28 Jan 04 - 10:46 AM (#1103493) Subject: BS: suggests some great books From: GUEST,James I am going to be laid up for three whole months this winter and I plan to stock up on some good reads. Since I see a wide variety of tastes and opinions here at Mudcat I was hoping you all would suggest some good reads. I like a lot of Non fiction as well as some ripping yarns. I am currently reading"The Venetian Affair",The Lady and The Unicorn and several books by Simon Winchester. I like a good mystery also. Thanks In advance, I know you can help me out. |
28 Jan 04 - 11:01 AM (#1103513) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: MarkS If you have a taste for Science Fiction, start by looking for the Honor Harrington series by David Weber. The first book is "On Basilisk Station." It is ususally available at reduced price just to get you hooked. There are enough books in the series to keep you occupied through any lengthy period. Regards Mark |
28 Jan 04 - 11:06 AM (#1103517) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Rapparee Dana Stabenow's Kate Shugak series is great. "Breakup" and "Blood Will Tell" are possibly the best in the series, but that's comparing excellence and excellence. If you REALLY want to think, read "Godel, Escher, Bach: an eternal golden braid." It's nonfiction, but I'm not going to even attempt to explain more about it. Or read up on Chaos theory. Or the 14th Century. DON'T read (very much) in your usual fields of work. Also, have you considered using the time to learn a new instrument? |
28 Jan 04 - 01:14 PM (#1103612) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Les in Chorlton For non-fiction, The Ascent of Man - Jacob Brownoski, anything by Stephen Jay Gould, For fiction John Le Carre for cold war and post cold war thrillers, Terry Pratchet for well..... Discworld, Ian Rankin Inspector Rebus - crime in Scotland. |
28 Jan 04 - 01:20 PM (#1103618) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Stilly River Sage I'd go reread some of my favorite old mysteries. Josephine Tey, Mary Stewart, Tony Hillerman, Nevada Barr. |
28 Jan 04 - 03:04 PM (#1103679) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Clinton Hammond Everything by William Gibson Everything by Neil Gaiman Everything by Clive Barker Everything by Guy Gavriel Kay |
28 Jan 04 - 03:08 PM (#1103682) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Amos Gravesend Light Ahab's Wife both published in the last few years and both worthy prizewinners. Sorry -- authors' names escape me. The first is by a woman. A |
28 Jan 04 - 03:09 PM (#1103683) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Amos Correction: the latter is by a wopman (Ahab's Wife). A |
28 Jan 04 - 03:15 PM (#1103687) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: harvey andrews HISTORY "Dreadnought" Robert K Massie. Reads like a novel, unputdownable. COMEDY "Dig infinity" Oliver Trager. Biog of Lord Buckley TRAGEDY "The perfect storm" S Junger THEATRE "Acting up" David Hare BIOGRAPHY "Dear Tom" Tom Courtenay DELIGHT "84, Charing Cross Road" H Hanff |
28 Jan 04 - 03:18 PM (#1103691) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: GUEST Martin Cruz Smith: "Gorki Park" - one of the best detective stories I ever read, it really gave me nightmares. The sequel is "Polar Star", also great. And you shouldn't miss Henning Mankell's novels about Inspector Kurt Wallander. That stuff is addictive. Mankell is too good to be real ;-) |
28 Jan 04 - 03:19 PM (#1103693) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Stilly River Sage Amos, you corrected yourself from "woman" to "wopman"--usually people get it wrong before they start sending corrections! |
28 Jan 04 - 03:26 PM (#1103703) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: GUEST,pdc "Ahab's Wife" is by Sena Jeter Naslund, a professor from the University of Kentucky. An excellent, outstanding book that recreates the big, flamboyant fiction of the 19th century. Particularly good for those who have read "Moby Dick," but also fascinating for those who haven't. Loved it, as you can probably tell! |
28 Jan 04 - 03:58 PM (#1103729) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Bat Goddess I just finished reading Louis L'Amour's memoir, "Education of a Wandering Man." Before I read it, I'd had no desire to read Western fiction, but after reading of his travels, what he was reading during his travels (book lists for 1930-1932 included), stories of who he talked to during his travels, and descriptions of the deserts he walked out of, mines he worked on or assessed, ships he sailed on, and reading of his philosophy of writing -- accurate historical backdrop, accurate geography and weather, and characters based on information about real people gleaned from diaries and reminiscences -- I now want to start in on reading his novels. Sounds more like they should be categorized as historical fiction rather than "Western" genre. By the way, Guest, pdc, I'm in the middle of re-reading "Moby Dick" for the first time since I was 14. And, believe me, I didn't have the education or maturity to fully appreciate it at the time. What a book! Linn |
