Hello folks - I'm having trouble finding good books these days. With that in mind, I'm posting my "most memorable book list", in the hopes that you'll do the same so that I (and everyone) might have something to look forward to. My list is not in any particular order, it is incomplete, and a few are out of print.
1) Neverwhere, Neil Gaiman
2) Magic Kingdom for sale (Bestseller), Terry Brooks
3) Jumper, Steven Ghould (Gould?)
4) Replay, Ken Grimwood
5) The Exorcist - forget the movie
6) Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
7) Once Around the Realms - Forgotten Realms - (Brian Thomsen (sic.))
8) Inferno (MUST read) - Larry Niven
9) Ringworld - Larry Niven
10) Lucifer's Hammer - Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle
11) The Mote in God's Eye - Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle
12) Footfall (Bestseller) - Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle
13) Tomorrow & Tomorrow - Charles Sheffield
14) Higher Education - A jupiter novel - Charles Sheffield, Jerry Pournelle
15) A Wizard of Earthsea - Ursula K. Le Guin
16) The Misenchanted Sword - Lawrence Watt-Evans (This is the first in a series of "ethshar" novels)
17) The Sorcerer's Son - Phyllis Eisenstein (amazing first of three amazing books, anything by her is great)
18) Midshipman's Hope - David Feintuch (series: words do not describe)
19) Faerie Tale - Raymond E. Feist
20) Magician's Apprentice series - (original) - Raymond E. Feist
21) LOTR - Tolkien
Non-SF/Fantasy:
1) The Alienist - Calib Carr
2) Cuckoo's Egg - Cliff Stohl
3) Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood (Rebecca Wells) *chick book, superbly written though*
4) Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden(see above)
Book List
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- Sojourner
- Posts: 765
- Joined: Thu Apr 18, 2002 5:01 am
- Location: Atlanta, Georgia
These have helped me form a coherent, sober idea of where I fit:
Steppenwolf - Hermann Hesse
The Plague - Alber Camus
the Way Things Are: De Rerum Natura - Lucretius
The Sea Wolf - Jack London
These have fed my love of reading:
With a Single Spell - Lawrence Watt-Evans
Metamorphoses - Publius Ovidius Naso
Gates of Ivrel - CJ Cherryh
The Hobbit - J.R. Tolkien
I am Legend - Richard Matheson
Le Morte D'Arthur - Thomas Malory
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams
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·•Kuurg•·
Steppenwolf - Hermann Hesse
The Plague - Alber Camus
the Way Things Are: De Rerum Natura - Lucretius
The Sea Wolf - Jack London
These have fed my love of reading:
With a Single Spell - Lawrence Watt-Evans
Metamorphoses - Publius Ovidius Naso
Gates of Ivrel - CJ Cherryh
The Hobbit - J.R. Tolkien
I am Legend - Richard Matheson
Le Morte D'Arthur - Thomas Malory
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams
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·•Kuurg•·
hrmm
Legend by David Gemmell (I swear this axeman shoulda been a dorf)
The Waylander Saga by David Gemmell
Legend of Nightfall by Reichert
Bazil Broketail Saga by Christopher Rowley (the story of a dragon and his boy)
The Mithgar saga by Dennis McKiernan (especially Eye of the Hunter)
The Vlad Taltos Saga by Steven Brust (the story of a not so reluctant assassin....and his pet pseudodragon)
Grunts by Mary Gentle (da Orc Marines?...nuff said)
the Dragoncrown cycle by Michael Stackpole
the original 4 book set by Raymond E. Feist (starting with Magician : Apprentice and ending with a Darkness at Sethanon)
the Rover by Mel Odom (the story of the fearsome halfling Librarian)
the Elric of Melnibone Saga by Michael Moorcock (I really wanna sword like Stormbringer)
The Sunrunner Saga by Melanie Rawn (yes a book by a female author...but who would have ever guessed she could write so many characters...just to get them all killed off)
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Legend by David Gemmell (I swear this axeman shoulda been a dorf)
The Waylander Saga by David Gemmell
Legend of Nightfall by Reichert
Bazil Broketail Saga by Christopher Rowley (the story of a dragon and his boy)
The Mithgar saga by Dennis McKiernan (especially Eye of the Hunter)
The Vlad Taltos Saga by Steven Brust (the story of a not so reluctant assassin....and his pet pseudodragon)
Grunts by Mary Gentle (da Orc Marines?...nuff said)
the Dragoncrown cycle by Michael Stackpole
the original 4 book set by Raymond E. Feist (starting with Magician : Apprentice and ending with a Darkness at Sethanon)
the Rover by Mel Odom (the story of the fearsome halfling Librarian)
the Elric of Melnibone Saga by Michael Moorcock (I really wanna sword like Stormbringer)
The Sunrunner Saga by Melanie Rawn (yes a book by a female author...but who would have ever guessed she could write so many characters...just to get them all killed off)
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- Sojourner
- Posts: 870
- Joined: Sun Aug 25, 2002 5:01 am
- Location: Ixarkon
- Contact:
I like the Runelords Saga, by David Farland.
