News:

In case of downtime/other tech emergencies, you can relatively quickly get in touch with Asmodean Prime by email.

Main Menu

Favourite books

Started by Mister Joy, June 25, 2008, 09:34:11 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

MikeyV

#15
First and foremost is Dune. I got my fist copy when I was 15, and have read it every year since. So that's 25 times, give or take. I love the series, and read them all, but not with the same intensity as Dune. The second most read book in that series is God Emperor of Dune.

This list is by no means comprehensive:

1. Dune - Frank Herbert
2. God Emperor of Dune - Frank Herbert
3. 1984 - George Orwell
4. Animal Farm - George Orwell
5. The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck
6. Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck - I love the movie version with John Malkovich and Gary Senise
7. Where the Red Fern Grows - Wilson Rawls
8. The End of Faith - Sam Harris
9. Letter to a Christian Nation - Sam Harris
10. God is not Great - Christopher Hitchens
11. The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins
12. Sword of Truth series - Terry Goodkind
13. Dragonlance Chronicles Trilogy - Dragons of Autumn Twilight, Dragons of Winter Night, Dragons of Spring Dawning - Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
14. Dragonlance Heroes - The Legend of Huma - Richard Knaak
15. Dragonlance Legends Trilogy - Time of the Twins, War of the Twins, Test of the Twins - Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
16. A Song of Ice and Fire series - A Game of Thrones, A Clash of Kings, A Storm of Swords, A Feast of Crows - George R. R. Martin
17. The Andromeda Strain - Michael Crichton
18. The Chronicles of Prydain - The Book of Three, The Black Cauldron, The Castle of Llyr, Taran Wanderer, The High King - Lloyd Alexander (The second most read series after Dune)

That's just off the top of my head. There are a billion or so more I haven't listed.

I used to be a Stephen King fan...but I just got sick of him, and stopped reading him about 10 years ago. Same for Dean R. Koontz. I swear that guy has a word template and he just changes the names of characters...talk about formulaic.

As for Shakespeare, In order - Taming of the Shrew, Much Ado About Nothing, Hamlet, Richard III.

I tried, 3 times in fact, to read Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment. I got half way through each time, but just can't finish. Same with J. R. R. Tolkein's Lord of the Rings.

Forgot to add: If you haven't read The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan, I would counsel against starting. Although it's a good story, it drags on for about 5 books too far, plus he (Robert Jordan) died this year before he could release the finale. I only kept reading out of spite, I guess. But, like most long winded people, he ruined a fantastic story IMHO. Of course, YMMV.
Life in Lubbock, Texas taught me two things. One is that God loves
you and you're going to burn in hell. The other is that sex is the
most awful, dirty thing on the face of the earth and you should save
it for someone you love.
   
   -- Butch Hancock.

leftyguitarjoe

I do enjoy various atheist literature, but I read ALOT of science books. Books about relativity, string theory, quantum mechanics, ect...

AND I'm an avid sci-fi fan. Asimov is my hero :hail:

afreethinker30

Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit   Great story about a young adopted child growing up in a extreme religious family.And her quest to look inside herself.She falls in love with another woman and her dealing with God,Love and tolerance.
Everything by Anne Rice before she turned her back on us fans and started writing Jesus books.
Jack Ketchum The Girl Next Door ...based on a true story of a crime that happened here in Indiana.

Mister Joy

QuoteYES. just....YES! it's a MUST READ for every Homo sapien. NO!.....for everyone in the Homo genus! (I could swear I've come across some Homo erectuses in my time...hahaha)

I'm shocked and appalled! That could really hurt the feelings of anyone reading this who happens to be horribly inbred.

They can't help the fact that their parents were cousins and siblings simultaneously. Just like they can't help how hilariously disfigured and stupid they are. Or how the whole world laughs at them and their primitive swamp etiquette. Give them a break or the enhanced awareness of their nightmarishly inescapable genes may drive them insane. Which would be particularly unfortunate because no one would notice. :D

MikeyV

#19
Quote from: "Mister Joy"I'd say King can be far better when he wants to be. Trouble is, he's lost popularity over his better books because most of his audience want the formulaic stuff.

Agreed. I'm of the opinion that King is at his best when he's writing human interest/drama as opposed to horror. Dolores Claiborne comes to mind.

I find that his scariest monsters are not the supernatural types -- Cujo, Annie Wilkes from Misery, Jack Torrance from the Shining -- those are my types of crazy.

I'm still a fan of his short stories, Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, Rage (not in print anymore), The Running Man (the only thing it had in common with the Schwarzenegger movie was the title), The long walk, Quitters Inc., Roadwork, wow, there are so many...

The movies based on his works for the most part suck: The Shawshank Redemption, Misery, Dolores Claiborne, and The Green Mile were exceptions to the rule.
Life in Lubbock, Texas taught me two things. One is that God loves
you and you're going to burn in hell. The other is that sex is the
most awful, dirty thing on the face of the earth and you should save
it for someone you love.
   
   -- Butch Hancock.

afreethinker30

QuoteEDIT (spotted something else):

QuoteEverything by Anne Rice before she turned her back on us fans and started writing Jesus books.

Oh I keeled over laughing when I heard that news, it struck me as so absurd. I haven't read "Christ The Lord" but I hope to high heaven that it still has her usual undercurrent of gothic homoeroticism. Now that would be an entertaining read. :hmm: A bisexual Christ...That I would read  :D

Mister Joy

Quote from: "MikeyV"Agreed. I'm of the opinion that King is at his best when he's writing human interest/drama as opposed to horror. Dolores Claiborne comes to mind.

