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Kafka
Garcia-Marquez Jules Verne Burgess Hemingway Reverte-Perez Poe Stanyslav Lem |
Currently
Orson Scott Card Clive Barker (even though I don't like all of his books, the ones I like I really like) Connie Willis David Brin Elmore Leonard Recent writers I've just started reading, but like everything so far: Neil Gaiman Nick Hornby |
Raymond Feist
L. E. Modesitt Terry Pratchett Douglas Adams Timothy Zahn |
Stephen King
Orson Scott Card Terry Brooks David Webber Tom Clancy Jules Verne-The first master of Sci-Fi With many, many honorable mentions. Reading is one of the greatest abilities that man has and live would be much duller without it. |
Dean Koontz
Stephen King Clive Barker Richard Matheson James Hilton - only for Lost Horizon |
Vladimir Nabokov (Pale Fire, The Gift, Despair)
Gunter Grass (The Tin Drum) Alexandr Solzhenitsyn!! (Gulag Archipelago) Ian Kershaw (Hitler: Hubris & Hitler: Nemesis) Edvard Radzinsky (the immensly entertaining Rasputin File, The Last Tsar) John Dower (Embracing Defeat) Dmitri Volkogonov (Stalin, Lenin) Leo Tolstoy (The Death of Ivan Ilyich) Chretien de Troyes (Cliges) DH Lawrence (Sons & Lovers, The Rainbow) |
Nabokov
Hawthorne Kundera Poe (but it's been a loooong time since I read him, but I still remember the hairs on the back of my neck standing up when I read "Ligeia") and Joyce |
Stephen King
Richard Laymon Robert McCammon John Sandford Anne Tyler |
Robert Penn Warren
Ernest Hemingway Norman Mailer T.C. Boyle Yukio Mishima |
Fyodor Dostoevsky(Brothers Karamazov, C&P, The Idiot)
Herman Hesse(Siddhartha, Steppenwolf, The Glass Bead Game) C.S. Lewis(Till We Have Faces, Screwtape Letters, various) J.D. Salinger(Franny and Zooey, Raise High the Roof Beam Carpenters, Catcher in the Rye) Neil Postman (Technopoly, Amusing Ourselves to Death, The End of Education) |
<b>William Faulker</b> - The Sound and the Fury brought me in to his trance...As I Lay Dying, Absalom, Absalom! and his short stories including the spectacular "Two Soldiers" had me becoming a part of his "cult."
<b>J.D. Salinger</b> - The Catcher in the Rye and Nine Stories alone make him this great. <b>George Orwell</b> - 1984. Can we all say...Wow?! Animal Farm. Can we all say...Woah?! <b>Hunter S. Thompson</b> - Trip. I like to trip. And this man's book make me trip three times over. His autobiographical writings are always great and fun to re-read. <b>Stephen King</b> - King has the trance that Faulkner has on me, but in a completely different manner. His books are no where as great pieces as Faulkner's, but his style for horror is always great. Even his suspense writings, including Apt Pupil are great. |
Authors:
1. Fyodor Dostoevsky (Notes from Underground) 2. Raymond E. Feist, (Fairy Tale, Magician) 3. Almost any translation of Beowulf, Seamus Heaney's is my favorite 4. John Steinbeck (Tortilla Flats, Of Mice and Men) 5. George Orwell (1984, Animal Farm) Sorry, I don't think of poets as authors but I love these guys... Poets: 1. William Blake (A Poison Tree, The Garden of Love, and anything else) 2. Alfred, Lord Tennyson (The Lady of Shalott, The Lotos-Eaters) 3. William Woordsworth (Ode, Resolution And Independence) 4. Edwin Arlington Robinson (Miniver Cheevy) 5. Samuel Taylor Coleridge (The Rime of the Ancient Mariner) ...you said no screen-plays. what about playwrites?... 1. George Bernard Shaw (St. Joan, Man and Superman) 2. Shakespeare (Life and Death of King Richard III, Titus Andronicus) 3. Aeschylus (Prometheus Bound) 4. Aristophanes (The Birds) 5. Harold Pinter (The Birthday Party) There you have it a mish mash of everything. I might have taken liberty with the rules, but everyone above deserves some recognition. |
John Collier
Lois McMaster Bujold Philip K Dick Orson Scott Card Octavia Butler Harlan Ellison Clive Barker Connie Willis Jane Austen I'm sure I missed more than a few of my favorites, but these were the ones that immediately came to mind. Next author I want to check out is Avram Davidson since I like John Collier so much and people compare the two a lot (it's a bonus that Davidson still has books in print--I had to hunt down an OOP copy of The Best of John Collier after reading some of his stories in anthologies.) |
