Bitchin' Blog Posts

Mood Reading

by SB Sarah | by SB Sarah | October 01, 2009 | Thursday at 11:52 am | 62 Comments

Lately I’ve been craving a few things: hot tea, a particular wool blanket that my husband’s late grandmother made, and contemporary romance. The first two mean it’s fall, but the last one I’ve been puzzling over.

Usually, when I’m in need of some comfort reading, I reach for historicals. A few good petticoats, some stays and cravats tossed on the floor, maybe even a rogue pelisse in inclement weather, and I feel much better. But the past few weeks, I’ve been more tired than usual, and to my surprise I’ve been looking for the spark and zest of contemporary romance. I want current settings, modern dialogue, and spicy attraction - almost as if I’m looking in the book for energy that I don’t have right now.

Then, the other evening, after a particularly good dinner, when the house was quiet and I was very content, I was all “Ooh, historical, please.” Historical romance literally was my cup of tea, the hot beverage after my meal that made me all warm-bellied and satisfied. It’s almost like mood reading reversal - not that I’m complaining. I just find it curious.

Do you have mood reading? Which genres match your moods?

Filed: General Bitching, Random Musings

Tagged: romance, historical, contemporary

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  1. Kayleigh said on 10.01.09 at 01:43 PM[link]

    I go through strange reading phases depending on my moods. There are some nights, like my current phase, where I crave biographies and memoirs (just finished Anderson Cooper’s memoir and am moving onto the Harvey Milk biography) but then when I’m exhausted or want to get out of my current state of mind, only the trashiest paranormal romance will do. I’m a Celtic/English literature student so I also have to read lots of strange poetry and old texts so I try and keep a balance between the school and extra texts so I don’t burn out on either.

  2. Maria Geraci said on 10.01.09 at 01:48 PM[link]

    When I’m in need of comfort reading I tend to reach out for those authors I’ve read forever that I know won’t disappoint me. Madeline Hunter comes first to my mind. I also really love historicals and she’s always on the top of my list:)

  3. Abby said on 10.01.09 at 02:27 PM[link]

    Historicals are my standby, and I tend to find that certain authors suit my mood… if I’m feeling sentimental and want something lighthearted, it’s JQ.  If I want angst and tension, it’s Kleypas (my real favorite!).  If I just want something rather ridiculous to take my mind off real life, it’s Tracy Anne Warren (who has fantastically bizarre plots and good writing).  And if I want to feel like less of a freakshow, it’s the historically anachronistic but wonderful Suzanne Enoch, whose historical heroines seem not to suffer from a biological imperative to reproduce… and whose books are delightfully free of epilogues in which the heroine has had a litter.

    I haven’t read much in the way of contemporaries, but if Kleypas’ Sugar Daddy is my go-to when I want something that will both make me cry and feel better simultaneously.

  4. JoanneL said on 10.01.09 at 02:33 PM[link]

    If it’s for ‘energy’ then I’ll read Romantic Suspense. Nothing says “move your ass” better than a bomb about to go off or a murderer in the attic.

    Right now with the cold & damp in the Northeast I’ve been seeking comfort with a glom of Jo Goodman’s Historical romances. Long and meandering stories with heroes that aren’t afraid to say “I’m sorry” and funny dialogue. And every room has a fireplace. Warm.

  5. Brooks*belle said on 10.01.09 at 03:09 PM[link]

    Historicals are my comfort food.  Contemporary chick-lit is my mood-elevator.  Romantic suspense is caffeine.

    I tend to usually go for the comfort food.  Especially in this cozy-craving weather.  Thank goodness reading is calorie free!

  6. Jessica Scott said on 10.01.09 at 03:16 PM[link]

    I do actually have mood reading, though I’ve never thought of it like that. When I’m cranky and on a tear, I need a rough paranormal or a dark suspense. For some reason, I need the similiar emotions to be able to deal with my own. I love a good contemporary romance, Robyn Carr being a newly discovered storyteller that I’m enjoying immensly.
    All in all, I like particular authors more than particular genres. I know that Allison Brennan writes some great spine tingler suspenses. Roxanne St Claire gets me going with her great characters and what happens next. Laura Kinsale really gets me with her emotional characters who are not perfect but we love them nonetheless. Tracy Wolff and Maya Banks crank out steamy that distract me from my day.
    Certain authors for me are better than certain genres. They just fit the mood, whatever the mood might be, better.

