Having said that, I really enjoy Mary Renault's historical fiction. I also like Gregory MacGuire, Tom Wolfe, and Robert Harris (at least his book Imperium.) Also Barbara Kingsolver, Lloyd Alexander, Tolkien, Dick Francis, Jane Austen, Steven Pressfield, David Brin, Dan Simmons, John Irving... and so the list begins. It doesn't really end.
Favorite writer[s]: George R. R. Martin, David Gemmell, Robert A. Heinlein, OSC, Kevin J. Anderson, Frank Herbert, Steve Perry, Mario Puzo, Robert R. McCammon, Tolkien, Bernard Cornwell, Brian Lumley, and Robin Hobb.
Book: Ender's Shadow, by OSC.
Author: Ray Bradbury.
"Atonement" by Ian McEwan is my number one book & author.
My other favorites are the Alvin Maker series by OSC (so good), anything by Paulo Coelho or Kurt Vonnegut and "The Woman in White" by Wilke Collins... and my guilty pleasure... James Patterson supermarket paperbacks.
I've never read anything by Heinlein but I've seen the name so many times on this site that I think I will.
Recently I've been tearing through the historical fiction genre and am really enjoying it.
Favorite Book: still "The Wind in the Willows," Kenneth Grahame. First Runner-Up: "The Lord of the Rings," J. R. R. Tolkien.
Second Runner-Up (and Favorite in Non-Fiction): "The Coming Fury," Bruce Catton.
Favorite Writer (SF or Fantasy): Robert A. Heinlein. Runners-Up: Isaac Asimov, Leigh Brackett, L. Sprague de Camp, Lester Del Rey, H. P. Lovecraft, H. Beam Piper, Frederik Pohl, Eric Frank Russell, and Thomas Burnett Swann.
Favorite Heinlein Book: "Space Cadet." Runners-Up: "Red Planet," "Time for the Stars," "The Door Into Summer," and "Double Star." (The competition is very stiff here.)
My all time favorite fantasy other than LotR: Deed of Paskenarrion by Moon.
Favorite fantasy of books I've read recently: Godslayer and Banewreacker by Carey.
Favorite Science fiction: Remnant Population also by Moon.
Since Elizabeth Moon wrote two of my favorite books, I suppose she is probably my favorite author.
Other favorite books not necessarily spec fiction: Pride and Prejudice, Count of Monte Cristo, Vanity Fair, The Dubliners, 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, Invisible Man, Fahrenheit 451, Slaughterhouse Five... Well, those are the ones I can think of right off-hand.
[This message has been edited by JeanneT (edited December 30, 2007).]
Favorite authors - CS Lewis, Tolkien, J Steinbeck, M Twain
Favorite books (SF&F) - LotR, Narnia, CS Lewis Space Trilogy, Fahrenheit 451
Favorite books (all other) - The Day of the Jackal (Forsyth),The Stand (King), To Kill a Mockingbird, The Great Gatsby, and I've also enjoyed several NF books.
Favorite book written (fairly) recently: The "Hitman" books by Lawrence Block. Okay, that's 3 books, but they're all pretty equal. Very fun books.
The Lute Player - Norah Lofts
Frankenstein - Mary Shelley
Tess of the D'Ubervilles - Thomas Hardy
Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden
Quicksilver - Neal Stephenson
Chronicles of Tao - Ming-Dao Deng
Perdido Street Station - China Miéville
The Scar - China Miéville
Shibumi - Trevanian
Shogun - James Clavell
Cry to Heaven - Anne Rice
The Persian Boy - Mary Renault
Pat
[This message has been edited by TaleSpinner (edited January 01, 2008).]
Yeah, I noticed something similar in my list too. I do read younger writers (e.g. "Carter beats the Devil" by Glen David Gold and "Devil in the White City" by Erik Larson) but compared to the others they're not favourites. These two seem to be one-offs and other younger writers I read seem to be either inconsistent in quality, or turning out more of the same.
Pat
My non-fiction tastes also shifted away from the sciences in favor of history and (more recently) political writing. I suppose reading about science could be associated with interest in science fiction---if I shifted away from science fiction, I might naturally shift away from science with it.
Of course, I'm still trying to fill the occasional hole in my fiction collection. I believe, of the published novels of Thomas Burnett Swann, I'm lacking only one to complete my collection. (Of course, I buy to read, not to collect.) Of the one living writer on my list, Frederik Pohl, I would also probably pick up a newer work of his---but would also try to grab some older work, too.
Funny. I have many favorites among living authors. Science Fiction was too much boys playing with shiny toys (I strongly disike Dune) in the old days to attract me and before LotR although fantasy existed it was pretty limited. I love a lot of what is being done now.
