I decided to change my ways and give books a chance. I'm looking for suggestions. Anything goes, fiction, nonfiction, sci-fi, philosophy, social commentary, biography, classics. I'm open to anything, but I'd prefer some old staples before I hit the latest and greatest stuff. BTW I love the thread title.
7/14/2006 8:01:13 PM
Enders Game
7/14/2006 8:01:53 PM
everything written by Michael Crichton
7/14/2006 8:03:07 PM
Dr. Seuss
7/14/2006 8:06:01 PM
http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=410293http://www.thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=414932
7/14/2006 8:06:39 PM
Curious GeorgeGoodnight MoonBerenstein BearsWhere The Wild Things AreThe Very Hungry Caterpillar
7/14/2006 8:10:14 PM
I'd begin at chapter 1...but seriously... try John Steinbeck's Travels With Charley- its a short, but good read. [Edited on July 14, 2006 at 8:22 PM. Reason : f]
7/14/2006 8:14:51 PM
Johnathan Livingston Seagull. Start it in the early evening and still make it to the party...but definitely one of those books everyone should read. Same goes for Ishmael and The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide.
7/14/2006 8:26:32 PM
^ Oh my god I loved Ishmael.So few people have read that one too.Here's my list of fav booksCatch-22Slaughterhouse 5Mossflower (yes it is a kinda childrens book....still good!)Wizards First Rule (just finished reading, cant comment on the rest of the series)Enders GameDragonlance Chronicles (Dragons of Autum Twilight, Winter Night, Spring Dawning, Summer Flame)The Return of Sherlock Holmes (collection of stories)White Fang (not the movie, yes the book)The Sun Also RisesLord of The Isles (first book in a series I think)The color of magic (discworld)I cant think of the rest right now but i havent had caffinne in ...too long.And yes i'll probably get made fun of for that list too.
7/14/2006 10:52:32 PM
read catch 22
7/14/2006 11:01:52 PM
don't do that oprah's bookclub bullshit where you get somebody else to tell you what to read, just go brows the fiction section at your library until you find something that piques your interest, then maybe mix in a classic every now and again
7/14/2006 11:15:21 PM
the giving tree
7/14/2006 11:20:50 PM
FAULKNERTWAINThat's all you need.
7/14/2006 11:31:05 PM
The Hero and the Crown
7/14/2006 11:33:17 PM
The Robe and Wizard Hat.
7/14/2006 11:34:53 PM
Early michael crichton[Edited on July 14, 2006 at 11:49 PM. Reason : 23]
7/14/2006 11:49:06 PM
Rush Limbaugh's See, I Told You SoI haven't gotten past the front cover I saw at Goodwill, but it's pretty much hillarious so far.
7/14/2006 11:50:08 PM
7/15/2006 1:45:04 AM
You want anything? Here are a few.Anything by Pynchon (Gravity's Rainbow, V.)Anything by Nabokov (Lolita, Pale Fire)Anything by Kundera (The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Identity)Anything by Italo Calvino (If on a winter's night a traveler, Invisible Cities)For good measure, I recommend these other authors:Heller, Burroughs, Rushdie, Camus, Sartre, DeLillo, Hesse, Kafka
7/15/2006 1:58:31 AM
anything by steinbeck
7/15/2006 2:04:51 AM
I am going to go out on a limb here.If somebody is "new to reading", whatever the fuck that means, they probably shouldn't start off with Gravity's Rainbow.p.s. Highlights for Children.
7/15/2006 2:17:24 AM
Go pick up the following authors for philosophy:Nietzsche, Heidegger, Husserl, Sartre, AristotleAs if that won't keep you busy forever, if you need some fiction check out the Dune series. Ender's Game is pretty good too
7/15/2006 2:20:35 AM
Some middle school teacher should make their students read Gravity's Rainbow during the summer.
7/15/2006 2:43:22 AM
7/15/2006 3:38:13 AM
Ham on Rye by Charles Bukowski and Wait until Spring Bandini by John Fante-
7/15/2006 11:02:11 AM
faulkner's light in august is one of my favorites george orwell's 1984 is a classic too if you missed reading it in school (some how i never read it for school and ended up reading it on my own)i also suggest the dune series-- start with dune & there is a list of the order of books on the inside i also enjoyed fast food nation thats a decent mix of different genres & none of them are terribly hard to follow along with
7/15/2006 11:49:44 AM
TwainMelvilleConradJoyceThat should hold you off for a while.
