The Source by the James Michener. I love historical fiction.
Books
Book reader community.
I’ll have to check it out, it’s not a genre I’m too familiar about myself but happy to add things to my to read list at any opportunity ^^
Ordered it a couple of days ago! I'm generally interested in the ancient biblical history and archeology so it seemed like a must read
I love hitchhikers guide to the galaxy so much. Reading what if soon.
Another that’s been on my list for far too long
Travel:
Into the Heart of Borneo - Redmond O'Hanlon. He was a pasty, British, natural history book REVIEWER, until his editor had the brilliant idea to torture him by packing him up and sending him to Borneo for a month.
In Trouble Again - Redmond O'Hanlon. Freshly surviving Borneo, his editor sends him to the Amazon for TWICE as long.
These two books are bright, funny, and immensely readable. You will be tempted to follow them with his 3rd book "No Mercy: A Journey to the Heart of the Congo." Be aware this one is neither bright, nor funny. He and his crew barely survived, it's an amazing story, but a super tough read.
Road Fever - Tim Cahill. Hired by General Motors for a promotional stunt, Cahill and his co-pilot/co-driver Garry Sowerby drive a show-truck from the tip of Argentina to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, as fast as possible.
Oh those are quite some interesting books, definitely gonna check them out ^^
The book that made me fall in love with reading was "City of The Beasts" from Isabel Allende. I picked it up because my dad had left it lying around, and I completely fell in love. Not only with Isabel Allende, but with reading.
And my favorite book is "One Hundred Years Of Solitud". The first time I read it, was pre internet, so I would write down the name of the characters, to keep track of the family tree. It was just so beautiful, and it really opened me up to fantasy.
Awesome, I just bought a used copy of "one hundred years.." Looking forward to reading it!
East of Eden, hands down. That said, it’s hard to explain why (a short description of this book will always sound dull and boring)—I suppose it’s the character development. It’s truly something else.
Anna Karenina, but not because of Anna (she’s kind of a dickhead); because of Levin. So good.
East of Eden definitely has a place in my top 5. Having been forced to read grapes of wrath in highschool, I didn't touch another Steinbeck for quite a few years. I think being told to read something immediately changes your opinion about the book and author.
East of Eden was a perfect book about humans. Definitely changed the way I think and feel about Steinbeck. Worth every page.
test 2 /u/rsn@lemmy.world
Still probably Birthday of the World, by Le Guin. Short story compilation, particularly enjoyable if you're familiar with her other work. Finishes with one of my fav generation ship stories.
Honorable mention for Kushiel's Dart being my all-time favorite piece of guilty-pleasure reading.
I've read some of her Hainish Cycle and some from the Earthsea series, also LHoD and Omelas and some of her non-fiction. But didn't know about Birthday of the World until this! More Le Guin is always good. Thank you.
You're in for a treat. lol For fans, it's imo the cherry on top of her entire career. Kinda the sweet treat that ties the whole thing together and puts a bow on it. It's all refined riffs and dives into some of her seemingly favorite kinds of concept material.
Four Ways To Forgiveness is also really good. Her later short story work is, in general, my favorite of her entire catalogue. She's just kinda done with fucking around and has finally arrived at exactly the kinds of things she wants to say, and she fires them like a ping pong ball machine gun.
My my my. You definitely know how to rile someone up! Will look up both. Thanks again. Did/Have you read Always Coming Home? I couldn't get through it the first time, but images from reading it still linger in my mind.
My all time favourite would be Blood Meridian, but very close would be A Canticle for Liebowitz, A Clockwork Orange, and Slaughterhouse 5. All brilliant books, and the last two are very short as well.
Canticle hits my post apocalypse and medieval loving brain in exactly the right spot, Clockwork is so challenging at first but the immersion is ridiculous, and Slaughterhouse is a brilliant piece of unreliable narrator fiction.
Lord of the Rings (although I would lump any Tolkein under this), Count of Monte Cristo, Rendezvous with Rama, one of Thomas Hardy's (can't decide which but maybe Return of the Native, Hyperion by Dan Simmons.
Having a little difficulty opening links in the memmy app it seems but I’ll check the list out in a moment
l'etranger by Camus. I relate sometimes too much with the main character im starting to worry
Haha, I always thought that was the point.
Yeah I guess it is
I loved the Murderbot series it was amazing
- The Dark Tower series by Stephen King
- The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice
Beyond the Sky and Earth - Jamie Zeppa The Hobbit/LOTR - JRR Tolkien Harry Potter series - JK Rowling Outlander series - Diana Gabaldon A Man Called Ove - Fredrik Backman (honestly anything by him) Gone with the Wind - Margaret Mitchell
@DuskLoaf
Lord Of The Rings series, Dan Brown's Robert Langdon series and the Harry Potter series I re-read a lot still.
Every now and then I consider reading the HP series, I get a little ways in and then drop, not from bad writing or anything just cause my brains jumping to the plot points since I’m familiar enough w the movies, a curse really.
80% of these are gonna be Lord of the Rings lmao
I just finished Endurance, a pretty fun classic nonfiction about a dangerous trans-Antarctica trip. I think it’s pretty well known but I hadn’t heard of it until I read it.
Ender's game is a book I can always pick up and read through in one or two sittings. The rest of the serieses maybe not as much.
Also anything Jonathan safran foer.
Edit: foundation and anathem are also gems.
Non-fiction: The Demon-Haunted world by Carl Sagan. A must-read for anyone.