  7. Caroline said on 10.01.09 at 03:17 PM[link]

    My comfort reads are big romance/historical fiction, and the occasional fantasty series (David Eddings is my fave). I also go back to my favorite romance novel of all time, Montana Sky. My dog-eared, tattered copy gets pulled out when I am in serious need of a pick me up. The other one I re-read, when I am feeling sorry for myself, is Palomino, by Danielle Steele. I read that book when I was 15, and it was my very first “romance” novel.

    My mood reading, well, I vascillate between historical romance (love, love the Scottish laird and English lady scenario, and time travel is the bomb) and the tried and true contemporary cowboy story with no real indicator as to why. They have to be realistic (do your research, a horse has “hooves, not “feet”. Horses eat hay, not straw. I tend to like the “small town girl come back for good and rekindles her affair” kind of setup, or the “city slicker woman gets bowled over by cowboy hats and horses” epiphanies. And me a fusspot “english” rider to boot!

    My last read was Linda Lael Miller’s Montana Creed series. Seriously good, and very much fun.

  8. Keira said on 10.01.09 at 03:37 PM[link]

    I’m currently on a category kick. Old categories especially from the 70s-80s. :) Does that count? On the other hand I suppose it might be glomming…

  9. Elizabeth said on 10.01.09 at 04:07 PM[link]

    When I’m in need of comfort I reach for older Nora Roberts category romance, especially the ones about big, boisterous families, like the Stanislaski series, some of my favorite trilogies like the Gallaghers of Ardmore.  When I’m feeling cheerful, but don’t want to read something new, I always go back to my favorite historical authors, JQ, Lisa Kleypas, and Eloisa James.  They never fail to keep me in my good mood.  And when I’m needing something exciting?  Definitely romantic suspense; it doesn’t get much better than Eve and Roarke.

  10. Francesca said on 10.01.09 at 04:17 PM[link]

    When I just want to feel good and have a few gentle laughs, I read Eva Ibbotson if it’s grey and blah outside. If I want to feel stimulated (mentally, not teh other way) it’s Kathleen Gilles Seidel for me. Sometimes I need a sugar fix; then it’s old school category: Betty Neels, in particular. When I just want to wallow it’s Jean Plaidy or an Angelique marathon, or, if I’m feeling particularly wallowy(?), it’s a bodice ripper: most likely Bertrice Small.

  11. michelle said on 10.01.09 at 04:24 PM[link]

    my comfort zone is definitely the historical romances. i pretty much have to be forced to read anything else, and i’m always shocked when i enjoy other genres.

    for ultimate comfort reading, i go right for the christina dodd/judith mcnaught/julia quinn/lisa kleypas/stella cameron historicals.

    recently i found myself absolutely craving some harlequin suspences… that phase last about a week—but it was a good week!

  12. willa said on 10.01.09 at 04:39 PM[link]

    (Possibly heretical opinion ahead!)

    Just lately I read a Georgette Heyer, The Masqueraders, and for some reason the ending really bugged me. It was just too frickin much! All of these irritating people running around being irritating, augh!

    Heyer is, to me, a petit four of a food. it looks really good but I can only have a few bites before it’s too much for me.

    So, in a huff, I stopped reading the Heyer book and rooted through my bookshelves until I found an old Victoria Holt novel, The Shadow of the Lynx. Victoria Holt! Oh how I’ve missed you!

    Victoria Holt’s books are like a delicious, slightly bitter tea. A great antidote to Heyer’s too-sweet, too-cute petit fours.

    I’ve found that when I’m reading a book, I’ll read it’s “antidote” immediately afterward.

    When I’m in a sorry or sad mood, though, I go straight to the YA fiction. Tried and true and makes me feel so much better.

    When I’m in the mood for fun and delicious fiction, I go to the romances, mostly historical.

    When I’ve OD’ed on romances and need something else, I go to the dark literary fiction (right now I’m reading a Margot Livesy novel, The House on Fortune Street.)

    And then the literary fiction sends me straight back to the romance novels, sometimes adding in a good fast mystery novel as well.

    Good stuff.

  13. Patsy said on 10.01.09 at 04:43 PM[link]

    My comfort books for Winter are definitely Historicals.  It’s not winter yet, but I just finished Tessa Dare’s A Lady of Persuasion and I found it delightful.  I liked it much better than the previous two, which I enjoyed.  And, it’s quite modern for a historical.  A cheerful hero, people acting reasonably (for the most part), diatribes on labor and cash crops. 