28 Jan 04 - 04:12 PM (#1103735) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Cluin Wopman? LOL Great typo, Amos. As a constant keyboard flubber myself, I salute you. As long as you're going to be laid up, James, and you like mysteries, I'd suggest a book about another fellow who was laid-up who took on a mystery as a hobby during his convalescence. The book is "The Daughter of Time" by Josephine Tey. It's a good read and even pretty educational. Other than that, try some Walter Mosley: the Easy Rawlins stories or especially "R.L.s Dream" (tangentially involves bluesman Robert Johnson, but the main character is another old bluesman). |
28 Jan 04 - 04:15 PM (#1103737) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Emma B Just read "The Athenian Murders" by Jose Carlos Somoza although, I'm ashamed to say, in translation. If you like "The Name of the Rose" you'll love this. Best biography I've read for a while "Turlough" by Brian Keenan, a must for O'Carolan addicts |
28 Jan 04 - 04:23 PM (#1103744) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Amos What I was trying to correct was "former" to "latter", and the Wopman Error, as it is known in higher scientific circles, was merely a mathematical anomaly. :>) A |
28 Jan 04 - 04:33 PM (#1103752) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Stilly River Sage Linn, if you want to see what literary types do with westerns, look for Ron Hansen's The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. If you have a strong stomach find a copy of Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian: Or An Evening Redness in the West. Both are historical novels. SRS |
28 Jan 04 - 04:35 PM (#1103755) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Rapparee Lots of times I like to read what I call "list" books: books which contain short articles, sometimes only a paragraph or two, about a topic. Stuff you can read, put down, and pick up again without losing a beat because the next paragraph is about something completely different. Here are some titles: Saints preserve us! (a rather irreverent hagiography) Who in hell? (similar to the above, by the same authors, but great sinners instead) Stories in Stone (a book of epitaths) Various cartoon collections: Bill Watterson, Darby Conley, Bill mend, Allen Magruder, Frank Cho, Jerry Scott, Jim Borgman, Mike Peters, Berk Breathed, Gary Larson, Doug Marlette, and so on. Unwritten laws. 100 Ways To Die In the Outdoors. Pat McManus's books -- The Night The Bear Ate Gumbaw, The Bear In The Attic, How I Got This Way, Real Ponies Don't Go Oink!, and lots of others. (Warning: they are FUNNY!!) |
28 Jan 04 - 04:55 PM (#1103768) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Helen Any fiction by Nevil Shute for a well-written light read, but I especially like his autobiography called Slide Rule. He was number cruncher, pre-computers, for aircraft design, and worked on a private enterprise design and build project for an airship in a sort of economic/design competition, competing with a bungling, bureaucratic government organisation whose airship crashed and burned. It's only a fairly short book, but I find it extremely interesting from a whole lot of different perspectives. The coincidence of a couple of things in this thread is kind of odd & spooky because I was just looking at my copy of Godel, Escher & Bach a couple of nights ago - which I haven't actually read yet - and also my small collection of Mary Stewart pot boilers plus Crystal Cave etc and wondering whether to re-read some of them, again. (That's not a tautology, by the way, I mean I have already re-read them all at least once, and I might re-read them again.) Helen |
28 Jan 04 - 05:06 PM (#1103772) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Stilly River Sage I've read several by Nevil Shute (full name: Nevil Shute Norway), and remember tracking down a short list on Mudcat a year or more ago. I agree--his books are very good. A Town Like Alice was made into a popular mini-series, and On the Beach was made into a film at least once. Last time he came up I was trying to remember one called Trustee from the Toolroom, but as I look through the list of his books at Amazon, I see others I read also (way back in high school). I think I read the Vinland the Good, if that starts out with a couple of folks in a small airplane that crashes on the coast and they flash back to Viking times. SRS |
