- Share what genre you choose and why did you choose this specific genre?
- What book did you end up reading?
- Did you enjoy/dislike the book? Share why you did/didn't.
- How would you rate this book?
- Would you recommend it?

Interesting choice! It gave me new book suggestions as well. Because so far the only 'diary format book' I can remember to have read is 'Diary of a Young Girl' by Anne Frank. I am going to try the books you mentioned. Thank you for sharing!jenjayfromSA wrote: ↑03 May 2018, 03:01 I enjoy stories in letter or diary format. Not common, but it's a different way of putting across character and plot. Of course, letters are a dying art. Emails don't cut it An old favourite is Daddy Long Legs by Jean Webster and the sequel Dear Enemy. An orphan is sent to college by an unknown benefactor and has to write a letter to him once a month. She's upbeat, funny, vulnerable and delightful. Mary Ann Shaffer's The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society set in the Second World War is also warm and real. In diary form is another old favourite, Desiree by Annemarie Selinko. The advantage is that you can easily drop or skate over a couple of months or even years. I've just finished the sequel to Hendrik Groen's The Secret Diary of Hendrik Groen aged 83 and a quarter, set in an old age home in the Netherlands. He is now 85 and aging is definitely the pits, but he's still warm, wise and funny. The Old But Not Dead Club may have new members, but the senior delinquents are going strong and having fun.
Automatic Ads by Google