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[Closed] What's the best book you've ever read

 DezB
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[i]Like the way everyone is trying to put the most intellectual book they can thing of![/i]

Er, people have said James Ellroy, Clive Barker & Iain Banks. So they're not really, are they.

I couldn't possibly answer the question. It's like music, how do you decide what's [i]best[/i]?


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:22 am
 TomB
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Catch-22 made me laugh out loud, a lot, in public. Brilliant


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:24 am
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Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts. Based on his life in India after escaping a prison in Australia. Brilliantly written book and I will definitely be reading it again. As well as eagerly awaiting the sequel. (Which will no doubt not be as good)


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:25 am
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Most enjoyable - the Willard Price adventure books with Hal and the other one (can't remember his name). Read all of them when I was a kid and can't think of one that I didn't enjoy.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:31 am
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Catch-22 made me laugh out loud, a lot, in public. Brilliant

It amazes me that, though I hated English at school, four of the books we had to read (Lord of the Flies, Catch 22, Catcher in the Rye and To Kill a Mockingbird) are still amongst my favourites.

Most enjoyable - the Willard Price adventure books with Hal and the other one (can't remember his name). Read all of them when I was a kid and can't think of one that I didn't enjoy.

Roger was the younger one. God, I loved those as a kid. Learnt a fair bit of exotic animal trivia from those.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:31 am
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Okay not "everyone" then just a few people.

Really love books that are a surprise "hit" - had a few that I've left on the shelf for ages then finally read and loved them. Also works the other way around.

Yep Shantaram is very good but it's one hell of an ego trip for the writer.

Most funny books are Jack Reacher novels - the author is clearly a bit gay and has this central figures and some huge, invincible lady killer who is harder than anyone despite only being ex Military Police. He goes on about the guys physical attributes a wee but too much...

Got bored of those type of novels years ago - they are all the same.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:34 am
 hels
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In terms of impact I would have to say Anne Frank's Diary, which I read when I was about 10, changed my world view quite considerably.

For pure reading pleasure Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Too flowery for some !! And honorable mention for The Bone People.

Non-put-downable - the Tales of the City Books by Armistead Maupin.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:37 am
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Catch-22 made me laugh out loud, a lot, in public. Brilliant

Catch 22 has it all.

There's obviously a lot of 'laugh out loud' but some of it is really quite desolate.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:42 am
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i think mine has to be foucault's pendulum by umberto eco. followed closely by wind in my wheels by josie dew.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:49 am
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Big fan of Kerouac, esp The Dharma Bums

You either love it or hate it, and I fully understand why people don't like him. Why ? Just do.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 10:58 am
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The one that made the biggest impression at the time was 'A Clockwork Orange' by Harpurhey's finest son, Anthony Burgess.
I can understand why Kubrick pulled the film though.

Favourite actual piece of writing is 'The Sun also rises' by Hemmingway.
Sparse, beautiful writing that affected me deeply at the time.

The funniest and most life affirming is probably Three Men In A Boat' by Jerome K Jerome. Showed me that although time passes on, attitudes and humour stay the same. The TV thing with weirdy, beardy and the other one was a bit of a let down though.
That's closely followed by the collected P G Wodehouse golf stories - give it a go, even if you hate the bloody game - his funniest stuff IMO.

Best biography is probably the Spike Milligan War diaries, which I still can't read in public without embarassing myself.
Oh, and 'White Line Fever', Lemmy's autobiography is hilarious. Not, in any way, literature, but bloody funny all the same.

My 'comfort book' is 'The Complete Sherlock Holmes', which I can return to anytime and still find superb.

Scariest by a mile are the M R James ghost stories - best read on your own, at night, under canvas. ๐Ÿ˜ฏ

And a special mention for the first edition of 'Richard's Bicycle Book', for obvious reasons ๐Ÿ˜€
By Richard Ballantine, BTW. The later editions are a bit of a let down - less philosophy, more 'what bike for me?'.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:00 am
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Sweet. I have a few more to add to my Amazon wishlist now. Thanks peeps.
Also have just remembered Martin Amis' [i]Money[/i]. Cracking read. I [i]think[/i] I enjoyed [i]Zen and the ....[/i] but I'm not sure. Alex Shulgin's [i]Phenethylamines I Have Known And Loved[/i] is interesting too, from a chemist and one-time space cadet's perspective.

