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Favorite Books


diedan
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Self-explanatory, really. I feel like graphic novels should probably go in the comics thread, unless someone feels strongly otherwise. Anyhow, here's my top 5, roughly in order:

 

1. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - James Joyce

2. Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon

3. Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carrol (yeah, I'm kind of cheating by putting them both in there.)

4. House of Leaves - Mark Z. Danielewski

5. Little, Big - John Crowley

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Whoah, I'm surprised we didn't have a thread for this yet, now that I think about it.

 

Also, diedan, my mom's been after me to read Little Big for yeeeears.

 

1. Women in Love by D.H. Lawrence (ignore the lame title, this is a masterwork)

2. The Dispossessed by Urula K. Leguin

3. The People of Paper by Salvador Plascencia

4. The Translator by John Crowley

5. The Soloist by Mark Salzman

 

Ha... I just realized 4 out of 5 of my books start with 'The' - with the 'lame title' being the only unique one. Wild.

 

I might be forgetting a few of my favorites, but the first three are certainly at the top for me.

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Also, diedan, my mom's been after me to read Little Big for yeeeears.

It's because it's such a great book! I haven't read it in years, but it's stuck with me ever since. Also, crazy! The only people I've ever met who have actually read John Crowley were people who I told to read John Crowley. I really love The Deep, Engine Summer, The Solitudes, and Lord Byron's Novel: The Evening Land. I still need to finish the Ægypt tetralogy, read The Translator, and finish Four Freedoms.)

 

 

Also, I really thought about doing a top 10, because there are so many that I feel like I'm leaving out, but I like the pressure of whittling it down to 5.

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Also, diedan, my mom's been after me to read Little Big for yeeeears.

It's because it's such a great book! I haven't read it in years, but it's stuck with me ever since. Also, crazy! The only people I've ever met who have actually read John Crowley were people who I told to read John Crowley. I really love The Deep, Engine Summer, The Solitudes, and Lord Byron's Novel: The Evening Land. I still need to finish the Ægypt tetralogy, read The Translator, and finish Four Freedoms.)

 

 

Also, I really thought about doing a top 10, because there are so many that I feel like I'm leaving out, but I like the pressure of whittling it down to 5.

 

Yeah, my mom's a huge Crowley fan. She's the biggest book worm I know - it's kind of ridiculous how much she's read and how widely.

 

I do very much recommend the Translator - it's much different than his other work because it's realistic (and slightly historical) fiction, but oh man, is that a powerful novel.

 

His collection of short stories is also very excellent. I'll read Little Big one of these days but urg, my list of books I own and need to read is even longer than my list of games I need to play.

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This. Not to mention the TV shows/movies I want to watch. Yet I keep spending all my time on the internets...

 

Hahaha... yeah. With the amount of time I spend procrastinating on the internet, I could spend that time doing something useful, like reading.

 

But then, that's one of the really, really hard parts I've found about this whole 'work at home on the internet' thing.

 

My attention span has gotten truly horrid.

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1. Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carrol (they're in the same book most of the time, not cheating putting them both. oh, and for me? duh...)

2. The Mound by HP Lovecraft (yes, it's a novella, but it's so good)

3. 1984 by George Orwell

4. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens

5. Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain

 

i'm a weird reader, i'm not picky at all. i'll read anything from trashy romance novels to obtuse tomes on history or other perceived boring stuff, so coming up with favorites i usually end up listing stuff that i've been reading since i was younger because it's some of the only stuff i read and reread a zillion times. i like to go to library tag sales and pick up older books, like from the early 1900s, about science and stuff and read how crazy and racist and just sometimes outright bizarre stuff they took as absolute "fact" are today.

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not about to rank them but

-Anything Borges

-Most of Ayn Rand

-The Picture of Dorian Gray, probs the most influential book on my philosophy/outlook on everything

-Anything Jonathan Safran Foer

-Anything Jhumpa Lahiri

-The Fortunate Pilgrim, Mario Puzo (who wrote the godfather, btw)

-High Fidelity

-House of Leaves

 

There are a couple of others but they slip my mind right now.