    Otherwise, I don’t need comfort reading in Spring—it’s my time for challenges.  In Summer, I love beach-read contemporaries, especially Crusie.  And, in the Fall, I turn to books I loved when I was young—especially Christopher Pike’s and L.J. Smith’s (The Vampire Diaries are much better than Twilight, and also the Secret Circle).  I think it’s because I like to remember the excitement of starting school all over again.

  14. Leslie H said on 10.01.09 at 04:43 PM[link]

    When I am moody, it is not so much genre as author.

    Self Pity= Dresden Files by Jim Butcher. (Dresden’s life sucks more than mine)

    Annoyed= “In Death” series by JD Robb. (Eve Dallas opens a can of ass whoop on the universe. A BIG can.)

    Tired= Discworld books by Terry Pratchett (He makes me laugh no matter how many times I read his books.)

    I only try new authors when I am in a fairly good mood, otherwise it seems like a risk.

  15. Anne Calhoun said on 10.01.09 at 04:55 PM[link]

    Very interesting question. I don’t tend towards mood reading as much as remembering something about a book or series that sends me back to the shelves for a reread. If I’m tired, I tend towards nonfiction, usually guaranteed not to work me up. I agree with Leslie H…anything new - new author, new book by a favorite author - I need to be in a fairly good mood to start.

  16. Laura (in PA) said on 10.01.09 at 05:18 PM[link]

    I am so totally a mood reader. Sometimes I want fast-paced. Sometimes I want cozy. Sometimes I want light-hearted. Sometimes I want historical. Sometimes I want just good writing, whatever genre it may be. It’s not so much according to mood, as it is to my mindset (is there a difference?).  Every time I finish a book, I go through a process of perusing my (massive) TBR pile, and see what’s calling me. For example, yesterday I finished a Julia Spencer-Fleming (LOVE HER BOOKS), and needed something to read when I went to bed. I almost picked up Julia Quinn, and ended up with an Eve & Roarke novella. It wasn’t that I didn’t want Julia, just the novella was calling louder.

    Unless I get notified that a book I am on the list for at the library is available, I never know what I’m reading next.

  17. EmilyV said on 10.01.09 at 05:23 PM[link]

    Love the question! I was just thinking about this the other day as I thought I lost my ipod (turned out it was just on my desk at work) and I was absolutely miserable, not to mention that it started to rain on my walk home. When I got back to my flat ALL I wanted to do was stew in my misery and read a historical romance while consuming an entire tub of nutella (the only thing left in my cupboard…). And I knew that that was the only thing that would have comforted me at that moment (or a good shot of whiskey…). As for my fav comfort historical writers, definitely Lisa Kleypas and Sabrina Jeffries. Occasionally, when it is cold outside, or I am just feeling like chilling on the couch I will pick up a category (sadly, Harlequin Presents is my go-to….). Contemporarys are not usually my thing, but Lisa Kleypas’s definitely are. Basically Lisa just gets me through life….

  18. AngW said on 10.01.09 at 05:24 PM[link]

    If I’m under the weather or need comfort—historicals, the more the better

    Needing to get stuff done—detective and other types of murder mysteries

    Pushing off the ToDo list—cozies (a.k.a the lighter side of murder mysteries) and fantasy or science fiction

    quirked (no other way to describe it)—nonfiction of all stripes

  19. LG said on 10.01.09 at 05:29 PM[link]

    My comfort reading is “students in magical schools” type stuff - like Harry Potter (first book especially), Arrows of the Queen by Mercedes Lackey, etc.  I seem to particularly prefer the ones in which the main character is just starting out at the magical school and still has times of being confused and overwhelmed.  I doesn’t matter how many times I read some of them (my copy of Arrows of the Queen will probably need to be replaced sometime soon), they always make me feel better.

  20. Kait Nolan said on 10.01.09 at 05:32 PM[link]

    I absolutely have mood reading. 

    During the stress of managing finals and juggling students, I tend to reach for chick lit or cozy mysteries.

    To assuage a general sense of boredom, usually I reach for paranormal romance or urban fantasy.

    When I’m feeling homicidal about work, gotta pull a good romantic suspense or murder mystery.  The darker the better.

  21. Kwana said on 10.01.09 at 05:49 PM[link]

    I do have my mood reading and for comfort it’s all about the historical. Yesterday, I tweeted that I started my first fire of the season and had and Elizabeth Hoyt. I was in heaven.

  22. MelB said on 10.01.09 at 05:59 PM[link]

    My go to comforts are mostly historical. Amanda Quick and Lisa Kleypas with a Julia Quinn thrown in. Perfect fuzzy blanket, cold night, rainy day reads. I also take them with me when I’m going out to do something stressful like wait at the DMV or the doctor’s office.

