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Books & Reading
Comments
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A shout out for Thomas Hardy.
Far from the Maddening Crowd
Tess of the D’urbervilles
Jude the Obscure.A brilliant English teacher introduced me to them when I was a pain in the arse kid.2 -
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Great ongoing thread here on Lifer's current reading and book recommendations...
https://forum.charltonlife.com/discussion/comment/5645991#Comment_5645991?utm_source=community-search&utm_medium=organic-search&utm_term=reading0 -
stoneroses19 said:Favourite novel either The Drifters by James A Michener or Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami. Both powerful reads.While I've read a lot of novels over the years, I mostly read non-fiction, travelogues, history books.
One of the best authors who writes fiction and non-fiction books is Geoff Dyer. A very funny writer.1 -
Favourite writers:
Samuel Beckett
Virginia Woolf
Anne Tyler
Elizabeth Strout
Claire Keegan
Jonathan Coe
Kurt Vonnegut
Charles Bukowski
Henry Green
Jean Rhys0 -
CAFCBourne said:Just finished Mark Billingham's Detective Miller 2 parter that I enjoyed so I may venture onto DCI Tom Thorne books.
Currently reading the Sunrise by Victoria Hislop which I'm enjoying.
The disappearance of Stephanie Mailer by Joel Dicker was a good read too.
Only started getting into reading in the last couple of years and now one of my favourite pass times.1 -
CafcWest said:Greenhithe said:Favourite book Skinny Legs n All by Tom Robins.Favourite author John Niven by a mile. I’ve got every book and love every one of them. Especially The Second Coming.Honourable mentions to
the outsider by Camus
jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach
slaughterhouse five by Vonnegut.I also love Jitterbug Perfume. Even started having hot baths and trying breathing exercises it affected me that much 😂. I gave up on Still life and even cowgirls get the blues for some reason. I may revisit them. Great author.1 -
Frankie_de_Toro said:My favourite author is John Wyndham. My favourite novel is Lucky Jim by Kingsley Amis. Still makes me laugh out loud 45 years after I first read it.Agree about Lucky Jim. I re-read it every few years and it still makes me laugh.
In terms of non fiction reading “ The first day on the Somme” by Martin Middlebrook which I first read in 1971 and led to my obsession with WW1 including well over 100 visits to the Western Front.
The other stand out book is “ A savage war of peace “ by Alistair Horne about the Algerian war of independence from France in the 50’s and early 60’s. Fascinating and terrifying. It makes one grateful that none of the independence conflicts that the British were involved in came anywhere near the horror involved there.
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If you like spy stories, and can handle a 9 book series, Game, Set and Match by Len Deighton is one I keep returning to.
My all time favourite is PG Woodhouse and Thank You Jeeves.0 -
I read a lot ,but my 2 favourite books are,,As the crow flies,Jeffrey Archer,and Pillars of the Earth(and subsequent follow ups) KenFollet.
I use my local library ,always finding authors I have not read before,Recently,Helen Fields and Ruth Ware,great reads.0 - Sponsored links:
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I've set myself the task of (trying) to read through most of 2 series, the SF Masterworks collections and the Penguin clothbound series for the more classic literature purely for the covers that are stunning.
But I'm a big sci-fi man so favourites to date have to be:
Hyperion (series) by Dan Simmons - admittedly only read the first two which I believe are a closed story in the Hyperion/ Endymion series.
I'm surprised it hasn't been turned into a TV show yet.
The forever war by Joe Hadleman is a close second.
Philip K Dick as favourite author though (Ubik, Do Androids dream of electric sheep)0 -
I love a great story and Robert Goddard writes great stories.
Lots of his books contain a historical time line where secrets hidden in the past come back to haunt the present. I've recently finished his Inspector Taleb duo and they didn't disappoint.0 -
Two of my favourite books are Memoirs of a geisha by Arthur Golden and The Charm School by Nelson de Mille0
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CL_Phantom said:I've set myself the task of (trying) to read through most of 2 series, the SF Masterworks collections and the Penguin clothbound series for the more classic literature purely for the covers that are stunning.