7/15/2006 11:59:06 AM
America: The Book
7/15/2006 12:08:37 PM
Scifi:Hyperion by Dan Simmons (and sequels)Dune by Frank Herber t(probably not the sequels though)Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card (and sequels and parallels)Foundation by Isaac Asimov (a large series)Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. HeinleinFantasy:The Eye of the World by Robert JordanWizard's First Rule by Terry GoodkindMagician: Apprentice by Raymond E. Feist (and the whole Riftwar and Serpentwar series)Hard to classify:Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry PratchetNon-Fiction:The Fabric of the Cosmos by Brian GreeneOnce you've gone through fantasy and scifi books like that you might want to try some of the more heady stuff mentioned earlier. Seriously though, don't start with "gravity's rainbow"[Edited on July 15, 2006 at 12:21 PM. Reason : ]
7/15/2006 12:18:27 PM
7/15/2006 12:26:15 PM
Call of the WildWhite FangTo Build A Fire (short story)
7/15/2006 1:29:21 PM
a collection of 3 short storiesflannery oconnor is a funny writer-- i enjoy her
7/15/2006 1:48:06 PM
ender's game is written for middle schoolers. but maybe if you're new to reading, then that would be a good thing.
7/15/2006 2:11:43 PM
someone delete this thread PLEASEthe title is infuriating
7/15/2006 2:14:52 PM
Fucked-up, hilarious, Southern Grotesque:All We Need of Hell, Body, A Feast of Snakes, or Car by Harry CrewsOf course, everything Flannery O'Connor ever wroteand lots of crime/mystery writers: Lehane, Walter Mosley, Michael Connelly, George Pelecanos
7/15/2006 3:05:02 PM
The Kite Runner by Kahled (I forget his last name) is an excellent page turner. Look online at the University Scholars' Program reading choices, they are usually exciting, page turning, intellectually simulating books.
7/15/2006 6:19:56 PM
you guys are awesome.i already have enough suggestions to laat me for a very long fucking time. i picked up some hunter s. thompson and do androids dream of electric sheep (bladerunner), bob dylan chronicles, walden, and dune for the time being. and i'd probably be a fool to not investigate gravity's rainbow at least in the future. i read 1984 and have been hunting out animal farm in used books stores to no avail. thanks guys for some good suggestions. lets keep this thread rollin'
7/15/2006 8:45:52 PM
American Psycho by Brett Easton Ellisthe book is much much more graphic than the movie
7/15/2006 8:48:58 PM
Hitchiker's Guide series
7/15/2006 8:52:27 PM
^^^ dont overdo it buddy
7/15/2006 9:37:22 PM
7/15/2006 11:13:43 PM
cheap used books can be found on http://www.half.com as wellused bookstores are nice but i can sometimes find the same books for cheaper online[Edited on July 15, 2006 at 11:38 PM. Reason : hgjhg]
7/15/2006 11:38:01 PM
So far, I want to kill you for recommending it.But I'm only 50 pages in.I've had about three people tell me it's amazing, about five tell me it's horrible. All fairly well-read people, I guess.
7/15/2006 11:38:10 PM
That's still eight really awesome people just for actually reading the whole thing.I hate it when one of my friends decides to quit 100 pages into it. To be honest, most don't even make it that far.[Edited on July 15, 2006 at 11:49 PM. Reason : .]
7/15/2006 11:48:17 PM
ibts
7/15/2006 11:55:27 PM
^ well who the fuck wants to read 800 pages to get any enjoyment out of itREAD STEPHEN KING'S DARK TOWER SERIESSTART W/ THE GUNSLINGER
7/16/2006 12:02:13 AM
^ Yeah, the DT is awesome, and the Gunslinger especially kicked ass. Def. the best of Stephen King
7/16/2006 12:13:51 AM
7/16/2006 1:28:50 AM
7/16/2006 3:35:31 AM
i read airframe by michael crichton(sp?) in 3 days
7/16/2006 3:50:32 AM