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Lindsay Lohan View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 17:02
Originally posted by sleeper sleeper wrote:

Originally posted by Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Lohan wrote:

I love robbie williams because he is fun to listen to and makes me happy!

So in a sense you could say that robbie williams is better than VDGG forexample!

Now we know your jokeing

My favourit authers (so far) ar Tolkien, Terry Pratchet and Anne McCaffrey

Well VDGG could be both better and worse than Robbie Williams depending on what criterias you where looking for!

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¢¾Old¢¾Hen¢¾ View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 17:52

I hate Jeffery Archer .. He's a Tory knobjockey.

Awww .. it's ok to love Rowling :) she's lovely.

 


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Syzygy View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 17:59

I like crime fiction as well, and in the UK I think that Rankin and Robinson (Canadian expat but his books are set in Yorkshire) are 2 of the best authors in the genre, along with Reginald Hill.

I'm also a big fan of US author Lawrence Block, who is a real master craftsman and switches between hard boiled noir (the Matt Scudder series among others) and tongue in cheek capers (the Burglar series among others). He's also a true master of the short story.

My taste in reading is pretty broad, though - I'm currently reading The Algebraist by Iain M Banks, with a Christopher Brookmyre next on the bedtime reading list.



Edited by Syzygy
'Like so many of you
I've got my doubts about how much to contribute
to the already rich among us...'

Robert Wyatt, Gloria Gloom


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bluetailfly View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 18:10

My favorite author is Herman Melville, though currently I'm reading Robert Penn Warren's "All the King's Men" and am absolutely blown away by how good it is.

"The red polygon's only desire / is to get to the blue triangle."
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¢¾Old¢¾Hen¢¾ View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 18:15
Originally posted by Syzygy Syzygy wrote:

I like crime fiction as well, and in the UK I think that Rankin and Robinson (Canadian expat but his books are set in Yorkshire) are 2 of the best authors in the genre, along with Reginald Hil

Yeah, Peter Robinson's are set in Yorkshire. 

Ian Rankin's set in Edinburgh.

There were two of his novels made into episodes, one was shown a few weeks ago. It's like watching Taggart!

Good to know someone likes Rankin and Robinson :)

x


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The Miracle View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 19:03
  • Tolkien
  • Voynich (She wrote The Gadfly - one of my favorite books ever)
  • Bulgakov (Wrote Master & Margaret, a masterpiece, though I'm not sure if it was translated to English...)


Edited by The Miracle
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 19:19
Yet it has been translated The Miracle, I have a copy on my computer, I'll find the link for you!

http://lib.ru/BULGAKOW/master.txt


Original Russian version.

http://lib.ru/BULGAKOW/master_engl.txt

A 1967 translation.

http://lib.ru/BULGAKOW/master97_engl.txt


I have read that this is the best translation (from 1997), but I guess it's down to opinion.

It could take quite a while, I've yet to read it myself, but I plan too.

I know it's illegal, so shh!

I've just read Franz Kafka's "The Judgement", I love Kafka, he makes you think and I like a book that makes you think.  I love "Metamorphosis" as well (also by Kafka).  A true genius and fits my mood about the world precisely too!


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gdub411 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 19:33

Fantasy/science Fiction....yes I am a geek.

Micheal Moorcock is my fav, although his early books are a bit simplistic in writing style.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 19:41
I have all (except one set) of the R.A. Salvatore Drizzt books to plow through... I like my Fan-Fi too Gdub.

I really wish they'd write more novels based in the Planescape world, it's the best fantasy world ever created in my opinion and Sigil is full of great characters too.  There is room for so much depth.

For anyone who's interested, check this out (and yes, it's legal!):

http://www.deathstar.org/~krlipka/ps/fiction/archive/fired ust.html


Or if you prefer it in PDF format:

http://www.deathstar.org/~krlipka/ps/fiction/archive/firep rint.pdf


A great read if I say so myself.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 19:57

I am a long time Fan/Fi reader and my favourites include: Tolkein, Asimov, McCaffrey, Moorcock, Zelezany, Frank Herbert, Storm Constantine among others.