But I'm a big sci-fi man so favourites to date have to be:
Hyperion (series) by Dan Simmons - admittedly only read the first two which I believe are a closed story in the Hyperion/ Endymion series.
I'm surprised it hasn't been turned into a TV show yet.
The forever war by Joe Hadleman is a close second.
Philip K Dick as favourite author though (Ubik, Do Androids dream of electric sheep)1 -
ForeverAddickted said:Sharpe series by Bernard Cornwell; if I had to pick one it would be Sharpe's Eagle, ironically the one that began the series
Simon Scarrow and Conn Iggulden are honourable mentions for the Historical Fiction genre1 -
ForeverAddickted said:Sharpe series by Bernard Cornwell; if I had to pick one it would be Sharpe's Eagle, ironically the one that began the series
Simon Scarrow and Conn Iggulden are honourable mentions for the Historical Fiction genre1 -
Bonfire of the Vanities may be my favorite novel.
Fave writer is undoubtedly Philip Roth. He could write paragraphs more interesting than entire books.1 -
CJ Box
MW Craven (Poe series)
Michael Connelly (Bosch)
John Irving (esp Prayer for Owen Meaney)
Mick Herron (Slow Horses)
Tom Sharpe
Alexander Dumas
Thomas Hardy (but not Jude)
Patrick Ness
Nick Harkaway0 -
A shout out for A Prayer For Owen Meany, both very funny and moving. I fancied a Spanish author for my recent holiday and can highly recommend The Invisible Guardian by Dolores Redondo, which is a crime story on the surface but with supernatural elements.
I’ve also just discovered World Of Books. Second-hand online book store; doubt I’ll ever buy a brand new book again.2 -
Killarahales said:A shout out for A Prayer For Owen Meany, both very funny and moving. I fancied a Spanish author for my recent holiday and can highly recommend The Invisible Guardian by Dolores Redondo, which is a crime story on the surface but with supernatural elements.
I’ve also just discovered World Of Books. Second-hand online book store; doubt I’ll ever buy a brand new book again.
Spenser novels by Robert B Parker/Ace Atkins combine crime with an element of supernatural.1 - Sponsored links:
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captainbob said:EveshamAddick said:CaptainRobbo said:captainbob said:Favourite author: Charles Dickens
Favourite novel: David Copperfield
'David Copperfield' was Dickens' favourite novel and is largely based on his own childhood and youth. I would recommend this as the second novel to read by him.
After that, I think most readers would pick out 'A Tale of Two Cities' and 'Bleak House' as top of the league.
One mentioned less often is his first novel, 'Pickwick Papers', which is set principally in Kent and is Dickens at his most light-hearted.
If you want to time travel back to Victorian England, the closest you can get to this is to read Dickens and wallow in his detailed, evocative descriptive language.
Conversely, I love Thomas Hardy. The first novel of his I read was Far From The Madding Crowd and I had to constantly re-read passages, so spellbound was I by his writing.
My other favourite authors:
John Wyndham
Isaac Asimov
Ben Elton
Stephen Fry
Stephen King
HG Wells
Dean Koontz
Bit shout out also to The Pillars of The Earth by Ken Follett (as the OP also likes - possibly thanks to his mother in law, who recommendeded it to me anyway). I read that book in February 1998 when I had the worst flu ever. I was bedridden for a week and then knackered for weeks after. That book was a great help. I read an hour, sleep a few hours, then read a bit, and so on. Ken Follett also wrote The Third Twin, a bit of science fiction, which I also liked, and I think is unlike all his other books.
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captainbob said:EveshamAddick said:CaptainRobbo said:captainbob said:Favourite author: Charles Dickens
Favourite novel: David Copperfield
'David Copperfield' was Dickens' favourite novel and is largely based on his own childhood and youth. I would recommend this as the second novel to read by him.
After that, I think most readers would pick out 'A Tale of Two Cities' and 'Bleak House' as top of the league.
One mentioned less often is his first novel, 'Pickwick Papers', which is set principally in Kent and is Dickens at his most light-hearted.
