Libra said:
I would have to go with The Chosen by Chaim Potok. Heartwrenching, but beautiful and relatable as well. It is one of the few books that has ever made me cry.
Hey! My mum is currently telling me to read that one. I will do, once I've finished the ones I'm on right now.
My picks:
Titus Groan (Mervyn Peake). Beautifully written fantasy (with very few actual "fantastical" elements, at least in the first book). It would perhaps be better described as an absurdist gothic novel. The man had an incredible grasp of his cast of characters, many of whom are questionably sane, and they live in a sprawling castle where (and I quote) "the sacredness of the rituals is in inverse relation to their comprehensibility or usefulness".
I've read the second novel, "Gormenghast", as well, but not the third (or the little horror novella), so I won't include them as a series.
Slaughterhouse Five (Kurt Vonnegut). Perhaps heavy at times, but that is the subject matter (the protagonist, like Vonnegut, was a prisoner of war). Besides, a key theme is how the protagonist deals with that weight in his mind. Philosophical aliens help him.
The Foundation series (Isaac Asimov). A science-fiction series that chronicles centuries, and even thousands of years. Characters may stick around for several chapters, and in the chapter after, five hundred years may have passed and they will be long dead. This is a story about entire galactic society (and its relationship with the "psycho-historian" Hari Seldon, who lives only in the first chapter of the first book, but leaves holographic recordings in his effort to guide the development of society, and is a constant presence throughout).
Sandman (Neil Gaiman). I thought of putting down "Watchmen", which is no doubt a masterpiece, but I genuinely find the Sandman series more enjoyable to read. The first two volumes in particular are my favourites, as well as "Season of Mists" and "The Kindly Ones". The ones containing disconnected short-stories, I did not enjoy as much. Overall, it's an incredibly rich story, following the entity that governs dreams and his family (who are also "endless" entities like him, with various realms and various duties, whether they diligently perform them or not).