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Carrie Fisher's Reading List

Notable reader profiled on radicalreads.com. 6 favorite books recommended in their radicalreads feature.

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Favorite books (2019)

Favorite books recommended by Carrie Fisher, as compiled by radicalreads.com. Source article: https://radicalreads.com/carrie-fisher-favorite-books/.

Source: radicalreads.com

George Eliot (also rec’d by Bret Easton Ellis , Carrie Fisher , Constance Wu , Emily Ratajkowski , Nigella Lawson & Zadie Smith ) · Buy on Amazon
"One of the greatest books ever written by a woman, especially in those early days. Although Mary Anne Evans gave herself a male pen name, she showed incredible ambition and scope in her writing—the world she created, the characters she imagined. I love that line in the book that reads: “The really delightful marriage must be that where your husband was a sort of father, and could teach you Hebrew, if you wished it.” It was hard to be a woman in those days, but her storytelling was exceptional."
Cover of Naked
David Sedaris · Buy on Amazon
"This collection of personal essays made me laugh as hard as any book I’ve ever read. I also discovered that I needed glasses when reading this, but still it’s one of the funniest books ever."
Joan Didion (also rec’d by Michael Stipe & St. Vincent ) · Buy on Amazon
"I love her use of spare narrative throughout this story about an unfulfilled actress looking for purpose in her life. I admired the style then and have tried to pattern some of my own writing in that fashion."
Susanna Moore · Buy on Amazon
"She’s an extremely talented writer. Her first novel, set in the 1950s, is about a woman who grew up with a very eccentric mother, which, of course, is why I related to it."
Salman Rushdie · Buy on Amazon
"I love Salman. He’s a friend of mine, but I loved this book—which allegorically weaves a family’s story with the history of modern India—even before I knew him. I’m just showing off that I know him."
Marcel Proust · Buy on Amazon
"I’m also showing off that I’ve actually gotten through Swann’s Way, the first volume in Proust’s monumental work In Search of Lost Time. Just getting through those first 100 pages, where he could not fall asleep until his mother kissed him good night, was an achievement alone."

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