28 Jan 04 - 06:04 PM (#1103810) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: Jeanie James - you say you also like non-fiction: here are a couple books I've enjoyed lately, that you might like: "Seven Ages of Britain" by Justin Pollard (publ.Hodder & Stoughton) - based on the recent UK TV series. Covers history of Britain from the Mesolithic period to 17th century. Described as "exploring the lives and times of the ordinary people of Britain who rarely emerge into the light of written history but nonetheless were witness to its every twist and turn." "Borley Rectory - The Final Analysis" by Edward Babbs (publ. Six Martlets Publishing) - If you are into (real life) mysteries, you will enjoy this analysis of what was known as "the most haunted house in England" and the characters and events surrounding the place, up to the present day. And some poetry - Treated myself at Christmas to this excellent anthology : "Staying Alive - Real Poems for Unreal Times", edited by Neil Astley (publ. Bloodaxe Books). Described as "500 life-affirming poems fired by belief in the human and the spiritual at a time when much in the world feels unreal, inhuman and hollow." Famous and less known poems, from 'classics' to 21st century. Powerful, positive, thought-provoking. Good stuff ! Hope the 3 months go really well for you, James, All good wishes, - jeanie |
28 Jan 04 - 06:10 PM (#1103813) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: GUEST,pdc Bat Goddess posted: "By the way, Guest, pdc, I'm in the middle of re- reading "Moby Dick" for the first time since I was 14. And, believe me, I didn't have the education or maturity to fully appreciate it at the time. What a book!" I couldn't agree more. One of the most fortunate experiences I ever had was in my second year of university (as a mature student), when I signed up for a semester-long course on Moby Dick. Wow, was I lucky to take that course! The prof was a Melville fanatic, belonged to the Melville Society (had the whale belt buckle) and knew Melville's sources, his inspiration, his own whaling experiences that lead to the creation of the book -- the whole thing. I remembered that course for years, and have read Moby Dick several times since, each time getting more out of it. Enjoy!! |
28 Jan 04 - 06:47 PM (#1103831) Subject: RE: BS: suggests some great books From: open mike Ther is a Cormac MacCarthy who is an author and a musician. I would definately second the Tony HIllerman suggestion. Most of his murder mystery novels are set in the south west Hopi/Navajo country in Arizona and new mexico. They have a lot of tribal history. Farley Mowat is an interesting author, too. He specializes in environmental topics..such as Never Cry Wolf. Also Oliver Sachs is an interesting fellow. He is a psyciatrist/ psychologist and has case studies, patient histories and solved medical mysteries in his books. i would also suggest that if you are wanting inspiration and spiritual introspection, Pema Chodron will offer you food for thought in her "When Things Fall Apart" (Heart advice for difficult times) and another one about facing your fears. these are from a Buddhist perspective. Another wonderful author is Daniel Quinn. He has written several books, among them: "Ishmael" which is a prize-winning novel about sustaining life on this planet, and learning to adopt an attitude change which encourages this. This book is often required reading for university students and is thought- provoking. Some followers have attained near cult loyalties as they follow the writings of Daniel Quinn. http://www.ishmael.com/welcome.cfm i hope you will come thru your "hibernation" as an improved person! and best of health to you. |
28 Jan 04 - 07:14 PM (#1103854) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: freda underhill hi James if you want a really good read, try My Place by Sally Morgan. In 1982 Sally Morgan travelled back to her grandmother's birthplace. What started out as a tentative search for information about her family, turned into an overwhelming emotional and spiritual pilgrimage. Sally Morgan is an Australian Aboriginal writer - My Place is her story about her search for her past, through the stories of the author's mother and grandmother. Winner of the 1987 Australian Human Rights Award for Literature and the 1990 Order of Australia Book Prize. I have just finished reading Mayada Daughter of Iraq by Jean Sassoon. It is the story an an Iraqi woman from a prominent Iraqi family who was jailed by Saddam Hussein. It tells the story of her life in the cell with over a dozen other women. And I am just reading The Promise by Guzin Najim, another story from Iraq. This is another very good read freda |