  23. Katie Ann said on 10.01.09 at 06:04 PM[link]

    When I want to cleanse my palate after a string of bad/boring books, I go for something by a guaranteed win author, like Loretta Chase or LaVyrle Spencer (and I still have several unread books by them on my shelf, I like to savor them).

    But I certainly get in a particular mood for paranormal/historical/contemporary, especially if I’ve just glommed a particular series.  After reading all of the P.C. Cast/Kristin Cast “House of Night” series in a few days, I was in the mood for a very mature (read: contains sex and no teenager speak) historical to sink my teeth into.

  24. liana said on 10.01.09 at 06:50 PM[link]

    historical romances are cozy reads for me. I like reading them in thick afghans and with a mug of tea in hand. and if I want to read “Lord of Scoundrels,” I have to be in a very determined mood. I have to commit to reading the entire thing. in Kleypas-s and Quinns I can basically pick up wherever.

  25. AgTigress said on 10.01.09 at 06:56 PM[link]

    Interesting that for most (all) of you, it is the genre, the type of story, that is decisive.  For me, it’s the writer.
    For relaxation and taking my mind of daily strains and stresses, I re-read Ngaio Marsh, Heyer, Patricia Wentworth, even Agatha Christie if feeling particularly feeble, Dorothy L. Sayers, and occasionally Edmund Crispin.  The only living writer who is an automatic relaxation read for me is Jayne Ann Krentz, and it makes no difference to me whether I re-read her contemporaries (category and later), her historicals or her paranormals.  It is the author’s voice that is the comforting element rather than the type of plot.

  26. bookishheather said on 10.01.09 at 07:07 PM[link]

    I noticed that during the summer is when I do the most reading of non-fiction - and usually odd ones like Cod: A Biography, or Word Fugitives...anything interesting and off the beaten path. If I’m feeling blah or moody, I tend to go for dark paranormal like Laurell Hamilton or JR Ward. If in need of a boost, I tend to read modern romance like Susan Elizabeth Phillips. But if I’m looking for a nice, comfortable read, I curl up in my quilt and read a good historical romance, like Victoria Alexander or Lisa Kleypas. My keeper collection is mainly historical romance or non-fiction.

  27. Shiloh Walker said on 10.01.09 at 07:08 PM[link]

    Does seasonal reading count as mood reading?

    I want UF and thriller/scary stuff in the fall.  Always.

    When I’m down, I want to reread old favorites.

    Summers I tend to do more contemps or try new authors.

  28. gypsydani said on 10.01.09 at 07:25 PM[link]

    I try to mix it up because I find that if I read too much of a certain kind of novel, then when I get tired of the period, I get tired of reading.  So I alternate with ancients, medievals, regencies, historical american, contemporaries and paranormals.  Lucky for me I like to read everything.  If I’m feeling particularly itchy, like I want to jump out of my skin, I want a romantic suspense novel to get caught up in.  If I want a good laugh, contemporary always seems to work, especially Crusie.  If I’ve had a bad day in the real world, I like historicals based in ancient times or paranormals.  I seem to read more paranormals and contemporaries in the summer and more historicals in the fall/winter.  Maybe it’s those old school habits.  The fast, fun reads for vacation and the educational (historical) works for colder weather.

  29. wylykat said on 10.01.09 at 07:28 PM[link]

    The In Death series is it for me.  While going through a nasty divorce, with no more “extra” money for books, I went to the library where a wonderful librarian noticed my reading tastes and suggested the In Death series.  I remember being intrigued by the shiny covers with blue bodies.  The police procedural looking covers are great but not the ones that helped me in tough times, so years later I scrounged used book stores to find those early blue bodied books for my own.

  30. ms bookjunkie said on 10.01.09 at 07:36 PM[link]

    I woke up yesterday, really depressed.*

    Since, unfortunately, none of my usual comfort reads (Morning Glory by LaVyrle Spencer, Petals on the River by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, pretty much anything by David Eddings, various Nora Roberts/JD Robb and most “pre-change” Elizabeth Lowell (as in after Midnight in Ruby Bayou she stopped making me cry -and I stopped caring about her books) to name the ones I most often reach for) were available, I had to analyze the situation. I wanted either something that would give me a cathartic cry (most EL is so good for this, especially the categories), or make me laugh and bring on the endorphins.