I think the first Science Fiction I read that I actually liked was Before the Change, a short story that won the Nebula a few decades ago. Later I delved somewhat into Science Fiction and found a few pieces I like.
And I left off some classic favorites. I left off Jane Austen whose writing I truly love and have read and re-read many times, for example. I left off To Kill a Mockingbird and The Heart is a Lonely Hunter as well.
[This message has been edited by JeanneT (edited January 02, 2008).]
Typically marketed to Adults:
1 The Dune Chronicles, Frank Herbert
2 Deathbird Stories, Harlan Ellison
3 The Glass Bead Game, Herman Hesse
4 Angry Candy, Harlan Ellison
5 Anthem, Ayn Rand
6 Siddhartha, Herman Hesse
7 Slaughterhouse-Five, Kurt Vonnegut
8 Lord of the Flies, William Golding
9 The Handmaids Tale, Margaret Atwood
10 Brave New World, Aldous Huxley
11 The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkein
12 The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck
13 Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury
14 A Canticle for Leibowitz, Walter Miller
15 A Day No Pigs Would Die, Robert Newton Peck
16 A Separate Peace, John Knowles
17 A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
18 The Chronicles of Amber, Roger Zelazny
19 Animal Farm, George Orwell
20 Flowers for Algernon, Daniel Keyes
Typically marketed to Children / Young Adult:
1 The Chronicles of Prydain, Lloyd Alexander
2 Bridge to Terebithia, Catherine Patterson
3 Where the Red Fern Grows, Wilson Rawls
4 The Chronicles of Narnia, C. S. Lewis
5 The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Elizabeth George Speare
6 Summer of the Monkeys, Wilson Rawls
7 Watership Down, Richard Adams
8 House Without a Christmas Tree, Gail Rock
9 The Little House series, Laura Ingalls Wilder
10 The Dark is Rising series, Susan Cooper
11 Harry Potter series, J.K. Rowling
12 Secret of the Andes, Ann Nolan Clark
13 Journey Outside, Mary Q. Steele
14 Wrinkle in Time series, Madeline L'Engel
15 I am the Cheese, Robert Cormier
[This message has been edited by Igwiz (edited January 02, 2008).]
Ender's Game, OSC
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, Heinlein
Foundation Series, Asimov
Wrinkle in Time (and most of her other works), L'engle
Harry Potters, Rowling
The Princess Bride, Good(being lazy and not looking on the shelf, I think it's goodman? Goodwin? Goldsomething?)
So - yeah, sorry to not follow directions.
Now maybe that makes me a bad person--but I confess.
I enjoyed "Earthsea" when I was quite a lot younger, not sure how I'd feel about it now. "Decision at Doona" was memorable because it was one of the first SF stories I read that focused more on people than machines--but I gave up with "The Left Hand of Darkness" which was well-written but lost me. (Some say I'm easily lost and others say I should be.)
Pat
If I had a gun to my head I'd say Catcher in the Rye. Mostly because I'd assume that if I had a gun to my head I'd be like a spy or something and that's a recurring thing in quite a few spy stories.
I've found Le Guin less readable the further she moved away from SF and towards the New York Literary Establishment. At least the ideas are startlingly original...it's just they're encased in writing I find impenetrable.
quote:
"Decision at Doona" was Anne McCaffrey, not Ursula K. Le Guin...
Oops. Thanks for the correction.
Pat
Other than that...Andre Norton when I was young and she was younger, too. Her books from the 50s and 60s. Arthur C Clarke for short stories. You know, looking back, I never did enjoy his novels as much as his short fiction.
For general fiction -- Robert B Parker, Martin Cruz Smith, Iain Pears, Michael Pearce, Daniel Silva, Janet Evanovich, Rowling, Thomas Burnett Swann....
individual books? Moghul Buffet -- Bernard, Fire From Heaven -- Renault, The Fist of God -- Forsythe, Too Many Magicians -- Garrett. The Minotaur Trilogy -- Swann, Dark Angels -- Koen, The Other Boleyn Girl -- Gregory, The Secret of the Amulet -- Nesbit...I could go on for a long time on this line.
JeanneT, I started reading A Wizard of Earthsea and had read all I cared to by page 45.
Also, wetwilly, I quite liked Catcher in the Rye. To me, it was the first story where I disilked the MC in the beginning of the book, but genuinely cared for him by the end. I felt as if Holden opened up to me the more I read. By the end he was so vunerable. It was a very powerful thing for me.
That's not to say it's on my list of favorites, though.
Thanks!