28 Jan 04 - 07:15 PM (#1103856) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Midchuck The Gabriel DuPre mysteries, set in Montana, by Peter Bowen. The first two in the series are Coyote Wind and Specimen Song, and they're out as a double in trade paperback. There are 9 or 10 of them out now altogether. The Honor Harrington books are good, but not the best. Try the Belisarius alternate history series by Drake and Flint - An Oblique Approach, In the Heart of Darkness, and so on. The "Vlad Taltos" fantasy novels by Stephen Brust: Jhereg, Yendi, and so forth. Or his Dumas takeoffs set in the same universe, but earlier: The Phoenix Guards, Five Hundred Years After, et. seq. Concur on the Kate Shugak Alaska mysteries. My wife found those, and, as W. C. Fields said when he explained that a woman drove him to drink, I never did thank her properly. But my big thing this winter is the new Neal Stephenson books: Cryptonomicon>, set alternatively in the present and WWII, and the sequel, Quicksilver, set in England just after the Restoration, through New England in the seventeen-teens. Take you a while, and most of us have to skip over the math, but worth it. Peter. |
28 Jan 04 - 07:16 PM (#1103857) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Midchuck Sooner or later I'll remember those closing codes, every time. Peter. |
28 Jan 04 - 07:45 PM (#1103879) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: jaze NAME OF THE ROSE--Umberto Eco SACAJAWEA--Anna Lee Waldo Thick books both but, gripping stories! |
28 Jan 04 - 07:51 PM (#1103885) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Bat Goddess And if you like Tony Hillerman's Navajo mysteries, you should also like Arthur Upfield's Napoleon Bonapart (Bony) mysteries that that take place in Australia. Lots of aborigine background, as well as local lore. My taste also runs to travel & exploration books, pre-1940. Richard Halliburton in particular (he swam the Panama Canal, jumped into a cenote in Chichen Itza, almost made it to Mecca but chickened out and got flown out by a friendly sheik, disappeared in 1939 sailing a Chinese junk across the Pacific), but lots of others, including Carolyn Mytinger's "Headhunting in the Solomon Islands, Around the Coral Sea." ("No woman is fulfilled, they say, until she holds in her arms her own little book.") Too many books; not enough time. Linn |
28 Jan 04 - 07:53 PM (#1103888) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Shanghaiceltic Try; Kindness of Strangers; Kate Ady (A BBC reporter) Any of John Simpson's books again he is a BBC reporter Any of the Kathy Reichs novels. |
28 Jan 04 - 08:35 PM (#1103910) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Jerry Rasmussen All-time favorites of mine: The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter by Carson McCullers Giants In The Earth, by A.E. Rollvaag (about Norwegian settlers on the prairie) How Green Was My Valley, byRichard LLewellyn Stranger In A Strange Land by Robert Heinlein ain't half bad either Jerry |
28 Jan 04 - 08:41 PM (#1103914) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,ozmacca How can anybody recommend a good book? There are far too many good books around! But for a good thriller writer, with a lot more than his fair share of talent and a neat sense of humour to boot, try Gavin Lyall. Any of his stories are well worth reading for the technical accuracy of the location and the background, as well as an excellent selection of plot lines and believeable characters. Unexpected, yet never laboured, twists in the stories make compelling reading. Some of his best would be "Midnight Plus One", "Wrong Side of The Sky", "Shooting Script", "Venus With Pistol", as well as his Major Maxim books and the stories about the Secret Service just before WW1. Absolutely terrific stuff, and I never tire of them. For a comic thriller writer in a class of his own, Donald Westlake must be read. Try any of his stories about Dortmunder, a New York criminal who gets involved in the most amazing escapades. Who else would steal, not the contents of the bank, but the whole bank itself.... "Bank Shot", "Why Me", "Hot Rock", and several others. For humour, Terry Pratchett of course, and also some, but by no means all, of Tom Holt's output. "Only Human" and Snow White and the Seven Samurai were excellent. For an entertaining and interesting look at the Roman Empire, try Lindsey Davis, who writes crime stories about an informer (a kind of detective around the time of Vespasian)"The Silver Pigs", "Shadows in Bronze", Venus in Copper", and many others. For alternative history sci-fi, Harry Turtledove's "Balance" series makes good reading, with the plot about an invasion of the Earth during WW2 and the resultant changes to the relationships between the antagonists, and what it does to human (and alien) society. Those should keep you going for a couple of weeks......... |
