My life in books

1 min read

WITH A NEW LOVE STORY, YOU ARE HERE, OUT THIS MONTH, BESTSELLING AUTHOR David Nicholls SHARES THE BOOKS THAT HAVE SHAPED HIM

PHOTOGRAPHY: PETER MOUNTAIN/NETFLIX, ELLIE SMITH, SOPHIA SPRING, COURTESY OF DEAN ROGERS/FOCUS FEATURES, METRO GOLDWYN MAYER PICTURES, GETTY

My favourite character from a book is…

Where to start? The most vivid characters are often unbearable or deeply unlikeable, and who’d want to spend time with Miss Havisham or Miss Jean Brodie? And yet the pleasant characters are often deeply dull, and David Copperfield is lousy company, too. Perhaps someone funny then. I love Zooey in Salinger’s Franny And Zooey, his cool and his cynicism. It would be good to sit and smoke and drink martinis with him.

The character I most relate to is…

When I was younger, Adrian Mole was like looking in a mirror and Pip from Great Expectations still resonates; the vague aspirations, the terrible mistakes, the desire to be decent and the failure to do so. I’ve never really let go of that book.

The book that helped me get through a difficult time was…

When my father died, I reached for Philip Roth’s Patrimony, a beautiful, frank and tender book about a sometimes difficult relationship.

It was a great comfort, though it’s a real heartbreaker, too.

A book that shaped my teenage years was…

Thomas Hardy’s Tess Of The D’Urbervilles. All that doomed love, the twist of fate, the terrible men. Many years later I adapted it for the BBC, starring Gemma Arterton and Eddie Redmayne, a dream come true for teenage-me, and a line in one chapter al

This article is from...

Related Articles

Related Articles