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Favourite authors
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Jenny
(last edited Oct 05, 2013 10:04AM)
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Oct 05, 2013 10:03AM

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Wonderful feminist and enviromentalist sci-fi and fantasy novels!
I know she's not the best writer out there but J.K Rowling will always be one of my favourite authors especially after reading The Casual Vacancy because she has the gift to create such real, gritty characters that forced me to think about myself and the way I would treat or judge people.
Stephen King is one author I would like to try. I have only read The Shining but I wasn't that fond of it.
Stephen King is one author I would like to try. I have only read The Shining but I wasn't that fond of it.

Amber wrote: "Have you read the Stand, Alannah? that was a pretty good one by Stephen King and The Eyes of the Dragon is pretty good too."
No, just The Shining but I did read a couple of chapters of Carrie but the book was gone when I went to try and it out of the library. I put that down for the spooky booky challenge but I will check those out Amber. Thanks for the recommendation.
No, just The Shining but I did read a couple of chapters of Carrie but the book was gone when I went to try and it out of the library. I put that down for the spooky booky challenge but I will check those out Amber. Thanks for the recommendation.

Leslie wrote: "I will put in a plug for one of my favorite authors whom I feel is sadly overlooked:
Sheri S. Tepper
Wonderful feminist and enviromentalist sci-fi and fantasy novels!"
I confess I don't know her, I'll look for some of her book Leslie. Where should I start?
Sheri S. Tepper
Wonderful feminist and enviromentalist sci-fi and fantasy novels!"
I confess I don't know her, I'll look for some of her book Leslie. Where should I start?
Alannah wrote: "I know she's not the best writer out there but J.K Rowling will always be one of my favourite authors especially after reading The Casual Vacancy because she has the gift to create such real, gritt..."
I aldo like Rowlings books a lot Alannah! And I feel the same about King: I've only read Hearts in Atlantis, and liked it but not so much!
I aldo like Rowlings books a lot Alannah! And I feel the same about King: I've only read Hearts in Atlantis, and liked it but not so much!

Amber wrote: "Hey Laurat, would you ever try reading Stephen King again? From what I've read by him, he has some pretty good books and I've only read a few books by him since I became a fan in 2011. Joyland was ..."
He is one of the favourite author of my husband and son, and the keep proposing his books to me. I think I'll read the one with the one about the murder of Kennedy, the one with the date as title, now I don't remember it.
He is one of the favourite author of my husband and son, and the keep proposing his books to me. I think I'll read the one with the one about the murder of Kennedy, the one with the date as title, now I don't remember it.


Here it goes:
J.M. Coetzee
Heinrich Böll
José Saramago
Samuel Beckett
Ágota Kristof
Max Frisch
Christa Wolf
Javier Marías
Elias Canetti
Margaret Atwood
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Ernst Weiss
Lion Feuchtwanger
Fernando Pessoa
Anne Carson
E.L. Doctorow
Yasmina Reza
there's more I am afraid, but these are the ones where regardless of anyone else's opinion I'd pick up each and every book of theirs to read.

LOL. see my problem? How on earth am I supposed to live long enough to read all their books AND squeeze in all these group reads and readalongs?! I almost need to be thankful most of them are already dead and can't write more!! LOL

Brilliant obviously!!! (in my really objective opinion ;)))
I love Coetzee for the fact that while he writes great 'conventional' novels , he's also very keen on experimenting with different styles or bending the bounderies of the classical format of a novel. Whereas Disgrace is very simple but extremely powerful in the way it is told, Waiting for the Barbarians is a philosophical/dystopian novel and Elizabeth Costello is a novel that reads like a collection of essays. I also like the fact that he's deeply political.
Javier Marias is much hated by some for the fact that he manages to give you 2 minutes of actual plot spread out over 30 pages of internal monologue LOL. And I am not even kidding. Still, not ALL of the book and not every single one of it is like it, but he has a very unique interpretation of what's important, which is part of the beauty as all of a sudden a dead body in the kitchen seems much less exiting then the musings of the maid on whether or not to still cut the cake, or whether to bring it back to the fridge. I love his A Heart So White and am planning to read The Infatuations soon.

I had the chance to read DISGRACE many times. But I always postpones it or ignored it. Now your comments rebuke me for avoiding it till today.
About Marias's style of writing seems interesting to me. I like such type of novels (monologues or reflections) when they are written well.
Will try both of them in the coming days.



