People Are Sharing The Most Underrated Books They've Ever Read, And I'm Adding Each And Every One Of These To My Reading List
While it's fun to read the latest Booktok smash hit, there's something especially satisfying in reading and enjoying a book that isn't splashed all over social media.
So when I found this Reddit thread started by user My_Life_is_a_Farce asking for underrated book recommendations, I naturally took notes. Here are some that I've already added to my TBR list, which you might like as well...
1.Time Song: Journeys in Search of a Submerged Land by Julia Blackburn
"Time Song by Julia Blackburn is one of the most remarkable nonfiction books I've ever read... It is nominally a history of the now-submerged land between England and continental Europe, but it is also a memoir about loving and losing and loving again, and it is also a meditation on what it means to exist and be remembered, and it is also literal poetry and a masterclass in sentence to sentence writing. I love this book so much." —assholeinwonderland
2.Important Artifacts and Personal Property from the Collection of Lenore Doolan and Harold Morris, Including Books, Street Fashion, and Jewelry by Leanne Shapton
"Cool storytelling by proxy. I was really into studies of material culture at the time but I think this holds up regardless." —koko_kachoo
3.The Dream of Scipio by Iain Pears
"I read it in a college course, but beyond that I've never seen in mentioned anywhere. It's a really beautiful novel about what it means to be human and what civilization means. It takes place in one town in southern France over three distinct historical moments: the fall of Rome, the Black Death, and the Vichy period. It's one of my favorite novels." —katiejim
4.The Rice Mother by Rani Manicka
"If you like intergenerational stories like Homegoing and Pachinko, I recommend The Rice Mother by Rani Manicka. It tells the story of Lakshmi, a Ceylonese girl born in 1916 who is married off to a man in Malaysia at 14, and follows multiple generations of her family up to the early 21st century.
The book gives an interesting insight into 20th century Malaysian history, including multiple immigrant cultures and the brutal Japanese occupation during WWII, and is a fascinating portrayal of complex characters and family relationships from multiple perspectives. The descriptions are beautiful and there is an underpinning of magical realism and themes of fate." —nashamagirl99
5.The Women in Cages by Vilas Sarang
"It's a collection of some of the strangest, weirdest, most wonderful short stories I have ever read. I know nobody else who has ever read this one, and everyone really should." —lenny_ray
6.The Knife Man: Blood, Body Snatching, and the Birth of Modern Surgery by Wendy Moore
"It is a fascinating biography that shows us how far medicine has come from basically a profession based on wives' tales and superstition to one based on science." —_my_choice_
7.Daddy-Long-Legs by Jean Webster
"It's my favorite book of all time, and has the most lovable heroine I have ever had the pleasure of getting to know. A mysterious nameless man sends an orphan girl to school, and she discovers the secret of happiness through all of the little wonderful things in life. The musical is also fantastic. She calls the man Daddy-Long-Legs on account of him being so tall, long-legged, and fatherly." —BruisedSkidd
8.Billy and the Cloneasaurus by Stephen Kozeniewski
"I got it cheap on the Kobo store purely because of its name, and didn't expect much. But it turned out to be a really fun read...Would definitely recommend for a somewhat weird but entertaining dystopian book." —TigerSardonic
9.Epitaph for a Peach by David Mas Masumoto
"It's about how he saves a variety of organic peaches his immigrant grandparents planted. It follows a year at the farm and his process to make the farm organic. Beautiful tribute to farming, families and the work ethic of immigrant families. Saw so much of my family in the book. Warning, you will crave peaches for years after reading it." —Wanderingirl17
10.Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith
"Build Your House Around My Body by Violet Kupersmith. It's a magical-realism/mythological novel involving a kind of curse spanning over generations, taking place in Vietnam." —Cabbage_Pizza
—Mysterious_Fox_8616
11.Just in Case by Meg Rosoff
"I read it years ago, bought it from a charity shop as I like the dust cover. It's all about a boy trying to escape fate. Never met anyone who has read it and I find it an interesting read to come back to." —Stephen111110
12.The Canning Season by Polly Horvath
"It's a little hard to find for some reason, but The Canning Season by Polly Horvath is a longtime favorite of mine. Equal parts hilarious and poignant. It's about a teenage girl whose overbearing/borderline abusive mother sends her to spend a summer with distant elderly relatives she's never met." —NeighborhoodMothGirl
13.American Street by Ibi Zoboi
"A YA story about a Haitian girl who immigrates to Detroit. I found her perspective really interesting." —Icy-Vegetable-Pitchy
14.This Body by Laurel Doud
"I picked this book up in a $2 bargain bin maybe 10± years ago and it blew me away. I don't know anyone else who has read this book... I always thought it could have been made into an amazing screenplay.
