What shall I read?

Alright, Joeusers, I need your help.

I'm amassing a library of books to read during my hospital stay and subsequent recuperation.  It's going to be a long haul, according to my surgeon, so I'm trying to line up as many books as I can.  My Amazon account has seen a fair bit of activity in the past couple of weeks...but I'd like it to see more.

Thus far I have in my possession: The Historian, Snow Falling Upon Cedars, The Grapes Of Wrath, and a collection of Faulkner's short stories.  I'm also considering getting Thomas Friedman's 'The World Is Flat' - from what I hear it's an excellent primer in global economics. I'm about halfway through Falkner already, and The Grapes won't take me but a day or so to complete.   So, I'm looking for reccomendations.

Give me your 'must read' books.  You don't even have to tell me what they're about or why you like them if you don't want to, I can do the research by myself.....but I do need some ideas about what to read.

Thanks!

10,004 views 25 replies
Reply #1 Top
Assuming you havn't read them (or you could read them again if you already have) : Narnia series (all seven books), Lord of the rings series (including hobbit, but i can't say i'd recommend silmarion, although you might like it, who knows), and Hitchhicker's guide to the galaxy.
Reply #2 Top
Danny: Read the Narnia Chroniclaes when I was a kid, ditto the LOTR and Hobbit. I re-read the Hitchhiker's Guide last year when I found out that the movie was coming out.

Thanks for the ideas though!
Reply #3 Top

LW: I ordered that one last week, and I'm dying for it to get here!

The DaVinci code....I was looking at that yesterday and wondering if it was any good.  It's been so popular that I wasn't sure I wanted to read it, but now that you've recommended it.....I think I'll give it a shot.

I've never head of Swan Song, but I'll go and have a look at it too.  The Thorn Birds...I think i started reading that when I was in my 20's, and I didn't finish it.  I'll have a look at that on Amazon too!

Good luck at the surgeon.....might we be commiserating with each other post-surgery soon?

Reply #4 Top
Dean Koontz's Frankenstein

Don't Eat This Book, Morgan Spurlock (goes along with the Super Size Me video he put out in 2003? 2004?)

The Codex, Douglas Preston

It's All Right Now, Charles Chadwick

The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, Ann Brashares
Reply #5 Top

but i can't say i'd recommend silmarion, although you might like it, who knows

It reads more like a history book than a novel.

Are you into Sci-Fi?  If so, The Foundation Trilogy.  If not James Mitchener (anything by him, but you might like Texas and Centenial).

Reply #6 Top
Try Angels and Demons by Dan Brown...the same author as The Da Vinci Code. It was so truly captivating to me that I wanted my husband to enjoy it too, so I ordered the unabriged audio version that we have been listening to on some short out of state trips. Next week, we hope to finish it on a much longer out of state journey. Try it, you will like it, I promise.
Reply #7 Top
Hmmm, I do have a few books lined up that I'm reading right now. One of them that I recently started reading is Cooking for Mr. Latte, a food lover's courtship, with recipes by Amanda Hesser. it's about this gourmet food writer's love of food and her romance with her recipes (her actual love, Mr. Latte and her "foodie" group of co-workers as she call them). So far it's pretty interesting and fun to read. Very light stuff and some really great recipes (that I hope to try one day)!

I'll take a look at the other titles that I can't remember right now that I have at home and tell you about them tomorrow.

Also I do have a list of "To be read books" that I keep on my hard drive. I think one of the books I mentioned is one you were reading some time ago and recommended on your JU book site and also the Dune series which either Doc or Elie recommended for me to read since I love the movie so much! I'll copy it for you here:


SO MANY BOOKS, SO LITTLE TIME
A Year of Passionate Reading
by Sara Nelson (nonfiction)

Mary Hunt’s Debt-proof Living
By Mary Hunt

The Complete Tightwad Gazette:
Promoting Thrift as a Viable Alternative Lifestyle
by Amy Dacyczyn

WILD CARD QUILT
Taking a Chance on Home
by Janisse Ray (nonfiction)


EMBRACING UNCERTAINTY
by Susan Jeffers, Ph.D. (nonfiction)

Learn How To Bank Like A Banker, Kimberly Griffiths.


