Roman Totale wrote:I would also recommend the 'Dirk Gently' books by Adams. Dirk is a "holistic detective" in that he believes that all things are inter-connected, and combines elements of quantum physics, chaos theory, Coleridge and pizza.
Recommended Reading
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Dr. kitteny berk
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Anhamgrimmar
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HereComesPete
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not sure if this has been posted yet, but I recommend reading The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fford.
It is set in a world where television is a vessel used only for news and books and reading is really where the action is. It is based around a Litratech Agent named Thursday Next and is astoundingly clever in it's construction and narration. Simply superb
It is set in a world where television is a vessel used only for news and books and reading is really where the action is. It is based around a Litratech Agent named Thursday Next and is astoundingly clever in it's construction and narration. Simply superb
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nunoncastors
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bomberesque
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OK, most of my fave sci-fi authors have already been mentioned here;
PK Dick
Iain Banks (with or without the M)
Steven Baxter
Neal Stephenson (before he went all nutty on teh Baroque cycle, which I'm fairly sure anyway was only an excuse to write about a bird fisting a bloke to get him off because his cock had rotted off)
Herbert (Dune bloke)
Orwell
Anthony Burgess. Anyone who could write C. Orange at all let alone in under a month gets my vote. He also wrote a superb critique on 1984 titled... 1985 in which he accuese Orwell of being a champagn socialist. Gripping stuff.
Alastair Reynolds
Also (some may have been mentioned above, I went through most but not all the posts)
William Gibson - If you haven't head of him stop now and hang your head in shame
Peter F Hamilton - zeroG sex cages cyber marines and and zombies, what could go wrong?
Richard Morgan - Takeshi Kovacs is a dark hero several political points being made in this stuff but never takes away from teh visceral killing
Alastair Reynolds
....I'll have to look at my bookshelf again to aid my memory
Also, and don't burn me for saying this, but there does actually exist some good Fantasy out there written by authors other than JRR T.
Gormenghast by the absolutely fucking insane Mervyn Peak is the direction that fantasy could have taken, if not for the hobbit/LOTR hijacking the train so effectively
Perdido Street station and The Scar By China Meiville
Fool on the Hill by Matt Ruff
The His Dark Materials series by Bill Philip Pullman. For kids but excellent in a way that Harry potter can only guess at.
Neal Gaimen - great although I'm getting tired of folk tales, honestly
Read Scar night recently by some dude who was in Rockstar North. Was Meiville like but not as good.
For contemporary fiction
Martin Amis
Iain Banks (sans M)
Thingy Pirsig; Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance, is much less quirky and much more poignent than it sounds
Chuck Palahniuk his stuff includes Fight club. Very subversive stuff. This guy is a nutter.
blimey, that went on too long
PK Dick
Iain Banks (with or without the M)
Steven Baxter
Neal Stephenson (before he went all nutty on teh Baroque cycle, which I'm fairly sure anyway was only an excuse to write about a bird fisting a bloke to get him off because his cock had rotted off)
Herbert (Dune bloke)
Orwell
Anthony Burgess. Anyone who could write C. Orange at all let alone in under a month gets my vote. He also wrote a superb critique on 1984 titled... 1985 in which he accuese Orwell of being a champagn socialist. Gripping stuff.
Alastair Reynolds
Also (some may have been mentioned above, I went through most but not all the posts)
William Gibson - If you haven't head of him stop now and hang your head in shame
Peter F Hamilton - zeroG sex cages cyber marines and and zombies, what could go wrong?
Richard Morgan - Takeshi Kovacs is a dark hero several political points being made in this stuff but never takes away from teh visceral killing
Alastair Reynolds
....I'll have to look at my bookshelf again to aid my memory
Also, and don't burn me for saying this, but there does actually exist some good Fantasy out there written by authors other than JRR T.
Gormenghast by the absolutely fucking insane Mervyn Peak is the direction that fantasy could have taken, if not for the hobbit/LOTR hijacking the train so effectively
Perdido Street station and The Scar By China Meiville
Fool on the Hill by Matt Ruff
The His Dark Materials series by Bill Philip Pullman. For kids but excellent in a way that Harry potter can only guess at.
Neal Gaimen - great although I'm getting tired of folk tales, honestly
Read Scar night recently by some dude who was in Rockstar North. Was Meiville like but not as good.
For contemporary fiction
Martin Amis
Iain Banks (sans M)
Thingy Pirsig; Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance, is much less quirky and much more poignent than it sounds
Chuck Palahniuk his stuff includes Fight club. Very subversive stuff. This guy is a nutter.
blimey, that went on too long
Last edited by bomberesque on November 21st, 2007, 14:10, edited 1 time in total.
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FatherJack
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bomberesque
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I loved the Dark Materials trilogy, they were really good reads. Simple enough for children, but have a deeper meaning too with regards to religion, and very well written. I really wanted to see the stage version by the National Theatre last year, but couldn't get tickets for when I was down there. I'm looking forward to the film too, especially after enjoying Stardust so much recently. Is it definitely only the first book in this film then? Been a while since I've read them.
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FatherJack
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Mr. Johnson
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FatherJack
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I'd be very surprised if they made the third one at all, or without very heavy modification, or they'd be priests picketing outside cinemas and everything.Mr. Johnson wrote:i heard they dumded the golden compass down for the merkins and their jesus-love. never heard of the books before that really.
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Mr. Johnson
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HereComesPete
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Anhamgrimmar
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Anhamgrimmar
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Oops, forgot i'd said i would do this! Its uplaoding to mediafire as i write this.Anhamgrimmar wrote:if anyone wants it, i'll try to uplaod my collection of e-books.
Lots of anne mcaffery, lovecraft, neal stephenson, pratchett, and other assorted stuffs
tis 80mb though, so its gonna take a while
Edit: Linkeh
Bookses
Also contains ybkfull, which is a e-book reader, and a copy of winrar. which sort of defeats the object of an unarchival tool, if its inside the archive needing unpacking.........[/url]
Last edited by Anhamgrimmar on November 21st, 2007, 18:27, edited 1 time in total.



