Launched today is a search for the top 10 life-changing novels for women. There's an article in today's Independent, and Women's Hour on Radio 4 is also involved.
Nominations are open until Oct 22, with a longlist of 30 published after that, and then a shortlist of 10, with the results on Dec 8. The books can be written by men or women from anywhere in the world, and of course men can vote too (presumably for the book giving the best insight into the female psyche).
To get it started, 400 women (academics, judging from the results) were asked to nominate the novel that had made a difference to their lives.
The top 40 results are:
Douglas Adams – The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy
Louisa May Alcott – Little Women
Maya Angelou – I Know why the Caged Bird Sings
Margaret Atwood - The Handmaid's Tale
Jane Austen – Persuasion
Jane Austen - Pride and Prejudice
Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre
Charlotte Bronte – Villette
Emily Bronte - Wuthering Heights
Albert Camus – The Stranger
Joseph Conrad – Heart of Darkness
George Elliot - Middlemarch
George Eliot – The Mill on the Floss
F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby
Gustav Flaubert – Madame Bovary
Jonathan Franzen – The Corrections
Joseph Heller – Catch 22
Frances Hodgson-Burnett – The Little Princess
James Joyce – Ulysses
Jackie Kay – Trumpet
D.H Lawrence – The Rainbow
Harper Lee – To Kill a Mockingbird
Doris Lessing – The Golden Notebook
Doris Lessing – The Grass is Singing
C.S. Lewis – The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe
Gabriel Garcia Marquez – One Hundred Years of Solitude
Daphne du Maurier – Rebecca
Margaret Mitchell – Gone With the Wind
Toni Morrison - Beloved
Marcel Proust – Remembrance of Things Past
J.D Salinger – Catcher in the Rye
Mary Shelley – Frankenstein
Donna Tartt – The Secret History
J.R.R Tolkien – The Lord of the Rings
Leo Tolstoy – Anna Karenina
Edith Wharton – The House of Mirth
Jeanette Winterson – Oranges are not the only Fruit
Jeanette Winterson – The Passion
Jeanette Winterson – The Powerbook
Virginia Woolf – Mrs Dalloway
Apparently, the current No 1 is Jane Eyre.
Well, I'd agree with some of these (Mill on the Floss) but not with others (Little Women????). Actually I've only read 11 of them

. There's loads of books I've enjoyed reading, but I'm struggling to think of one that has really changed my life.