Favorite Books

Talk about whatever is on your mind, if it doesn't go anywhere else.
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Postby OneSevenNine » 2008.12.02 (23:26)

A Void by Georges Perec (trans. Gilbert Adair): This book has no "e"'s in it, (No, really) making it a strange read, but Perec's writing style dazzles me every time I see it.
The rules of perspective by Adam Thorpe
The areas of my expertise by John Hodgman: Funniest three hundred pages of non-sequitirs ever.
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Postby matttaylor » 2008.12.15 (23:27)

My favorite is the Power of five series by Anthony Horowitz, because they are written so well and has a great story-line
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Postby epigone » 2008.12.16 (01:05)

I like dystopian novels, particularly 1984, Brave New World, The Handmaid's Tales, Fahrenheit 451, etc.

I also really love any Vonnegut books.
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Postby Slayr » 2008.12.16 (02:49)

i liked all the rede wall books(brian jacques), the shannara books(terry brooks), thw word/ void series(terry brooks), pendragon(d.J machale), aex rider(anthony horowitz), the malzan empire books(steven erikson, still reading them), can't remember the series, but it' by terry goodkind and finallt the genesis of shannara series and it's by terry brooks(go terry!!!!) oh, and the inheritance series(eragon, eldest and brisingr) were ok, and you cant forget the Landover series(terry brooks), darksword trilogy(cant remember who wrote it) the shadow series(tad williams), memory sorrow and thorn(tad williams) and cant forget the ultimate book THE MISSING PIECE(thats a classic, shel silverstein)

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Postby Pixon » 2008.12.18 (23:57)

Anything by Roald Dahl please me.
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Postby blackson » 2008.12.20 (05:23)

A Brief History of Time- Stephen Hawkins
The Artemis Fowl Series.
Atheism: The Case Against God- George Smith
Adrift-Steve Callahan

Just a few.

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Postby Luminaflare » 2008.12.23 (16:16)

Battle Royale by Koushun Takami is making its way higher in to my top ranked books the more I read it. Also Tsukatu, thanks for the recommendation of Transmetropolitan.

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Postby blackson » 2008.12.24 (08:29)

I got this book called "Rapture for the Geeks" at Barnes and Noble a few days ago.

I love it.

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Postby otters~1 » 2008.12.26 (19:57)

The Silmarillion, Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Lost Tales, etc...
The Hitchhiker's Guide books and the even funnier Dirk Gently novels.
Narnia--those books have more symbolism than anything I've ever read.
1984 was good.
Dickens.
Dante.
The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire.
Louis Lamour.
Anything about baseball.
PG Wodehouse--Douglas Adams' inspiration.
Isaac Asimov.
The Harry Potter series was quite good.
And finally, something I'm surprised no one has mentioned yet: His Dark Materials, by Phillip Pullman.

Obviously this list is quite incomplete. By the way, I read a lot. :)
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Postby SlappyMcGee » 2008.12.26 (20:49)

Tsukatu wrote:
  • Transmetropolitan
I feel I can't adequately explain why until you start reading, and by that point I wouldn't have anything to explain.

kai had a Transmetropolitan avatar without even knowing what it was, but I set him straight, I did.

Well, so far as traditional novels go,

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson
Dracula by Bram Stoker
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (Actually, I hate this book. But it's good, sort of.)
The first couple books of Hitchhiker's Guide by Douglas Adams.
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess. (although I liked the movie more...)


I dunno, fuck novels. Graphic Novels are where it's at.

Anything by Grant Morrison, like the incredible All-Star Superman.
Kingdom Come.
Joe Kelly's work on Deadpool.
Warren Ellis, as previously mentioned.
Watchmen, although I suppose that's rather tired.


Oh, back on books.

Catch-22 was very good.
Anything and everything by Kurt Vonnegut. But especially Slaughterhouse Five. But also especially everything else.


I should clarify. Everyone in Canada has this love relationship with Life of Pi, and I fucking hate that book. The ending ruined the middle, and the middle ruined the beginning. Also, in rage at the metaphor, I ripped the tiger out of the cover from my book, and now there's a hole in my book.

Ooooh. The Big Sleep.

Heart of Darkness.

