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Thread: Favorite Books

  1. #41
    Grand Member Online status: Light12 is offline Reputation: Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary
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    Re: Favorite Books

    wow big list. why don't we make it a bit bigger?
    Dirk Pit serices, really good action adventure books.
    And the X-wing star wars novals, exellent.
    Anyone else?

  2. #42
    Junior Member Online status: BigBeard is offline Reputation: BigBeard the Neutral
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    Re: Favorite Books

    Most of my favourite authors and books have been mentioned already so i'll keep this short.

    First read this in school in the 90s,and i've since reread the entire series every couple years:P

    A Wizard of Earth sea by Ursula K Le Guin,and the earthsea trilogy.Great books.

    Was never much of a fan of stephen kings horrors,but his dark tower series is amazing,never expected that kind of story to come from stephen king,i'd go as far to say they're a masterpiece.
    Last edited by BigBeard; Jun 18 2012 at 05:35 AM.

  3. #43
    Grand Member Online status: enginekid is offline Reputation: enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads
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    Re: Favorite Books

    I love these kinds of threads!

    I like using images, a picture speaks a thousand words.








    Last edited by enginekid; Jun 18 2012 at 06:22 AM.

  4. #44
    Member Online status: Tassolahoff is offline Reputation: Tassolahoff the Wary Tassolahoff the Wary
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    Re: Favorite Books

    Oi

    1.Dragons of Autumn Twilight/Winter Night/Spring Dawning by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman
    2.The Hobbit by J.R.R Tolkien
    3.Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn

    Yeah, all other books I've read are pretty much lame and/or uneventful.




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    Tourmalien Bracegirdle

  5. #45
    Member Online status: Lyrilo is offline Reputation: Lyrilo the Wary Lyrilo the Wary Lyrilo the Wary
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    Re: Favorite Books

    Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

    It came out last year and is probably the most fun book I've ever read. If you liking gaming (and by visiting these boards I'm sure that you do) you really need to check this one out. And if you are like me and were a kid in the 80's.........then the pop culture references are going to be an extra bonus for you. It's Willy Wonka meets The DaVinci Code meets Tron. Seriously, I can't recommend it enough. It goes all the way to 11 my friends.

  6. #46
    Senior Member Online status: enginekid88 is offline Reputation: enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte enginekid88 the Neophyte
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    Riders of the Purple Sage
    Written by Zane Grey
    Introduction by William Handley



    Told by a master storyteller who, according to critic Russell Nye, “combined adventure, action, violence, crisis, conflict, sentimentalism, and sex in an extremely shrewd mixture,” Riders of the Purple Sage is a classic of the Western genre. It is the story of Lassiter, a gunslinging avenger in black, who shows up in a remote Utah town just in time to save the young and beautiful rancher Jane Withersteen from having to marry a Mormon elder against her will. Lassiter is on his own quest, one that ends when he discovers a secret grave on Jane’s grounds. “[Zane Grey’s] popularity was neither accidental nor undeserved,” wrote Nye. “Few popular novelists have possessed such a grasp of what the public wanted and few have developed Grey’s skill at supplying it.”

  7. #47
    Grand Member Online status: Light12 is offline Reputation: Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary Light12 the Wary
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    i would also highly reccomend anything writen by James Herriote. great stories about what it was like being a Vet in the early part of the Century.

  8. #48
    Senior Member Online status: ferdinanda is offline Reputation: ferdinanda the Wary ferdinanda the Wary ferdinanda the Wary ferdinanda the Wary ferdinanda the Wary
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    Many good choices here, and some that I'll have to check out. A few of my favorites:

    Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
    , by Susanna Clarke
    Seven Gothic Tales, by Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen)
    An Instance of the Fingerpost and The Dream of Scipio by Iain Pears, as well as his Jonathan Argyll (detective art historian!) series
    Mornawen "Molly" Bayberry
    Assistant Archivist of Bree
    Researches on demand, for reasonable rates

  9. #49
    Member Online status: Micrathene is offline Reputation: Micrathene the Wary Micrathene the Wary
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    The Professor's works are pretty much a given.

    Other favorites include but are not limited to the Redwall series, Watership Down, the Vorkosigan Saga (especially A Civil Campaign), and assorted Neil Gaiman works.

  10. #50
    Senior Member Online status: takimeta is offline Reputation: takimeta the Wary takimeta the Wary takimeta the Wary takimeta the Wary takimeta the Wary
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    Anyone who's:

    - played MMO's
    - grew up in the 80's
    - loves video games
    - has ever been social in online chat rooms

    ... NEEDS to read READY PLAYER ONE! It was such an unexpected breath of geeky awesomeness that even after the 2nd reading, I still felt like listening to They Might Be Giants while playing Space Ace wearing my Member's Only jacket! SOOO GOOD!

    Here's the first two chapters should you wish to "log in"... Enjoy!

