Can you peoples please list a couple of good books?
Can you peoples please list a couple of good books?
hey all, I'm going on a vacation saterday, and have a 7 hour drive. I am in derparate need of reading material!!  ... 
I've recently read
To Kill A Mockingbird
1984
Count of Monte Cristo
And am now reading
Uncle Tom's Cabin
and soon to read afterwards
The Jungle
So, if you have any reccomendations, up to a twelfth grade reading level, please let me know, as I'll be greatly happy!
edit: oh, and i'm looking for titles, that I will remember down the road or that is a noteable classic.
Thanks!
			
			
									
						
										
						I've recently read
To Kill A Mockingbird
1984
Count of Monte Cristo
And am now reading
Uncle Tom's Cabin
and soon to read afterwards
The Jungle
So, if you have any reccomendations, up to a twelfth grade reading level, please let me know, as I'll be greatly happy!
edit: oh, and i'm looking for titles, that I will remember down the road or that is a noteable classic.
Thanks!
Anything by Grisham is fast and engaging. I've read all except A Painted House, and I'd recommend The Client, The Pelican Brief, A Time to Kill, Runaway Jury, heck...pretty much any of them, you can't go wrong. Except "Skipping Christmas", that was pretty bad.
In terms of "great" books, I'd recommend Lord of the Flies by William Golding, if you haven't read it already. Or Franz Kafkas' The Metamorphosis. I love To Kill a Mockingbird, so hopefully you'd like these ones.
			
			
									
						
										
						In terms of "great" books, I'd recommend Lord of the Flies by William Golding, if you haven't read it already. Or Franz Kafkas' The Metamorphosis. I love To Kill a Mockingbird, so hopefully you'd like these ones.
No particular order, off the top of my head
The Stars My Destination- Alfred Bester
Treasure Island- RL Stephenson
Count of Monte Cristo- Dumas
Day of the Triffids- Wyndham
Farenheit 451- Bradbury
Stranger in a Strange Land- Heinlan
Exorcist- Blatty
Forever War- Haldeman
At the Mountains of Madness- Lovecraft
Pet Semetary- Stephen King
Best Ghost stories of Algernon Blackwood
Maltese Falcon- Dashiell Hammett
Big Sleep- Raymond Chandler
Double Indemnity - James M. Cain
A lot of philip K Dick's short stories are worth checking out
Day of the Jackal- Forsyth
Book of the New Sun - Gene Wolfe- NB takes some getting used to the language in this, but persevere. This excels on the reread.
			
			
									
						
										
						The Stars My Destination- Alfred Bester
Treasure Island- RL Stephenson
Count of Monte Cristo- Dumas
Day of the Triffids- Wyndham
Farenheit 451- Bradbury
Stranger in a Strange Land- Heinlan
Exorcist- Blatty
Forever War- Haldeman
At the Mountains of Madness- Lovecraft
Pet Semetary- Stephen King
Best Ghost stories of Algernon Blackwood
Maltese Falcon- Dashiell Hammett
Big Sleep- Raymond Chandler
Double Indemnity - James M. Cain
A lot of philip K Dick's short stories are worth checking out
Day of the Jackal- Forsyth
Book of the New Sun - Gene Wolfe- NB takes some getting used to the language in this, but persevere. This excels on the reread.
- Loomis
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Heh.
I work in a library and the question I get asked most often (after 'Mate, can I use the email?') is 'Do you have any good books here?'.
My first reaction is to say, 'No, the librarians only buy the bad ones here. Go to the other library'. However, not wanting to lose my job, I give them a list of stuff I've read lately.
I've had my head buried in law textbooks for the last 2.5 years, so I haven't read as much as I used to. But stuff I usually recommend:
Chuck Palahniuk- anything. Most famous for 'Fight Club', I'd recommend either that or 'Survivor'. The latter is probably my fave of his.
Naomi Klein - No Logo. Truly frightening look at how far branding has gone. Scarier than anything Orwell wrote.
Yeah, I'd agree with maj. A lot of Philip K Dick is great.
Oh, and this is an odd addition for me, but Nick Hornby's High Fidelity. If you love music, or are obsessive about anything, you'll love this book.
But you seem to be keen on 'classic' books. Ok, in terms of 'classics' (and modern ones):
Dante's Divine Comedy. Took me years to plow through this, but worth it.
Joseph Conrad - Heart of Darkness
Anything by Edgar Allen Poe. Used to read Poe daily in high school. I was such a freaky kid.
Aldus Huxley - Brave New World
T.H. White - Once and Future King
Malory - Le Morte D'Arthur (Death of King Arthur)
Cervantes - Don Quixote (Side note: Everyone go and see or rent the documentary Lost in La Mancha, about the failed Terry Gilliam project. it is brilliant).
Lots of H.P. Lovecraft
Kazantzakis - Last Temptation.
Tolkien - Lord of the Freakin' Rings, Hobbit etc.
Paul Auster - New York Trilogy (ok, not a classic, but good nonetheless).
Oh, god. This is so hard to narrow down.
I might have to post again later...
			
