Author Topic: Your favorite books?  (Read 4546 times)

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Offline Galemp

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Anything by Roald Dahl.
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Offline Corsair

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LOTR, Harry Potter, Clancy's Jack Ryan books, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
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Offline Mr. Vega

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Fahrenheit 451, the Foundation Novels(or anything else by Isaac Asimov), Speaker for the Dead and its sequels.
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Offline Flipside

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Foundations' Edge - Asimov - for about the 5th time.

The Runelords novels - David Farland - Fantasy with a twist, and it begs a second series, great use of 'magic with a price' here.

The Science of Discworld - Terry Pratchett / Jack Cohen. Half comedy about a wizard (Rincewind, who else) viewing the evolution of the Earth in fast forward, half easy to understand scientific documentary on what current thinking in on what is actually going on.

 

Offline phreak

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Operating System Concepts 6th ed.  Silberschatz, Gilber, Gange.

oh wait this isn't a least favo(u)rite books thread.
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The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan. Blows Tolkien and those furry little hobbits outta the sky, IMO. :D
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Offline NGTM-1R

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Offline pyro-manic

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Quote
Originally posted by aldo_14
Hitchhikers Guide (the big 4 book trilogy-in the onebook- version, but especially ), 1984 (for ideas rather than entertainment value), Calvin & Hobbes "It's a magical world" (sentimental reasons; it's the lastbook I have from what could be considered childhood - i.e. just about the point where before life stopped being all about fun - and also because it;s the last one ever as well.)


What? Has Watterson stopped doing Calvin and Hobbes then? I didn't know that...

Calvin and Hobbes is my favourite comic strip of all time. It's intelligent, incredibly funny and at the same time conveys some very serious messages. Fantastic stuff. If what you say is true, then I'm gutted. I started reading the books when I was the same age as Calvin (6), so I kinda grew up with him (even though he stayed six forever, and I didn't).

Oh, man - hearing that has actually upset me. Damn.... :blah: :(

Erm, favourite books. Tricky one. Apart from Calvin and Hobbes, here's some of my favourite fiction:

His Dark Materials - Phillip Pullman (Meant to be a trilogy for children, but the story is so powerful on so many levels that anyone would love it. The daemons are quite possibly my favourite device in any book ever. The story is wonderful, and it's hugely moving. I cried....)

Against a Dark Background - Iain M. Banks. (IMO his best book. Great characters, vicious plot, magnificent imagery.)

Look To Windward - Iain M. Banks (Again, a great book. It's got some fantastic creatures - dirigible behemothaurs - and the themes are brilliant - love, death, regret and classical music...)

Swallows And Amazons series - Arthur Ransome (happy childhood memories of this. They're rather dated now, being written and set in the 1930s, but they're all good, and the earlier ones are classics - Sallows and Amazons, Swallowdale, etc.)

A Call to Arms - Alan Dean Foster (bloke who wrote Alien originally. It's the first of a trilogy called "the Damned". It's basically sci fi about alien invasion and galactic war, but it's got some great ideas, none of which I'm about to give away here :p. I first read this when I was about 12, when my mum got it for me from the library. I loved it, read the rest of the trilogy, and then forgot about it for years. I spent a long time trying to find it again, but was hampered by the fact I couldn't remember what it was called or who the author was. I eventually found it again after hours of googling, as I could only remember the name of one of the alien species - the Massood. Was worth it though - I bought it and read it again, and it's as good as I remember...)

Currently reading Paradise Lost by Milton. Hard work, but very good.
« Last Edit: December 06, 2004, 08:49:56 pm by 853 »
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Offline Corsair

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Quote
Originally posted by pyro-manic
His Dark Materials - Phillip Pullman (Meant to be a trilogy for children, but the story is so powerful on so many levels that anyone would love it. The daemons are quite possibly my favourite device in any book ever. The story is wonderful, and it's hugely moving. I cried....)
D'oh. How could I have forgotten those books? Yeah, those are definitely on my favorites list too...

