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Happy National Book Lovers Day! Share your favorite titles here!
Happy National Book Lovers Day! Here are some of my all-time favorite books. What are yours?
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I would LOVE to see your favorite books in celebration of Book Lovers Day! I've no doubt this community has some fascinating titles to share. |
The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury
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Good to see some Heinlein in your collection, innerspaceboy. SIASL is one of my favorites too.
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No book has ever hit me like 1984 when I read it a few years back. Easily my favourite novel.
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The Old Man and the Sea - Ernest Hemingway
Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee Night - Elie Weisel Brave New World - Aldous Huxley I think most of these authors are dead. |
Ray Bradbury is so goddamned overrated. He can go to hell.
Nice list ISB, Cage is always a good read. One quintessential book I haven't seen listed yet is Sebald's Rings of Saturn. A man goes on a walking tour in Suffolk and that's about it, but it blends together fact, fiction, history, and memoir very seamlessly. Also, the language is stupid beautiful. |
The majority of my favorites are classic novels from before the 1920's. But I still like some of the new stuff.
1. Tarzan of the Apes 2. Frankenstien 3. 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea 4. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 5. Solaris 6. Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (this is a kids' book?) 7. Catherine, Called Birdy 8. Three Days in April (hyped for the spin-off) I'm not much of a bookworm, though. Other greats IMO are Jurassic Park and The Firm and The Book of Three. I wanna say the first LOTR, but I just can't get into them. Tolkein rambles off-topic a bit too much. |
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I haven't read Mrs. Frisby but the film is fantastically dark as well. It made a lasting impression on me as a lad. I definitely need a copy of Solaris in English. I'll have to look up how early on that was translated. I know the Russian novel, We took several decades. And regarding Frankenstein, my copy sports what is perhaps the least appropriate cover artwork of any edition I've found. Did they even read the damn thing? |
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Yeah he's a linguist/historian before a writer, which shows in the pacing of the second two books, but his mythos and its presentation is one of the most important artistic achievements of this century. He's like if Ayn Rand had written Atlas Shrugged but didn't forget to make his story entertaining. |
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