[off-topic]
<small>
Originally posted by tasha88 .... it's a bonus that Davidson still has books in print .... From what I read he died in poverty <A HREF="http://www.avramdavidson.org/thoughts.htm" target="_blank"><IMG SRC="http://www.dvdtalk.com/forum/images/smilies/frown.gif" border=0 ALT="Davidson sad"></a> |
John Steinbeck-East of Eden
Stephen King Ken Follett-The Pillars of the Earth Dean Koontz (poets) Kahlil Gibran-The Prophet Samuel Tayor Coleridge-The Rime of the Ancient Mariner- It was so awesome to have two of my English teachers reading this and playing Iron Maiden's song of the same name during class. I felt so cool being one of the only people who already knew it word for word. Metal baby, yeah! |
Thanks for the links, Benedict. I'm sorry to see any author die broke, which is why I pretty much boycott my library. (Well, that and I always end up with huge fines anyway, so I might as well buy books.) :(
tasha |
Roger Zelazny
Ernest Hemingway DH Lawrence I'm not sure whom to pick for my last two spots...I could pick William Gibson, but only his early works Neuromancer and Burning Chrome do anything for me. I could list Stanislaw Lem but I've only read ~3 of his books. I'll have to think about it. |
in no particular order:
Tom Clancy Robert Ludlum Elmore Leonard J.R.R. Tolkien Clive Cussler also like (fiction and nonfiction): Michel Foucault, Claudia Koonz, Carl Hiaasen, E.B. Sledge, Jack Higgins, Stephen Ambrose, Michael Crichton, John Grisham and George L. Mosse |
No particular order:
Arthur Clarke Robert Heinlein Mark Twain Isaac Asimov Charles Dickens Tom Clancy Hard enough getting the list this short. |
Literature:
F Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway Vladimir Nabokov Thomas Hardy Fyodor Dostoyevsky Fun: Jim Thompson James M Cain JRR Tolkein Would also agree strongly with Poe and Sir A C Doyle as excellent short reads. |
Stephen King
Larry McMurtry Win Blevins Elmore Leonard John Grisham |
Robert Jordan
Tolkien J.K. Rowling |
1. Flannery O'Connor
2. Faulkner 3. Fitzgerald 4. Chabon 5. Heller |
although i don't tend to read multiple books by individual authors (i've been in college since i've taken up pleasure reading again i haven't had the time to read as much as i'd like so i have to mix it up) but the authors i've gone back to numerous times are:
john irving (actually, 'prayer for owen meaney' stirred my interest in books again) j.k. rowling (while a terrific writer of children's books, she also brings back fond memories of my dad reading the Narnia series to me) david sedaris (hysterical short stories) also i was blown away by the writing style of 'memoirs of a geisha' so i'll probably read anything arthur golden comes out with next (if he'd just hurry up!) |
Fyodor Dostoevsky
Herman Hesse C.S. Lewis J.D. Salinger I'm still thinking about the fifth...lots of contenders, right now I'd say Graham Greene. |
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Originally posted by Darren Garrison I'd like to add in people such as Vernor Vinge... They wrote a short story together back in 1971 or so called "Just Peace." It was originally published in Analog magazine. It's been reprinted in collections of Vernor's short stories a couple of times since then. IT's a VERY entertaining story. My dad and I are planning to write a sequel to it sometime. Hell, it might even get published - stranger things have happened. ;) |
Dave Barry
Steven Lawhead Frank Peretti John Grisham Sue Grafton |
Top 3
Tom Robbins Gabriel Garcia Marquez Nikos Kazantzakis Others Richard Russo, Michael Chabon, Russell Banks, Nick Hornby |
1) William Shakespeare
2) Stephen King 3) C.S. Lewis 4) Robert Jordan 5) R.A. Salvatore |
The top 5
1) Pat Conroy- Powerful, manly, fiction that just rings true with me. Maybe its because we're both southern, basketball-loving, romantic, wisecrackers. My only complaints are a) His slow output and b) The nightmare that is Beach Music.