Oh, and pyro...Calvin and Hobbes stopped being published a few years ago. Anything you see in newspapers are old. :(
Wash: This landing's gonna get pretty interesting.
Mal: Define "interesting".
Wash: *shrug* "Oh God, oh God, we're all gonna die"?
Mal: This is the captain. We have a little problem with our entry sequence, so we may experience some slight turbulence and then... explode.

 

Offline Kamikaze

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Hmmm, off the top of my head...

Use of Weapons - Iain M. Banks - A culture novel, the structure of the book is neat and the story is interesting and varied. Worth reading a couple of times.

The Bridge - Iain Banks - A non-culture novel with an interesting interweaving storyline. Very good, though it will confuse you.

Renrenrenpo No Enshuu/A Sea of Deceits (The book has a Japanese and English title printed on the cover, the titles don't mean the same thing) - Hiroshi Mori - Part of a mystery series by Hiroshi Mori (a professor at Nagano University). One of my favorite books from the series so far (I also liked Yuugen to Bishou No Pan/A Perfect Outsider).

Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams - If you haven't read this, you've just gotten your geek license revoked. ;)

Takedown - Tsutomu Shimomura - Great story about a computer hacker (the author) who tracks and captures the cracker Kevin Mitnick.
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Offline übermetroid

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Nightfall
Star Ship Troopers
Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy
LOTR

Calvin and Hobbes
Zits
Fox Trot
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Offline Knight Templar

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  • The Art of War - Sun Tzu
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Offline Zuljin

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The Wheel of Time.
Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy.
Discworld.
LOTR.

 

Offline pyro-manic

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Addition: The Dirt - Motley Crue. About all the crazy stuff they got up to. Brilliant read.
Any fool can pull a trigger...

 

Offline ionia23

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Side Note - Everybody who participates in our varying political threads really ought to read those two books.

"The Dark Tower Series" - Stephen King
"Dune" - Frank Herbert
"The Silmarillion" - Tolkein (hard to read, but boy would I love to see Peter Jackson make it visual)
"The Green Futures Of Tycho"
"The Chronicles of Amber"
"The White Mountains/City Of Gold And Lead/The Pool Of Fire"
any of the Harry Pott-ah books
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Offline Mongoose

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Quote
Originally posted by Jetmech Jr.
The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan. Blows Tolkien and those furry little hobbits outta the sky, IMO. :D

You've got to be kidding me.  Half of Jordan's stuff is either directly or indirectly ripped from Tolkien.  I've read two of the books, and they're nowhere near Tolkien's league.  Plus, the guy has written about eleven novels about the size of dictionaries, and where I'm at in the story now, I see no feasible way of drawing out the story that long.  Read my lips:  the medium of fantasy works best with the trilogy.  Always has, always will.

If you can't tell, I'm a Tolkien fanatic. :D I also loved C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia (it's good no matter what your age) and Space Trilogy (Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, and That Hideous Strength).  My other favorites include the Sabriel trilogy by Garth Nix (Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen--could be considered children's books by some, but they tell a great story with some unique elements) and the Hitchhiker's Guide (can't beat a classic :)).

Quote
Originally posted by pyro-maniacHis Dark Materials - Phillip Pullman (Meant to be a trilogy for children, but the story is so powerful on so many levels that anyone would love it. The daemons are quite possibly my favourite device in any book ever. The story is wonderful, and it's hugely moving. I cried....)

I completely agree with you.  A great trilogy with some very touching elements.

 

Offline Krackers87

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His Dark Materials

The Boxes

Calvin & Hobbes

Dune

Chronicles of Narnia

Hot Zone

Anything by Dave Barry
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Offline Black Wolf

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Offline Col. Fishguts

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Quote
Originally posted by PhReAk
Operating System Concepts 6th ed.  Silberschatz, Gilber, Gange.

oh wait this isn't a least favo(u)rite books thread.


Is that the one with the dinosaurs sitting in a coffehouse on the cover ?

My favourites:
"HHGTTG - A trilogy in 5 parts" - Douglas Adams
"The call of Cthulhu and other weird stories" - H.P Lovecraft
"Blade Runner" - Philip K. Dick
Every Gary Larson collection
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