There are some "excellent" books that I really didn't get though. Does that make me an uncultured philistine? e.g. Paul Auster's [i]New York Trilogy[/i]? Meh.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:03 am
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Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon,mad as a fish.
Ian


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:03 am
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Catch-22 made me laugh out loud, a lot, in public. Brilliant

I have been struggling with Catch 22 for several months. I've never laughed out loud so much at a book that at the same time utterly frustrates me.

I've been reading a chapter or two, followed by a trashy fantasy novel for some light relief (go-to authors being Robin Hobb & David Gemmell), and then comimg back to it etc. etc.

I think the best book i've ever read is Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse. I love the idea that someone can reinvent themself completely multiple times. I want to mention War and Peace and East of Eden as well because they are epic in the proper sense of the word. When i finished War and Peace i felt like a relative had gone missing.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:05 am
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Danny Champion of the World, as a kid it got me hooked and I must read it every couple of years, very well written

Stalingrad was a chilling book


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:06 am
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I really enjoyed De Berniers books more so than GG Marquez who I also liked, both of them are a bit flowery but still good..

The most moving book I've ever read is If this is a man by Primo Levi, mostly because of his attitude to what he went through.

For popcorn books I like Carl Hiaasen always makes me laugh and I generally get through them at one sitting as they have brilliant pace.

There are so many great writers, overall if I had to choose one it would be John Steinbeck everything he wrote is worth reading, several times.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:06 am
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Scariest by a mile are the M R James ghost stories - best read on your own, at night, under canvas

Yeah, they're great stuff!

[i]All the Pretty Horses[/i] blew me away at the time, though I wonder how much your appreciation of books is closely tied to time and place. More recently [i]The Road[/i] actually gave me a disturbed night's sleep, not sure if that's the mark of a good book though!

Oh, and [i]Water Music[/i] by T.C. Boyle is fantastic, read loads of his since but none of them have quite measured up.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:08 am
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Don't have a best book.

Nobody has mentioned On The Road, Cuckoos Nest, F&L in Las Vegas, all the sort thing I tend to like; intelligent but lots of action and sex and drugs


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:22 am
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Favourite biography - Shakey, Neil Young's Biography, by Jimmy McDonough. Better than a lot of fiction, what a story.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:23 am
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possibly alistair reynolds revelation space
dan simmonds illium
george rr martins somg of ice and fire series is good too

i hang out in the scifi/fantasy section


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:27 am
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Razzle.
It made my willy big


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:29 am
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I'm nearly at the end of 'Birds without wings' - what an epic read, loving it.
I have a couple of favourites, don't think I could really pick one...

One Flew over the Cuckoo's nest.
A Prayer for Owen Meany
This Side of Brightness

All great books IMO


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:34 am
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george rr martins somg of ice and fire series is good too

I wish he'd bloody hurry up and finish the next one.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:35 am
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alistair reynolds revelation space
is excellent.

However the best and the set I return to, The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant First and Second by Stephen Donaldson.
Because at my lowest ebb these books literally gave me the strength to carry on, to feel that life is important and worth holding onto, no pressure then ๐Ÿ˜†


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:42 am
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Vinneh, me too on the wilbur smiths etc, am reading the one with the tug boats in it at the mo ๐Ÿ™‚

Just finished 7 pillars of wisdom and needed something lighter.

Count of Monte Cristo is good too ... but how can you define best book? Some are amazing, some moving, some inciteful, some show you that you should be very glad you weren't in The Somme, on a D-Day Beach or in Berlin in 1945 ... I also love reading biographies; what some people achieve is amazing & travel type books - although it always gives me wanderlust

I'll read almost anything but the one that I get most enjoyment from reading & re-reading, maybe Red Storm Rising by Tom Clancy.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:43 am
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Agree with 'Unbearable Lightness of Being', brilliant! A few more: Italo Svevo 'Confessions of Zeno', Flann O'Brien 'At Swim Two Birds'.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:54 am
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Swiss Family Robinson (when I was ten) it was a great adventure for kids!


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 11:55 am
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Posted : 10/09/2010 12:49 pm
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for impact, 'flowers in the attic' when i was younger


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 12:56 pm
 U31
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An interesting insight to how an Aspergers child's mind works...

http://www.amazon.com/Curious-Incident-Dog-Night-Time/dp/1400032717

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:01 pm
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Down and out in Paris and London by George Orwell.