From Amazon's description:
'WHAT IF YOU HAD LIFE TO LIVE OVER AGAIN?
WHAT IF YOU WERE RICH? WHAT IF YOU WERE SKINNY? WHAT IF YOU HAD A SECOND CHANCE TO FIND TRUE LOVE?
Katharine Ashley, in the prime of her life, is a dutiful mother of two whose heart suddenly stops beating. Thisby Bennet is a rich and skinny young woman whose dangerous taste for drugs and men leads to her equally untimely death. When Katharine's departing soul finds its way into Thisby's lifeless body, the story of This Body begins...'" —Creative-Tomatillo
15.Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts by Rebecca Hall
"Wake by Dr. Rebecca Hall. It's about women-led revolts throughout the trans-Atlantic slave trade. It's a graphic novel, memoir, and super interesting dive into not well-known history. I finished it last night and haven't stopped thinking about it." —spanishpeanut
16.The Book of Qualities by J. Ruth Gendler
"It's a poem book that personifies human traits (greed, pleasure, compassion, and beauty). It is a very sweet book." —margirl100twirl
17.The Fruit Bowl by Dominic Holland
"He's Tom Holland's dad (yes, that Tom Holland) and is mostly known as a comedian though he's a writer as well. I love all his books but The Fruit Bowl has so much heart and it'll make you cry at the beginning and again at the end. Really loved it." —Zoe_Croman
18.In Search of April Raintree by Beatrice Mosionier
"Takes place in my home city where the author grew up, and is inspired by true events of her life. Changed my perspective on life. Story partly includes residential schools of Canada." —Due_Anteater9116
19.American Hippo by Sarah Gailey
"It's hippo cowboys doing a heist. It rules." —Hms-chill
Okay, now, tell us your totally underrated books! Share in the comments below, and let us all add even more to our TBR!
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Your hair is probably the first thing you neglect as a struggling woman, especially." —u/bibijoe Karen from The Grudge 2: "When the woman in The Grudge 2 has perfectly curled hair while in the hospital." —u/Sweaty_Chard_6250 an FBI agent uses Excel to hack a nuclear weapon in Unthinkable — and you can also see a movie script pulled up: Suggested by u/HalfACupkake you can see that a character's not actually on the phone, like in this scene from The Boys...: "Whenever people talk on phones, and you can clearly see the lock screen or the homepage of the phone not being in a call." —u/Coffmad1 worse, when the character's on a different app, like Abby in this NCIS scene. Suggested by u/Foxterriers when characters text using a non-messaging app, like in School of Rock, when an audience member "texts" someone using a blank document: Suggested by [deleted] fake video game-playing moments, like this one from Rumble in the Bronx...: "Rumble in the Bronx had a kid playing a Sega Game Gear, and it is very obvious that there is no game cartridge plugged in." —u/CaptainBloodface12 this one from Malcolm in the Middle...: "Reese from Malcolm in the Middle has a scene where he is playing a Game Boy THAT LITERALLY DOESN'T HAVE A CARTRIDGE IN IT." —u/bariztizg the "controller acting" from Anora, where this character just mashes buttons indiscriminately: "Anora (which I otherwise loved) had some of the worst controller acting I've ever seen; it's straight out of a made-for-TV movie. The actor is 23 as well, surely he's held a controller???" —u/wills_b costume from Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles scene, where you can clearly see the person inside: Suggested by u/SlipTheSlime actors drink from clearly empty coffee cups, like during the stakeout scenes of Law & Order...: "I can't stand when actors drink from empty coffee cups!!! Totally takes me out of the moment, and then it's all I can notice. Of course I can't think of any movies that do this now though..." —u/mudmilkshake "Not a movie, but almost every stakeout scene from every iteration of Law & Order. To me, adding