Oh, yeah, and Dune. And everything by Fyodor Dostoevsky, but less than Vonnegut.
Last edited by SlappyMcGee on 2008.12.26 (21:02), edited 1 time in total.
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Postby origami_alligator » 2008.12.26 (21:01)

Dune was one of the greatest books I have ever read.
the Abhorsen series (Sabriel, Lirael and Abhorsen) by Garth Nix were all very good, though the last book was a bit too short, and Lirael was a bit too long.
His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman were some of the greatest books. The way in which he described creatures from other worlds entirely was amazing and he gave a lot of personality and character to the settings and people within the books.
Someone mentioned Roald Dahl, and I want to add Daniel Pinkwater to the "anything by this author" list.
Anthem by Ayn Rand is one of the most interesting books I have come across. I still have yet to read The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged, but I have heard they are both good as well.


Currently I'm between reading The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowldge, by Carlos Castaneda, and The Republic, by Plato.
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Postby Zephyr » 2008.12.29 (05:46)

Matthew Reilly ftw
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Orange- N cannot be spoken, or even thought about in my household. If my parents ever found out that I have played N since the cleansing, my life would be ruined. I keep the game in a multi-passworded .rar on a USB flash drive inside a locked boron alloy container that requires two keys to open (I keep one under the 64th hammer in my piano, and the other one in a small section of removable ceiling in the corner of the attic) hidden in a wall compartment lined with aluminium foil to prevent sonar detection behind my 375 kg cupboard, which is bolted to the floor - the only way to reach it is to abseil outside the fourth floor window and use a screwdriver to unfasten the screws holding the secret brick in place on the opposite side of the wall, but the screwdriver must be a specific type like the one I own, since if any other screwdriver comes into contact with the screws, the entire building will explode, as will a seperate charge placed inside the boron alloy container, rendering the USB useless. Even once the container is retrieved, attemping to open it without the arming pin in place (which is kept inside the battery compartment of my Maglite) will cause the water reservoirs lining the container to burst and react with the caesium lining, causing the container to burst into flames - the only way to prevent this is to use the arming pins to shut off the reservoirs with a sliding steel door. The USB itself contains an accelerometer linked to an explosive charge, meaning that if the USB detects its own movement speed as being greater than 5 cm/s, it will explode - any person attempting to steal it would have to move at a uselessly slow speed. Once plugged into a computer, the USB will upload a ghost virus onto it, leaving no traces. Only the right password can deactivate this virus, and if it is left on the computer for more than six hours, it will format all drives.

As you can see, I take my N playing very seriously.

Guiseppi- I'd much rather watch animals get boned in the ass.

Yanni- If it's glad, it's not rape.

Tsukatu- I refuse to use throw-away bags for such a frequent purpose as buying groceries. Instead, I've collected the hair of my two pet dogs and have woven them together into an all-natural, 100% environmentally friendly bag that I bring with me everywhere. And when I buy products that come in glass and plastic containers, I track down the company that packages them and ship back their containers so that they don't take up space in landfills.


Yeah, I use plastic.

Tsukatu- I hear Ebony Online is great, too. Cum save your princess, my lord!

Ska- UR MUM LIKE IS SPICY

Ska- why d i get the feeling what i typed will end up in the quote depository; or worse: someone's sig.

KinGAleX- I did it on the couch a little while ago.

Zeph- I got too pissed at the knife in the end so I just broke the wood on my knee