    I did not want to trudge to the library in search of Eddings, and had nothing I could count on to help me cry, so I went the endorphin route and reread the Halle Pumas series (The Wallflower, Sweet Dreams, Cat of a Different Color and Steel Beauty) by Dana Marie Bell.**

    Gotta tell you, I was in a really good mood going to bed last night.

    *I’m not just using the word here, I’m talking on-the-verge-of-crying, I-miss-my-mommy-and-daddy, winter-is-coming-and-I’ll-never-see-the-sun-again type of mood. My more rational self says it’s time to start taking vitamins and Omega 3, and maybe consider investing in a SAD lamp, but most of all, time to get my sleep cycle back on track. Anyhow.

    **Dana Marie Bell’s books are truly amazingly unbelievably funny, sweet, hot and emotionally satisfying, considering their length is on the really short side. SB Sarah, I think you should try these, even though they are paranormals. Try the excerpt for Steel Beauty, at least. (Samhain/My Bookstore and More)

  31. Becca said on 10.01.09 at 07:55 PM[link]

    I’m with Leslie H on Pratchett and JD Robb. Another go-to author for me is Lois Bujold - I can read/listen to her books for hours and hours. Right now, the day after the first sharp frost here in SE Michigan, I’m on a Jayne Ann Krentz kick. Don’t care what series, I just enjoy her stuff for sheer fun.

  32. Pam said on 10.01.09 at 08:18 PM[link]

    I am always reading something and have major anxiety when I don’t have a book or two going and a stack of TBRs waiting for me.  When I’m feeling fragile, I usually turn to books that incorporate a little humor into whatever else they offer.  I look for the HEA,  but genre, not so much. 

    Mood sometimes determines which book I pick next, but often mood is determined by which book I read last.  For instance, when I find a new author to love, I’ll roar through whatever I can find by that author—most recently Arianna Franklin.  After I’ve gobbled that last delicious morsel, I’m often somewhat let down, and, instead of tackling something new or challenging, I may turn to a comfort read—for me, Heyer or Pratchett.

  33. Nadia said on 10.01.09 at 08:23 PM[link]

    I try to shift genres with every book just to keep from falling into a rut, but when I’m in a mood, all bets are off.  If I’m frustrated with the world, I’ma need a kick-ass heroine who gets to fuck people up like I wish I could.  Paranormal or romantic suspense, if I can trust the author not to have a wussy-girl heroine.  If I’m sad, I want snappy dialogue to get me out of my funk - Julia Quinn is always a winner for that, or MaryJanice Davidson if I want kooky fun.  Sometimes, but not often, I need a tear-jerker, and the go-to book for that will always be SEP’s Dream a Little Dream.

  34. SheaLuna said on 10.01.09 at 08:39 PM[link]

    When I need to get lost down the rabbit hole, it’s Terry Pratchett all the way.

    Need a good laugh… Janet Evanovich has me laughing so hard I have to cross my legs.

    In the mood for a little magic and Mayhem… Alyssa Day, JR Ward, CE Murphy, JD Robb, Laurell K Hamilton, Sherrilyn Kenyon and any paranormal romance or urban fantasy that strikes my fancy (especially if there’s a hot guy on the cover).

  35. Donna Marie Rogers said on 10.01.09 at 09:12 PM[link]

    When I first discovered romance novels back in the late 80s, all I wanted to read was historicals, anything I could get my hands on.  Though somewhere along the way I switched over to contemporaries (which is also what I write).  But lately, for some reason, I’m back to reading historicals.  Or I should say rereading, particularly my old favorites like Dorothy Garlock, Julie Garwood, Norah Hess, Judith McNaught, Amanda Quick, Elizabeth Lowell, Linda Howard, Rebecca Paisley, Johanna Lindsey, Mary Jo Putney and many others.  These seem to be my comfort reads, no matter my mood lately. :-)

    Dream A Little Dream is my absolute favorite by SEP, I really need to reread that one soon as well.

  36. emma said on 10.01.09 at 09:46 PM[link]

    I don’t call it mood reading but when I need to relax and not think I like light contempary romances.
    I know when I pick the book up that basically boy meets girl, there will be some laughs, misunderstandings possibly some mystery and then all will end neatly.
    No need for me to get heavily envolved and pulled into the book.  Just night light reading.
    Or if I haven’t caught up already I would find a Janet Evanovich book for some laughs but unfortnuatley currently up to date.

  37. Chloe Harris (noelle) said on 10.01.09 at 09:56 PM[link]

    I am always reading something and have major anxiety when I don’t have a book or two going and a stack of TBRs waiting for me.

