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  #1  
Old 07-30-2011
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Default Books,

Love the Shannara series, read them all and his Magic Kingdom for sale series as well. Loved the Dragonriders of Pern series, for that matter all of pern, but my favorites were the Dragon Harper books. I really loved the Elven Airship, the Disappearing Dwarf, and The Stone Giants, by Blaylock. The Borribles triology by Larabetti and the Redwall books, which are just wonderful. I read a lot of classics as well.
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Old 07-30-2011
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Love the Shannara series, read them all and his Magic Kingdom for sale series as well. Loved the Dragonriders of Pern series, for that matter all of pern, but my favorites were the Dragon Harper books. I really loved the Elven Airship, the Disappearing Dwarf, and The Stone Giants, by Blaylock. The Borribles triology by Larabetti and the Redwall books, which are just wonderful. I read a lot of classics as well.
The Magic Kingdom: For Sale! series is an enjoyable one, as is the entire "Myth" series by Robert Asprin.

Another series I enjoy(and have to dig out of storage in my spare room so I can read it all over again) is the 'Guardians Of The Flame' by Joel Rosenberg. One of my favourites by far!

I own a few of Katherine Kerr's books but I haven't read them yet. I am missing one or two, and I would prefer to get the entire series before reading them.

I love getting my books either from a used book store(there are two of them in my city) or from the thrift shops!
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Old 07-31-2011
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I like books of all stripes. I used to read a lot of Star Wars books...Don't really do this anymore. I have a decent swathe of classic literature...Stuff like the complete works of Shakespeare, Milton, Poe, Tolkien, etc.

What I read the most are nonfiction books. I just don't have a lot of time for flights of fancy when there is so much REAL knowledge to be read. I have a lot of plant/nature books, finance books, books on drugs, and spirituality. I probably spend most of my time in spirituality books. I like a lot of Eastern religion books (Tao te Ching, Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, etc.), but I'm really a fan of Brennan Manning (author of the Ragamuffin Gospel).
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Old 07-31-2011
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I like books of all stripes. I used to read a lot of Star Wars books...Don't really do this anymore. I have a decent swathe of classic literature...Stuff like the complete works of Shakespeare, Milton, Poe, Tolkien, etc.

What I read the most are nonfiction books. I just don't have a lot of time for flights of fancy when there is so much REAL knowledge to be read. I have a lot of plant/nature books, finance books, books on drugs, and spirituality. I probably spend most of my time in spirituality books. I like a lot of Eastern religion books (Tao te Ching, Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, etc.), but I'm really a fan of Brennan Manning (author of the Ragamuffin Gospel).
You might be a good person for my inquiry. There is much I would learn of science and history, etc. Yet I have no love for textbooks. Dry old things they tend to be. I would rather welcome something scholarly that isn't so marvelously boring. Have you any idea of books like that? I know about Carl Sagan's books but that's about it.
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Old 07-31-2011
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You might be a good person for my inquiry. There is much I would learn of science and history, etc. Yet I have no love for textbooks. Dry old things they tend to be. I would rather welcome something scholarly that isn't so marvelously boring. Have you any idea of books like that? I know about Carl Sagan's books but that's about it.
Whoa, that's two REALLY broad fields that I don't have a terrible amount of experience with. As for science, I have some books on astro physics. A really accessible read is anything by Stephen Hawking. Of course, he talks about astronomy, the origin of the universe, things like that. As for natural history/science, a quintessential read would be Darwin's "On the Origin of Species." I have a lot of old National Geographic books that cover some interesting topics. Regarding history, this is a topic I don't do much reading on. Autobiographies and biographies are perhaps one of the less dry methods of getting a feel for a certain time period.
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Old 07-31-2011
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I am a voracious reader. I read a lot of classics, and to the degree possible I always read in the original languages if they are ones I know. I love to read poetry, especially German poetry of the Romantic and Late Romantic periods and American poetry of the twentieth century. On the rare occasions when I "allow" myself to read something purely for fun, it is usually a novel suggested by a friend or colleague. Right now, I am reading the Harry Potter books ... a summer reading "project" that just feels right, since I missed out on the Pottermania that swept through people younger than me. I'm in the middle of the second book, and enjoying it immensely.
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Old 07-31-2011
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Wahh, why's it gotta be my favourite one? Can I give a top 5 in no particular order? Ok, and restricting to fiction only I'll do non-fic later

Mother Night - Kurt Vonnegut
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep - Phillip K Dick (can this count as 1/3 of a book as it's not a novel?)
The Wasp Factory - Ian Banks
Strata - Terry Pratchett
Day of the Triffids - John Wyndham

Wahhh, Can it be a top 10?

ok, i'll just add A Scanner Darkly and be done...

Ok actually, I will pick a favourite; Mother Night, a totaly brilliant book, written as the autobiography of a nazi who wasn't a nazi, but also was a nazi. The book stands on it's truely brilliant creation on a confused and bizarre, but ultimately believable and relate-able character in an even more confused and bizarre world.

