Comfort food for the soul
by chuckofish
It’s been a stressful summer. One way I have dealt with it is by re-reading some of my old favorites. Right now I am reading Out to Canaan, 4th in Jan Karon’s Mitford series, having just read These High Green Hills (#3).
These books are not for everyone (although they have been perennial bestsellers), but for me, these simple stories of the adventures of an Episcopal priest in a small town in North Carolina peopled by wonderful and endearing characters, are the only kind of fantasy I enjoy.
They had a good life in Mitford, no doubt about it. Visitors were often amazed at its seeming charm and simplicity, wanting it for themselves, seeing in it, perhaps the life they’d once had, or had missed entirely.
Yet there were Mitfords everywhere. He’d lived in them, preached in them, they were still out there, away from the fray, still containing something of innocence and dreaming, something of the past that other towns had freely let go, or allowed to be taken from them.
The books are also very funny, sometimes laugh-out-loud funny. And they are filled with the Holy Spirit. Yes, and Karon quotes the likes of Bonhoeffer and Pascal and Wordsworth (freely)–all right up my alley.
I also enjoy the #1 Ladies Detective Agency series by Alexander McCall Smith about a wonderful lady detective in Botswana. These books, like the Mitford books, seemingly simple and straightforward, are full of truth.
The world, Mma Ramotswe believed, was composed of big things and small things. The big things were written large, and one could not but be aware of them–wars, oppression, the familiar theft by the rich and the strong of those simple things that the poor needed, those scraps which could make even the reading of a newspaper an exercise in sorrow. There were all those unkindnesses, palpable, daily, so easily avoidable; but one could not think of those, thought Mma Ramotswe, or one would spend one’s time in tears–and the unkindnesses would continue. So the small things came into their own: small acts of helping others, if one could; small ways of making one’s own little life better: acts of love, acts of tea, acts of laughter. Clever people might laugh at such simplicity, but, she asked herself, what was their solution?
And, as you know, when in doubt, it’s always a good time to re-read Raymond Chandler. But, look, someone seems to have “borrowed” my Chandler volume 1. (Ahem.)
What do you read for comfort?






I have thought Emerson makes for the best self-motivational reading since I first read his essays. Then again, I’m also known to read chick lit as comfort food and “brain cleansing” while not in school…
Our parents read murder mysteries–but I have a hard time reading bad writing and a lot of mystery/thrillers fall into that category–I know how that sounds–but that’s why I can’t read chick lit. Although I do really like Melissa Bank.
For comfort I read the stories of my childhood: The Secret Garden, the Narnia books, The Jungle Books… They’re all well written and take me back to a time when I was care free and the world was full of infinite possibility. Great post!
I borrowed your Raymond Chandler vol. 1! Sorry 🙂
After reading the entire Salinger collection (way too small) in what seems like a week, I am now reading “All the Pretty Horses,” at Susie’s suggestion and “borrowed” from your library.
Yes, the Salinger canon is too small. I read him for comfort as well.