28 Jan 04 - 08:43 PM (#1103918) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Nancy King And you might want to check out this thread , which contains a LOT of great suggestions. Nancy |
28 Jan 04 - 08:58 PM (#1103924) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Helen Years ago I read two books by Helene Hanff 84 Charing Cross Road The Apple of My Eye The second one: a resident of NY city who doesn't take it all for granted and sees it as if she were just visiting. It is very observant, perceptive, warm, and insightful. I've never been to NY but if I planned to go there I would re-read this book first. SRS, The Vinland book is one of the few Shute books I haven't read. Helen |
28 Jan 04 - 09:51 PM (#1103944) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Teresa Yes, yes! The Belisaruius series, and anything else written by Eric Flint. Belisarious is both a thought-provoker and a page turner. Robert silverberg's New Springtime series. And I've just discovered Fred Chappell's books about life in the mountains of North Carolina. They're fanciful and full of plain, earthy wisdom. They have some neat, wonderfully loving descriptions of old-timey music, too. Best wishes to you, James, and happy reading. :) Teresa |
28 Jan 04 - 09:55 PM (#1103946) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Teresa My fangles got tingered. The second spelling is the correct one: Belisarious Belisarius Belisarius! ;) Teresa |
28 Jan 04 - 10:16 PM (#1103955) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Bee-dubya-ell Anything by John Irving. |
28 Jan 04 - 10:51 PM (#1103971) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: open mike Guest James, please tell us a little about yourself. ARe you knew here? (new?) what exactly is it that has you laid up for 3 months? Where do you live? When are you going to actually join the mudcat so that you don't have to have guest as your first name? welcome! and I hope this doesn't seem like prying, but many people have offered up their suggestions to you and we also want to send you get well wishes and get to know you a bit. That's just how we are... and i remembered another author to recommend William Least Heat Moon -- Blue Hiways and River Horse are best books of his i have read. He says that small town cafe's are rated by the number of calendars they have hanging on their wall. He travels around the U.S. visiting small towns in a van in Blue Highways. It is available on cassette tape, too. In River Horse he travels across the U.S. in a boat, and only has to portage it a few times.. it is complete with maps...he bothe makes you want to go along and makes you feel like you already have! saves on gas that way. |
28 Jan 04 - 10:57 PM (#1103975) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Amos Anything Farley Mowat writes is worth reading. All of Robert Penn Warren's fiction. If you have not read it, one great sea-classic is "Sailing Alone Around the World" by Captain Joshua Slocum, an unimpeachable book. A |
29 Jan 04 - 01:30 AM (#1104023) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Cluin Also any of John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee novels. The mystery part of them is alright (they're good page-turners) but it's the asides and social commentary that are the real gems in his work. It's fun to check out the date of publiction of each one and comapare his predictions for the future with what really happened. He wasn't all that far off in that respect. I remember one where he predicted the rise in power of the computer geeks. |
29 Jan 04 - 01:34 AM (#1104026) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,Tang the Orangutan Anything by Jane Goodall, she studied my cousins. Tarzan is pretty good too. |
29 Jan 04 - 02:09 AM (#1104035) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Mudlark James...3 months to read. Some would say that was paradise! I've either not seen or didn't like the movies of the following books. All were terrific reads, however: Novels as Literature: All of the Jack Aubrey series of sea stories. That alone should cover most of the time. John Gardner's books, particularly Grendel and Sunlight Dialogues Peter Matthiessen: particularly At Play in the Fields of the Lord, Far Tortugo Martin Cruz Smith: Gorki Park, of course (SO much better than the movie) but he has written several and all are solid, good reads Corelli's Mandolin Cold Mountain If you are U.S. and have a taste for oddball, quirky, hilarious and unforgettable, try some Charles Portis: Norwood, True Grit, Dog of the South. For humorous nonfiction: Any of Bill Bryson's books For serious, thought provoking nonfiction: The Act of Creation andGhost in the Machine, both by Koestler Highly readable memoirs: Ring of Bright Water, Gavin Maxwell; Road to Coorain, Jill Ker Conway, Cider with Rosie, Laurie Lee And...an uncategorizable work of fiction, brilliant writing, haunting imagry, set in an distant post apocalyptic time, by Russell Hoban: "Riddley Walker," the one book I would take to a desert island. Happy reading, whatever you choose and I hope you mend swiftly and completely. |
