- “Moby-Dick” by Herman Melville. It’s a book I reread every 10 years, which is coming up again. I even love the whale parts. 
- “Winter’s Tales” by Isak Dinesen. It has two of my favorite Dinesen stories, “Sorrow Acre” and “The Sailor-Boy’s Tale.” 
- “The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson.” Her poems taught me to “tell all the truth/but tell it slant.” 
- “Where the Wild Things Are” by Maurice Sendak. This stood the world of children’s picture books on its head in 1963. 
- “The Great Stink” by Clare Clark. I read this mystery novel set in the London sewers in one long, stinking sitting. 
A book you hope parents will read to their kids: James Thurber’s “The Thirteen Clocks.” This perfect fairy tale will get inside you from your guggle to your zatch.
A classic you revisited with disappointment: L. Frank Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.” All I could see were the repetitions, the unvarying sentences and the paper-thin characters.