The Belgariad and Mallorean series', Belgarath the Sorceror, and Polgara the Sorceress... By David Eddings.
I'm pretty enthralled with R.A. Salvatore's writings.. All the Drizzt and Cadderly books were good.
On a related note... I still can't read the lord of the rings or the hobbit.. Tolkein's writing just bores the shit out of me.
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Malacar - omg ymir!
Tanji ASSOC:: 'god was blueballed the night before he made Thanuk'
The Belgariad and Mallorean series', Belgarath the Sorceror, and Polgara the Sorceress... By David Eddings.
I'm pretty enthralled with R.A. Salvatore's writings.. All the Drizzt and Cadderly books were good.
On a related note... I still can't read the lord of the rings or the hobbit.. Tolkein's writing just bores the shit out of me.
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Malacar - omg ymir!
Tanji ASSOC:: 'god was blueballed the night before he made Thanuk'
I've read a lot of what you folks have put here (Legends, Elric, dragonlance, Eddings, etc.). I've also found a couple of neet things I'd like to try out, so my thanks for the recommendations!
Malacar, Tolkien has to be read when you are wide awake, have plenty of free time, not under stress, you're sitting comfortably in your favorite coffee house, and you are "ready for it", whatever that means for you. I had to try reading it like 3 times before I was "ready for it", and when I was, I slammed through it quite appreciably, and I've read it every couple of years since then. Maybe give it another try sometime
Malacar, Tolkien has to be read when you are wide awake, have plenty of free time, not under stress, you're sitting comfortably in your favorite coffee house, and you are "ready for it", whatever that means for you. I had to try reading it like 3 times before I was "ready for it", and when I was, I slammed through it quite appreciably, and I've read it every couple of years since then. Maybe give it another try sometime
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Dhurn:
<B>hrmm
The Vlad Taltos Saga by Steven Brust (the story of a not so reluctant assassin....and his pet pseudodragon)
</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
yeah, what Brust does well is encompassed within these novels, though I didn't like where they went (with Vlad leaving the empire), but then who knows where the story is going to end up.
I appreciate Vlad's dry sense of humor, which I feel Brust has always handled deftly.
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Gormal:
<B>
In no particular order..
Narnia chronicles
</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Do you like C.S. Lewis in general or just his narnia chronicles? He wrote an excellent book called the Screwtape Letters. It's religious like the narnia chronicles, but not over-bearingly so. It's a Demon corresponding with his young nephew about his 'progress' - very funny.
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Mezheru:
<B>
Hello folks - I'm having trouble finding good books these days.
6) Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Did you mean that entire series and related series? I really liked the Shadow books, though I had the same complaints with those that I did with the Ender books; specifically that his 'children' think like adults, and I don't mean tactically, I mean they behave the same way an adult would with pretty much any situation.
John Wyndham wrote some good books, too: Day of the Triffids, Kraken, Chrysalids...
oh, and it was discussed in another thread, Watt-Evans also wrote the overman series, which is pretty good (lure of the basilisk, et al)
Mezheru = Gledrukmig?
Kuurg = Dueleren
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·•Kuurg•·
<B>hrmm
The Vlad Taltos Saga by Steven Brust (the story of a not so reluctant assassin....and his pet pseudodragon)
</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
yeah, what Brust does well is encompassed within these novels, though I didn't like where they went (with Vlad leaving the empire), but then who knows where the story is going to end up.
I appreciate Vlad's dry sense of humor, which I feel Brust has always handled deftly.
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Gormal:
<B>
In no particular order..
Narnia chronicles
</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Do you like C.S. Lewis in general or just his narnia chronicles? He wrote an excellent book called the Screwtape Letters. It's religious like the narnia chronicles, but not over-bearingly so. It's a Demon corresponding with his young nephew about his 'progress' - very funny.
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Mezheru:
<B>
Hello folks - I'm having trouble finding good books these days.
6) Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
</B></font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Did you mean that entire series and related series? I really liked the Shadow books, though I had the same complaints with those that I did with the Ender books; specifically that his 'children' think like adults, and I don't mean tactically, I mean they behave the same way an adult would with pretty much any situation.
John Wyndham wrote some good books, too: Day of the Triffids, Kraken, Chrysalids...
oh, and it was discussed in another thread, Watt-Evans also wrote the overman series, which is pretty good (lure of the basilisk, et al)
Mezheru = Gledrukmig?
Kuurg = Dueleren
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·•Kuurg•·
Dueleren! Yeah I'm gledrukmig Wonderful to "see" you!
1)I liked the Ender's Shadow quite a bit. Though in my original post, I was only referring to Ender's Game, the original.
2)I read a watt-evans book about dragons, it was really good (new series, not sure if it is an overman book).
