Mine is Devil House by John Darnielle. Wowwww.
Favorite Holy Book: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
Favorite Non-Fiction Book: Humankind by Rutger Bregman
Favorite Print and Audiobook Series: The Aubrey-Maturin Saga by Patrick O’Brien, narrated by Patrick Tull
Favorite Terry Pratchett Book: Going Postal
Going postal is peak Moist.
I’ve followed Bregman from the start when he started writing for the Dutch news site De Correspondent. I love the positive vibe he sends.
And yes, Douglas Adams humor is snappy as ever in the Hitchhiker’s guide. ❤️
The Count Of Monte Cristo
Seconded. Have read it 4 times now.
Neil Stephenson - Cryptonomicon
Terry Pratchett - The Night Watch
Randal L. Schwartz - Learning PerlLoved Cryptonomicon. Have you read his Baroque Cycle? It deals with some similar themes and ancestors of the same families around the turning of the 18th century.
I tried, but I couldn’t quite get into it. I’ll give it another go once I finish Seveneves.
I also love the tech noir vibes from Snow Crash, by the way.
And Rise And Fall of the D.O.D.O. was hilarious
Rarely read book, but Ender’s Game is probably my favorite
Hard one. I’ll list a few I suppose
The terminal man by Michael chrichton: a paranoid man has electrodes implanted in his head to stop violent fugue states he enters, but he learns to control the electrodes, and accidentally sets off significantly more intense violent outbursts
Annihilation by Jeff vandermeer: the first part of the southern reach trilogy, an expedition of scientists are sent into a possibly alien anomaly to find out what it is and how to stop it from growing and consuming the land. The environment inside is confusing and seems to infect anyone inside it in some way.
Wizard and Glass by Stephen King: the fourth book in the dark tower series, it’s a flashback to the main characters adolescence, his first mission as an ambassador and spy for his kingdom to find out how a small town may be secretly participating in a civil war, and how a witch may be controlling the enhabitants.
The Stranger by Albert Camus: a man with no motivation or real concern finds himself the focus of a murder trial, and without any interest in defending himself, can’t see how nobody is on his side.
Great list!
Dark Tower IV is such an amazing read. When I finished the series I wanted to read IV again.
I’m not familiar with the others. I’ll have to check those out. Thankee-sai.
Book: Dune
Audiobook: Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (narrated by Jim Dale).
Hyperion Cantos. Excellent story and interesting characters.
The Little Prince by Antoine St Exupery and Imagica by Clive Barker
Myst: The Book of Ti’Ana by Rand Miller
Being a writer myself, I always loved the premise of Myst where you could write a world and actually visit it. This book goes into detail about the D’ni at the height of their civilization and how the books work and stuff. It’s awesome.
I don’t know if it’s my favorite, but the one I suggest to people the most is “House of Leaves” by Mark Z. Danielewski
My Teacher Flunked the Planet, by Bruce Coville.
The final book in the My Teacher is an Alien series, it follows a group of 6th graders who are tasked to explore the best and worst of humanity in order to help defend our right to exist to an intergalactic council of aliens that fears us. It deals with some pretty heavy fucking themes that have stuck with me since I first read it at the age of 10.
“Forty thousand,” said Duncan. His eyes were closed, as if he were reading from a page inside his head.
“What?” asked Susan.
“Forty thousand,” he repeated. “That’s how many kids die every day from things that could be changed if we, all of us, the people of Earth, decided they should be.”
I took in a sharp breath; forty thousand people was more than twice the population of Kennituck Falls.
“Forty thousand a day,” continued Duncan relentlessly. “That’s a quarter of a million a week. Over a million a month. Nearly fifteen million a year. They die from not having vaccines that cost less than a dollar apiece. They die from dirty wells and lack of food. They die from the fact that people don’t care, at least, not enough to change it.”
Duncan sat frozen, as if in a trance. Tears leaked from beneath his lowered eyelids, cutting paths through the dust of the camp that still covered his cheeks. His voice was like the voice of God, listing our sins.
“Last year, fourteen million children died because we earthlings decided to spend our money elsewhere. It happened the year before, too. And we’re going to let it happen again this year.”
Suddenly he opened his eyes and looked right at me. “Peter, I learned a lot in the last few weeks. I read more than you can imagine.I have millions of facts in my head that I’m trying to put together. I don’t know what it all means, but I know the numbers. I know one day’s worth of the money our world spends on guns and bombs and soldiers could save fifty million children over the next ten years.”
As Duncan spoke I had a vision, a fantasy, that the people of Earth - not the leaders, not the governments, just the people - were suddenly able to speak with one voice. And they said, “Enough. We don’t want it to be this way anymore. Make it right!”
But we couldn’t speak with one voice. For some reason we were no better than mute in the face of a disaster we all wanted to pretend wasn’t happening.
I was sick with shame and anger. And I knew that I would never be the same after that night.
I had been witness to a crime.
Now I would have to testify to what I had seen. Because to keep silent would also be a crime.
Ok that sounds great.
Interesting. I read these as a kid and remember nothing but them being ripping good yarns.
Gideon the Ninth and the rest of the Locked Tomb series.
Lesbian necromancers IN SPAAAACE! But it’s not pulp, it’s an interesting look at sci-fi and magic.
Nona is my personal favorite so far but all of them are so good. Definitely one of my favorite series and I will be sad to see it end after alecto.
The Phantom Tollbooth
How can one choose? It is so much connected to my mindset at the time of reading.
Then give me a few that come to mind at the moment. :)
- The name of the wind - Patrick Rothfuss
- Discworld series - Terry Pratchet
- The city of the blind - José Saramago
- The Little Prince - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
- Cathedral of the sea - Ildefonso Fancones
- Mythos - Stephen Fry
- Catch-22 - Joseph Heller
- …
I could go on for a while, I suppose. Every one of them has brought me joy reading. The discworld series are being reread at the moment and at every stage of my life the address me in a different way. The Little Prince is the one I would buy for everyone I know. In French because that works best.
Galactic Pot-Healer by Philip K. Dick.
I tried to write a plot summary and couldn’t do it justice. So instead I’ll talk about themes:
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individuality vs. subsumption
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theology
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the nature of love and sexual attraction
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art restoration
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making a wrong choice intentionally just to prove you’re capable of making choices
It’s very funny, and has a sassy robot, which we all love.
My favorite quote:
A man is an angel that has become deranged, Joe Fernwright thought. Once they – all of them – had been genuine angels, and at that time they had had a choice between good and evil, so it was easy, easy being an angel. And then something happened. Something went wrong or broke down or failed. And they had become faced with the necessity of choosing not good or evil but the lesser of two evils, and so that had unhinged them and now each was a man.
What a great quote. I checked it out of the ebook library.
Very cool excerpt. Made me think of the witcher quote about lesser evil:
Evil is Evil. Lesser, greater, middling… Makes no difference. The degree is arbitary. The definition’s blurred. If I’m to choose between one evil and another… I’d rather not choose at all.
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