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dude
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Topic: literature Posted: May 02 2004 at 08:32 |
THROUGH THE HISTORY OF THE FORUMS SO FAR THERE HAVE BEEN A NUMBER OF DISCUSSOINS ABOUT LITERATURE AND MENTOINS OF BOOKS AUTHORS ETC
WHAT ARE YOUR TOP TEN BOOKS OR SHORT STOREIS OR PEICES OF LITERATURE, IT CAN BE POEMS, SCIENCE FICTION EVEN SOFT CORE PORN COMEDY!!(I LOVE THE CONFESSOINS BOOKS BY TIMOTHY LEE FOR EXAMPLE VERY FUNNY AND AS THE SEREIS WENT ON THE(LIGHT) PORN WAS LESSENED IN FAVOR OF THE COMEDY AND A NUMBER OF MOVEIS WERE MADE!)
GO TO IT
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diddy
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Points: 1117
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Posted: May 02 2004 at 09:43 |
Hmmm...I don't really have a particular order or a 'Top Ten' but I can mention some of my favorites.
Take a look at my signature and you will find a quotation of the author of my favorite book, George Orwell...and I really love 'Nineteen eighty four' read it several times in german and english. I love Science Fiction of that kind (Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World etc.), no Star Trek or similar science fiction.
I also enjoyed some Tom Clancy, Tolkien of course and some 'classical' like Goethe (Faust) or his fellow Schiller. Right now I'm trying to understand Friedrich Nietzsche (Also sprach Zarathustra), but I think I will fail
BTW I don't like Shakespeare, I had to read Romeo and Juliet, but the plot is kind of banal, nice language but simple plot, I don't liked it...
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If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear...
George Orwell
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dude
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Posted: May 02 2004 at 09:50 |
FARENHEIGHT 451 WAS A BRADBURY STORY I NEVER READ(IT WAS FILMED IN THE LATE SIXTEIS WITH OSKAR WERNER IF I REMEMBER CORRECTLY!)
BUT ONE OF HIS SHORT STORYS "FROST AND FIRE" IS ONE OF MY FAVORITE ALL TIME SCI FI STOREIS!!!
DURING THE NIGHT SIM WAS BORN...........AND HE WOULD LIVE JUST 8 DAYS!!
Edited by dude
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Glass-Prison
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Posted: May 02 2004 at 10:45 |
hmm... top ten fiction, what a tough question. I think I will leave out non-fiction, because there are many philosophical works I could include, but it would be tough to compare those with the fiction novels. anyway, here goes...
1. Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand
2. The Iliad & The Odyssey - Homer
3. The Lord Of The Rings - J.R.R. Tolkien
4. 1984 - George Orwell
5. Crime & Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky
6. Ulysses - James Joyce
7. Dracula - Bram Stoker
8. Chronicles of Narnia - C.S. Lewis
9.Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad
10. Animal Farm - George Orwell
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Stormcrow
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Posted: May 02 2004 at 11:44 |
How about 10 favorite authors?
J. R. R. Tolkien
Robert A. Heinlein
Thomas Sowell
Graham Hancock
Gordon R. Dickson
Larry Niven
Robert B. Parker
Jeff Cooper
David Eddings
Roger Zelazny
and "The Stand" and the Dark Tower books are almost enough to put Stephan King in, even though I don't care for a lot of his other work.
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dude
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Posted: May 02 2004 at 11:53 |
LARRY NIVEN, ONE OF THE GRAETS!! ILOVED "RINGWORLD"
HAVE YOU RAED "INCONSTANT MOON " STORMY?
YOU WOULD ALSO KNOW "SOLDEIR ASK NOT" BY GORDEN R DICKSON ONE OF THE DORSAI STORIES(if i remember correctly), I THINK IT WON A NEBULA OR HUGO AWARD IN THE early seventeis
Edited by dude
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Stormcrow
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Posted: May 02 2004 at 12:10 |
dude wrote:
LARRY NIVEN ONE OF THE GRAETS!! ILOVED "RINGWORLD"
HAVE YOU RAED "INCONSTANT MOON " STORMY?
