best book you've read

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    The Alienist was like 15 years ago. You haven't read a fiction book sense? In any event, I was wondering why more non-fiction books aren't being listed since the title of the thread doesn't specify genre or type.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by pinkmoon View Post
    Good taste in books especially papillon the exorcist is a very good horror book however I think the devil rides out by Dennis wheatley is the best horror book of all time
    Never read The Exorcist, but I rate the movie as still the best horror flick ever made.

    After looking through the thread I now realize just how many books I've read that I've totally forgotten about. Dennis Wheatley was a favourite of mine in my teens and yes, The Devil Rides Out was my favourite of his, then I think, Strange Conflict.

    I liked The Alienist, (the last fiction book I read), but I thought the end was weak.
    Moondust, by Arthur C Clark was my favourite of his, I'm surprised they never made it into a movie.
    I mostly read ancient history/archaeology books so that likely doesn't really count for 'favourites'.
    Stewart's "Ultimate" is so well used its in a sad and sorry state by now.
    Antonia Frazer's - The Gunpowder Plot, was a real gem.
    Robert Drews - The End of the Bronze Age, a great intro. to the subject.
    Hoffmeier - Israel in Egypt & Ancient Israel in Sinai, are first class.

    I find it a real struggle to get into fiction which I think this thread is more concerned with.

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  • Wickerman
    replied
    Originally posted by Tom_Wescott View Post
    Political correctness is a fleeting phase.
    Lets hope so.....but then again we have always been warned that the meek shall inherit the Earth - heaven forbid!

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  • Chris
    replied
    Sorry, but you're all obviously wrong. The correct answer is clearly 'Moby Dick'.

    "All visible objects, man, are but as pasteboard masks ..."

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  • pinkmoon
    replied
    Originally posted by Cogidubnus View Post
    Hello Tom

    Yes it was a very good book indeed and the first of the sci fi genre I ever (thanks to my father) read...at the age of about ten...It says something that despite all the book-culls down the years, I've still copies of all the John Wyndham books on my shelves...and I'm sadly down now to my last couple of thousand...

    If you can spare the time you might find his work rewarding - it's almost early science faction...

    The royalties from some of his works were gifted in perpetuity to his old school, Bedales, near Petersfield, which isn't that far from me.

    Cheers

    Dave
    I can recommend it myself as well.

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  • Cogidubnus
    replied
    The Kraken Wakes

    Hello Tom

    Yes it was a very good book indeed and the first of the sci fi genre I ever (thanks to my father) read...at the age of about ten...It says something that despite all the book-culls down the years, I've still copies of all the John Wyndham books on my shelves...and I'm sadly down now to my last couple of thousand...

    If you can spare the time you might find his work rewarding - it's almost early science faction...

    The royalties from some of his works were gifted in perpetuity to his old school, Bedales, near Petersfield, which isn't that far from me.

    Cheers

    Dave

    Leave a comment:


  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Wasn't Day of the Triffids a B-Movie? No idea it was a book.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

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  • Bridewell
    replied
    In no particular order (except for the first two):

    Penguins Stopped Play (Harry Thompson)

    Cider With Rosie (Laurie Lee)

    The Day of the Jackal (Frederick Forsyth)

    The Day of the Triffids (John Wyndham aka John Beynon) - also most of his other work.

    Nelson (Tom Pocock)

    The Foundation Trilogy (Isaac Asimov)

    The Flashman Novels (as previously referred to)

    Animal Farm & 1984 (George Orwell)

    Brave New World (Aldous Huxley)

    The Virgin Soldiers (Leslie Thomas) - and most of his other works, including the autobiographical - This Time Next Week.

    At My Mother's Knee and Other Low Joints (Paul O'Grady) - received the unheard of accolade of a positive review in Private Eye magazine.

    (I'm sure there will be additions to the above but it will do for now).