I find that his scariest monsters are not the supernatural types -- Cujo, Annie Wilkes from Misery, Jack Torrance from the Shining -- those are my types of crazy.

I'm still a fan of his short stories, Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption, Rage (not in print anymore), The Running Man (the only thing it had in common with the Schwarzenegger movie was the title), The long walk, Quitters Inc., Roadwork, wow, there are so many...

Indeedy. I find psychological suspense & paranoia to be far more chilling than so called 'true horror'. I like all the ones I've read out of those you've listed. Truth be told though, the Schwarzenegger movie did put me off reading the Running Man. Maybe I'll give that a go after all.

Children of the Corn is quite a good one, I thought. The whole thing as kind of a simplified alternative ending to Lord of the Flies, just with the setting changed and the back-story altered a little.

karadan

Quote from: "Mister Joy"The Wheel of Time is a series that I've often thought about reading but thus far I haven't got around to it.

I read the Da Vinci Code (just like everyone else who reads, obviously because of the controversy it stirred up) which I thought was good. I didn't like Dan Brown's conspiracy theorist attitude about it though. It's fabulous as a piece of fiction but Brown's insistence that the stuff in his book was true got on my nerves a little. Which is a shame because the book is pretty good and I think my knowing that the author is taking himself so seriously has tarnished my ability to enjoy it a little.

Have you read Philip K. Dick's sci-fi A Scanner Darkly? That book is absolutely drenched with conspiracy and paranoia. They made a movie adaptation starring Keanu Reeves a couple of years ago but it was a little disappointing, I thought.

I read the book before watching the film. Loved them both for varying reasons. P K Dick is one of my favourite authors.

I generally read sci-fi so i've read everything from Greg Bear to Iain M Banks. From Asimov to Alfred Bester.

I've recently discovered a Scottish sci-fi author called Richard Morgan. He wrote a trilogy of stories based upon the same badass called 'Takeshi Kovacs'.. The first of these three books was called 'Altered Carbon'. It blew my frigging socks off! I've never seen so many genuinely original ideas packed into one book. He writes with a viscous vigor i haven't seen since 'The Use of weapons' by Iain m Banks. If anyone here is into cyberpunk noir intermingled with detective stories with amazing flair, then this is the book for you.
QuoteI find it mistifying that in this age of information, some people still deny the scientific history of our existence.

Dreamer

probably my favourite book of all time is The Picture of Dorian Grey. i love Oscar wilde.
there are many other books i love.
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
Lord of the Flies - Golding
Revolution in the head - Ian McDonald
Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant/Amateur Marriage/Breathing Lessons - Anne Tyler
Atonement/Enduring Love/Cement Garden - Ian Mcewan
The Namesake - Jumpha Lahiri
Thunderbolt Kid/Neither Here Nor There/Lost Continent - Bill Bryson
*You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one...*

*I may not agree with what you are saying but i will defend to my death your right to say it*

*You never ask questions, when God's on your side*

nikkixsugar

Quote from: "Mister Joy"
QuoteYES. just....YES! it's a MUST READ for every Homo sapien. NO!.....for everyone in the Homo genus! (I could swear I've come across some Homo erectuses in my time...hahaha)

I'm shocked and appalled! That could really hurt the feelings of anyone reading this who happens to be horribly inbred.

They can't help the fact that their parents were cousins and siblings simultaneously. Just like they can't help how hilariously disfigured and stupid they are. Or how the whole world laughs at them and their primitive swamp etiquette. Give them a break or the enhanced awareness of their nightmarishly inescapable genes may drive them insane. Which would be particularly unfortunate because no one would notice. :hmm:  It would just be a case of "Earl's dribbling more than usual today..."

Anyhoo, I don't know if I can be bothered to read The God Delusion simply because I get the impression that it would just be a big book to tell me what I already know - religion is baloney - just with a few extra fun facts to re-affirm it, as if I needed it re-affirming any more.

Mister Joy, you really should read The God Delusion I cannot recommend it highly enough. It talks about the flawed arguments for god, the arguments against god, memetics, polytheism, monotheism, secularism, the theism, deism, and atheism of the Founding Fathers, the roots of religion, the roots of our morality, a critique of the Bible, the moral Zeitgeist, What's wrong with religion and why we should be so hostile toward it, and how religion can be a literal "get out of jail free" card in slander, defamation, and even SPOUSAL ABUSE cases, and much, much, much, much, much, much more. They actually have the first chapter online so you can sample it at //richarddawkins.net. You can buy it from the site, but it would be much cheaper to get it on Amazon or Half.com.

As for the guy from Deliverance, take a whack at it as well.
Hate to tell you, but.....

[spoiler]there is no god. Oh, and Dumbledore dies.[/spoiler]

Dreamer

oh yes :D how could i forget the God Delusion? one of the greatest books i've ever read!
*You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one...*

*I may not agree with what you are saying but i will defend to my death your right to say it*

*You never ask questions, when God's on your side*

Asmodean

Quote from: "Willravel"
Quote from: "Asmodean"No kidding! Mine is in ONE tome. The thing is enough to build three houses out of. But it's a great work of litterature. I'm working on it in its native language too. Makes me sort of proud, that :D
I'd get mine in one tome, but my book case is made of wood, not steel.

You're seriously reading it in the original Russian?! And a little French?! Dude. That's incredible.

Yes. It's not easy. Generic street-corner variety Russian I can handle pretty easily, but Tolstoi didn't write it in generic street-corner variety Russian.
Quote from: Ecurb Noselrub on July 25, 2013, 08:18:52 PM
In Asmo's grey lump,
wrath and dark clouds gather force.
Luxembourg trembles.