YOU WOULD ALSO KNOW "SOLDEIR ASK NOT" BY GORDEN R DICKSON ONE OF THE DORSAI STORIES, I THINK IT WON A NEBULA OR HUGO AWARD IN THE early seventeis |
I really enjoy Niven's short story "Inconstant Moon" a lot! Given the popularity of SciFi disaster movies, I don't understand why it was never made into a major motion picture. I seem to remember that it was made into a TV show for one of the anthology programs that used to be popular, but that it was of rather pedestrian quality.
Also the short story collection by the same name that includes "Inconstant Moon" is uniformly great.
And yes I know "Soldier Ask Not" very well. All of Dickson's "Childe Cycle" books are brilliant work, IMO. I'm quite sure it won the Hugo award, though I don't remember whether it also won the Nebula.
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Peter
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Posted: May 03 2004 at 00:06 |
Buks are fer eggheadz & nerdz!
My homie Eminem don't read, an hes a moor beter poemer then any off yur old dead writrs! Get reel!
Sined,
Bollockwhiff
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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dude
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Posted: May 03 2004 at 09:54 |
PHILLY STINE!!!!!
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Peter
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Posted: May 03 2004 at 16:49 |
Okay then, Dude, I'll be serious. Some great literature I've enjoyed:
Jane Austen - Mansfield Park
Jane Austen - Emma
Charlotte Bronte - Jane Eyre
Cervantes - Don Quixote
Charles Dickens - David Copperfield his best!
Charles Dickens - Oliver Twist
Charles Dickens - Great Expectations
Charles Dickens - A Tale of Two Cities
Henry Fielding - Tom Jones very funny!
Thomas Hardy - Far From the Madding Crowd tragi-comic!
Anthony Trollope - Barchester Towers
William Makepeace Thakeray - Vanity Fair a sprawling comic masterpiece!
I also enjoy the poetry of Byron -- funny and moving!
I'll leave the fantasy, sci-fi and modern stuff for another post!
Happy reading, proggers!
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: May 03 2004 at 23:29 |
1.- Jorge Luis Borges: The most progressive writter in history, combines elements of reality and fantasy (real-marvellous movement) in such a manner that you believe everything. (Best Book: El Aleph)
2.- Julio Cortazar: Almost like Borges, but his books are more dense. (B.B:Rayuela)
3.- Isaac Asimov: True and intelligent Sci Fi (B.B: Foundation)
4.- Edgard Alan Poe: Tales of Mystery and Imagination scare the sh!t out of me.
5.- Mario Vargas Llosa: Just read The War of the End of the World, an historic fantastic book.
6.- Franz Kafka: The Trial and Metamorphosis are masterpieces.
7.- Ray Bradbury: Farenheit 451 Satire and political, a masterpiece.
8.- Willliam Shakespeare: Hamlet and Macbeth are nasterpieces, can't believe he wrote Romeo & Juliet.
9.- Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra: Don Quixote is a must have. The best book ever written in Spanish.
10.- Steven King: The Shining, Autopsy Room 4, Different Seasons are enough reasons to consider him a genius.
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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Peter
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Posted: May 03 2004 at 23:51 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
1.- Jorge Luis Borges: The most progressive writter in history, combines elements of reality and fantasy (real-marvellous movement) in such a manner that you believe everything. (Best Book: El Aleph)
3.- Isaac Asimov: True and intelligent Sci Fi (B.B: Foundation)
4.- Edgard Alan Poe: Tales of Mystery and Imagination scare the sh!t out of me.
7.- Ray Bradbury: Farenheit 451 Satire and political, a masterpiece.
8.- Willliam Shakespeare: Hamlet and Macbeth are nasterpieces, can't believe he wrote Romeo & Juliet.
9.- Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra: Don Quixote is a must have. The best book ever written in Spanish. |
Great selections, Ivan! I'm due to re-read Quixote soon. I first read it in my early 20s! Fabulous! Every fan of fantasy should read it!
Re ol' "Shakey" (Billy Jigglejavelin?), yes, he did write the immortal "Homeo & Drooliette," but he didn't originate the Italian story/legend on which it was based. R&J is another masterpiece! In varying degrees (& according to individual taste, of course) all of Shake's plays are masterpieces! That's why we still read them. Immortal stuff!
Do you read him in Spanish or English, might I ask?
Thanks, and a belated welcome to the Archives,
Peter
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: May 04 2004 at 00:13 |
Thanks for the welcome Peter, I'm glad to be here.