			
									
						
							I work in a library and the question I get asked most often (after 'Mate, can I use the email?') is 'Do you have any good books here?'.
My first reaction is to say, 'No, the librarians only buy the bad ones here. Go to the other library'. However, not wanting to lose my job, I give them a list of stuff I've read lately.
I've had my head buried in law textbooks for the last 2.5 years, so I haven't read as much as I used to. But stuff I usually recommend:
Chuck Palahniuk- anything. Most famous for 'Fight Club', I'd recommend either that or 'Survivor'. The latter is probably my fave of his.
Naomi Klein - No Logo. Truly frightening look at how far branding has gone. Scarier than anything Orwell wrote.
Yeah, I'd agree with maj. A lot of Philip K Dick is great.
Oh, and this is an odd addition for me, but Nick Hornby's High Fidelity. If you love music, or are obsessive about anything, you'll love this book.
But you seem to be keen on 'classic' books. Ok, in terms of 'classics' (and modern ones):
Dante's Divine Comedy. Took me years to plow through this, but worth it.
Joseph Conrad - Heart of Darkness
Anything by Edgar Allen Poe. Used to read Poe daily in high school. I was such a freaky kid.
Aldus Huxley - Brave New World
T.H. White - Once and Future King
Malory - Le Morte D'Arthur (Death of King Arthur)
Cervantes - Don Quixote (Side note: Everyone go and see or rent the documentary Lost in La Mancha, about the failed Terry Gilliam project. it is brilliant).
Lots of H.P. Lovecraft
Kazantzakis - Last Temptation.
Tolkien - Lord of the Freakin' Rings, Hobbit etc.
Paul Auster - New York Trilogy (ok, not a classic, but good nonetheless).
Oh, god. This is so hard to narrow down.
I might have to post again later...
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I've recently finished a fascinating fantasy series called "The Dark is Rising" by Susan Cooper. They're meant for older children but they're so complex that I can't see children understanding every aspect of it. The books in the series are:
1. Over Sea, Under Stone
2. The Dark is Rising (even though the whole series is called this, the main story really starts in the 2nd book, hence the title of the entire series)
3. Greenwitch
4. The Grey King
5. Silver on the Tree
The first book is really the set up of everything, and actually has no fantasy in it whatsoever unlike the others; it's just a straight forward mystery, but it's a great read. Dark is Rising (the 2nd novel) is my personal favorite, though.
			
			
									
						
										
						1. Over Sea, Under Stone
2. The Dark is Rising (even though the whole series is called this, the main story really starts in the 2nd book, hence the title of the entire series)
3. Greenwitch
4. The Grey King
5. Silver on the Tree
The first book is really the set up of everything, and actually has no fantasy in it whatsoever unlike the others; it's just a straight forward mystery, but it's a great read. Dark is Rising (the 2nd novel) is my personal favorite, though.
- Matty-Mouse
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 - Location: UK
 
I'm not sure you'd be able to get hold of it outside of the UK but "The Little Soldier" by Bernard Ashley is a really good book and so are "The Chronicles of Narnia" By C S Lewis.
			
			
									
						
							Dust? Anyone? No?
Dust? Anyone? No?
Dust? Anyone? No?
Well thats actually low in fat so you can eat as much of that as you like.
			
						Dust? Anyone? No?
Dust? Anyone? No?
Well thats actually low in fat so you can eat as much of that as you like.
- MickeyMouseboy
 - Platinum Edition
 - Posts: 3470
 - Joined: Fri Apr 18, 2003 4:35 pm
 - Location: ToonTown
 
My Stephen King recommendation would be "Different Seasons" - it's a collection of four novellas (each around 100 pages or so). Three of the four have been made into movies - Stand By Me (The Body), (Rita Hayworth and) the Shawshank Redemption, and Apt Pupil. I've actually never read the fourth one, but the other three are all short and engaging and it's interesting to compare/contrast with the movies in the direction they take. The three I read aren't typical King horror, as you can tell from the films if you've seen or heard of them.jabroni76 wrote:^^^
well, I am still in a twist. I finished Harry Potter, and don't know what to read now. I'm going on another vacation from the first to fifth... with a nice flight... I'll probably get Lord of the Flies and maybe The Stand, even though it seem's pretty complicated!
Well I liked them anyway. Might be easier to get into each one than a big book like "The Stand", which I haven't read, so I don't know what it's like.