[13:50:29] |<-- Zeph has left irc.mountai.net (Quit: Zeph)
[13:50:53] <Zeph> omfg 1950s jazz :D
[13:50:57] <WorldCupE> ZEPH
[13:51:01] <WorldCupE> WHAT
[13:51:11] <WorldCupE> hpw
[13:51:12] <WorldCupE> how
[13:51:12] <Zeph> everyone wears out halfway through the match
[13:51:15] <WorldCupE> ._.
[13:51:17] <WorldCupE> you
[13:51:19] <WorldCupE> aren't
[13:51:20] <WorldCupE> here
[13:51:24] <WorldCupikaze> I think the broadcasters lowered the volume for certain frequencies
[13:51:35] <WorldCupikaze> WOAH
[13:51:38] <WorldCupikaze> STOP IT ZEPH
[13:51:46] <WorldCupE> he's in #n
[13:51:49] <WorldCupE> but not here
[13:51:58] <Zeph> that nz guy wasn't fouled
[13:52:05] <WorldCupikaze> DUBBLE YOO. TEE. EFF.
[13:52:05] <WorldCupikaze> STOPIT
[13:52:29] <WorldCupE> I don't think Zeph can read what we say
[13:52:38] <WorldCupikaze> No
[13:52:41] <WorldCupikaze> But it still happens
[13:52:46] <WorldCupE> xD
[13:52:47] <Zeph> holy shot I'm vibrating to 1950s relaxing jazz
[13:52:58] <WorldCupE> ZEPH
[13:53:01] <WorldCupE> CAN YOYU HEAR ME
[13:53:20] <WorldCupE> donfuy
[13:53:23] <WorldCupE> have you seen this
[13:53:35] <Donfuy> i can't
[13:53:43] <WorldCupE> can't what
[13:53:47] <WorldCupE> Zeph isn't here
[13:53:48] <WorldCupikaze> WHAT's GOING ON
[13:53:51] <WorldCupE> but is speaking
[13:53:51] <WorldCupE> D:
[13:53:58] <Donfuy> can't see what huh?
[13:54:06] <WorldCupikaze> IT'S THE APOCALYPSE
[13:54:10] <Donfuy> where's zeph o_o
[13:54:18] <WorldCupE> precisely
[13:54:21] <WorldCupikaze> Exactly
[13:55:21] <WorldCupikaze> call wide
[13:55:24] <Zeph> Pooh
[13:55:28] <WorldCupikaze> EH?
[13:55:37] <WorldCupikaze> OOOOOOOOoh
[13:55:38] <Zeph> amazing slide tackle saves day
[13:55:48] <WorldCupikaze> WHY ARE YOU TALKING YOU AREN'T HERE
[13:56:53] <WorldCupikaze> call wide
[13:57:02] -->| Zeph ([email protected]) has joined #Worldcup

[13:32:33] |<-- Zeph has left irc.mountai.net (Quit: Zeph)
[13:32:43] <WorldCupE> ZEPH D:<
[13:32:44] <Zeph> fucking irc app
[13:32:47] <WorldCupE> O_O
[13:32:50] -->| Zeph ([email protected]) has joined #Worldcup

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Postby bobaganuesh_2 » 2008.12.30 (00:14)

The Dark Tower Series by Stephen King, most notably The Dark Tower I: The Gunslinger and The Dark Tower III: The Wastelands , though I ahve not read the last book in the series yet. Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis I read as a 'child' and it resonates through my head. I have read the prelude to Dune Trilogy, and my favourite of that is probably Dune: House Harkonnen. Animal Farm was quite enjoyable, I look forward to reading 1984 sooner or later. Mind of the Raven by Bernd Heinrich is a sort of biological analysis of the behavior of ravens, and talks about their intellect and social tendencies. Of course the graphic novel V for Vendetta by Alan Moors and David Lloyd.made me more cynical towards the movie (I should be finished Watchmen by now but I'm so goddam procrastinative! That was pretty amazing. And most recently The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini. Truly heart-warming.

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Postby crescor » 2008.12.30 (08:45)

The name of the rose - Umberto Eco.

I challenge you all to read 'Ullyses', from James Joyce. The most difficult book ever written.
I made it to page 304
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Postby Luminaflare » 2008.12.30 (13:08)

How can a book be difficult? O_o

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Postby wolfgang » 2008.12.30 (13:39)

Perdido Street Station and The Scar by China Mieville, dark twisted steam punk fantasy. The imagination of the man is breathtaking, and his prose is beautiful. I'm just about to start reading Iron Council, which I got for Christmas.

Deadhouse Gates by Steven Erikson, the series is overall pretty shaky, but this is epic fantasy at it's finest. An engaging, grueling tragedy from start to finish.

The Life of Pi could get a mention, a great concept and a touching journey that only get's cooler once it starts to bleed surrealism and an unreliable narrator. The ambiguous ending is lovely.
Luminaflare wrote:How can a book be difficult? O_o
Seriously, you've never heard the term?

Difficult just means it takes a lot of mental agility or effort to read. The language can be particularly complex. The plot can be convoluted to follow, or there can just be some mind-bending concepts that you struggle to comprehend.


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