Do you read him in Spanish or English, might I ask? |
In English, there's no way to read Shakespeare in other language without loosing the rythm and the rhyme.
I went to see Hamlet in our first Theater but it was in Spanish, left after 5 minutes, even when the artists were excelent, it wasn't the same.
Re ol' "Shakey" (Billy Jigglejavelin?), yes, he did write the immortal "Homeo & Drooliette," but he didn't originate the Italian story/legend on which it was based. R&J is another masterpiece! In varying degrees (& according to individual taste, of course) all of Shake's plays are masterpieces! That's why we still read them. Immortal stuff! |
A few years ago I read that Shakespeare had a legion of students, and that some of his less important plays were written mostly by his students, he only changed a few things.
IMHO This could be posible for two reasons:
1.- He has too many works even for him.
2.- Some great painters as Tizziano, Rafael Sanzio, Michaelangello, etc had their Academies (in the greek sense) and many of their paintings had only one or two brushes by them, it's proved some lesser works by those great artists were mostly painted by students that followed their styles.
Don't know if you heard this before? and Do you believe it's posible?
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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Peter
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Posted: May 04 2004 at 00:59 |
'Tis possible, but not likely -- too much unity of style. Shake was a superstar (deservedly) in his own day. I don't think that his ego and artistic integrity would have allowed him to attach his name to works by junior, inferior writers.
Why "too many plays?" That argument holds little water.
Great writers are often very prolific! Do you realize just how many books your fave Asimov wrote? Hundreds! Ever take stock of Dickens' output? (Fourteen -- mostly lengthy -- major novels, plus numerous newpapers, journals, etc!)
How many books and stories has your buddy King written?
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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ayt1
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Joined: May 03 2004
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Posted: May 04 2004 at 02:14 |
10 would be difficult to choose. 5 fits me better.
J.R.R. Tolkien Lord of the rings.
Homer Iliad and Odissey
Bulgakov Master and Margarita
Goethe Faust
Servantes Don Quixote
Many people here talk of Bradbury. The short story The Blue bottle is very fine, to my taste.
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: May 04 2004 at 12:19 |
. I don't think that his ego and artistic integrity would have allowed him to attach his name to works by junior, inferior writers. |
Thats why I mentioned Academy in the greek sense, parts of Socrates works were developed by his students, including Plato who wrote the Dialogs, Michelangello was helped when painting the Sixtine Chappel, Tizziano signed many paintings done 90% by his students, in those years the student's work was considered property and could be signed by the master, because they were considered helpers and trainees. I don't doubt of Shakeys integrity, but in those years morality had a different conception.
But it's only supositions of people who need to write about something in order to eat , the point that Shakeaspeare is to English literature what Cervantes is to Spanish literature, and I love both.
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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Peter
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Posted: May 04 2004 at 13:32 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
. I don't think that his ego and artistic integrity would have allowed him to attach his name to works by junior, inferior writers. |
Thats why I mentioned Academy in the greek sense, parts of Socrates works were developed by his students, including Plato who wrote the Dialogs, Michelangello was helped when painting the Sixtine Chappel, Tizziano signed many paintings done 90% by his students, in those years the student's work was considered property and could be signed by the master, because they were considered helpers and trainees. I don't doubt of Shakeys integrity, but in those years morality had a different conception.
But it's only supositions of people who need to write about something in order to eat , the point that Shakeaspeare is to English literature what Cervantes is to Spanish literature, and I love both.
Iván
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Right on, Ivan the Not-So-Very-Terrible! There seems to be no real way to conclusively prove it one way or another anyway, as in the old "Was Shakespeare gay? Did he pen his sonnets for a man (young actor), a woman, or for an upper-class client's use?"
Interesting topic for discussion, but needs a time machine to resolve.
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"And, has thou slain the Jabberwock? Come to my arms, my beamish boy! O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!' He chortled in his joy.
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Stormcrow
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Posted: May 04 2004 at 13:37 |
Ah Cervantes.
His work rendered in English makes me wish I could read Spanish.
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dude
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Posted: May 07 2004 at 09:03 |
I HAVE NOT READ A GREAT MANY NOVELS(TAKES A LONG TIME FOR ME!!)
