What are the absolutely most COMFIEST books you've read?

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Northanger Abbey was pretty comfy

The Midnighters. It allows you to imagine being a teenager who gets an extra hour every day to do things.

All Jane Austen really.
I also find Jules Verne very comfy, and non-fiction travel diaries and explorer biographies, stuff like the Life of Joseph Banks or Antarctic exploration logs.

Also some classic children's books like Charlotte's Web.

The Time Machine

based blinda.

Houellebecq was always comfy for me.

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read that recently. it was fun.

Almost all Faulkner is extremelt comfy, especially if you're a good ole southern boy. The Sot-Weed Factor by John Barth is max comfy.

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Jane Eyre

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The pickwick papers

"History of Rome" by Livy book VII

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Moomins

The magic mountain
Dead Souls
The Hobbit
Don Quixote

All the books with description of food.

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>I also find Jules Verne very comfy
yeeees

How I Became a Nun

try gargantua and pantagruel

Read it over winter break at my parent's house in college
Made things much comfier

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blessed bilindaposter. wish u well, user.

Sounds good thank you

Came here to post sot weed factor

shadow of the wind
wind in the willows
a quiet life (oe)

anything by raymond carver

What is the bilinda of literature

Woolf

Youjust named thefjrst woman authoryou couldtnink of

Woolf sucks! Thisis a joyce board!

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Lol what a dumb working class Mick

I had a very feminist friend who was not very smart or put together tell me she liked woolf and joyce sucks and since then woolf bas been ruined for me

Stoner tbqhwys

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I remember liking "Ethan Frome" for its descriptions of winter in Massachusetts. "Don Quixote" is on the verge of becoming a literary tulpa for me, its comfiness is so infectious. "Winnie the Pooh" and "The Phantom Tollbooth" are two of the funniest children's stories in English, and also cozy. Classic existential I'm-trapped-on-a-mountain novels smother you with a leaden blanket of comfy.

The comfiest book in my library is probably "Invisible Cities." Life passes by in a haze as foreign settings crawl their way from the pages and surround you. It should be required reading for fantasy writers, or anyone who wishes to build fictional worlds.

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