AN EMBARRASSMENT OF MANGOES
by Ann Vanderhoof (nonfiction)


The Dune Series –
House Atreides
House Harkonnen
House Corrino
By Brian Herbert & Kevin Anderson

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time
By Mark Haddon

The Tipping Point
By Malcolm Gladwell

Learning to Fall – the Blessings of an Imperfect Life
By Philip Simmons

Always Wear Joy, My Mother Bold & Beautiful by Susan Fales-Hill

Monkey Dancing by Daniel Glick

Lend me your Ears, A collection of the World’s great speeches
by William Safire

Walden by Henry David Thoreau
Reply #8 Top
Lila by Robert Pirsig

The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis

Contact by Carl Sagan

Sophie's Choice by William Styron

and ya can't go wrong with a little Penthouse Forum...
Reply #9 Top
Here's some that are not brain benders, but none the less, entertaining

Wally Lamb: She's Come Undone (my faaaavorite book)
Ben Stein: Hollywood Days, Hollywood nights
Nicholas Spark: The Notebook
Reply #10 Top
I recommend:

Jinn by Matthew B.J. Delaney

Saving Private Ryan meets Alien in Delaney's tense and involving first novel, a hybrid that transcends its several genres. In the deadly jungles of the Pacific Theatre in 1943, young Private Eric Davis sees something "long and squirming" burst out of the stomach of a dead soldier. Davis is picked up by a ship, the Gallo, which is promptly shelled and sent to the bottom. Flash forward to the year 2007: Pierre Devereaux, a Jacques Cousteau type, is directing an undersea documentary when he discovers the wreck of the Gallo. Not surprisingly, Devereaux's assistants are horrified when they see Davis's corpse banging its head insistently against the window of their sub. A year after the Gallo is brought back to Boston, a series of murders begins to plague the city...

Gravity by Tess Gerritsen

Dr. Emma Watson and five other hand-picked astronauts are about to take part in the trip of a lifetime--studying living creatures in space. But an alien life form, found in the deepest crevices of the ocean floor, is accidentally brought aboard the shuttle Atlantis. This mutated alien life form makes the creatures in Aliens look like backyard pets.

Soon the crew are suffering severe stomach pains, violent convulsions, and eyes so bloodshot that a gallon of Murine wouldn't help. Gerritsen brilliantly describes the difficulties of treating sick people inside a space module, and how the lack of gravity affects the process of taking blood and inserting a nasal tube. Dr. Watson does her best, but her colleagues die off one by one and the people at NASA don't want to risk bringing the platform back to earth.


The Cobra Event by Richard Preston

The Cobra Event is itself a paranoia-fest, a provocative thriller that makes you wonder exactly how much bioterrorism is taking place in the real world. Preston, best known for his terrifying chronicle of the Ebola virus, The Hot Zone, and other impeccably researched nonfictions, is not content to create fast-paced nightmarish scenes. His novel is instead a complex morality tale anchored in uncomfortable fact. Preston is keen to convey the "invisible history" of bioweapons engineering and, equally, to show the unsung heroism of his scientific detectives (along with that of the nurses and technicians who literally sacrifice their lives for medicine). Like their creator, these characters are not without a sense of humor. One calls the manmade virus "the ultimate head cold." Readers will never forget literally dozens of scenes and will never again see the subway, rodents, autopsy knives, and--above all--runny noses in the same light.