TOP TEN(IT COULD CHANGE NEXT WEEK)
1:ROBERT HEINLEN BY HIS BOOTSTRAPS
2:LARRY NIVEN
INCONSTANT MOON
RAMMER
BORDERED IN BLACK
RINGWORLD
IN FACT JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING!!
3 JOE HALDERMAN THE FOREVER WAR(LOTS OF PHYSICS FOR THOSE INTERESTED,THERE HAS BEEN TALK OF TURNING THIS INTO A MOVIE)
WILLIAM HOPE HODGESON
A FEW WORDS:WILLIAM HOPE HODGESON WAS ALATE 19TH EARLY 20TH CENTURY AUTHOR(BORN IN NOVEMBER 1877 HE WAS KILLED IN APRIL 1918 WHILE ATTACKING A GERMAN BUNKER JUST BEFORE THE END OF WWI) HE WROTE SOME OF THE STRANGEST STORIES OF THE SUPERNATURAL EVER IMO HP LOVECRAFT GREATLY ADMIRED HIM!
MANY OF HIS STORIES DEALT WITH THE SEA AND ITS MYSTERIES(HE WAS A SIALOR) AND EVEN THOUGH HE HATED HIS TIME AT SEA IT IS THERE THAT HE DREW INSPIRATION FOR SOME OF HIS STORIES,FOR EXAMPLE THE DERILECT IS ABOUT AN OLD ABANDONED SHIP THAT LITERALY TRIES TO EAT THE MEN WHO EVENTUALY FIND HER!
THERE WERE NO ELDER GODS OR ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS IN HIS STOREIS BUT MANY STORIES DEALT WITH "OUTSIDE FORCES" OF A HORRIFIC NATURE SOME OF HIS WORK HAS EVEN BEEN DESCRIBED AS PROTO SF AS TO HIS USE OF EQUIPMENT TO EITHER ATTRACT OR REPEL THESE FORCES
HIS "CIRCLE DEFENCE" WHICH CONSISTED OF A NUMBER OF COULERED ELECTRIC CIRCLES(LIKE FLOUROS) WHICH USED IN COMBINATIONS COULD ATTRACT OR REPEL FORCES HAS APPEARED IN THE WORKS OF OTHER AUTHORS WHO WERE INFLUENCED BY HIM EG DENNIS WHEATLEY ETC THIS DEFENCE FIRST APPEARED IN THE STORY THE HOG ABOUT AN EXPERIMENT THAT GOES HORRIBLY WRONG AND ALMOST UNLEASHES THIS FORCE ON THE WORLD
THE HOG IS PART OF A GROUP AF STORIES ABOUT A SUPERNTURAL INVESTIGATOR CALLED "CARNECKI" SOME OF HIS INVESTIGATIONS TURN OUT TO BE HOAXES BUT THE REST!!!..........LETS JUST SAY YOU HAVE TO READ THEM FOR YOURSELF(AFTER READING THE WHISTLING ROOM YOU WILL NEVER LOOK AT LIPS THE SAME WAY AGAIN!!!)
THE HOUSE ON THE BORDERLAND IS ABOUT A VERY STRANGE HOUSE AND WHAT HAPPENED TO ITS INHABITANTS,I DONT KNOW WHAT HODGESON WAS ON WHEN HE WROTE THIS BUT IT IS VERY HALLUCINATORY AND QUITE BRILLIANT IN ITS WAY!!
HIS LONGEST WORK IS THE NIGHTLAND SET MIILLIONS OF YEARS FROM NOW AS A GROUP OF HUMANS TRY TO SURVIVE IN A BUILDING CALLED "THE LAST REDOUBT" ONE MAN FINDS OUT THAT ANOTHER GROUP OF HUMANS EXISTS AND SETS OUT TO FIND THEM.HE SETS OUT INTO A TRULY NIGHTMARISH WORLD FULL OF STRANGE CREATURES AND UNSEEN BUT FELT FORCES.