29 Jan 04 - 04:20 AM (#1104072) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,An English Patriot If you like fantasy, then read The Gormenghast Triology by Mervyn Peake and the collection of short stories by the American writer, Harlan Ellison, called Strange Wine. A much underrated novelist is Martha Gellhorn so try and get her collected novellas. Anything by Hardy, whether it is a novel, a collection of short stories, or his poetry. If you are a man, then you have to read "For Whom The Bell Tolls": If you are a woman, then read "Wuthering Heights." If you like history, then "The Making of the English Working Class" by EP Thompson and the biography of Cromwell by Antonia Frasier. Avoid anything by Alison Weir(d)! |
29 Jan 04 - 04:59 AM (#1104085) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: harvey andrews Amazing amount of reading going on here and all so different. We have over two thousand books in this house and only about five have so far appeared on this list! |
29 Jan 04 - 08:53 AM (#1104232) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Jerry Rasmussen Mudlark: Modern Times, Mon! I too am a great appreciator of At Play In The Fields Of The Lord, and Far Tortuga.. Jerry |
29 Jan 04 - 02:17 PM (#1104489) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Grab You probably should read Moby Dick and Gormenghast once. Just once. Then you know why you never read them before... ;-) I'll second Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon. Snow Crash and Interface are both worth reading as well. Diamond Age and Zodiac aren't as good. If you're into fantasy, Tad Williams is great. You'd better be a fast reader though, or have a lot of time to kill, since so far he's done two tetralogies (4-book series, for those without a handy dictionary :-) and each book is about 2" thick. Well worth it though. Too many fantasy writers just churn out these multi-book series, but Tad Williams is probably the only one since Tolkein who feels like he's creating true epics. But the best recommendation is anything by Sheri S Tepper. Feminist writer doing fantasy, but doing it rationally and well instead of in the big-chip-on-the-shoulder way of LeGuin or Atwood. Very, very good books - if I needed a desert-island author, it'd be her. Graham. |
29 Jan 04 - 02:33 PM (#1104502) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Schantieman Books I have read, enjoyed and can remember the titles and authors of are.... Non-Fiction The Selfish Gene, The Blind Watchmaker and River out of Eden by Richard Dawkins - all expounding Darwin's ideas and bringing them up to date. Two Years Before the Mast by Richard Henry Dana - an account of sailing in a square-rigger by a law student who tried it 'just for fun' in the 1850s (I think). Part-way through this now. Mother Tongue by Bill Bryson - an erudite and entertaining (like everything he writes) dissection of the English language Eats Shoots and Leaves by Lynne Truss - ditto, specialising in erroneous punctuation, like greengocers' apostrophes. Fiction The Handmaids Tale by....?? Disturbing but fascinating. Under the Greenwood Tree, The Trumpet Major and Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy. If you get on with these, try Tess and Return of the Native. NOT Jude the Obscure. The Richard Bolitho books by Alexander Kent - a bit more exciting and less literary than... The Jack Aubrey books by Patrick o'Brian - a bit like Wagner - some wonderful moments but some dreadful half-hours The Catcher in the Rye by J D Salinger That'll do for now. Steve |
29 Jan 04 - 04:36 PM (#1104583) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,Bill Kennedy too many to choose from but here's a short list in no particular order Life on the Mississippi by Twain/Clemens Les Miserables by Victor Hugo unabridged Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust Islandia by ? Henry Roth all of starting with Call it Sleep James Joyce Dubliners/Portrait of Artist as Young Man/Ulysses that should keep you for three months, you'll be a changed man! |
29 Jan 04 - 04:54 PM (#1104597) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST Schantieman...Margaret Attwood I think. |