    Me too!!!

    I tend to go in waves of years rather than moods. I went from Historical Fiction to Historical Romance to Paranormal Romance then back to Historical Romance with a few other odd choices thrown in.

    Not really mood reads but comfort reads are anything by Madeline Hunter and Susan Johnson. For some reason anything by SJ is comforting to me, whether it something that’s gotten good reviews or not. Which is weird because normally I’m very picky

  38. edieharris said on 10.01.09 at 09:57 PM[link]

    After discovering it in Chicago’s O’Hare airport during a seven-hour layover, I return to Vicki Lewis Thompson’s Nerd in Shining Armor every time I travel/am about to travel (or any of Thompson’s “Nerd” books). Her nerd-tastic heroes are so delightfully “real” without being Betas. And her women are all different, all flawed.

    Julia Quinn’s Bridgertons remain classic “frilly garter” reads; I’ve always enjoyed Lisa Kleypas’ “Bow Street” trilogy; Susan Mallery’s “Bakery Sisters” books are good contemporary fluff; and no one creates a cowboy quite like Linda Lael Miller.

    But time and time and time again, I will read the late Kathleen E. Woodiwiss’ A Rose in Winter, because it is the first romance novel I read where I fell completely in love with the hero. Based around my favorite fairy tale (“Beauty and the Beast”), I truly feel that—while still being Old Skool—it’s one of the best romances ever written.

    In fact, as it’s rainy and cold this afternoon, I think I’ll give up on reading Cathy Maxwell’s latest and reread A Rose in Winter instead.

  39. Liz said on 10.01.09 at 10:14 PM[link]

    I don’t have a specific genre that I read, but when I’m feeling down I like to read a good Christmas romance.  There is something about that holiday and the stories that go with it make me feel happy.  I also tend to listen to Christmas carols when I’m reading these books to further put me in that frame of mind.  Sometimes I light an evergreen scented candle too.

  40. Elizabeth Wadsworth said on 10.01.09 at 10:22 PM[link]

    My comfort reading is definitely Pratchett, especially Night Watch and Going Postal (last night I curled up in front of a roaring fire with the latter and my SO made a remark to the effect of, “You’re completely content right now, aren’t you?”)  Another comfort author is PN Elrod; her Jack Fleming stories are funny, snarky, and (mostly) angst-free vampire/hard-boiled mystery/romance/comedies.  And Susan Cooper’s The Dark Is Rising is the perfect book for a snowy winter night.

  41. Leslie H said on 10.01.09 at 10:59 PM[link]

    Thinking more about this, sometimes it isn’t a mood as it is a kind of Mental Flavor Craving.

    Like when you want strawberry ice cream bad enough to get dressed and go to the store. I often put aside a book I am looking forward to reading until I get the craving on. Simon Tolkien’s Final Witness (JRR’s Grandson) is one of those. When the British mystery bug hits, I am ready.

  42. Lia said on 10.01.09 at 11:18 PM[link]

    When I feel bad, I tend to go back to books I loved when I was about 15.
    My first choice is usually LM Montogomery.
    I like to enter the world of good old PEI and say hello to a wonderfully imaginative little redhead and two crotchety old ladies.
    This was the first story that made me want to go up to the characters and shake them thoroughly so that they make the right decision…

  43. Erica said on 10.01.09 at 11:58 PM[link]

    Mood reading is one of the main reasons I got an e-book reader.  I have some fast favorites that I just like to read passages from, even if I don’t read the whole book over again.  Some of my warm fuzzies come from historical’s but most of my favs are the old standards, Austen, Bronte, Loretta Chase.  I read The Thorn Birds (am I the only fan of this book?), and the Mists of Avalon every year at around the holidays and have been known to pick up Little Women or A little princess once a year as well.  So, I keep them on the Kindle, and when I feel the urge, they are there.

    Haha now I’m all nostalgic

  44. Erica said on 10.02.09 at 12:02 AM[link]

    Oh I almost forgot, I have a beat up 1978 hardcover copy of Phillipa Carr’s The Love Child that my mom gave me.  I think I have read that a million times by now.  It may have been on of my first romance books.

  45. Camile said on 10.02.09 at 12:19 AM[link]

    I find myself reaching for the paranormal romances when it’s been a trying day. Lately, though, I’ve been craving fantasy romance and historicals. I’m guessing it’s because I’ve been gorging myself on romantic erotica and the like.