Ahh, you beat me to it. I just reread Road to Wigan Pier which is also very good but the second half is a little bit tedious once the novelty wears off. There are a couple of sections bits about e.g. why poor people consume tea and white bread and about unemployment which could be relevant practically unchanged as retorts to some of the nonsense that gets posted up here. Sadly, in some respects not a lot has changed.

Martin Amis - Money - great book. Didn't they/aren't they televising it with the guy out of Spaced?

**** Milan Kundera. Josef Skvorecky if you absolutely have to - Miss Silver's past is a good one. Solzhenitsyn, Inner Circle.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:07 pm
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:09 pm
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+2 for American Tabloid, liked cold 6000 as well.
I like Ian Rankin as well, met him once in Gateshead, there's a photo of the back of my head on his website!
Read a couple of Mo Hayder recently, quite enjoyed her style and stories.
Anybody tried Christopher Brookmyre?? worth a read, mans a nutter and writes a good tale.

When I was a kid my grandad used to get books from readers digest, so I never really read kids books always ended up reading whatever he was reading. Always made sure I had books around the house when my daughter was younger and she would pick up the bug of reading.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:16 pm
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At a push thinking back the book that has had my heart racing and thinking 'oh my god' was a series of books by Stephen DOnaldson "The Gap Series". Certainly not your usual Buck Rogers wins the day type SF.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:20 pm
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Despite it being a bit obvious, the Harry Potter books are brilliant.

Another great book is The Time Travellers Wife. Bit depressing though.

Also Noughts & Crosses, and the rest of the trilogy.

And the Forever War.

Don't think I could pick between them.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:21 pm
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Fiction
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Non Fiction
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:29 pm
 StuF
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I think the one that made the most memorable impact on me was Stephen King - IT, read when I was about 16, really absorbed by it.

Non fiction - Born to Run, Christopher McDougall. Very well written an a very persuasive for throwing away your running trainers


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:31 pm
 DezB
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Funny ol world innit? I threw Glamorama across the room cos it was so crap! Then it's someone elses favourite book ever!


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 1:34 pm
 DezB
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[i]Shakey, Neil Young's Biography, by Jimmy McDonough[/i] - I'll be buying that.

Ok, I've got one - Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl. Because it was the first book I bought from our school book club and got me into reading.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 2:15 pm
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can't pin point one - think it depends on when and at what age

from my childhood
wind in the willows - kenneth grahame

teens to young adult
anything by George Orwell - I also read quite a lot of political stuff, which won't be a surprise to people who know me.

I'm also a big fan of Kerouac. First book my wife bought me was On the Road - read it from cover to cover in one sitting (I was on the dole at the time).

Cormac McCarthy tells a good tale, my favourites in no particular order, Outer Dark, Child of God, Blood Meridian.

Book I really enjoyed a few years ago was 'Stone Junction'by Jim Dodge. I've also just read (i.e. yesterday ) Fup by him which is quite funny.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 2:35 pm
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Mark Manning (Zodiac Mindwarp)
and Bill Drummond (KLF)
Bad Wisdom

Drummond and Manning undertake an epic journey to the North Pole to sacrifice an icon of Elvis Presley.
Had a goood old giggle at it I remember.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 2:56 pm
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I could do with re-reading 'stone junction'... count your bones until they glow..

On a related topic.. my other half has just excelled herself as the postie has just this very minute delivered me 'reheated cabbage' by Irvine Welsh and 'the man who cycled the world' by Mark Beaumont..

good times


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 3:19 pm
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As I am no intellectual, indeed I am probably a bit of a philistine, my favourite books are...
The Wasp Factory - Iain Banks
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas - Hunter S Thompson

The first because it is so twisted and yet compelling. The second because of the sheer OTT madness of it. Andrenochrome??


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 3:51 pm
 D0NK
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Yay for white101 the only other person ever to have read christopher brookmyre besides me. Mrs hates it when I read his stuff, normally by the pool on holiday, and I LOL and everyone looks at me ๐Ÿ™‚ be my enemy, snooker table, pmsl.

Best dunno collector collector - tibor fischer, quite ugly one morning - CB, feersum enjinn - ian banks, dunno


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 6:31 pm
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Non fiction: Hungry Spirit, Charles Handy.
Fiction: The Power of One, Bryce Courtney.


 
Posted : 10/09/2010 6:35 pm
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