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Meg
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Jan 10, 2009 08:54AM

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1. Thrity Umrigar
2. Anita Shreve
3. Sue Miller
4. Elizabeth Berg
5. Lisa Jackson
6. Sue Monk Kidd
7. Rosamonde Pilcher
8. Barbara Taylor Bradford
9. Janet Evanovich
10. Eileen Gouge

My Top 10 would be:
Danielle Steel (lately though her books are stale)
Nora Roberts
James Patterson
Mary Higgins Clark
Luanne Rice
Neale Donald Walsch
Anna Quindlen
Susan Wiggs
Anita Shreve
Kristin Hannah
At least those are the authors I buy all of their books I can find.

Anne Tyler
Dennis Lehane
Robert McCammon
Alice Hoffman
Ray Bradbury
Larry McMurtry
Stephen King
Harlan Ellison
Edith Wharton
Pat Conroy

I also read Jonathan Kellerman, Dean Koontz, James Patterson, Harlan Coben usually as soon as they come out.

I used to devour books by the same author until I realized often I was reading the same story with a different title (e.g. John Grisham, Robert Parker)! However, I have found a few who pen a different story (e.g. Dennis LeHane, Michael Crichton - how sad that the world has lost this author). But I usually don't choose a book with the author in mind - usually it's the subject that catches my attention.

I think I am really mourning the loss of a favorite author.

Oooooh, you didn't like The Mermaid Chair? Gosh, I thought it was super.

1. MC Beaton
2. Nancy Atherton
3. Stephen King
4. Clive Barkers
5. Lawrence Block
6. Robert Parker
7. Herbie Brennan
8. Janet Evanovich
9. Jan Karon
10.PG Wodehouse
These are the top 10 authors but I have so many

I might have missed something, Meg, but what author are you mourning? Oddly enough, we must have been writing at the same time, since our answers say about the same thing in a different way. What you said sums it up: "If I like a first novel I seem to be really disappointed in their next one."

in no particular order
1. Dean Koontz
2. Patricia Cornwell
3. Iris Johansen
4. Kathy Reichs
5. Jeffrey Deaver
6. James Patterson
7. Robin Cook
8. Tess Gerritsen
9. Robert Ludlum
10. JK Rowling
and so many more

No order just as they come to mind:
1. Stephen King
2. I don't know his name but the guy who writes the No.1 Ladies Detective Agency (he also has other series I want to read so I'll add him)
3. Marian Keyes
4. Douglas Preston/Lincoln Child collaborations (I haven't read their individual works yet)
5. The guy that wrote Kite Runner and Thousand Splendid Suns (I can't think of his name off hand) - I can't wait for more of his works
That's all I can think of.

Choosing ten favorite authors is like choosing ten favorite ways to top a pizza. It's just a small part of a much, much larger universe of possibilities...
off the top of my head:
Kathe Koja
Wendy Walker (the fantasist/art critic, not the chick-lit author who's recently started publishing)
Cormac McCarthy
Steven Erikson
Charles Simic
Ira Sadoff
Mary Biddinger
Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Richard Siken
Peter Sotos
But, then, ask on a different day, some of those names will change...

Elizabeth George
William Faulkner
Dennis Lehane
Philippa Gregory
Laura Lippman
Jeffrey Deaver
Preston & Childs (actually their individual works aren't bad either)
PD James
Charles Dickens
Tony Hillerman

1. Jane Austen
2. Maeve Binchy
3. Wally Lamb
4. Janet Evanovich (Stephanie Plum series)
5. Larry McMurtry (if you haven't read Lonesome Dove you should!)
6. Stephen King (but only his early works)
7. Colleen McCullough
8. Paulo Coelho
9. Charlaine Harris (Sookie Stackhouse...and I'm thinking about trying her Shakespeare series)
10. James Patterson (Women's Murder Club)
And then there are the runner-ups...occasionally, they'll sneak up and knock someone off the list.
Rick Riordian, Kristin Gore, Brandon Mull, JK Rowling, Stephenie Meyer (The Host A Novel was really good!), and Jennifer Weiner.
I have to stop thinking about it before I change the list again....



Never, never did understand the love for Catcher in the Rye. It was an OK read, but not one I cared about reading again. The Great Gatsby, now that's another story. But I think it's my favorite passages that I bother re-reading in TGG. The last few paragraphs are just stunning.

