What is the comfiest book you have ever read?
Pic related for me.
Stoner desu
V., underrated comfiness
Gogol is pretty comfy, at least what i read
people are gonna say LotR is comfy but i think it drags a lot, i read it once in my life and i think that's enough
if you are under 16, or a mom, Harry Potter
>>7523499
>trying this hard to pretend youre not from reddit
>still failing
Norwegian Wood
the names by delillo
>>7523457
Some parts of 100 years of solitude
Jerzy Kosinski, The Painted Bird
There's something comforting in the boredom and pointlessness of most of The Pale King.
>>7523457
are you trying to be funny?
How the hell is Ivan Denisovich comfy? Being cold as hell is not comfy.
Pic related: comfiest non-fiction history novel
>>7523641
I felt a wave of relaxation when the young peasant's eyeballs were removed
Paradise Lost was a pretty comfy read for me, at least.
>>7523716
I found it really comfy too.
That imagery, those verses. Top tier book.
Calvino's Invisible Cities is pretty damn comfy. Dubliners is comfy as well. I also agree with >>7523499 that V is comfy.
But George Eliot is probably the comfiest writer. Reading Silas Marner is like sitting on a soft rug by a familiar fireplace drinking hot cider and listening to your young cousin play Satie's Gymnopédies on the old family piano.
The Sailor Who Fell From Grace With the Sea or Katherine Mansfield's stories tb'h