AND

Prey by Michael Crichton

High-tech whistle-blower Jack Forman used to specialize in programming computers to solve problems by mimicking the behavior of efficient wild animals--swarming bees or hunting hyena packs, for example. Now he's unemployed and is finally starting to enjoy his new role as stay-at-home dad. All would be domestic bliss if it were not for Jack's suspicions that his wife, who's been behaving strangely and working long hours at the top-secret research labs of Xymos Technology, is having an affair. When he's called in to help with her hush-hush project, it seems like the perfect opportunity to see what his wife's been doing, but Jack quickly finds there's a lot more going on in the lab than an illicit affair. Within hours of his arrival at the remote testing center, Jack discovers his wife's firm has created self-replicating nanotechnology--a literal swarm of microscopic machines. Originally meant to serve as a military eye in the sky, the swarm has now escaped into the environment and is seemingly intent on killing the scientists trapped in the facility. The reader realizes early, however, that Jack, his wife, and fellow scientists have more to fear from the hidden dangers within the lab than from the predators without.
Reply #11 Top
"Switch Bitch", "Kiss Kiss", and "My Uncle Oswald" by Roald Dahl (or any other of his adult short-story collections, those are just the ones I remember off the top of my head.)
the "Canopus in Argos: Archives" series by Doris Lessing
"Briefing for a Descent into Hell", by Doris Lessing.
"The Sound and the Fury" and "As I Lay Dying", by William Faulkner
"The Sun Also Rises", "A Farewell to Arms", "For Whom the Bell Tolls", and "The Old Man and the Sea" by Ernest Hemingway.
"A Clockwork Orange" by Anthony Burgess. Also a bunch of other stuff by him, although none has reached anywhere near the heights achieved by that one.
Any book by Terry Pratchett, but particularly the "Discworld" series. Gently humorous but engrossing, rather in the tradition of...
Any book by P.G. Wodehouse, but particularly the Bertie Wooster stories (aka the "Jeeves" stories) and the Psmith novels.
Any Dilbert book.
A book of crossword puzzles or other mental gymnastics (or perhaps a couple weeks' worth of newspaper crosswords).
"Starship Troopers", "The Moon is a Harsh Mistress", and "Stranger in a Strange Land" by Robert Heinlein.
"Little Fuzzy" and "Fuzzy Sapiens" by H. Beam Piper.

Reply #12 Top
for sheer escape and pleasure anything by james patterson, clive cussler and john sanford.
Reply #13 Top
My favorite author is JG Ballard, a great 70's British sci-fi writer. But the books that I enjoy the most which he wrote are Empire of the Sun, which was made into a movie that was directed/produced by Stephen Speilberg, and The Kindness of Women which is a sort of continuation of the story.
I've got a book I'd like to mail you... send me your address at my email and I'll post it asap. I'll even include a note as to why I love it so much, and why it makes me think of you. Nic.

[email protected]
Reply #14 Top
All the Dan Brown books are..interesting. Angels & Demons and Davinci Code are by far the best. But Deception Point and Digital Fortress are also interesting and both have a female lead.

I read all 4 in a space of a week and I shouldn't have because Dan Brown is lazy - he uses the same formula for all his books - Completely different scenarios (and all equally interesting) but once you know the pattern its REALLY easy to know who the "bad guy" is. And that annoyed me.

I'm really into Marian Keyes Linkabout now (so was Shades) Watermelon, Rachels Holiday and Angels are all about the same family each one focusing on a different sister.
The Other Side of the Story, Sushi for Beginners and Last chance saloon are good. I think Lucy Sullivan is Getting Married was my favourite after Watermelon.

Cecelia Aherns PS I Love You - was also really good. Poignent. Sad, funny - good.

I LOVE Traci HardingLink. She's an Australian fantasy writer she wrote 2 trilogys about the same character and she has 2 standalone books that I haven't as yet read.
The Ancient Future
Echo in time - Atlantis
Masters of Reality - The Gathering

Chronicle of Ages
Tablet of Destinies
Cosmic Logos

Actually I think because of the stuff you write about Budddism and your interest in religions etc you'd really enjoy these the first one is about this chick who goes back to the year 519. (Traci Hardings done ALOT of research)
The second she goes to Atlantis
The third is the Future

The first in the second trilogy picks up 50years after the end of the 3rd
The second picks up straight after
The third another 50years later.
Reply #15 Top
Oh yeah, anything by Larry McMurtry. Did I tell ya I met him once? He doesn't live far from me, BTW.
Reply #16 Top
Try:

Timeship by Stephen Baxter, it is very long...it is a sequel to the time machine.

anything by john jakes...or Harry Turtledove....or Stephen R. Hawking's (no relation to the physicist) Sirius (don't know if it was released to book stores, or only via internet...met him online at a writing website called fanstory.com) also, another author i met at the website, who released a murder/mystery novel called "The Nightmare in Alice Springs" , i think currently it is only available in Austrailia and online... not sure though...or Time and again by jack finney...or the Area 51 series by Robert Doherty...(not as good as the previous novels, but still interesting...good luck...
Reply #17 Top
oh and Tigers child by torey hayden, also her other book called: One child...both are awesome books, read on child first, then tigers child, so that they makes sense, as tigers child is about the same child in one child, only years later...
Reply #18 Top
Anything by Unberto Eco. If I had to hand pick one for you, I'd say Baudolino. Also 100 Years of Solitude by G.G. Marquez.
Reply #19 Top
I havent read as much as I'd like to lately, but I recently finished Stardust by Neil Gaiman. The tagline is something like "A grown-up fairy tale", which it is. He's written a few other books and graphic novels / comics and is fairly well known for his work. Terry Pratchett writes good SF-humor, similar to Douglas Adams but with a more fantasy feel than SF.