29 Jan 04 - 05:31 PM (#1104630) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Helen The Handmaids Tale by....?? Margaret Atwood not Attwood, and despite what Grab said, I wouldn't agree about Atwood or Leguin having a chip on their shoulders. I count those two authors as two of my favourites. Atwood is excellent at building a story around individual and group complexities and the vagaries of human memory. Leguin creates fantasy or sci-fi social worlds and intelligently explores the implications of these social structures and the effects on the people living within them. Helen |
29 Jan 04 - 06:14 PM (#1104663) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Helen I just looked up Russell Hoban's Riddley Walker suggestion and I am going to hunt it down and read it. It sounds a lot like a very enigmatic book called Engine Summer by John Crowley, which I have read a couple of times. Enjoyed the first time, savouring every word, but enjoyed even more the second time because I understood where it was heading. Helen |
29 Jan 04 - 06:31 PM (#1104683) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Jerry Rasmussen Call It Sleep! Oh, yes! Jerry |
29 Jan 04 - 07:55 PM (#1104757) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Thomas the Rhymer My three most recent: "The Price of Loyalty" by Ron Suskind "Erewhon" by Samuel Butler "The Strange Life of Ivan Osokin" by P.D.Ouspensky The price of loyalty is a must read for anyone who is under the auspices of the Bush administranium... Erewhon is a fabulous satirical romp... The strange life of Ivan Osokin is a mystical exploration into the quandry that fate implies... Go get 'em, and get on with it! ttr |
30 Jan 04 - 08:56 AM (#1105122) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,James WOW what a great list..I have read some of the things mentioned but I sure have a wide variety to choose from. I am very grateful to all who have posted. This makes me think that we should have a regular book posting as there seems to be a lot of avid readers among us. Thans so much. But don't stop posting, this is wonderful. James |
30 Jan 04 - 07:28 PM (#1105548) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Helen I'm sure that there have been more books & reading threads but here are two for starters: different kind of GREAT BOOKS thread Dangerous books that lead you astray Helen |
30 Jan 04 - 11:21 PM (#1105631) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Sam L Teresa, Fred Chappell lives up the road here next to, um, nevermind. Lot of good writers from around here. But I have to sing my usual lonely song of Nabokov, whose books saved my life. Literally. Or literaryally. whatever. I think it's because of his insistance on lowly parody as a significant element of art. So much smart intellectual stuff just doesn't engage you with a credible likeness of the world around you, a lot of stuff that tries to imitate the world is just stinky stale imitations of previous imitations. he clears one's head. good, good stuff, I like him even for his faults. I started with a book called Transparent Things and kept going. My Dad's poetry is very good, better than you first think, his fiction not so reliably so. |
31 Jan 04 - 06:56 PM (#1106204) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Jim Dixon In case anyone's still paying attention, here are the threads I've found about books (other than songbooks), in date order, oldest first: BS: The saddest read of all Best book you ever read. Worst book Best Book Pt 2 books - ONE masterpiece. BS: What have you been caught reading ? BS: What do you read ? BS: Current reading list - any good books? BS: Movies they should make BS: Your Favorite Authors BS: Books online BS: What Constitutes Good Writing? Books That Most Influenced You BS: A different kind of 'GREAT BOOK' thread. Dangerous Books That Lead You Astray BS: Best recorded books Brits 21 Favourite Books -- Yours? What Books Do You Reread? BS: What books would you NOT reread? |
31 Jan 04 - 09:48 PM (#1106305) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Helen Thanks Jim Dixon, you got in before me and found the threads and then made the links. Good work! Now I can re-read all the threads and find some new reading material, which has bee very scarce for me lately. I can't seem to find anything that is really rivetting and unputdownable, so I have resorted to trying to re-read old favourites, but it is not the same as discovering a new book. Helen |
31 Jan 04 - 10:01 PM (#1106310) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: harpgirl I have been reading Jimmy Carter's historical novel about the 1776 War in the South. It is dense with descriptive facts from that period of history but the plot is somewhat disjointed. It is a good read, however. While sailing on the Caribbean last fall, I read a good historical fiction tale about Sarah, from the Bible -- which I also recommend. I liked Angels and Demons by Dan Brown as well. |