I love Asimov's novels (even the later ones which are fluffed out a lot, but that's just me), as well as some of his short stories: the best single story collection is Nine Tomorrows. His best single novel, in my opinion, is the rarely mentioned The End of Eternity. I'd say it's the best, most complex time travel story ever written.
Definitely non-genre here, but my favorite kid's author is Louis Sachar. I tell you, this guy's hilarious. Holes is good--maybe his best--but it's not quite typical, either. It's a bit darker and reaches a bit deeper than most. You can see that tendency in his other books, but to a lesser extent. Favorite novels: Sixth Grade Secrets and Someday Angeline (as well as any of the Marvin Redpost early reader books: but start with the first--Marvin Redpost: Kidnapped at birth?). Give these books a chance! If you don't like them, at least you won't have wasted much time, as they're all pretty short (and Marvin Redpost you can read in an hour).
Arthur C. Clarke: A number of wonderful short stories. But I agree with arriki that his novels aren't as good. He doesn't know how to plot a novel. They all read somewhat like travelogues. That's why my favorite novel of his--without question--is Rendezvous with Rama. It is a travelogue, but a really, really interesting one. I absolutely loathed the sequels written with Gentry Lee, however.
OSC is probably, overall, my favorite single writer.
Roger Zelazny is also wonderful. He tends to lack resolution, so when I finish something by him I'm afraid I usually have this little sense of disappointment--but the journey getting there is usually so good that I forgive him. And his use of language is wonderful.
I'll think about this. Possibly more later.
[This message has been edited by rickfisher (edited January 14, 2008).]
I think it's true that certain books call to you at certain times in your life, and reading The Last Unicorn as an adult resonated with me. That feeling of lost innocence and childhood, a longing for magic and wonder to still exist in the world.
Favorite Author: Ray Bradbury
He writes like I wish I could, I still think he's one of the cloesest things to Shakesphere we have in the modern world. Some of the images he's painted still stand with me after years of reading them.
Other Favorites
Guilty Pleasure: Terry Brooks
I've heard this man refured to as "the poor man's Tolkien", but I can't help but love him. While it's true his story or world or univerese, isn't as deep and encompassing as Tokien's stories, the way he writes is more to the point, and strait to the fun. I love the grand adventures, the fast paced rollar coaster with strange and amazing characters and epic situations, showdowns, and battles.
Favorite Fiction Writer: Chuck Palahniuk
Some of his stuff is borderline Sci-Fi/Fantasy, like Lullaby. Best known for Fight Club which they made the Brad Pitt, Edward Norton movie from, the story is almost exactly the same. His books lead you down a wild ride of strange modern day facts mixed with some of the oddest journies into the strange world of every day life. There's no way to discribe Chuck's Books other than to say, be prepared to have your reality altered. I'm not kidding.
In total awe of: Neil Gaimon
The guy went from writing amazing graphic novels like 'The Sandman' Vertigo comics series and began to write some serious and wonderful Fantasy novels. Every one of Neil's books takes place somewhere you would just LOVE to live, his worlds are magical, deep, intense and yet leave you feeling happier to have visited there.
Others:
I also love the classices of Sci-Fi and Fantasy. Authors include, Orson Scott Card (of course), Tolkein, Assimov, Heinlein (who taught me to be a careful observer of my world and not to take anything at all for granted, a gift I would never be the same with out), Steven King ( The Talisman, Black House, The Dark Tower series), Micheal Cricton, Dan Simmons, and Douglas Adams.
I think I could go on for a great deal longer but those are some of the bigger ones I enjoy.
Stephen R. Donaldson - All of the Thomas Covenant Books
Terry Brooks - All
Robert Jordan - Wheel of Time
Ursala K. LaGuin - Earthsea Trilogy
Christopher Paolini - The Eldest is the better book
J.K. Rowling - Harry Potter
C.S. Lewis - The Chronicles
J.R.R Tolkien - Trilogy and Hobbit
Robin Hobb - The stories are good, but the trash novel love scenes are a bit much
I am probably leaving some out.
I guess you could say that I am a mainstream reader. I do not know if that is a good or bad thing?
quote:
Christopher Paolini - The Eldest is the better book
<shudder>
Please...women and children visit this site...
OSC - the Shadow series.
Arthur C. Clarke - The Rama series
Terry Brooks - Elfstones of Shannara (mostly for the relationships)
Toliken - The Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit
Ben Bova - Voyagers series.
[This message has been edited by jayh (edited February 08, 2008).]
Favorite Book: Tossup between "Anthem" by Ayn Rand and "The Great Divorce" by CS Lewis.
Favorite Author: I think I still have to go with Terry Brooks, though I haven't read any of his newer stuff in about 10 years (I need to catch up).
