosse

Father And Son by Edmund Gosse

"The first misery memoir, but you won't find any others as self-knowing, as deeply felt or as well written as this one. A Victorian Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit."



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The Accidental by Ali Smith

The Accidental by Ali Smith

"A tour-de-force, a novel about the ordinary and the extraordinary, a book that is both experimental and readable... Ali Smith is a true and valuable British original."

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The Invisible Woman by Claire Tomalin

The Invisible Woman by Claire Tomalin

"A terrific biography, as absorbing and as acute as a good novel, about the complicated domestic arrangements of our greatest novelist."

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The History of Mr Polly by HG Wells

The History of Mr Polly by HG Wells

"Wells didn't only write SF - this is a sunny, optimistic comedy about a man who refuses to settle for his lot."

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The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

"A "Children's Classic", according to some. Yes, well, that - and one of the best and most imaginative descriptions of what it means to be an American."

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Molesworth by Geoffrey Williams and Ronald Searle

Molesworth by Geoffrey Williams and Ronald Searle

"The only work of comic literature that makes me laugh every time I read it - a comfort and a joy."

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Chronicles by Bob Dylan

Chronicles by Bob Dylan

"A brilliant, angular portrait, of the artist as a consumer of art, and the most thoughtful autobiography of a musician - of a performer in any medium - that I have ever read."

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Mystic River by Dennis Lehane

Mystic River by Dennis Lehane

"Most works of literature, let's face it, are not so absorbing that you are in danger of walking into lamp-posts while reading them. But Mystic River is a work of literature. And you will hurt your head."

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Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

"There have been several wonderful graphic novels published in the last few years, but this is perhaps the richest, and the most moving - it's as dense and complex as a "proper" book."



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The Railway Man by Eric Lomax

The Railway Man by Eric Lomax

"A harrowing, deeply moving memoir, full of an inspirational tolerance and forgiveness. If you don't weep buckets, then you are a robot."

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The Giant's House by Elizabeth McCracken

The Giant's House by Elizabeth McCracken

"Elizabeth McCracken has written two brilliant novels and a beautiful memoir. This, her first book, is a luminous, heartbreaking modern classic."

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Empire Falls by Richard Russo

Empire Falls by Richard Russo

"An epic, large-hearted, funny, downbeat and altogether magnificent portrait of a dying town, and the people who just about get by there."

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Selected Poems by Sophie Hannah

Selected Poems by Sophie Hannah

"Funny, melancholy, shrewd and real... Sophie Hannah is the heir to the brilliant Wendy Cope's throne."



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The Wife by Meg Wolitzer

The Wife by Meg Wolitzer

"A razor-sharp, deceptively tough novel about the sexual politics of writing. And if that sounds a bit like a narrow subject, well it shouldn't - after reading this, you'll wonder whether fiction is about anything else."

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Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant by Anne Tyler

Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant by Anne Tyler

"This book changed my life: I didn't know novels could be as warm, wise, or engaging as this until I picked it up. I've been trying and failing to rip Anne Tyler off ever since."

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Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson

Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson

"Robinson's first novel, written a quarter of a century before Gi Lead, her equally dazzling second - a slow, extraordinary, yearning mystical book about the dead, and how they haunt the living."

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The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

"The Blind Side combines tactical analysis with an account of a young sportsman's astonishing life and career. With this and Moneyball, Lewis has written the two best sports books of the last five years."

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How to Breathe Underwater by Julie Orringer

How to Breathe Underwater by Julie Orringer

"As fresh and as accomplished a first book as you could hope to find. Julia Orringer's sad, clear-eyed stories are hard to forget."

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