  46. Malin E said on 10.02.09 at 12:19 AM[link]

    I love The Thorn Birds too. When I was younger I used to read it at least once a year, now that I’ve rediscovered romance (I spent 10 years from I was 18 until I was about 28 not really reading “hardcore romance” so to speak), I have a whole load of comfort reads.

    Terry Pratchett is great, and usually never fails to cheer me up. Loretta Chase and Julia Quinn, not to mention Georgette Heyer are also great comfort reads for me.

  47. MichelleR said on 10.02.09 at 12:21 AM[link]

    When I was a teen back in the eighties, colds demanded regencies and Harlequins—the more chaste, the better. I can still picture myself with 4 or 5 books next to me in bed, sick but content.

    Today I follow politics a lot and read some fairly serious books. Every couple months this sends me into overload, and all I want are Samhains or Ellora Caves. I will then read them for several days before having the strength to cope. During this period, anything can happen on the world stage and it would be news to me.

  48. Cammy said on 10.02.09 at 12:39 AM[link]

    Definitely Terry Pratchett for laughs and sheer joy in wordsmithing.  Julia Quinn, Lisa Kleypas and Laura Kinsale for comfort reading when I’m in the mood to cocoon.  JR Ward when I’m a dark mood. Charlaine Harris is a nice medium between dark and comfort reading. I tend to jump between genres myself.  Marjorie M. Liu is another good one. I love her Dirk & Steele series.  My current comfort read is Love is Blind by Lynsay Sands.  And I worship at the alter of Elizabeth Hoyt.  I’m working on my second copies of the entire Prince series.

    When I’m feeling..frisky, there are many titles from Ellora’s Cave that work for me.  Lora Leigh’s breed series, but not her bound series. I’m not against menage in any way, but I loath that series for some reason. Lisa Marie Rice, Sarah McCarty’s Promise series…

    I’ve not seen too many votes for american/western historicals.  I cut my teeth on Johanna Lindsay and her fabulous-Fabio covers.  His Second-hand Wife by Cheryl St. John never fails to feel like a literary fuzzy blanket to me.  Ditto for the Wife Lottery trilogy by Jodi Thomas.

  49. Kaetrin said on 10.02.09 at 01:46 AM[link]

    I’m more of a “phase” person - I have these periods where I want to read a particular genre and then all of a sudden, I’ll want something different so I’ll glom onto something different for a while.  It was contemporaries earlier in the month and now, much to my surprise, it is paranormals.  I haven’t read any for months and months and now I’m all about “where the next Nalini Singh novel?”.

    In some ways its a bit of a pity because I have all these great historicals in my TBR pile but I know if I read them “out of phase” I won’t enjoy them the same way….

    Just means my TBR pile gets more and more massive!

  50. Ann said on 10.02.09 at 02:29 AM[link]

    When my children were babies and toddlers, I’d alternate Georgette Heyer with Louis L’Amour, like going from sweets to savoury and back.  It helped that the books were about the same size—good if you’re breast-feeding.

    I re-read Bujold nowadays, especially the Chalion books, when I need a sense of hope and persevering. LOTR and Eddings are good re-reads, and Dorothy Sayers.

    And being39 is a memory.

  51. chisai said on 10.02.09 at 02:34 AM[link]

    My mood reads are never romance.  Perhaps that’s because I’m fairly new to the genre (and thank you for that.  You guys are solely responsible.  I became hooked on this site due to book cover contest and never turned back. Lord of Scoundrels?  OMG?  Brilliant.)  Anyhoo. wWhen I’m bereft, I always, I mean always, read Imaginative Qualities of Actual Things by Gilbert Sorrentino.  When I’m just cranky, any book of short stories by Angela Carter hits the spot.  Often read aloud, to no one, because they just work better that way.  In happier times, there’s nothing like a good Loretta Chase (again, kudos).

  52. Jody said on 10.02.09 at 04:29 AM[link]

    It’s funny, but I only like contemporary romances when things are pretty good.  I get too impatient with the characters otherwise.  If things are marginally crappy, give me a Regency.  When I’m really miserable and feeling sorry for myself, I reach for the Narnia books, start with The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe and go all the way through to the end of The Last Battle.  They never fail.
    Bad winter weather is the time for Lord Peter Wimsey, Roderick Alleyn, dense Gothics like Victoria Holt, really scary paranormals and Possession.
    When I’m feeling bruised by life and generally cynical, Robert Parker is just the ticket.
    And let’s not even talk about comfort DVDs—

  53. JBHunt said on 10.02.09 at 04:40 AM[link]

    Jenny Crusie never disappoints. You fall in love with her characters all over again with each re-read.