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  • Tom_Wescott
    replied
    Originally posted by DVV View Post
    So many masterpieces would be politically incorrect now.
    Huysmans would be a mere woman hater.
    Poe, a racist.
    Jünger, a nazi.
    Dostoïevski would be branded as a putinist.
    Etc, etc.
    They would all be censored.
    Unfortunately, finner feelings and good literature are two different things.
    Look at the reason (if I can call it so) why Borges didn't get the Nobel. What a shame.

    By the by, talking of Borges, I'd like to add Bioy Casares' extraordinary "Invention of Morel" to my list.
    Political correctness is a fleeting phase. It will eventually die out. But in the meantime, how perfectly annoying it is.

    Yours truly,

    Tom Wescott

    Leave a comment:


  • Mayerling
    replied
    Originally posted by Magpie View Post
    Thinking back, I'm surprised at just how many bloody good books I was "forced" to read in school:

    Moonfleet
    Day Of The Triffids
    The Chrysalids
    1984
    Brave New World
    Wuthering Heights
    The Great Gatsby
    Fifth Business

    Many of which I've reread, voluntarily, since.

    Of course they made is read some absolute dross too, like The Stone Angel and Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, and of course the shameless gutting of anything by Shakespeare.
    I had to read Wuthering Heights, 1984, and Brave New World too. The first two were excellent (almost anything by Orwell is great) but I really had problems with liking the Huxley book. He is not a great writer for the pleasure of reading.

    Is "Moonfleet" the basis for a 1950s costume swashbuckler about smugglers which starred Stewart Granger and George Sanders?

    There were some duds among the books I was assigned in school to read:

    A Seperate Peace by John Knowles (it was praised to the skies in the early 1970s - I never understood why).

    The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Sallinger (Yes really!! - I found the biggest phony in this novel of an adolescent in revolt and revulsion towards phonies was Holden Caulfield himself. To make matters worse, I had to read the novel in 7th Grade and again in 11th Grade. Imagine education turned into a torture machine.

    I like Shakespeare, but feel it should be read in bits, and only concentrated on in college courses.

    Jeff

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  • belinda
    replied
    Douglas Adams five part trilogy of The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy

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  • Magpie
    replied
    Thinking back, I'm surprised at just how many bloody good books I was "forced" to read in school:

    Moonfleet
    Day Of The Triffids
    The Chrysalids
    1984
    Brave New World
    Wuthering Heights
    The Great Gatsby
    Fifth Business

    Many of which I've reread, voluntarily, since.

    Of course they made is read some absolute dross too, like The Stone Angel and Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz, and of course the shameless gutting of anything by Shakespeare.

    Leave a comment:


  • Carol
    replied
    I have two books that qualify for the title of 'the best book I've read'.

    J.B. Priestley - 'Angel Pavement' and
    Mrs. Belloc Lowndes - 'I, too, have lived in Arcadia'

    Carol

    Leave a comment:


  • Nick Spring
    replied
    Favourites

    For what it is worth here are some my favourites, not all but some and in no particular order:

    Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte

    The Lord of the Rings - Tolkien

    Mammoth Pike - Fred Buller

    No need to lie - Richard Walker

    Winnie The Pooh - A. A. Milne

    The Country Blues - Samuel Charters

    Beyond A Boundary - CLR James

    Ten Great Bowlers - Ralph Barker

    cheers

    Nick

    Leave a comment:


  • Steve S
    replied
    Originally posted by Magpie View Post
    Individual books that I reread on a regular basis:

    Shadowland, by Peter Straub
    Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman
    The Three Musketeers, my Duma
    Moonfleet, by Faulkner
    The Gun Seller, by Hugh Laurie

    There's also several series that I love, and reread often:

    Discworld, by Terry Pratchett
    Repairman Jack, by F. Paul Wilson
    Sharpe, by Bernard Cornwell
    Sven Hassel's WW2 novels
    Raffles, by E.W. Hornung.
    Lovejoy, by Jonathan Gash

    Anyone who gets a chance to read Nancy Barker's vampire novels would be in for a treat--good luck finding them though.
    I remember reading Sven Hassel's back in the 1970's........Read all of Cornwell's, but think the "Viking" series are better than the "Sharpes" Fighting through complete Dumas..done all the Musketeer-related ones,now for the rest!

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