I USE THE WORDS "FORCES" ALOT BECAUSE THIS IS WHAT MANY OF HIS STORIES DEAL WITH ,SOMETHING UNSEEN,JUST BEYOND THE ABILITY OF HUMAN SENSES TO DETECT CLEARLY BUT SOMETHING GHASTLY AND NIGHTMARISH THAT MANIFESTS ITSELF WHEN THE RIGHT SET OF CONDITIONS IS ENCOUNTERED
BECAUSE HIS STORIES WERE WRITTEN SO LONG AGO THERE IS I VICTORIAN FEEL TO HIS PROSE IN FACT THE NIGHTLAND WAS WRITTEN IN A SEVETEENTH CENTURY STYLE AND HAD TO BE REEDITED IN MODERN ENGLISH FOR REPRINTING
AS I HAVE INDICATED HIS STORIES ARE GENERALLY NOT ABOUT "GHOSTS" AS SUCH(ALTHOUGH THEY DO APPEAR!) BUT THEY ARE MORE ABOUT SOMETHING LARGER, SOMETHING MONSTEROUS, AN ALL ENCOMPASSING ENTITY JUST OUT IN SPACE THAT NURTURES WHAT WE HUMANS WOULD CALL SUPERNATURAL PHENOMENA AND MANIFESTS ITSELF THROUGH THESE PHENOMENA WITHOUT ACTUALLY UNLEASHING ITSELF FULLY(ALTHOUGH IT TREIS!)
IF YOU HAVE READ HIS STOREIS THEN I HOPE MY WORDS HAVE DONE HIM JUSTICE IF NOT...DO YOURSELF A FAVOR!!
BY THE WAY I HAVE LENT MANY OF MY HODGESON BOOKS AND THEY HAVE DISSAPEARED WITH LAME EXSCUSES LIKE "I LOST IT" (WHICH IS A PITY BECAUSE THE NIGHTLAND IS OUT OF PRINT I BELIEVE) MOST OF MY FREINDS WHO HAVE READ HODGESON LOVE HIS WORK AS DO I
IF YOU CAN FIND HIS STOREIS DONT HESITATE TO READ THEM THEY ARE AN............EXPERIENCE!!! AND I HOPE YOU LIKE THEM
5 WILLIAM HOPE HODGESON
CARNACKI THE GHOST FINDER:THE NIGHTLAND:THE HOUSE ON THE BORDERLAND:BOATS OF THE GLEN CARRIG:CAPTAIN GAULT
I THINK THAT WILL DO FOR NOW
by the way i beleive at least one of hodgesons stories became or was used as the basis for an episode of a tv sci fi horror sereis but i have no information to back this up can anyone help?
"the night land is a tale of the remote future billions of years after the death of the sun it ,is one of the most potent tales of the macabre ever written":H P LOVECRAFT
Edited by dude
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Jim Garten
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Posted: May 07 2004 at 11:39 |
I have to admit that I've neglected to join in this thread in the past owing to the heavyweight books being discussed - although I am a great reader, I'm afraid my choice of authors seems very low brow by comparison, but here goes:
In addition to the obvious JRR Tolkein (which, I believe is required reading, by law, for all prog-holes), my bookshelves contain the following, among many others.....
Stephen King
Clive Barker
Dean Koontz
Muriel Gray
Whilst many people poo-poo the whole horror/thriller genre of popular fiction, the above writers are definitely in the higher echelons of quality writing; Clive Barker in particular, is, in my opinion, one of the finest writers around at the moment in any genre (not the most prolific, admittedly, but each book well worth the wait)
Stephen Donaldson
Sci Fi/Fantasy - again, a very fine writer (try his 'Gap' series - re-tells Wagner's 'Ring Cycle' as a S/F epic)
Anthony Bevoir
History writer whose books relating the battles for Stalingrad & Berlin in WWII are essential reading
Terry Pratchett
If you like parodies of fantasy literature, this is the author for you; he has created his own Discworld, in which he plays out hysterical parodies of just about every fantasy cliche you could imagine. However, his books stand on their own as well written humour, you do not have to know the original books to appreciate the satire.
And, I'm afraid I have to say - and this will probably bring howls of derision...........
I'm a huge fan of Harry Potter! There! I've said it - I'm not going to explain any further, as so much has been said in the past, pro and con.
So - there you are.......
All pretty low brow, for which I apologise, but I have to say, the 'classics' tend to leave me pretty cold - I dont know why, I've just never been able to get into them, and I've tried them all - Dickens , Hardy , Cervantes , Bronte .
Oh, God - I'm so shallow......... I'm bound to be chucked off the site now!!!!
Edited by Jim Garten
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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