  11. #51
    Poster of Note Online status: Mephistophelis is offline Reputation: Mephistophelis has disabled reputation
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    My favourite books:

    1. The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Anne Bronte
    2. Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte
    3. The Bloody Chamber, Angela Carter
    4. The Trial, Franz Kafka
    5. Dubliners, James Joyce
    6. Doctor Faustus, Christopher Marlowe
    7. The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien
    8. Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
    9. Short stories, Franz Kafka
    10. Story of O, Pauline Réage
    "One mind is enough for a thousand hands."

  12. #52
    Grand Member Online status: silverblade5445 is offline Reputation: silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads silverblade5445 the Watcher of Roads
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    A very excellent thread this!.....and wow a lot of variety here.....I found some really good new finds from everyone's lists, many I had never heard of

    Here's some of my favorites - (in no particular order)

    Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien (no doubt about it....legendary )
    The Silmarillion
    The Hobbit

    Harry Potter series - JK Rowling
    The Green Mile - Stephen King (one of the most impressive story I've ever read)
    The Shawshank Redemption - Stephen King
    Sphere - Micheal Crichton
    The Hades Factor - Robert Ludlum
    The Chronicles of Narnia
    The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho
    The Swiss Family Robinson
    A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
    Wheel of Time series

    Ivalden - 75 Captain (R2) - Imladris
    Drankorg - Warg (R5) - Landroval

  13. #53
    Senior Member Online status: Livejazz is offline Reputation: Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads Livejazz the Watcher of Roads
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    Favorite modern fiction: Baudolino, by Umberto Eco.

    Favorite classic fiction: Les Miserables', by Victor Hugo.

    Favorite sci-fi: Hyperion, by Dan Simmons

    Favorite fantasy fiction: A Song for Arbonne, by Guy Gavriel Kay.

    Favorite non-fiction: Dreadnaught & Castles of Steel, by Robert K Massie.


    Fare you well ... let your life proceed by its own design
    Nothing to tell ... let the words be yours, I'm done with mine.

  14. #54
    Grand Member Online status: GV-Tanith is offline Reputation: GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated GV-Tanith the Undefeated
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lyrilo View Post
    Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

    It came out last year and is probably the most fun book I've ever read. If you liking gaming (and by visiting these boards I'm sure that you do) you really need to check this one out. And if you are like me and were a kid in the 80's.........then the pop culture references are going to be an extra bonus for you. It's Willy Wonka meets The DaVinci Code meets Tron. Seriously, I can't recommend it enough. It goes all the way to 11 my friends.
    +1!

    I was coming into this thread to recommend this book, which I just finished reading. It was recommended to me by a gaming friend, and I in turn am recommending it to all my gaming friends. It's quite a ride.

    (Let's make an attempt to legitimately bump all the legitimate threads in this forum, and bury the spam threads until a mod can delete them.)


  15. #55
    Member Online status: EldarMenil is offline Reputation: EldarMenil the Wary EldarMenil the Wary
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    1) The Lord of the Rings (the trilogy) - J. R. R. Tolkien
    2) A Song of Ice and Fire (all of them) - George R. R. Martin
    3) The Kingkiller Chronice (the 2 published books) - Patrick Rothfuss
    4) The Left Hand of God (reading right now) - Paul Huffman
    5) Dune (a classic) - Frank Herbert

    "A reader lives a thousand lives before he dies. The man who never reads lives only one."
    -- George R. R. Martin

  16. #56
    Member Online status: quetzalcoatl is offline Reputation: quetzalcoatl the Wary quetzalcoatl the Wary
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    Fun thread

    A few that I didn't see mentioned.

    Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes.

    The Saga of Recluse by L.E. Modesitt (most anything by Modesitt, really)

    The Honor Harrington series by David Weber (and other series)

    Horratio Hornblower series by C.S. Forester

    Watchers and Strangers by Dean Koontz (most of his others get too supernatural for me...)

    "All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us." --J.R.R. Tolkien (Gandalf, Fellowship of the Ring)

  17. #57
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    Great books all of them, so many I've read and re-read *sighs*, so here's a few of mine:

    James white - Hospital Station series - should really be a series!
    anything by Azimov - Caves of Steel leaps to mind
    Stranger in a Strange land - Heinlein
    The Pern series - early ones I re-read
    Discworld- working my way through the *city* books once more!
    Agatha Cristie - classics in their days, still worth a read
    H.P Lovecraft - oh man he had creeping horror down pat.

  18. #58
    Grand Member Online status: enginekid is offline Reputation: enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads enginekid the Watcher of Roads
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    ^^ you just reminded me of this one

    At the Mountains of Madness
    The Definitive Edition
    Written by H.P. Lovecraft




    Long acknowledged as a master of nightmarish visions, H. P. Lovecraft established the genuineness and dignity of his own pioneering fiction in 1931 with his quintessential work of supernatural horror, At the Mountains of Madness. The deliberately told and increasingly chilling recollection of an Antarctic expedition’s uncanny discoveries–and their encounter with untold menace in the ruins of a lost civilization–is a milestone of macabre literature.


    This exclusive new edition, presents Lovecraft’s masterpiece in fully restored form, and includes his acclaimed scholarly essay “Supernatural Horror in Literature.” This is essential reading for every devotee of classic terror.

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