2) John Irving- The World According to Garp and A Prayer for Owen Meany are my favorite NCN's (non-Conroy Novels) . 3)Walter Mosley-I've been hooked on Easy Rawlins ever since I saw Devil in a Blue Dress. Love the 50's/60's LA settings. 4) Elmore Leonard- The dialog king. 5)Michael Chabon- I've only read a few, but I've enjoyed them all emensely. Kavalier and Clay is one of the few novel I've read that deserved the hype it received from the print media. |
For those fans of Hesse, where do you rate "The Glass Bead Game" -- ie. "Magister Ludi"?
I consider it the best I've read -- out of two -- I think it far surpasses Siddhartha, but I haven't read Steppenwolf yet. ML is definitely Nobel caliber IMO, but what do you think about it -- think I need to read it again, its been too long. Tuan Jim |
In no real order...
Neil Gaiman - I've never read anything less than excellent from him James Morrow - Here is a writer that loves words. Vowels, sentances nouns and verbs-his sentances seem crafted. Chuck Palahnuik - The only writer that I've read who can channel energy though every sentance that he writes. No other writer makes it that easy to sit down and read the whole book at a time. Stephen Donaldson - He taught me that the hero isn't always the good guy and that every story won't have a happy ending. As good with emotion as Gaiman, but where Neil will smile sweetly (but kinda sad too) throughout-Stephen just wears a scowl. Phillip Pullman - Why the hell couldn't I have grown up reading children's books like this. Honorable mentions... Umberto Eco - Every one of his books has been great to read, made me think, though a bit dense. And every damn time, 2 months later I can remember only a tenth of what the hell happened. Keeps me going back though... Matthew Woodbridge Stover - Every single word that he writes is passion in one form or another. This is the guy who beat you up being crushed by a manure truck. This is the girl of your dreams picking you. This is having the perfect comeback to humiliate that guy that teased you. |
1. Nelson DeMille
2. Tom Clancy 3. Patricia Cornwell 4. Jeff Deaver 5. Tie between James Patterson and Robert K. Tannenbaum |
1) Graham Greene
2) Harlan Ellison 3) John Grisham 4) Bram Stoker 5) Michael Connelly |
- Thornton Wilder
- John Grisham - Faye Kellerman - C.S. Lewis - Edgar Allan Poe |
My favorite recent authors are:
1. Terry Brooks 2. Tad Williams 3. David Eddings 4. Douglas Niles 5. Clive Cussler My five favorite old style (mostly germanic) authors are: 1. Franz Kafka 2. Thomas Mann 3. Gotthold Ephraim Lessing 4. Franz Kafka...or did I already mention that? 5. An amalgam of Dickens, Hemingway, and Twain (I recommend you read Twain's essay on the German language...it is too true..) |
-J.D. Salinger (Gave my son the middle name Salinger)
-Ernest Hemingway -John Steinbeck -James Joyce -Thomas Hardy |
Ayn Rand
Frank Herbert Ian Fleming Stephen King Donna Tartt |
No order:
Edgar Allen Poe John Grisham Stephen King Michael Crichton James Patterson Ironic, the last 3 just published new novels and I haven't read any of them yet! (then again Patterson releases one every 2 months). I am eagerly awaiting King's conclusion of the Dark Tower series next year. |
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