| 15-04-2010, 13:35 | #31 |
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I love listening to the BBC Audio books for this- it used to be on BBC Radio 4 late at night after the shipping forecast. The books are great- the films (incl. the recent remake) really don't do it justice......
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| 21-04-2010, 19:22 | #33 |
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Gemmell, Banks, Feist, Anthony, Pratchett.
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| 21-04-2010, 20:43 | #34 |
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My one all-time favourite author has to be Isaac Asimov. While his scifi is excellent- his non-fiction works are also great reads (his 'New Guide to Science' is an excellent primer for any teenager with a science interest- but also tomes like 'A choice of Castrophes- the disasters that threaten our world' which rationally debate the many issues that cyclically arise- can be read again and again). The Foundation series was a very good friend of mine as a teenager discovering the sci-fi and fantasy genre.
I guess loads of people here are Philip K Dick fans- once you've read 'The Man in the High Castle'- any of his other works become must reads. This book in particular kindled a fire in my mind- all the 'What-ifs' something had or had not happened in history. The premise (of the axis powers winning WW2) has been touched on by other authors- such as Robert Harris (Fatherland), Murray Davis (Collaborator- set in a Britain that was occuppied in 1940), Harry Turtledove (Worldwar- the 4 of them) etc. It used to be very happen chance finding books like these- before the advent of alternatehistory.com and other useful repositories. A good way of discovering gems that you don't hear about very often- and related to Asimov and PK Dick- is of course by digging out the Hugo Annuals from the 1960s. The many short stories often introduce to authors you might never have come across before- and also often may be the brief flash of inspiration that was never repeated for some writers. I've also Arthur C Clarkes collected works on my book shelves- everything John Gribbin has ever published (I particularly like- In Search of the edge of Time) and many many others. |
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| 10-05-2010, 12:31 | #36 |
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"Day of the Triffids" - possibly my favourite book of all time.
And I've re-read a number of the discworld books, but that's usually down to inertia on my part - when I can't think of anything else to read, there are always fifty-million discworld books lying around the house. My Dad and sister are the same - at any given time, at least one person in the household will be re-reading some Pratchett novel or other |
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| 18-05-2010, 00:12 | #38 | ||
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Quote:
Also didn't like his insistence in retrospectively tying all the books together, his many different series tied together in the later Foundation books, Daneel and all that... Don't like that at all. Quote:
Love his anthologies, most of his is all about self, and how do you know it's really you looking back at you in the mirror, methinks he was a little paranoid! Love Alt History too, Fatherland was fantastic, Guns of the South great, try "What If" where real historians look at history and speculate what would have happened if one little thing was different. Arthur C Clarke, I cut my SF teeth on his short stories, and Fall Of Moondust and Songs of a Distant Earth are pure SF genius. |
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| 19-05-2010, 12:35 | #39 | |
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You might also like my fanfiction volume 11 of the chronicles
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You might also like my fanfiction volume 11 of the chronicles of an age of darkness titled 'The Wyvvern and the Warlock' which is a work in progress finished soon, FREE to read at http://hughcookfanfiction.angelfire.com the Walrus and the Warwolf was also my favourite story for many years when i was younger, but Julian May's 'Magnificat' I now rate pretty highly. a lot of people here like feists 'magician' and that is a grea novel as well. eddings 'Pawn of prophecy' began the belgariad with a bang. |
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| 08-06-2010, 23:02 | #41 |
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Every time there is a new wheel of time book I reread the entire series from the start. I now know this books so well that i just leave out useless chapters that have no relevance to the storyline. With the wheel of time books its love hate relationship.
Just finished my second read through of the malazan book of the fallen book series so currently waiting for the last book. Ive read the redemption of athalus every year since fifteen its not a particularly good book but nice to read a bit of fantasy fluff and try to read LOTR every year too. |
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| 28-07-2010, 02:04 | #42 |
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You reread the entire World of Time each time there is a new release!! Ouch Ouch. Do due to his death and also his ability to get distracted after book 5 the launches were getting longer and longer so you needed to jog the grey cells.
Magician was good and I always return to and the co authored books with Janny Wurts were as good as the Magician. Erikson Malazan books always open up new new twists and nuggets of knowledge every time I reread. George RR Martin A Song of Ice and Fire is brilliant but I am dreading that his output has slowed to a standstill with his recent decision to delay publishing and getting caught up with HBO filming of the book series. Orson Scott Card Enders Game is a good book to revisit especially if you read first in your teens. |
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| 12-08-2010, 22:31 | #43 |
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