I am currently reading mystery/thriller books and have really got into Andy McNab (he of Bravo Two Zero fame), Matthew Reilly - a very talented Australian author, and Lee Child - my favourite American crime writer. All the above are highly recommended.  


"Music is the Wine that fills the cup of Silence"
- Robert Fripp


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 10:48
I went through a phase of reading nothing but Thomas Hardy about ten years ago and have never forgotten the wonderful insights he gave me to the unfathomable female mind.  I still don't know how he did that (being a man, that is).  And Jude the Obscure just may be the saddest book ever written with the possible exception of Steinbeck's Grapes of Wrath.
"Literature is well enough, as a time-passer, and for the improvement and general elevation and purification of mankind, but it has no practical value" - Mark Twain
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 11:09
When it comes down to SF Stanislaw Lem is the man (though he doesn't like his books to be refered to as SF, and some of his work indeed doesn't have anything to do with SF, like "Imaginary Magnitude" or "A Perfect Vacuum"; yet they are nevertheless "typically Lem"). I especially love his Ijon Tichy books. And of course "Memoirs Found in a Bathtub". Some of his best books, like for example "Wizja Lokalna" ("Inspection at the Scene of the Crime"), have not been translated into English yet (but the whole Corpus Lem is available in German).

Edited by BaldFriede


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VanderGraafKommandöh View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 14:18
I've been meaning to look into Lem, I guess I'll have to find his books on sale online, I don't I can pick his books up in my local bookstore.

Any ideas where to start off Friede?

Welcome back by the way!
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Vompatti View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 15:25
^I guess Solaris is Lem's best-known book and it's also very good, so maybe you'd like to start with that one.
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BaldFriede View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 16:31
Originally posted by Geck0 Geck0 wrote:

Yet it has been translated The Miracle, I have a copy on my computer, I'll find the link for you!

http://lib.ru/BULGAKOW/master.txt


Original Russian version.

http://lib.ru/BULGAKOW/master_engl.txt

A 1967 translation.

http://lib.ru/BULGAKOW/master97_engl.txt


I have read that this is the best translation (from 1997), but I guess it's down to opinion.

It could take quite a while, I've yet to read it myself, but I plan too.

I know it's illegal, so shh!

I've just read Franz Kafka's "The Judgement", I love Kafka, he makes you think and I like a book that makes you think.  I love "Metamorphosis" as well (also by Kafka).  A true genius and fits my mood about the world precisely too!

The 1967 translation of Bulgakow doesn't have the complete text. The reason for that is that the Russian edition itself was not complete at that time. And it is an excellent book. German composer York Höller made an opera out of it; Jean and I saw it once.


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The Wizard View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 17:06
Originally posted by gdub411 gdub411 wrote:

Fantasy/science Fiction....yes I am a geek.

Micheal Moorcock is my fav, although his early books are a bit simplistic in writing style.

What are his best works?

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¢¾Old¢¾Hen¢¾ View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 17:17

 

 

 

 

haha!!


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BaldFriede View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 17:25
Originally posted by Geck0 Geck0 wrote:

I've been meaning to look into Lem, I guess I'll have to find his books on sale online, I don't I can pick his books up in my local bookstore.

Any ideas where to start off Friede?

Welcome back by the way!

As I said, unfortunately a lot of his books have not been translated into English (but as far as I know they have all been translated into German). A good start is "Memoirs Found in a Bathtub"; really weird and creepy reading.


BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
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bluetailfly View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 17:38
Originally posted by The Wizard The Wizard wrote:

Originally posted by gdub411 gdub411 wrote:

Fantasy/science Fiction....yes I am a geek.

Micheal Moorcock is my fav, although his early books are a bit simplistic in writing style.

What are his best works?

Having read a lot of Michael Moorcock, I recommend the Elric of Melnibone series. That's his best work and best character, imo.

"The red polygon's only desire / is to get to the blue triangle."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 17:54
I prefer the "Dancers at the End of Time" series of Moorcock. The Elric saga was the basis for the Hawkwind albums "Chronicle of the Black Sword" and "Live Chronicles"; "Live Chronicles" features Moorcock as narrator. The "Chronicles" tour was one of the most lavish stage shows of Hawkwind, with swordfights on stage and the likes.


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