Ultimately I like scifi novels the best, I've never been one for classics or character/narrative driven books, I like concept driven books best, and sci fi delivers on that (by that I mean proper scifi though, not some space opera drivel, Dune fans, i'm ripping on you here...) , not that I don't like good narrative driven books, I just like it better when a book is less a story, and more a trojan horse for some unnatural thought process.
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Old 08-02-2011
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Day of the Triffids - John Wyndham
An excellent novel. I actually didn't mind reading it when it was chosen as the book everyone in the class had to read way back in Public School.

I also enjoyed the novel 'Shane' when it was chosen for us to read.
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Old 08-02-2011
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I thought the Xanth series was by Piers Anthony not Norton
Anywho the Spellsinger series is a good series but i only have the first two
Another series i love is the Elric series
I also like the first three Dragonlance novels
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Old 08-03-2011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SluttyShemaleAnna View Post
Wahh, why's it gotta be my favourite one? Can I give a top 5 in no particular order? Ok, and restricting to fiction only I'll do non-fic later

Mother Night - Kurt Vonnegut
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep - Phillip K Dick (can this count as 1/3 of a book as it's not a novel?)
The Wasp Factory - Ian Banks
Strata - Terry Pratchett
Day of the Triffids - John Wyndham

Wahhh, Can it be a top 10?

ok, i'll just add A Scanner Darkly and be done...

Ok actually, I will pick a favourite; Mother Night, a totaly brilliant book, written as the autobiography of a nazi who wasn't a nazi, but also was a nazi. The book stands on it's truely brilliant creation on a confused and bizarre, but ultimately believable and relate-able character in an even more confused and bizarre world.

Ultimately I like scifi novels the best, I've never been one for classics or character/narrative driven books, I like concept driven books best, and sci fi delivers on that (by that I mean proper scifi though, not some space opera drivel, Dune fans, i'm ripping on you here...) , not that I don't like good narrative driven books, I just like it better when a book is less a story, and more a trojan horse for some unnatural thought process.
Phillip K. Dick and Kurt Vonnegut are two of my favorite writers. I like most of their work but "The Man in the High Castle" and "Mother Night" are two of my favorites. I like the social commentary of both men and the World War Two themes of both novels are especially relevant in today's turbulent world.

I read "Myra Breckinridge" by Gore Vidal years ago and really related to her.

My other favorite writer is Charles Bukowski. Anyone that has ever felt like an outsider in the "mainstream" world, been poor, drank too much, had gratuitous sex and worked a series of shit jobs can relate to Bukowski's life as illustrated eloquently in his prose and poems set mostly in Los Angeles in the 40's and 50's.
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Old 08-06-2011
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I usually only read non-fiction so most books would be considered boring. My favorite book was Homage to Catalonia by George Orwell. I cant believe I let somebody have it! Great book.
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Old 08-02-2011
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I am a voracious reader. I read a lot of classics, and to the degree possible I always read in the original languages if they are ones I know. I love to read poetry, especially German poetry of the Romantic and Late Romantic periods and American poetry of the twentieth century. On the rare occasions when I "allow" myself to read something purely for fun, it is usually a novel suggested by a friend or colleague. Right now, I am reading the Harry Potter books ... a summer reading "project" that just feels right, since I missed out on the Pottermania that swept through people younger than me. I'm in the middle of the second book, and enjoying it immensely.
I believe you will be quite satisfied when you are finished the series. It starts out light-hearted and the tone becomes darker each book starting with The Prisoner Of Azkaban. Also, you will see how her writing actually improves as the series goes along.

I read Deathly Hallows in 2 days! I will probably read the series again sometime in the future.
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Old 07-31-2011
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The Magic Kingdom: For Sale! series is an enjoyable one, as is the entire "Myth" series by Robert Asprin.

Another series I enjoy(and have to dig out of storage in my spare room so I can read it all over again) is the 'Guardians Of The Flame' by Joel Rosenberg. One of my favourites by far!

I own a few of Katherine Kerr's books but I haven't read them yet. I am missing one or two, and I would prefer to get the entire series before reading them.

I love getting my books either from a used book store(there are two of them in my city) or from the thrift shops!
I too quite enjoyed the Guardiansof the Flame series, losing track of it only when Carls or was it Karls' son took over for him in the books. I also loved the spell singer series, by alan dean foster.
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Old 08-02-2011
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I too quite enjoyed the Guardiansof the Flame series, losing track of it only when Carls or was it Karls' son took over for him in the books. I also loved the spell singer series, by alan dean foster.
I have a few of Alan Dean Foster's books. I think I only have one from the Spell Singer series, but the rest can be found in the local used book store(I saw them there the other day). Andre Norton's 'Xanth' series of books are pretty interesting, and there are a lot of them to read!
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