01 Feb 04 - 12:40 AM (#1106355) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Chief Chaos Anything by Terry Pratchett The Darkness series by Harry Turtledove (a WWII like story, 'nother planet, different people, but fought with magic instead of machines) The World War series by Harry Turtledove (alternate history of WWII where aliens invade and become the enemy of all mankind) Almost anything by Anne McCaffery. Anything in the Heralds of Valdemar series. Any of the Bazil The Broke Tail Dragon books. Big fan of sci-fi and fantasy. If I want drama all I gotta do is watch the news. I pick apart the spy novels and murder mysteries for inconsistencies and things that the characters know. I can't stand Sherlock Holmes because he makes connections that are so far off the chart as to be impossible for someone who is not a master of all space time. |
01 Feb 04 - 02:41 AM (#1106382) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,Johnny in OKC Catch 22, by Joseph Heller Great fiction, for men only Love, Johnny |
02 Feb 04 - 08:24 AM (#1107177) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,Janes Thanks soooo much. I spent part of w/end at the Library, Book shop and second hand shop and now have piles of stuff to read. Many of the things suggested I had already read but decided to re read some of them, especially Gormenghast, which I have not read in many years. I have not read much fantasy but saw lots of it suggested so decided to try some. Also picked up the Pat Barker Trilogy which I had hear a lot about but had not yet read. Someone mentioned Cider With Rosie by Laurie Lee and I had just begun to re read it a few days ago..a wonderful book. Thanks for the suggestion of Proust but I do have only three months.... I agree about the Joshua Slocum Book, I live just a short distance from his home town and I have read his book many times. Also, Thomas hardy one of my Favourites..thanks ..I will reread some of his. I like some of Margaret Atwood and will try Alias Grace I think. Thanks again for all the great siggestions...I think I may have to read about ten books a day. |
02 Feb 04 - 08:49 AM (#1107199) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: mooman Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other Animals and False Dawn: The Delusions of Global Capitalism both by Professor John Gray. Perhaps I am betraying my political leanings here? Peace moo |
02 Feb 04 - 09:27 AM (#1107244) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,James It says Janes, but it me James, sorry.. |
02 Feb 04 - 10:59 AM (#1107318) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,pdc I'm glad you mentioned Pat Barker's trilogy, Regeneration. They are wonderful. There is a Canadian-made movie of the books which is very good and available on video. |
02 Feb 04 - 09:48 PM (#1107802) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST Anything by Elizabeth Peters. |
02 Feb 04 - 10:13 PM (#1107815) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: moocowpoo My favourite The third policeman by Flann o'Brien It's been described as an "Alice in wonderland for adults" and is constantly quoting the outlandish ravings of a fictitious pholosopher(commentator) De'selby. an absurdly funny and brilliant story! Or Kinky Friedman for some lighter sillyness. |
03 Feb 04 - 08:30 AM (#1108083) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST Cold comfort Farm..funniest book I have ever read. |
17 Feb 04 - 02:31 PM (#1117889) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,James I am home from hospital and my cat and I are lying in the sun room watching the great ocean and reading, reading, reading. I have just finished the Pat Barker Tilogy and am starting Ahab's Wife. Thank you all for the great suggestions. I am very happy with your choices...and so is the cat . |
18 Feb 04 - 08:56 AM (#1118338) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: Dave the Gnome Just finished the first book in Philip Pullmans 'His dark materials' series and would highly recommend it. Anyone know why it has the alternative titles "Nothern Lights" and "The Golden Compass" btw? Going to start on "The Subtle Knife" tonight and can't wait:-) My non-fiction nomination would go to Bill Bryson - and he is completely transatlantic, nay, Global! So it doesn't seem to matter where you are from. Informed, informing and funny to boot! Cheers DtG |
18 Feb 04 - 01:47 PM (#1118552) Subject: RE: BS: suggest some great books From: GUEST,Oryx "Oryx and Crake" - Margaret Attwood's latest - Wow! Disturbing and brilliant. Read it now. |