some weight so they feel a bit more real to the actors and so the cup doesn't sound empty when it's put down seems like such a simple thing, but I'm sure there's more to it." —u/RedCorundum on Gilmore Girls, where the characers keep gesturing while holding cups that are clearly empty: "Gilmore Girls was the worst at this, to the point where it seemed like the cast was treating it as a running gag. They'd be gesturing wildly with supposedly full cups in their hands." —u/mbklein "Comes back from the bar at Luke's with two 'freshly filled' coffee cups. Can't see the coffee. Every time." —u/y3llowed communicator from The Phantom Menace, which is obviously a Gillette Razor: "The Gillette Ladyshave that Qui-Gon uses as his communicator in Star Wars: Episode 1 always gets me." —u/PauPau86 "My girlfriend and I both noticed that opening night in the theater because she used that exact razor." —u/Ralph--Hinkley Anakin's backpack from the same film, which looked like the backpack every other kid had at the time: "Anakin's backpack in The Phantom Menace. I just remember kids having one like that at the time, and it just seemed out of place in the movie." —u/tr1ckyf1sh of The Phantom Menace — when you could tell this guy in the background was DEFINITELY not Samuel L. Jackson: Suggested by u/colinaclark obvious mannequin used in this stunt from Wonder Woman 1984: "Wonder Woman 1984. She saves a kid during the highway scene, I think it was. She ends up holding the kid close and rolling on the ground. It was clearly a mannequin." —u/FubarioFromSicario the wildly fake dummy from the car explosion in Casino: "Casino is still a great movie, but the opening shot of DeNiro's car blowing up with the dummy inside always makes me laugh." —u/Global-Discussion-41 "I wonder at what point would he realise 'Holy shit, this looks ridiculous.'And at what point is it no longer worth it to go back and reshoot a car blowing up?I think we can all agree, Scorsese probably misjudged where that point was in this instance." —u/GimmeSomeSugar Here it is in a slowed-down GIF, so you can see how bad it is. badly photoshopped family photo in Twin Peaks: The Return: "I FUCKING HATE SHITTY PHOTOSHOPPED FAMILY PHOTOS! If you can't make it look half real, why even do it?" —u/Efficient-Editor-242 "Twin Peaks: The Return features my favourite example of this ever. If you haven't seen it, check out the photo of Andy, Lucy, and their 'kid' played by Michael Cera." —u/Hipyeti obviously fake stalactite from The Lord of the Rings: Suggested by u/IljaMaran from The Lord of the Rings, when this extra is clearly using imaginary arrows: Suggested by u/AnalysisMoney stunt from The Fugitive, where it's clearly a dummy and not Harrison Ford: "When Kimble jumps off the dam in The Fugitive. Worst dummy shot in cinema history." —u/EpicWheezes Check it out in GIF format here: toilet seat from Liar Liar, which you can tell is made out of foam: Suggested by u/heidismiles game of hackey sack going on with no hackey sack in this scene from Twilight: Suggested by u/Charlie4774 about Bond making espresso in this scene from Live and Let Die: "The shitty espresso that James Bond serves M in Live and Let Die." —u/seleucus_nicator way Steven Seagal holds a gun in Sniper Special Ops: "Not so much the prop itself. But the way he holds the gun, lmao." —u/Ghostman_Jack a character fits through the air ducts, like this scene from Die Hard: "Clean, accessible air ducts that are always big enough to crawl through. Just once, I want to see a hero get stuck in a duct and have to be cut out by the fire department." —u/colores_a_mano "The size of the things always fuckin' slays me. Never mind the fact that any tinbanger knows — even if you could fit, you ain't moving silently through thin galvanized steel tunnel that was probably installed by the lowest bidder in the most slapdash, cost-efficient way they if you're really lucky, it's connected like the building diagram actually says it