Ten Books!
...and a strange man with large teeth.
Following this post asking you all to recommend me one book, my final list is below. Hang on to your wage packets I MUST REMEMBER THIS IS NOT GANYMEDE & TITAN.
- Catch-22 by Joseph Heller, recommended by MDS Chill
- The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon, recommended by Philip J Reed, VSc
- It by Stephen King, recommended by performingmonkey
- Lanark by Alisdair Gray, recommended by Philip Alderman
- More than Human by Theodore Sturgeon, recommended by Austin Ross
- The Perfect Fool by Stewart Lee, recommended by Jonathan Capps
- Running With Scissors by Augusten Burroughs, recommended by Andrew Ellard
- Smoke and Mirrors by Neil Gaiman, recommended by Seb Patrick
- The Unbearable Lightness Of Being by Milan Kundera, recommended by Michael Lacey
- Yes Man by Danny Wallace, recommended by Pete Martin
A few points: I know loads of people suggested more than one book, but I wanted to make this something that was easy to do. (I may well go and compile a second list from the remaining books later.) I excluded books I'd read before, like Talking Heads (good piece for A-Level, that), HHGTTG or indeed Little Miss Naughty. I also tried to spread the authors out - I wasn't going to pick two Neil Gaiman books, for instance. I might do a brief piece on what I thought of each of them, but probably nothing stretching to a "review", because I'm piss-poor when it comes to book reviews.
Best get on with it, then...
About this entry
- By John Hoare
- Posted on Tuesday, August 15 2006 @ 12:32 am
- Categorised in Books
- 16 comments
Flippin' 'eck it's gonna take you a bit to get through that lot. I'm definitely gonna pick up 'Smoke and Mirrors' at some point 'cause it sounds insane, but good-insane.
By performingmonkey
August 15, 2006 @ 1:20 am
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Without question I approve of the breadth of your selections. I guess that's what this is about, really...finding the kind of stuff you like. You're off to a good start, and having read just about half of the suggestions, I doubt you've made any bad choices.
>I might do a brief piece on what I thought of each of them
I, for one, would certainly be interested in a book-by-book rundown.
By Philip J Reed, VSc
August 15, 2006 @ 2:00 am
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Indeed.
I don't want to give the impression I'm some kind of illiterate - I read all the time, including books. And I used to read a reasonably wide range. But somewhere down the line, I lost the breadth of material. I'm reading Frank Skinner's autobiography at the moment, for instance, which is fantastic - but I just knew that I'd like it, because I love Frank Skinner.
It's about time I tried some stuff that I don't know anything about again.
By John Hoare
August 15, 2006 @ 2:27 am
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Not a half-bad list you've got there, John. It'll take you awhile to get through it all, but - I've got to say it - as a sub-recommendation, get Gregory Benford's Timescape at some point after you're all done with that list. (I knew I couldn't recommend just one book.)
By Austin Ross
August 15, 2006 @ 2:48 am
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Oh, and I vote yes to a rundown of your thoughts on all those books.
By Austin Ross
August 15, 2006 @ 2:50 am
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I'll do a couple of articles, then - one for the first five books once I've read them, and one for the second five.
I'm a really fast reader, so it shouldn't take me long... but being a fast reader is *not* a good thing sometimes, especially when it comes to fiction. I have to stop myself from racing forward to find out what happens next, and force myself to enjoy the prose a bit more. Which is hard, but racing through a book is hardly the point.
By John Hoare
August 15, 2006 @ 3:08 am
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>I have to stop myself from racing forward to find out what happens next, and force myself to enjoy the prose a bit more.
This will be key with Lot 49. That's it. I'll be quiet now...
By Philip J Reed, VSc
August 15, 2006 @ 3:24 am
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I always finish books and go "what the fuck happened there?" and realise it's because I was turning the pages before I'd finished reading them. I did it today with Chuck Palahniuks Haunted, but even after going back I'm still not quite sure what that's all about.
Anyway, yes to the book reviews, John! I look forward to reading them. And have you come to the "if the mountain bike won't go to mohammed..." anecdote in Frank Skinners book yet? I think it's in his book, anyway. It's the best one-liner ever
By Michael Lacey
August 15, 2006 @ 3:53 am
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Frank Skinner's book is fucking brilliant.
By Ian Symes
August 15, 2006 @ 4:24 am
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You know, I could have saved you some cash by lending you at least two of those at the weekend...
By Seb
August 15, 2006 @ 1:24 pm
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Not a bad list, but I'd read Are You Dave Gorman, by Gorman and Danny Wallace, before Wallace's solo Join Me. (although of the split-sequels, Join Me is certainly better than DG's Googlewhack Adventure)
By Somebody
August 15, 2006 @ 7:28 pm
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Is that the order of your reading list as well? Or will that be dictated by availability? Or time? Or fluctuation of interest? O-or factors unknown??
By Philip J Reed, VSc
August 15, 2006 @ 11:37 pm
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Order will probably be dictated by availability. I can't afford to buy them all at the moment, so it depends on what the library has first. I'll buy the rest, though.
By John Hoare
August 16, 2006 @ 12:48 pm
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(although of the split-sequels, Join Me is certainly better than DG's Googlewhack Adventure)
This is completely incorrect - Googlewhack is brililant. AYDG? is miles better than any of the solo books, but Dave's solo book is much better than either of Danny's. For starters, it's a better story - and it feels far less forced, far less of an "I want to do something KER-AZEE!" for a while type venture.
Also, John : say the word if you want to borrow Smoke & Mirrors or Yes Man. Although the new paperback of S&M (hur hur) is absolutely lovely, so it's worth owning anyway.
By Seb
August 16, 2006 @ 2:18 pm
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So, how are you coming along with the list?
By Austin Ross
October 10, 2006 @ 4:11 pm
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Nowhere.
Mainly because I actually want to buy the books, and I've had no money to do that yet. (Or buy DVDs, either - I only bought some the other day because I need to review them).
When I get my first pay cheque through my web design, I'll start the list...
By John Hoare
October 10, 2006 @ 4:19 pm
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