Oliver Jeffers: Catch-22 was the first time I had a physical reaction to a book – The Guardian

Posted: December 23, 2021 at 10:25 pm

My earliest reading memoryI was being read a picture book of Waltzing Matilda by my dad, when my nose started bleeding again; Id been hit with a ball in the face earlier in the day. A big drop splatted right in the middle of the book and I remember thinking: Uh oh Ive ruined a book! I still have that book and I still see the dried-out splotch.

My favourite book growing upThe BFG by Roald Dahl. It was the first book that didnt feel like homework. There was a darkness to it that felt forbidden, but still on the right side of scary. I felt very proud when Id finished it, but also sad as I didnt want it to be over. A feeling Ive grown used to over the years.

The book that changed me as a teenagerI was not a big reader as a teenager. I had too much else going on, like being a failed delinquent, football, and helping look after my mother. But I read The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger, a nonfiction book about a convergence of weather patterns in a north Atlantic storm that made waves so big they broke the equipment used to measure them, and a human story that weaves through the scientific data. It hooked me on a life of reading nonfiction, and the true seismic shift of reading that book was the realisation that storytelling wasnt just about fiction.

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The writer who changed my mindRichard Dawkins, in my very early 20s, about the difference between agnosticism and atheism. I read some of his work at a turbulent time in my life. I had just lost my mother, having been raised Catholic, and feeling the church was wildly hypocritical, I became, as I used to say, devoutly atheist. But I came to understand that this too was a story, and one that was as potentially closed-minded as any of the major religions. Agnosticism, on the other hand, left open the possibility that we humans couldnt possibly know everything. I have given up on trying to be sure of anything and it is liberating. Ironically, Dawkins himself is a famous atheist, but there is a relief in being absent from the arrogance of both atheism and religion. The only main difference in all this is the story we tell ourselves.

The book that made me want to be a writerThe Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein. I came to it late in life, and realised immediately the raw kinetic power of picture books as a vehicle for art and storytelling.

The book or author I came back toMy dad always insisted I read Catch-22 by Joseph Heller. I tried in my mid 20s, but couldnt get my head around the cadence of it, and gave up. Years later, he prompted me again. This time I stuck with it admittedly out of respect for my dad and am thankful for doing so. It was the first time I ever had a physical reaction to a book, like Id been winded or punched in the gut.

The book I rereadAt Home by Bill Bryson. It explains why our homes are the way they are, how we got there through trial and error and centuries of history.

The book I could never read againA Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole. I adored this in my early 30s, the academic toilet humour of it. I tried reading it again, but perhaps too much has changed, or the humour is no longer fresh.

The book I am currently readingI currently have five books on the go. I know this infuriates some people, but its how I do it. Im not in the same mood every evening.

My comfort readJohn Grisham novels on long flights.

Theres a Ghost in This House by Oliver Jeffers is published by HarperCollins Childrens Books (20). To support the Guardian and Observer order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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Oliver Jeffers: Catch-22 was the first time I had a physical reaction to a book - The Guardian

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