Victor Hugo
George Orwell
Stephen King
John Green
and I'm currently reading my first book of Hermann Hesse and I think he could be on this list soon ;)

1. Italo Calvino
2. Yasunari Kawabata
3. Albert Camus
4. Franz Kafka
5. Gabriel García Márquez
6. Jorge Luis Borges

Philip K. Dick
Tennessee Williams
Homer
Jean-Paul Sartre
George R. R. Martin
Stan Lee
Alan Moore
Rafael Sabatini
Arthur Conan Doyle
There are some. I, too, have never read a Stephen King book. I really should get around to one some day.

And then:
William Makepeace Thackeray
Dennis Lehane
Ian McEwan
Cesare Pavese
John Fante
Oriana Fallaci
Edith Wharton
Allen Ginsberg
Jerome K. Jerome
I read few books by Patricia Highsmith (The Talented Mr Ripley, terrific, and Strangers on a Train) but if the other books are equally good then she will become another one of my favorite authors. :)

Charles Dickens
Virginia Woolf
F Scott Fitzgerald
and for more recent choices
Eowyn Ivey
Markus Zusak
There is a definite theme hear though all of my best loved authors write in a very distinct and descriptive manner , some would say 'Rambling'. :)

Mine too are a lot!!
Some of them:
Jane Austen
George Eliot
Gaskell Elizabeth Cleghorn
L.M. Montgomery
Frances Hodgson Burnett
Louisa May Alcott
Man?
Some ...
Anthony Trollope
Charles Dickens
William Makepeace Thackeray
Jonathan Coe
Ian McEwan
Italo Calvino
Giovanni Verga
Alberto Moravia
Some of them:
Jane Austen
George Eliot
Gaskell Elizabeth Cleghorn
L.M. Montgomery
Frances Hodgson Burnett
Louisa May Alcott
Man?
Some ...
Anthony Trollope
Charles Dickens
William Makepeace Thackeray
Jonathan Coe
Ian McEwan
Italo Calvino
Giovanni Verga
Alberto Moravia

And then:
William Makepeace Th..."
Did you read Waiting for the Barbarians by Coetzee as well?
Also: could you recommend something by Pavese? I have Among Women Only on my list already, but haven't come round to picking it up yet.

Philip K. Dick
Tennessee Williams
Homer
Jean-Paul Sartre
George R. R. Martin
Stan Lee
Alan Moore
Rafael Sabatini
Arthur Conan Doyle
There are some. I, too, have never read a St..."
Do you have a favourite by Sartre Robert?

But I will have to read him after Tomasi di Lampedusa and Umberto Eco.

Try also The Time of Indifference. I have read also Boredom and it was good.
Am I the only one that loves E.T.A. Hoffmann?



Jenny - Nausea"
Same here. Enjoyed it a lot, and has really influenced my perception of the world quite a bit.
dely wrote: "Am I the only one that loves E.T.A. Hoffmann?"
I read him in University; I like some of his stories, but they're too "magic" ..
Dhanaraj wrote: "Laura T had recommended me earlier Moravia's The Conformist. And I too found another book by him which interested me. That is: Contempt.
But I will have to read him after Tomasi di Lampedusa and U..."
I confirm!!!
I read him in University; I like some of his stories, but they're too "magic" ..
Dhanaraj wrote: "Laura T had recommended me earlier Moravia's The Conformist. And I too found another book by him which interested me. That is: Contempt.
But I will have to read him after Tomasi di Lampedusa and U..."
I confirm!!!
Jodi Picoult
Stephen King
Wally Lamb
Ruby Jean Jensen
John Saul
Dean Koontz
John Grisham
Linwood Barclay
Harlan Coben
Charles Dickens
Stephen King
Wally Lamb
Ruby Jean Jensen
John Saul
Dean Koontz
John Grisham
Linwood Barclay
Harlan Coben
Charles Dickens


Other favourites are C.S. Lewis, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Roald Dahl, Cassandra Clare, Cornelia Funke, Michael Grant, John Green, Madeline Miller, Richelle Mead etc., etc.. I could go on for days about all the authors I love, they usually make my list even if they only write one book I love.

It really makes me wish amazon had - apart from it's 'I want to read this on kindle' button - a 'get that woman translated for crying out loud!' button.

Neil Gaiman
Jonathan Safran Foer
Margaret Atwood
Graham Joyce
Julian Barnes
Philip Pullman
J.K. Rowling
Christopher Moore
J.R.R. Tolkien
Jonathan Carroll
Kurt Vonnegut
Jasper Fforde
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