is as opposed to dead-ending at a wall." —u/l_rufus_californicus eggs from Batman V Superman: "The plastic eggs Cavill is cooking Batman V Superman. Fisher-Price looking ass eggs." —u/lazlo871 uncanny valley CGI Renesmee from Breaking Dawn: "The CGI baby in Twilight. Might as well call it a prop." —u/ProAnalCyst "It's soooo uncanny valley! How did they think anyone would be okay with that fake ass baby?" —u/zaforocks fake prop toilet from Boondock Saints: "Boondock Saints is one of my guilty pleasure movies, but the clearly fake prop toilet that gets dropped on the Russian mobster…" —u/underground4077 Wash wasn't even holding onto the wheel in Firefly: "What about the very first episode of Firefly where the shot was slightly too wide and you could see Wash wasn't actually holding on to the steering and just had his hands in position? 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There I was, just being a millennial, enjoying my day and reminiscing about Pogs and Orbitz drinks and Beanie Babies, when suddenly, I was jolted from my "won't-ever-be-able-to-afford-to-buy-a-home" haze. Why, you ask? Well, I happened upon this blatant attack upon my generation from @gaulicsmith on Twitter (now known as X): And I quickly discovered the conversation has been happening all over the internet, including X, Threads, and Reddit. Unsurprisingly, my fellow millennials immediately felt called out. "Feeling attacked lol," said one person. "They're onto us lol first they came for our cheugy lol then our side part lol then our computer y2k crisis but they made it fashion lol" "my apartments on fire and i haven't felt joy since 2012 lol" And it will come as no surprise that millennials, the kindest generation, who have never done anything to anyone (except "kill" a bunch of industries and part our hair on the side and wear skinny jeans), quickly started apologizing, lol. Related: 50 People Who Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really, Really Gave No EFFS "Sorry ( ) resisting the urge..." Then they moved on to their next tactic: trying to explain themselves. "lol does not mean LAUGH OUT LOUD! It means please don't be mad at me," this person said. "CLOSE! It actually means: 'I have anxiety so say it back or I'll think you hate me.'" "It is our way of communicating tone. We are a generation of people who feel like we are always in trouble/everyone is mad at us. lol" Related: "Something's Killed Me. Please, Someone Tell My Parents": 19 Terrifying Stories From People Who Lived In Haunted Houses That Are Gonna Give Me Serious Nightmares "If I don't put lol at the end of a sentence you might get mad at me. I blame having parents raised by traumatized WWII vets." "we cannot abide someone thinking we're mad at them" And one person hilariously added, "Remember when all our Nanas thought it meant 'lots of love'?" Of course, millennials also had to get in a few solid jabs at some other generations while they were at it. "at least i don't have tiktok voice," said one. "'Lol' is to millennials as '...' is to boomers." "frfr zoomers use 'frfr' like 'loud and clear' for radio comms." "Why does Gen Z wear pajamas everywhere lol" And finally, "At least we can read lol." To my fellow millennials, just remember: If you're a millennial, what do you think? Are you going to keep using "lol" despite the harsh and entirely unfair judgment? Let us know in the comments. And if you're not a millennial, give us a break lol. (See, that's proper usage of the lol. You can't be mad at me now.) Also in Internet Finds: The History We're Taught Is Wildly Sanitized, So Here 28 Disturbing Historical Events Everyone Should Be Aware Of Also in Internet Finds: People Who Never Believed In The Supernatural Are Revealing What Made Them Change Their Minds, And I'm Terrified Also in Internet Finds: "It Was Driving Everyone Bonkers With Mystery": 49 Times The Internet Came Together To Identify Weird Items That Had Everyone Completely Stumped