I was at a family event and talking reading with cousin Licette and got an invitation to her presentation at the State Library the next day. This was a monthly Tuesday Talk of the Friends of the State Library of South Australia and Licette was talking of influential books in her life. It was an interesting visit to a reader's life viewed in the light of her readings. The difficulty of the task of distilling the list was hinted at by the key literary texts she had rejected. Those she chose had a range of life references relating to Licette and not to all others: childhood, relationships, travel, and the like. I could identify similarities and crossovers with some of my meagre personal readings and I came out with a desire to follow up quite a few. So what and who? Remember this is a personal collection over a full life to date, so Enid Blyton, Joanna Trollope, Zola, AS Bryant, Armitage, Andre Makine, Winifred Watson, DE Stevenson, Dorothy Whipple, George Eliot, John Gottman, Nina Stibbe, Alan Bennett, Alan Ramsay and a work by Licette and fellow professionals, Emotion coaching with children and young people in schools (2000). Some intrigued me, some raised ethical or political questions, some just seemed entertaining. FWIW, my starter intentions are Hero's daughter / Andre Makine, L'Assommoir / Emile Zola and Miss Pettigrew lives for a day / Winnifred Watson, but my list is not limited to three. I don't read in a book club, but given the pleasure of this session, maybe I should...
Licette Gus spoke on significant books in her life for Friends of the State Library of South Australia.
































