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Just for Fun > Alphabet of Authors' Last Names

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message 51: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments U: John Updike - contemporary author; I have read The Witches of Eastwick and a couple of his Rabbit books


message 53: by Nicole (new)

Nicole Skipping X

William P. Young Read The Shack Would not recommend


message 54: by Eliana (last edited Nov 26, 2013 05:38PM) (new)


message 55: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments Next should be Z! Thanks Eliana for filling in the gaps!


message 56: by Alannah (new)

Alannah Clarke (alannahclarke) | 14432 comments Mod
Z

Markus Zusak Read The Book Thief.


message 59: by LauraT (last edited Nov 25, 2013 11:45PM) (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
C
Wilkie Collins - read a lot of his books, famous such as The Woman In White, The Moonstone, No Name or less renown as After Dark, The Fallen Leaves, Jezebel's Daughter ...


message 60: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments D: Dorothy Dunnett --

I have read both her historical fiction and a few of her mysteries. Strongly recommend the historical fiction, try Niccolo Rising


message 61: by LauraT (last edited Nov 27, 2013 02:23AM) (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
Leslie wrote: "D: Dorothy Dunnett --

I have read both her historical fiction and a few of her mysteries. Strongly recommend the historical fiction, try Niccolo Rising"


Ok, I'll put this on my list as well... I'll have to live at least till 150 if I want to finish all the books you've suggested me!

E: George Eliot
One of my favourite woman writer, no one of my favourite author ever. She wrote some of the best books of victorian literature:Middlemarch, Daniel Deronda, The Mill on the Floss - which I didn't like so much as some others - and many many more ...


message 62: by Dhanaraj (new)

Dhanaraj Rajan | 2962 comments F. Dario Fo - Read his play Abducting Diana recently and liked it.


message 63: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
Dhanaraj wrote: "F. Dario Fo - Read his play Abducting Diana recently and liked it."

I think his works are definitly better on stage than reading on paper. Have you seen Mistero buffo. Giullarata popolare? He's great there. And it can also been appreciated by who can't understand italian: most of it is in "gramelot", an invented language of his which mixes italian, latin and several dialects of Lombardia. You have to "see" him to understand, but after that you never forget.



message 64: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
G: Elizabeth Gaskell
Great woman writer, North and South and Wives and Daughters my favourites


message 66: by Dhanaraj (last edited Nov 27, 2013 07:18AM) (new)

Dhanaraj Rajan | 2962 comments @ Laura T: I already understood that Fo's plays are more for performance than for reading and I had noted it down in my review of
Abducting Diana. And I have not seen any of his plays and I will check out the youtube link later. Thanks for the link.


message 67: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
Dhanaraj wrote: "@ Laura T: I already understood that Fo's plays are more for performance than for reading and I had noted it down in my review of
Abducting Diana. And I have not seen any of his pla..."


Now he's too old to be much on stage, but I've seen him several times - as you'll see on youtube he was also a lot on "teaching" meeting in universities or theaters.
His son lives not far from here, in Santa Cristina di Gubbio where he runs an "agriturismo" - a place you stay to sleep or eat with most of their agricoltural products. He often organises courses there - the name of the place is "The free University of Alcatraz" - and really often his father was performing there.



message 68: by Dhanaraj (new)

Dhanaraj Rajan | 2962 comments @Laura T, How I envy you? It is true that in life some get all the gifts possible. Lol....


message 69: by Eliana (new)

Eliana I: Kazuo Ishiguro The Remains of the Day is a quiet, brilliant masterpiece. Never Let Me Go is a disturbing, dystopian tale. And The Unconsoled is a weird, disorienting story that didn't work for me at all.


message 70: by Eliana (new)

Eliana LauraT wrote: "Dhanaraj wrote: "F. Dario Fo - Read his play Abducting Diana recently and liked it."

I think his works are definitly better on stage than reading on paper. Have you seen [book:Miste..."


Oooh! Thanks for the link. I wish there were an archive of fabulous theatrical performances, even just excerpts, to give some better feeling for playwrights whose work can best be appreciated in production. Some plays (Arthur Miller's for example) are very accessible to readers...but there are others I suspect I wouldn't love as much if I hadn't seen productions... even shows from over 30 years ago echo in my mind when I reread the scripts.

But I have experienced something similar when all I've seen is a single scene... somehow that glimpse can give the key to the rest of the play.

What a very long-winded way to say 'thank you!'


message 71: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments J: James Joyce -- read A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man & Ulysses. The first is definitely easier reading!


message 72: by LauraT (last edited Nov 28, 2013 01:19AM) (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
K: Stephen King
Only read Hearts in Atlantis even if it one of the favourite author of both my husband and son. Planning next year to read 11/22/63

P.S. You're welcome Eliana. Dario Fo is one of my love and I do agree, theater should be more represented on line


message 73: by Nicole (new)

Nicole L: C.S. Lewis I have only read Till We Have Faces but plan on reading much more of him in the future.


message 74: by [deleted user] (new)

M: Tahereh Mafi

- Author of one of my favourite YA series. I have read Shatter Me and Unravel Me, as well as the novella Destroy Me. I am counting the days until the final part of the trilogy, Ignite Me is released (66 days!) and until the novella Fracture Me is released (17 days!).


message 75: by Eliana (new)


message 76: by Alannah (new)


message 77: by [deleted user] (new)

P: Stephanie Perkins

I have read Anna and the French Kiss and Lola and the Boy Next Door. Both excellent reads :)


message 78: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments author with the last name starting with Q or R??


message 79: by Eliana (new)

Eliana Q: Thomas de Quincey best known for Confessions of an English Opium Eater, which is fascinating, but I prefer some of his other essays.


message 80: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
R: Miss Read I LOVE her books, such as Village Affairs


message 81: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments S: Dorothy L. Sayers -- one of my favorite mystery writers! As a teenager, I had a crush on her detective Lord Peter Whimsey! I think that is why I don't like the last few books as much - he meets & falls in love with someone else :(

LauraT wrote: "R: Miss Read I LOVE her books, such as Village Affairs"

Ha ha ha! I just got the 3rd Fairacre book from the library, Storm In The Village.


message 82: by LauraT (new)

LauraT (laurata) | 14293 comments Mod
Lovley that one!!!


message 83: by Eliana (new)

Eliana T: Marina Tsvetaeva I've owned her Selected Poems for several years, but only read a few of them. ...finally this year I read through the whole collection, and was delighted!


message 84: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments U: Maia Underwood - never read her...


message 85: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments W: Oscar Wilde - one of my favorite playwrights...

Pia wrote: "V: Jules Verne - Around the World in Eighty Days"

How did you like that? I was a bit disappointed by Journey to the Centre of the Earth.


message 87: by Eliana (new)


message 89: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments C: Catherine Coulter -- read a bunch of her FBI series...


message 90: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments next should be an author whose last name starts with D...


message 91: by Amber (last edited Jan 10, 2014 01:52PM) (new)


message 93: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments F: Robert Frost - association of ideas, since Laura played a poet :) The Road Not Taken and Other Poems


message 94: by Tweedledum (new)

Tweedledum  (tweedledum) | 2163 comments G. Elizabeth Goudge
Just finished The Bird in the Tree
A beautiful lyrical writer.


message 97: by [deleted user] (new)


message 98: by LauraT (new)


message 99: by Leslie (new)

Leslie | 16369 comments L: Doris Lessing - currently reading The Golden Notebook


message 100: by [deleted user] (last edited Jan 13, 2014 08:26AM) (new)


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