the_monkey wrote: » Stephen King's IT absolute masterclass in fiction. One of the most under rated authors EVER. 3rd time reading it, character development in this book is best I've ever read. Only book I read and feel so sad at the end / like I MISS the characters. If you haven't read it , I highly recommend it. it's a long read (~ 1300 pages) but just flies by...
FloatingVoter wrote: » SK rates Maeve Binchy in a similar light. Initially I thought he was taking the piss, then I picked up one my mothers books. Chapter after chapter flows. If you want to write, reading King and Binchy is a good starting point. They know people.
KH25 wrote: » Panem is hunger games yes? I detested the direction it went in after the first book. The only time I've finished a book and felt angry at the author.
Ilyana 2.0 wrote: » I'm very slowly reading The Covenant by James A. Michener, a sort-of historical novel about South Africa. It's a bit of a random one, recommended by my dad. Seems interesting albeit slow-moving, and the author has a lovely writing style.
mariaalice wrote: » Centennial or Hawaii by the same author are better books, Hawaii was the first every adult type book I read.
conorhal wrote: » I'm really enjoying 'Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norell', it's a charmingly quirky victorian set 'adult fairytale' about two magicians attempting to revive the practice of practical magic who become bitter rivals in the process. It starts quite slowly but it's building into quite the gothic thriller set in a Downton Abbey sort of world where fairytales are true. I believe that it's been turned into a major BBC series, I hope they dont screw it up as they did with Wolf Hall.
New Home wrote: » I'm glad someone likes it, I believe it was very successful at the time, but I must admit I found it badly written, quite tedious, and predictable...
Thargor wrote: » Hunger Games/Divergent/Maze Runner etc etc and all this other young adult crap that sprung up all of a sudden are hilariously awful, the world and the characters and everything else are always so one dimensional and just plain stupid, I'm never touching any of them again.
ScienceNerd wrote: » If it gets young people reading I think it's fine. I read some awful crap as a young teenager.
New Home wrote: » I picked it up in a charity shop too, and that's where it went back, too. Despite individual taste in books, it's still great when we find a book, any book, that we can get lost into.
conorhal wrote: » I don't suppose it was in Clondalkin was it? It would be pretty funny of I actually picked up and really enjoyed the exact same novel you binned in the charity shop!
conorhal wrote: » A critique of popular dystopian young adult fiction I saw a little while back made me pause and wonder if that's true. The main thrust of the artice, which was scathing of the Hunger Games series, was how nhillistic they were and how Katnis was a passive social media pawn primarily interested in what boy she wanted to kiss rather then engaged with the wider social context of the novels. It suggested a sort of disengaged passivity to many of the main female characters that made them worryingly awful role models.
mariaalice wrote: » Then name of the author has just come back to me ..Harold Robbins anyone else read him when you were a teen.
mariaalice wrote: » When I was a teenager and young adult adult my favourite authors were Jacqueline Susann, Leon Uris, Sidney Sheldon and the like and I still went on to read ' decent' books as an adult. Reading a book any book is what's important.
spud82 wrote: » The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson. Brilliant book. Read it in a day
Basster wrote: » Our Man in Havana, Graham Greene. Haven't read anything by him in years. Funny book, very enjoyable.
eisenberg1 wrote: » The Pirate, I thought it was pure porn (back then:eek:)
LynnGrace wrote: » Yes, indeed, used to read all of these authors, as a teen.