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@slithy toves: I love old crazy books. The best I had was a 1909 biography of John Dee, the 16th century Queen's court magician who went on some ridiculous trek for the philosopher's stone, helped "discover" the Enochian script, basically had an insane life. Sadly, the dog I had at the time got a hold of it and completely tore it apart...

 

Edit: Oh, and a few weeks ago I was out in Santa Monica, so some of my family and I went out to The Huntington where they had this library exhibit with TONS of old science books, stuff from Kepler, Brahe, old 13th century texts that were translations of Euclid, etc. It was absolutely incredible.

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Positively the most unintelligent list of books ever.

 

1. Love is a Mixtape - Rob Sheffield

2. Chronicles Vol. 1 - Bob Dylan

3. A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess

4. An Incomplete Education - Judy Jones & William Wilson

5. Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand

 

I only put one "classic" up there. I dont want to fill a list up with shit 95% of people know about and probably were forced to read in school.

I also never but the Beatles in any music favorites list. Neither do I use the Godfather for a film favorite, despite loving both.

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Oh, and a few weeks ago I was out in Santa Monica, so some of my family and I went out to The Huntington where they had this library exhibit with TONS of old science books, stuff from Kepler, Brahe, old 13th century texts that were translations of Euclid, etc. It was absolutely incredible.

i'm always amused at how some of the older stuff that's just explained in a really nutty way is completely more sensical in the end than some of the things they came out with when they started really getting into science, and taking apart cadavers to learn about the human body and mixing chemicals together and whatnot. there are definitely some cases where you'd have been better off with someone treating you by the four humors than some of the things they did in the 19th century.

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fuck I can't rank or choose just five.

 

Dragonlance. The Main 7 at least.

 

American Gods, Neil Gaiman

 

Good Omens, Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett

 

American Psycho, Brett Easton Ellis

 

Lord of the Flies, William Golding

 

lately been catching up on "required reading" I somehow missed in school. Read On the Road, really good stuff there. Was reading Slaughterhouse Five, been pressed for reading time, need to pick it back up.

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  • 3 weeks later...

I am a proper child when it comes to reading.

 

My favourite books are:

 

1. Farseer Trilogy by Robin Hobb

2. A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R. R. Martin

3. Artemis Fowl books by Eoin Colfer

4. Abhorsen trilogy by Garth Nix

5. Danny the Champion of the World by Roald Dahl.

 

Like I said. A child.

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I don't have favorites, but there are ones I really liked in no particular order

 

Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky

The Giver - Lois Lowry

Harry Potter books

1984 & Animal Farm - George Orwell

The whole Narnia series

Stephen King books

 

Not sure but after I read Sadako and the thousand cranes as a kid I started making a shitload of cranes but gave up after maybe 50

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I put more than 5:

 

The Giver - Lois Lowry

Farenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury

The Ambassadors - Henry James

American Psycho - Bret Easton Ellis

Strangers - Dean Koontz

Youth and Revolt - C.D. Payne

Catcher in the Rye - JD Salinger

Oryx & Crake - Margaret Atwood

Don Quixote - Miguel de Cervantes

The Tennants - Bernard Malamund

Wigfield: The Can-Do Town That Just May Not - Sedaris, Dinello, Colbert

The Big Friendly Giant - Roald Dahl

Edited by Dee
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I can't list just five books. So here's a not so ranked list of the works and authors I like:

 

-Anything by Haruki Murakami

-Stephen King short stories

-Elantris and the Mistborn Trilogy by Brandon Sanderson

-Borges

-1984

-Jane Austen

-Charles Dickens

-Mark Twain

 

Graphic Novels

-Tarot Cafe

-The Wallflower

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