Other fave books:
Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand
Original Shanara Series - Terry Brooks
Magician - Raymond Feist
Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkein
Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
Stranger in a Strange Land - Robert Heinlein
1984 - George Orwell
Night - Elie Wiesel
Star Rover, Sea Wolf - Jack London
Elric, Corum (Eternal Champion) books - Michael Moorcock
Other favorite authors:
Pretty much all of those in my list there.
[This message has been edited by kingtermite (edited February 17, 2008).]
StarBeast- Robert Heinlien
Foundations of Paradise- Authur C. Clarke
Anthem- Ayn Rand
Dragonflight- Anne McCaffrey
Ender's Game- OSC
Dragonlance series(Chronicles)- Margaret Weiss and Tracy Hickman
Seventh Son- OSC
Valis- Philip K. Dick
The Merchants War- Fredrick Pohl
Moving Mars- Greg Bear
Just to name a few.
Some others include (in no particular order):
The entire Ender's Series- OSC
Enchantment- OSC
The Chronicles of Narnia- C.S. Lewis
Lord of the Rings- J.R.R. Tolkien
The Rama Series- Arthur C. Clarke
Jurassic Park and The Lost World- Michael Crichton
Eragon and Eldest- Christopher Paolini
The Celestine Prophecy- James Redfield
I am also currently reading Otherland: City of Golden Shadow by Tad Williams, which is very good so far.
Favorite work of fiction: The Walking Drum by Louis L'Amour.
Favorite work of speculative fiction: Ender's Game by OSC.
Favorite author: It's a three-way tie between OSC, David Weber, and Louis L'Amour.
Inkwell
------------------
"The difference between a writer and someone who says they want to write is merely the width of a postage stamp."
-Anonymous
[This message has been edited by Inkwell (edited February 29, 2008).]
I am absolutely in love with this guy's storytelling and world building. Very dark and gritty, and not a light read by any stretch of the imagination, but the depth is worth every word.
Top ten "Adult" (or at least "more mature") books:
1. The Count of Monte Cristo (my all time favorite)
2. Anything by Poe (He's my idol)
3. Ender's Game (made me cry for no apparently random reason)
4. Speaker for the Dead
5. The Worthing Saga
6. LotR (also made me cry, when I read it when I was 10)
7. Animal Farm (All animals are equal.....)
8.Frankenstein
9. Watership Down (Good bunny story)
10. Twelfth Night, the Merchant of Venice, and other Shakespere stuffs. (see how sophistacted I am? I like Shaskpere!)
Top ten "kid" books:
1. The Giver
2. Redwall (the entire series)
3. The Horrible Histories books (these teach history...but the author focuses on the weirdest, most voilent and unpleasant parts of history, and he's sarcastic and cynical, which makes it fun to read)
4. the Narnia books (I've loved these since I was six.)
5. the Harry Potter series
6. The Fire Thief Trilogy (by the same author as the Horrible History books...)
7. Calvin and Hobbes.
8. Number the Stars
9. Fruits Baskets (it's manga....and yet weirdly addicting)
10. The Ramona books (I used to LOVE these. I don't really LOVE them anymore, but they're still decent).
I'm interested to see if any of you have read another author who probably ranks second on my list- Ian Irvine - I loved his "View from the mirror" series and I'm still reading "Well of echoes" his eco-thriller "The Last Albatross" is pretty wonderful too. Anyone else ever read any of these?
quote:
Favorite book: Boy's Life by Robert R. McCammon
IB, isn't that some kind of crappy magazine?
I kid, I kid.
(Of course, by your post I know you know the novel I'm refering to also.)
I'm also enjoying the Nightwatch series by Lukyanenko. I love how the forces of good and evil are overburdened by paperwork, regulations, and crafty, ruthless bosses.
Stephen R. Donaldson - Mirror of Her Dreams & A Man Rides Through (Slow build up, but once you hit the 200ish page mark you lost three days of sleep.)
Nathaniel Hawthorne - The Scarlett Letter
Henry David Thoreau - Walden (He is my personal idol, besides poe. I need to get a cabin...)
William Shakespeare - Much Ado About Nothing (Laughs, laughs, and laughs.)
Kurt Vonegut - A Man Without A Country
Tim Obrien - If I Die in a Combat Zone, Box me up and Ship me Home
Also, even though they were mentioned, (OSC, Orwell, Adams, Bradbury, Asimov, Dumas, Ayn Rand, and Rowling).
[This message has been edited by JustInProse (edited April 23, 2008).]
Bradbury is sort of in a class by himself.
Stormrider or Ender's Game are my favorite books from each author