Philip Pullman and the Writer's Table
The Writer's Table is a major promotion at the forefront of The Writer's Year, Waterstone's calendar of monthly initiatives and activities designed to highlight the role of the author. Philip Pullman, whose bestselling Northern Lights was last year named 'Best Book of the Last 25 Years' by Waterstone's Booksellers, will be given free rein in choosing every title that appears in the promotion. Pullman has also written about why he chose each book in his selection, and links to his hand-written thoughts can be found below.
"Our first Writer's Table was a great success, and really captured the imaginations of our booksellers and customers. We are extremely excited that Philip has agreed to choose the titles for our second Writer's Table. We are absolutely delighted with this eclectic and thought-provoking selection of books from one of the nation's greatest and most popular writers."
Toby Bourne, Head of Fiction, Waterstone's.
Read more about Philip Pullman
The Writer's Table
Complete Poems by
Elizabeth Bishop
"How simple some great poetry can seem - as simple as water, and as necessary. Bishop is incomparable: "Awful, but cheerful," she said. "
The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton
"A vast rickety structure of learning, wit, sense, nonsense, bizarre anecdotes, kindness, and wisdom. A humane guide and antidote to this terrible affliction."
A Perfect Spy by John le Carre
"A perfect blend of form, subject, sensibility and moral power. Le Carré's best book, and one of the finest English novels of the 20th Century."
The Woman In White by
Wilkie Collins
"For sheer plotting genius, Wilkie Collins had no rival. If you've never read this, I can promise you one of the most gripping stories of all time."
Kolymsky Heights by
Lionel Davidson
"The best thriller Ive ever read, and Ive read plenty. A solidly researched and bone-chilling adventure in a savage setting, with a superb hero."
The Ancestor's Tale by Richard Dawkins
"Dawkins at his very best: a beautiful clarity of exposition, and an unslaked sense of wonder at the grandeur, richness and complexity of nature. "
The Complete Brigadier Gerard by Arthur Conan Doyle
"Everyone knows Sherlock Holmes, but Brigadier Gerard is a marvellous creation - proud, valiant, and absurd. "
The Letters of Vincent van Gogh
"On the evidence of these honest, revealing and very moving letters, the greatest painter was a great writer as well; and his brother was a saint. "
Art and Illusion by
EH Gombrich
"This is all about the mysterious business of looking and seeing, and EH Gombrich looked deeper and saw more than almost any other writer an art."
The Castafiore Emerald by
Hergé
"Hergé was the best at everything: plots, draughtsmanship, jokes, characterization, timing - he could do the lot, and this is his best book."
The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner by
James Hogg
"A brilliant, chilling and subtle account of religious derangement. Every self-righteous fundamentalist ought to read this, but of course they won't."
Count Magnus and other stories by
MR James
"I don't believe in ghosts, but I'm frightened of them. They don't come any scarier than in these superb examples of the classic English ghost story."
Complete Fairy Tales by
the Brothers Grimm
"The fountain, the origin. Read one of these stories every day and your narrative taste will be purified, strengthened and refreshed."
The Varieties of Religious Experience by
William James
"The most interesting thing about religion: not whether it's true, but what it feels like, explored by a psychologist of great intelligence and sympathy."
The Finn Family Moomintroll by
Tove Jansson
"The delight of the Moomin world always trembles on the brink of melancholy; its subtle and fascinating atmosphere is a triumph of the storyteller's art."
Kim by
Rudyard Kipling
"A story about a boy in India, who... But no summary can do this marvellous, rich and unforgettable novel anything like justice."
The Marquise of O by
Heinrich von Kleist
"A very strange writer: intense almost to the point of madness, but what a penetrating mind, and what sharpness and clarity of vision."
A Voyage to Arcturus by
David Lindsay
"As literature, this is tosh. Nevertheless, it's a work of epic moral grandeur, and one of the very few fantasies to do something truly original and important with the genre. "
The Magic Pudding by
Norman Lindsay
"The best thing yet to come out of Australia, and that includes Shane Warne. If anyone can read this without laughing, heaven help them."
Lavender's Blue (ed. Kathleen Lines)
"Every household needs a collection of nursery rhymes, which are the foundation of every kind of success with language. This has always been my favourite."
Venice for Pleasure by
JG Links
"Whether in prospect or in retrospect, or there in one's hands in the city itself, the most informative and engaging guide to the past and present of Venice."
The Call of Cthulhu by
HP Lovecraft
"Preposterous, overblown, absurd in every way - yet with an originality that looks more powerful and convincing each time I dip into it. "
Buddenbrooks by
Thomas Mann
"How could a 25-year-old know so much, and write so perceptively? The first of Mann's great novels, and still astonishing today."
The Man Without Qualities by
Robert Musil
"The greatest condition-of-Europe novel, but much more than a profound diagnosis - it's enormously funny, apart from anything else. I never tire of it. "
The Best of Myles by
Flann O'Brien
"The best collection of the funniest newspaper columns ever written. It's as simple as that. After this, read his The Third Policeman."
The Gnostic Gospels by
Elaine Pagels
"We live in Gnostic times. This is a clear account of the strange and intoxicating religion that nearly supplanted orthodox Christianity in its earliest years."
The Emperor's New Mind by
Roger Penrose
"This is an age of great writing about science, and here is some of the finest. Penrose's knowledge is awe-inspiring in its reach and completeness."
The Book of Disquiet by
Fernando Pessoa
"The very book to read when you wake at 3am and cant get back to sleep - mysteries, misgivings, fears and dreams and wonderment. Like nothing else."
Wolf Solent by
John Cowper Powys
"Powys evoked the English landscape with an almost sexual intensity. Hardy comes
to mind, but a Hardy drunk and feverish with mystical exuberance."
Exercises in Style by
Raymond Queneau
"A pointless anecdote told in 99 different ways, or a work of genius in a brilliant translation. In fact it's both. Endlessly fascinating and very funny."
We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea by
Arthur Ransome
"Ransome never strayed beyond the realistic, but what an exciting story this is: danger, courage, skilful seamanship, and a real respect for his young protagonists. "
Duino Elegies by
Rainer Maria Rilke
"The deepest mysteries of existence embodied in the most delicate and precise images. For me, the greatest poetry of the 20th century."
Selected Writings by
John Ruskin
"The best way to read this great and life-enhancing writer is in short and well-chosen excerpts. Earnest, unfashionable, no doubt; but profoundly wise and truthful."
The Complete Maus by Art Spiegelman
"The complete answer to all those who still doubt the potential of comics. Spiegelman is a genius, and no other form could have told this story so well."
Wallace Stevens (ed. John Burnside)
"Wallace Stevens speaks more interestingly, and more memorably, about the things that matter most to me than any other poet. I can't imagine being without his work."
The new Biographical Dictionary of Film by
David Thomson
"Opinionated, slightly cranky, vastly entertaining, endlessly informative. Of all the reference books I have, this is always the hardest to put down."
Country of the Blind and other stories by
HG Wells
"In these short stories we can feel a whole genre just beginning to spread its wings, and test its strength, and take to the air."
Molesworth by
Geoffrey Willans and Ronald Searle
"As any fule kno, this is the best marriage of writer and illustrator since...Well, since William Blake, really. Still funny after 50 years."
Summer Lightning by
PG Wodehouse
"Wodehouse had the extraordinary ability to evoke innocence without being in the least boring, all in a prose style that lightens the spirits like champagne."