Sarah Dessen
Meg Cabot
Sophie Kinsella
Margaret Atwood
Barack Obama
Jane Austen
Charles Dickens
Charlotte Bronte
Wally Lamb
...and many more

George McDonald Fraser
Herman Hesse
Larry McMurty
Alan Furst
Jacqueline Carey
E.L. Doctorow
Tony Hillerman
Paul Theroux
Terry Brook
In no particular order.


Liza Dalby
Umberto Eco
Ryszard Kapuściński
Stephen King
Magdalena Kozak
Stanisław Lem
Jacek Piekara
Andrzej Pilipiuk
Robert Louis Stevenson
Marcin Wolski

1.John Updike
2.Henry James
3.Anne Tyler
4. Toni Morrison
5.Elizabeth Berg
6.Virginia Woolf
7.John Irving
8.Edith Wharton
9.E.M. Forster
10.Elizabeth Bowen

William Gibson (at the beginning of the year, I started rereading all his stuff, staring with the Virtual Light trilogy, then going back to the Neuromancer trilogy. I love how spare and poetic his writing is.
Mary Stewart, especially the Merlin trilogy.
JRR Tolkien
Anne Tyler
Larry McMurtry (his "contemporary" stuff, like The Last Picture Show. I could never get into his westerns.
Erica Jong
William Shakespeare
Khaled Hosseini
King and Koontz
Jonathan Kellerman
Phil Rickman
Wodehouse
Steinbeck
Henry Miller
Gore Vidal
Flannery O'Conner
Jayne Ann Phillips

Have you read Flannery O'Connor's book Wiseblood? I am a big fan of her short stories. My favorites are: "Everything That Rises Must Converge"; "Good Country People"; "Parker's Back"; "A Good Man is Hard to Find"; "A View of the Woods" and "The Comforts of Home." I love southern gothic writing.

Hav..."
Tressa - I, too, love southern gothic fiction. It's been years since I read Wise Blood. Also, in 1979, John Huston directed a very good movie version. Unfortunately, I can't find it on DVD. Do you possibly know of any young writers who are carrying on this tradition?
I have decided that this year is my year to read Lonesome Dove. But I took a very convoluted course to that decision. My husband and I saw the Clint Eastwood movie, Gran Torino. We both liked it, and I remembered another Eastwood movie that I liked, Unforgiven. I reminded myself that I do like westerns when they are well done. Thus, I'm adding Lonesome Dove to my To Read list.

Neil Gaiman
Brian Jacques
Janet Evanovich
Lilian Jackson Braun
A.A. Milne (I love Pooh)
Dean Koontz
See I need some help...

I'll have to think of any contemporary southern gothic writers. I think they broke the mold when they made Flannery. Dorothy Allison (Bastard Out of Carolina) and Kaye Gibbons are good southern writers that are far from saccharine southern like Fannie Flagg.
I'll always say how I don't like westerns, but am quick to agree how much I like Unforgiven, 3:10 to Yuma, The Proposal, Lonesome Dove, etc.

David James Duncan
Walker Percy
Umberto Eco
Annie Dillard
Edna O'Brien
Hermann Hesse
Michael Crichton
Isabel Allende
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Tim O'Brien

Meg,
If you read more of hers, be sure to read Daughter of Fortune before you read Portrait in Sepia.

Catherine Cookson
Stephen King
Douglas Adams
Mary Daheim
James Patterson
PN Elrod
Laura Levine
Janet Evanovich
Neil Gaiman

Neil Gaiman
Brian Jacques
Janet..."
I can't come up with ten favorite authors either, but there is one - Jhumpa Lahiri. I always pick up her books as soon as they come out.

2. Joey Comeau
3. Kresley Cole
4. Alan Campbell
5. Jesse Hajicek
6. Pauline Alama
7. H.P. Lovecraft
8. Poppy Z. Brite
9. Carlton Mellick III
10. John Twelve Hawks
Books mentioned in this topic
Romeo and Juliet (other topics)Beloved (other topics)
Lonesome Dove (other topics)
The Last Picture Show (other topics)
The Host (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Carlton Mellick III (other topics)Poppy Z. Brite (other topics)
Jesse Hajicek (other topics)
Alan Campbell (other topics)
H.P. Lovecraft (other topics)
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