If you want to time travel back to Victorian England, the closest you can get to this is to read Dickens and wallow in his detailed, evocative descriptive language.0 -
Chunes said:captainbob said:EveshamAddick said:CaptainRobbo said:captainbob said:Favourite author: Charles Dickens
Favourite novel: David Copperfield
'David Copperfield' was Dickens' favourite novel and is largely based on his own childhood and youth. I would recommend this as the second novel to read by him.
After that, I think most readers would pick out 'A Tale of Two Cities' and 'Bleak House' as top of the league.
One mentioned less often is his first novel, 'Pickwick Papers', which is set principally in Kent and is Dickens at his most light-hearted.
If you want to time travel back to Victorian England, the closest you can get to this is to read Dickens and wallow in his detailed, evocative descriptive language.1 -
jimmymelrose said:captainbob said:EveshamAddick said:CaptainRobbo said:captainbob said:Favourite author: Charles Dickens
Favourite novel: David Copperfield
'David Copperfield' was Dickens' favourite novel and is largely based on his own childhood and youth. I would recommend this as the second novel to read by him.
After that, I think most readers would pick out 'A Tale of Two Cities' and 'Bleak House' as top of the league.
One mentioned less often is his first novel, 'Pickwick Papers', which is set principally in Kent and is Dickens at his most light-hearted.
If you want to time travel back to Victorian England, the closest you can get to this is to read Dickens and wallow in his detailed, evocative descriptive language.
Conversely, I love Thomas Hardy. The first novel of his I read was Far From The Madding Crowd and I had to constantly re-read passages, so spellbound was I by his writing.
My other favourite authors:
John Wyndham
Isaac Asimov
Ben Elton
Stephen Fry
Stephen King
HG Wells
Dean Koontz
Bit shout out also to The Pillars of The Earth by Ken Follett (as the OP also likes - possibly thanks to his mother in law, who recommendeded it to me anyway). I read that book in February 1998 when I had the worst flu ever. I was bedridden for a week and then knackered for weeks after. That book was a great help. I read an hour, sleep a few hours, then read a bit, and so on. Ken Follett also wrote The Third Twin, a bit of science fiction, which I also liked, and I think is unlike all his other books.0 -
I'm also just discovering Jules Verne after having downloaded his complete works to my Kindle app for free!
Brilliant writing!3 -
I had never heard of Ken Follet, I'm reading Never at the moment and whilst sticking with it, its really heavy on dialogue that might or might not be moving the story on.
He is clearly a popular author so I'll stick with it hopefully its just a slow-ish start0 -
Carter said:I had never heard of Ken Follet, I'm reading Never at the moment and whilst sticking with it, its really heavy on dialogue that might or might not be moving the story on.
He is clearly a popular author so I'll stick with it hopefully its just a slow-ish start1 -
Just read my first Stuart Macbride book,involving a lunatic female detective,Roberta Steel and her sidekick tufty,absolute entertainment from start to finish,there are several others in the series which I cant wait to read.0
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Killarahales said:A shout out for A Prayer For Owen Meany, both very funny and moving. I fancied a Spanish author for my recent holiday and can highly recommend The Invisible Guardian by Dolores Redondo, which is a crime story on the surface but with supernatural elements.
I’ve also just discovered World Of Books. Second-hand online book store; doubt I’ll ever buy a brand new book again.
Also, whilst I think WoB has free delivery over £5, they have a store on ebay which is free delivery on any amount, so I often get individual books from there for a couple of quid delivered.1 -
Rufus is a dogs name said:Killarahales said:A shout out for A Prayer For Owen Meany, both very funny and moving. I fancied a Spanish author for my recent holiday and can highly recommend The Invisible Guardian by Dolores Redondo, which is a crime story on the surface but with supernatural elements.
I’ve also just discovered World Of Books. Second-hand online book store; doubt I’ll ever buy a brand new book again.
Also, whilst I think WoB has free delivery over £5, they have a store on ebay which is free delivery on any amount, so I often get individual books from there for a couple of quid delivered.
I know it is drop in the ocean, and I will continue to patronise the charity shops (or online sites like WOB) for sure, but as I am dead against musicians getting almost nothing for their efforts, and my favourite authors give me so much pleasure, I can salve my conscience just a little by paying lip service to contributing a little directly to the publishing industry...0