Another book that I think should be mentioned that rules, is "Sir Apropos of Nothing", by Peter David. I usually hate "funny fantasy", but this guy is absolutely great. Superior writing.
What I would pay 100 bucks to read: a book kind of like Wizard of Earthsea or Magician's apprentice, where a boy learns magic in a school or through an apprenticeship, rises to power, etc. Another example comes to mind: Secret of the fifth Magic series (6th,7th). I like the idea of a nobody (like me) rising to power through work and determination, with A-team music playing in the background, getting you in the mood to succeed (heh).
k, i've said enough
1)I liked the Ender's Shadow quite a bit. Though in my original post, I was only referring to Ender's Game, the original.
2)I read a watt-evans book about dragons, it was really good (new series, not sure if it is an overman book).
Another book that I think should be mentioned that rules, is "Sir Apropos of Nothing", by Peter David. I usually hate "funny fantasy", but this guy is absolutely great. Superior writing.
What I would pay 100 bucks to read: a book kind of like Wizard of Earthsea or Magician's apprentice, where a boy learns magic in a school or through an apprenticeship, rises to power, etc. Another example comes to mind: Secret of the fifth Magic series (6th,7th). I like the idea of a nobody (like me) rising to power through work and determination, with A-team music playing in the background, getting you in the mood to succeed (heh).
k, i've said enough
Here's my list of books I like, and like to re-read.. (no special order.)
* A Game of Thrones - George R. R. Martin.
* Silmarillion - JRR Tolkien
* American Gods - Neil Gaiman
* Lord of the Flies - William Golding
* Utvandrarna - Vilhelm Moberg
* The clash of Civilizations.. - Samuel P. Huntingdon
* Encounter with Tiber - Buzz Aldrin
* "the Belgariad" - David Eddings
* Wizards First Rule - Terry Goodkind
* The Demonhaunted World - Carl Sagan
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/Jegzed - Sorcere Master - Crimson Coalition
* A Game of Thrones - George R. R. Martin.
* Silmarillion - JRR Tolkien
* American Gods - Neil Gaiman
* Lord of the Flies - William Golding
* Utvandrarna - Vilhelm Moberg
* The clash of Civilizations.. - Samuel P. Huntingdon
* Encounter with Tiber - Buzz Aldrin
* "the Belgariad" - David Eddings
* Wizards First Rule - Terry Goodkind
* The Demonhaunted World - Carl Sagan
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/Jegzed - Sorcere Master - Crimson Coalition
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- Sojourner
- Posts: 245
- Joined: Thu Dec 27, 2001 6:01 am
- Location: Seattle, WA
This book made me go out to sea to be a seaman (*heh, i said seaman*)/commercial fisherman: The Sea Wolf by Jack London
This book made me proud to be an outdoorsman (made me wanna be a wolf too): White Fang by Jack London
These books made me want to be a frontiersman (i guess i sorta was, commercial fishing in AK, much less just living there): Dad's hand me down Louis L'Amour Westerns
This book made me join the army to be a WARRIOR! *Rar!*: The Walking Drum by Louis L'Amour
These series'(?) helped me survive countless forays into the "mountains" of Korea and Deserts of the U.S.: The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan, and the X-wing series by a pack o Star Wars fanatics..
This book serves as my door stop because I HATE IT!: PDR 1998 Physicians Desk Reference by a bunch of geeks
This series i am freaking waiting for them to finish because i gotta finish what i start even though the books are starting to get more boring as i go on: Left Behind series by Tim LaHaye
Honorable mentions: The Blue Day book because it's funny. Charles Dickens, because his books are sitting on my shelf collecting dust, yet they make me look a little more sophisticated. My coloring books because they give me something to scribe during my nights sitting at 1W
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"If it ain't broke, fix it until it is"
Dalen the super paly.
Aram the novice paly.
This book made me proud to be an outdoorsman (made me wanna be a wolf too): White Fang by Jack London
These books made me want to be a frontiersman (i guess i sorta was, commercial fishing in AK, much less just living there): Dad's hand me down Louis L'Amour Westerns
This book made me join the army to be a WARRIOR! *Rar!*: The Walking Drum by Louis L'Amour
These series'(?) helped me survive countless forays into the "mountains" of Korea and Deserts of the U.S.: The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan, and the X-wing series by a pack o Star Wars fanatics..
This book serves as my door stop because I HATE IT!: PDR 1998 Physicians Desk Reference by a bunch of geeks
This series i am freaking waiting for them to finish because i gotta finish what i start even though the books are starting to get more boring as i go on: Left Behind series by Tim LaHaye
Honorable mentions: The Blue Day book because it's funny. Charles Dickens, because his books are sitting on my shelf collecting dust, yet they make me look a little more sophisticated. My coloring books because they give me something to scribe during my nights sitting at 1W
------------------
"If it ain't broke, fix it until it is"
Dalen the super paly.
Aram the novice paly.
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