If you would like something different, try finding some trade paperbacks of certain comics. You might think of them as kids' stuff, but a lot of it isn't. Which reflects that comic readers are getting older, or kids are getting more jaded. Hellboy is a safe bet. Hopeless Savages is extremely entertaining, since it's so far off from most comics and is like a well written sitcom in comic form. Runaways is getting very good. Global Frequency is killer, as is the TV pilot if you can find the torrent on the Internet. Preacher is weird, weird, NC-17 stuff, but very well known. Marvel and DC's runs are so huge that I can't even touch on it at all...

I'd recommend more comics, but there's so many... If you're lucky enough to live near a real comic store, or at least a book store with a good selection of them (I know B&N's online store has plenty) you can ask some people there. If the staff doesn't help you, I'd bet some customers would
Oh, I almost forgot. If you're in a learning mood, try finding some books written by Richard Feynman. He's a famous physicist and professor, and while his books often touch on some science, it remains very accessible.
Reply #20 Top
What genre of books do you prefer Karen?
Reply #21 Top

Oh yeah, anything by Larry McMurtry. Did I tell ya I met him once? He doesn't live far from me, BTW.


I'll remember that Shovel. The next time I lay my hnads on one of Larry's books, I'll send it to you so's you can get me his autograph.
Reply #22 Top
Hi try these books out. For a really good economic book that covers the whole world try The Mystery of Capital by Hernando de Soto. I heard him speak and he conveys his thoughts in a way the general public can understand. For some lighter but thought provoking reading go Cat's Craddle by Kurt Vonnegut.
Kannon

Reply #23 Top
I'll second the recommendation for "Gormenghast", and for Harry Turtledove (though his "World at War" series is just ridiculously huge), and for anything by Neil Gaiman (can't believe I forgot him the first time around!), and specifically for the trade paperbacks of "The Sandman" series (by Neil Gaiman, as a matter of fact). Another fantastic trade paperback comic book series to get is "The Watchmen". And, for a fascinating look into medieval Japan, try the "Lone Wolf and Cub" series. And now that I'm at home and in front of my books, I'll make a few more recommendations...

"Lord of the Flies" by Willaim Golding
The complete works of Lewis Carroll
"Watership Down" by Richard Adams
"Steppenwolf" and "Demian" by Herman Hesse
"The Cryptonomicon" by Neal Stephenson, and then the "System of the World" trilogy ("Quicksilver", "Confusion", and "The System of the World").
Just about anything by Dave Duncan
Just about anything by Patricia McKillip, but her "Riddlemaster of Hed" trilogy is her best-known work. (Everything else of hers is a single book, though, if you want to keep it shorter.)

If you're feeling REALLY geeky, you could check out "The Story of sqrt(-1)", "Fermat's Enigma", "e: The Story of a Number", "Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea", and "Prime Obsession: Bernhard Riemann and the greatest unsolved problem in mathematics". (Yes, I'm a math dork. Can you tell?)

Oh yeah, and one more on the lighter side (Well, the darker side of the lighter side, anyway): "Red Meat", "More Red Meat", and the third "Red Meat" collection whose title I don't know, by Max Cannon. If you're not reading these comic strips already, you should be. http://www.redmeat.com/redmeat/current/index.html
Reply #24 Top
oh and Phillip Pullman's Dark Materials series...and Dorian Gray (Title) its a classic...
Reply #25 Top
I can see I am a little late giving you a suggestion on what books to read but I will name some anyways.

"Getting Over It", "Running in Heels", "Behaving Like Adults." --All by Anna Maxted. She is a great author. One of my favorties. Her stories are funny and easy to read. They are hard to put down too, so you will finish them quickly. I love her stuff.

Also try, " The God of Small Things." By Arundati Roy. Words can't describe how beautiful that book is.