    Some more recent additions to the comfort reading stack:

    Sherry Thomas (Private Arrangements, Delicious, Not Quite a Husband)
    Kresley Cole (the Immortals After Dark series—feels as if you’re hanging out with Buffy and the Scooby Gang)
    Jacqueline Carey (although I know that “comfort” and “Kushiel” wouldn’t seem a likely pair)

  54. mingqi said on 10.02.09 at 04:54 AM[link]

    most of my comfort reads are historicals- both in the romance genre and in YA fiction….though nowadays, I’m more in the mood for contemporaries.  I read Emily Giffin’s “baby proof” last week and had also been rereading snippets of This Heart of Mine this week.  I wish I was in a more historical mood- I had finally borrowed Lisa Kleypas’ Seduce me at Sunrise (I know I’m behind in the series) from the library when my mood shifted.  Maybe I’ll save that and the newest one until the Hathaway brother gets his book (I was mostly looking forward to his book and Beatrice’s).

  55. SonomaLass said on 10.02.09 at 05:36 AM[link]

    I usually have two or three books that I’m reading, and I’ll switch between them depending on mood and circumstance.  I have a book in my purse, an e-book on the laptop, and a couple of books going from the stack in the bedroom, so I can switch from heavy to light as the modd strikes. (Yes, this IS why I would be a good candidate for an e-reader, if I wasn’t so cranky about pricing and format issues.)

  56. Lyssa said on 10.02.09 at 11:49 AM[link]

    I have series of books that I curl up with. Eve and Roark, Miles and his Free Rangers (Bujold), Janielle and Sadi (Anne Bishop), Both werewolf series by Briggs, Kim Harrison’s Hollows series, Brockmann’s TS series, Novik’s Temeraire series, and Stephanie Plum series are all in my audio format (though I am still getting the Bishop and Briggs as they are released). When I am in the mood for a particular genre I know where to load my ipod.  What I find interesting is that In Death, Troubleshooters, Vorkasian all fall into my listened so many times that if they were cassetts they would be dead category. They are great when I am doing yard work, or cleaning around the house, or going grocery shopping.

    I do prefer to save ‘new’ stories for long car rides. The Thanksgiving trip home to my folks for instance will have the next In Death Novel playing.  *You have to plan these things in advance or you might not have a good book to listen to…and then will have to pay attention to the music/squabbles that happen around you. But a good story…and orders that you are listening to that story, and distribution of Ipods to others saves you from that horror.

  57. Chez said on 10.02.09 at 12:02 PM[link]

    When I’m down I reach for Julie Garwoods medieval scottish books, or Honours Splendour with the feet warming scene. They make me feel all warm and toasty inside.

    When I’m cranky it’s paranormals with lots of alpha males and fated mates fighting stuff. Too perfect.

  58. catblue78 said on 10.02.09 at 05:59 PM[link]

    I’ve always been a reader of Historicals.Right now I’m Loretta Chases’ Lord of Scoundrels.

    When I want to laugh I’ll read books by Julia Quinn.

  59. willa said on 10.02.09 at 08:45 PM[link]

    But time and time and time again, I will read the late Kathleen E. Woodiwiss’ A Rose in Winter, because it is the first romance novel I read where I fell completely in love with the hero. Based around my favorite fairy tale (“Beauty and the Beast”), I truly feel that—while still being Old Skool—it’s one of the best romances ever written.

    edieharris, I’m right with you! Sometimes I’m JUST in the mood for A Rose in Winter, that’s one of the first romances I ever read and it’s stuck with me ever since.

  60. fivejen5 said on 10.03.09 at 03:56 AM[link]

    To ease a dark mood or a bad day at work, I will echo the calls for a classic Nora Roberts, any of the JD Robbs or a Janet Evanovich (by the numbers or even her old Loveswept, I believe they were, reprints). For really broody moments, though, a Mary Balogh will do the trick.

  61. nathan Watchorn said on 10.03.09 at 12:44 PM[link]

    This piece of writing is surely very eye catching .the whole idea of mood reading is what it attracts a reader to stop and give his or her attention towards it.there are people like the writer who can not make out or judge what they want to read .this will actually help them to chalk out their interest areas.

  62. voodoo chile said on 10.06.09 at 06:10 AM[link]

    A good mystery book always works for me.  It’s my comfort food. I love no genre more than a well written crime/detective book. Robert Skinner, Cara Black, Judith Smith-Levin & Grace F. Edwards are a few of my favorite authors.

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