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Your all-time favorite writers?
Hoping to find some new good ones :glugglug
My favorites are: Franz Kafka, Bertolt Brecht, Oscar Wilde, Albert Camus, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Jean-Paul Sartre, Ferdinand Bordewijk, Edgar Allen Poe, Thomas Mann, Fyodor Dostoevsky and Anton Chekhov Probably forgetting a few, but these are the main ones :glugglug |
Chuck Palahniuk (fight club), William Gibson (nueormancer) :thumbsup :thumbsup
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John Milton, Dante Aligheiri, Burroughs, Bukowski, Hunter S Thompson, Kerouac, Stephen King, Poe, and Lovecaft.
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fuck I forgot William Blake and Baudelaire.
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Kerouac, Hemingway, Burgess, Fitzgerald, Harper Lee, Gibson, Poe, Hunter S, Steinbeck, Douglas Adams, Shakespeare... and many more
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So far, I remember forgetting Shakespeare, Nabokov, Lucebert and Lord Byron
She walks in beauty like the night Of cloudless climes and starry skies, And all that's best of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes; Thus mellowed to the tender light Which heaven to gaudy day denies. One ray the more, one shade the less Had half impaired the nameless grace Which waves in every raven tress Or softly lightens o'er her face, Where thoughts serenely sweet express How pure, how dear their dwelling place. And on that cheek and o'er that brow So soft, so calm yet eloquent, The smiles that win, the tints that glow But tell of days in goodness spent A mind at peace with all below, A heart whose love is innocent. Simply beautiful :glugglug |
I forgot Tolkien... doh!
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books suck, but if you must read, check our Dave Barry.
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I have a hardback version of Leaves Of Grass from 1908. I love old books. :winkwink: |
Roald Dhal...
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for sure Tolkien... and i didn't even consider non-fiction
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And as silly as it may sound.
Theodore Geisel. His words were some of the first to hit me. 'From there to here, from here to there funny things are everywhere.' rip old man. :glugglug |
Clive Cussler
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And two more forgotten authors: Vestdijk and Eco |
I enjoy a lot of old pulpy stuff, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Kenneth Robeson...
Philip Jose Farmer I dig, Clifford Simak (cheezy sci-fi) I mainy read these days to help me sleep. |
i also really like Jack London
"I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet" |
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http://www.iath.virginia.edu/whitman/works/ A whole new world is out there if you havent read any. <img src=http://www.whitmanarchive.org/servlets/xmlframes/documents/works/Leaves1855images/ppp.00271.048.jpg border="1"> |
That is an easy one: Stephen King
I got over 20 books from Stephen King, and each of those books is completely different from all the other ones. |
WIlliam Gibson (neuromancer), Tolkien, HP Lovecraft, Richard Adams, Douglas Adams, Spider Robinson, Frank Herbert, Shakespeare (plays), Tennyson (poetry). I'm sure there's more I haven't thought of yet.
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also really like Betty Smith (A Tree Grows In Brooklyn) and Frank McCourt (Angela's Ashes)...
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http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...tegory=29 226 one of my favorites. i dont have the dust jacket, and it looks exactly like that one. I never open it though. :winkwink: |
A more recent find: The Elementary Particles by Michel Houellebecq. It gives a rather disturbing view of modern societry and it's morality. Disgusting at times, but very well-written.
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Isaac Asimov - Franck Herbert
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Punkworld, quiet.
buy this and read it. I think youd love it. Its not for the weak hearted. Stories that make even me smirk. Really disturbing. Some are only 2 - 3 pages but are very good. http://www.younggodrecords.com/Relea...p?ReleaseID=17 '"The Consumer is a look at the inner world of illusion, hallucination, self-hatred, and search for identification through mis-indentification of a lost soul. It is an all consuming book. It is cerainly not a book for the squeamish, yet even the squeamish, I believe, will be hypnotized by this book. Though hallucinatory, the writing is extremely clear, crisp, succinct, as the narrator literally eviscerates himself for the reader. Yet, at the end I found myself with an unanswerable question: are the hallucinations a distortion of reality, or really closer to the reality of the world?" - Hubert Selby, Jr., author of Last Exit to Brooklyn; Song of the Silent Snow, Requiem for a Dream "M. Gira is an astonishing writer whose belief in the power of language is almost supernatural. The Consumer is one of the purest, scariest, and most beautiful books I've read in years." - Dennis Cooper, author of Try:Frisk "This is repulsive writing. Brilliant, disciplined and repulsive writing." - Nick Cave' a must read for anyone into literature. Gira is also well known for producing every Swans recording put out, but he is one excellent writer, I wish he put out mre stuff. http://www.younggodrecords.com/Artists/MichaelGira/ |
O'Reilly books :Graucho
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it's a toss up between myself and juicy
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Cool, its hard to not enjoy it.
:thumbsup Can't believe no one has said Neil Gaiman yet. Surely one of the best. http://www.neilgaiman.com |
Not in any particular order..but James Michener,Kurt Vonnegut,Jack Kerouac,Arthur C.Clarke,Robert Heinlein and lately
Tom Clancy are a few i have enjoyed. |
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<FONT SIZE=5>ARTHUR CHARLES CLARKE</FONT>
(2001: Space Odyssey) |
I recently ordered some books by Dennis Lehane. He seems to be very good - a kind of modern Raymond Chandler.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...books&n=507846 |
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I also named my dog Kerouac for a reason ;) I also like Salinger, Huxley, H.G. Wells, of course King, Burroughs, Poe, Lovecraft, C.S. Lewis. Some of my favorite books of all time. The Chronicles of Narnia by CS Lewis Hollywood by Bukowski The Stand by King Brave New World by Huxley spent a summer reading nothing but classics and enjoyed those immensely... The invisible man journey to the Center ofthe Earth War of the worlds Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Frankenstein *better than any movie EVER* Dracula Naked Lunch 9 Short Stories by Salinger Catcher In The Rye by Salinger damn so many books so many writers... I bought my nieces The Chronicles of Narnia series, I think I'll pick it up and read it again which would make it the fourth time :) |
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Never read the book..I guess I should. |
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As for Naked Lunch, Ive read The Soft machine, Junky, and The Wild Boys over and over. Burroughs gets me going. His Cities Of The Red Night trilogy is nice too. He does some really weird twisting of history in these... good stuff ;) |
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