- O'Reilly mind hacks
- 1984 - Orwell
- Wasp Factory - Iain Banks.
I'm such a geek.
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Reply to: Your favourite 3 books
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Previously on "Your favourite 3 books"
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Originally posted by DaveBMichael Moorcock - Cant belive he's not had a mention yet.
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It seems we're now entering the "load of obscure sh1te" phase of the thread.
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No way I can limit it to three but as far as Authors go, and in no particular order.
Ian M. Banks - All of it.
Roger Zelazny - Amber series in particular, Damnation Alley also.
Michael Moorcock - Cant belive he's not had a mention yet.
Frank Herbert - Dune et al.
Bernard Cornwell - Sharp rather than the Arthurian stuff.
Stephen Baxter - What hard sci-fi schould be.
Robin Hobb - Assassins Trilogy
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I was an Asimov geek at school and got through my science exams thanks to his factual books (Tragedy of the Moon, etc). I still love them but lost a lot of them in a move.
I did feel though that the 3rd & 4th Foundation books got weaker and lost focus and couldn't bring myself to read the others - should I give them anothers a go?
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Fascinating thing about the 7 books of the Foundation Trilogy (huh?) is that the good Doctor wrote them out of sequence and over a period of 45 years when he was doing other work ranging from writing SF to lecturing in higher maths, and they still fit together seamlessly. And unlike Heinlein, he hadn't written out a 50,000 year future history to base his work on.
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Originally posted by zeitghostFoundation - Asimov
Foundation and Empire - Asimov
2nd Foundation - Asimov
I've decided that 3 isn't nearly enough.
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Originally posted by zeitghost"Earth Abides" by George R. Stewart. Predates the Stand by some years, but very good.
I bought my copy in Woolies for the princely sum of 1/6d... remaindered.
Or do giant alien lizards have a different concept of numeration?
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Originally posted by XerxesMy great uncle lived on the road in Limerick featured in Angela's Ashes and knew the McCourt's well. He always says the book is a load of mostly made up nonsense. Things were no where near as bad as they were painted. In fact, he reckons they were some of the best fed people in Ireland as the soldiers in the barracks always gave then their leftovers.
Sort of reminds my of people of my grandparents generation who never missed an opportunity to tell you how fecking poor they were, on the one hand, then without any trace of irony, told you how happy they were when they 'had nothing' and that 'we made our own entertainment'.
"Bejeesus! we were poor as dirt! but happier than you'll ever be!"
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'Stranger in a Strange Land' - keep reading and re-reading it, although I could probably write out 90% of it from memory by now.
Anything by Ian M Banks (sic!), who refuses to treat his reader as anything other than an intelligent adult, but 'Feersum Injun' is a work of art in any genre
'The Stand', by Stephen King (the full edition, not the trimmed down first release) - not so much for the morality tale, but becuase the 20-odd main characters are real people and I still want to find out what happens to them.
And for slightly less challenging reading I love Clavell's Asian books, from Shogun through to Noble House, and anything by Le Carre, Leon Uris or Tom Clancy. Plus another couple of dozen on the bookshelf ranging from Brickhill's 'The Naked Island' to Niven's 'Lucifer's Hammer'
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My great uncle lived on the road in Limerick featured in Angela's Ashes and knew the McCourt's well. He always says the book is a load of mostly made up nonsense. Things were no where near as bad as they were painted. In fact, he reckons they were some of the best fed people in Ireland as the soldiers in the barracks always gave then their leftovers.
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It varies, but at the moment...
1) Down and Out in Paris and London - Orwell
2) Germinal - Zola
3) Angela's Ashes - Frank McCourt
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long time since i read anything that did not start 'installation and configuration' but . . .
Heinlein - liked em all.
Time enough for love.
(great quote regarding specialisation)
Starship Troopers.
(nothing like the movie)
and
I concur with those who have mentioned Stranger in a strange land. Probably the most memorable thing Ive read and its a very long time since i read it!
Im supposed to say 3 books only but must mention HG Wells who started the Sci-Fire for me.
Oh and Neuromancer was good and . . . and . . .
error
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Volume 3 is the best (from practical point of view), the first two are stuff for the mainframe dinosaur age. Pity he (like all great mathematicians) writes in a way that is very hard to get used to unless you are really into maths mindset, I had to read few chapters many times to understand what he meant, and after that I could have (and did actually) explain it in a much easier way. Reading draft of Vol 4 now, the contents of it are much more interesting than pretty much anything else he did - 5th looks good too, though not as good as 4th.
Come to think of it Vol 4 should be out soon, gotto check out what's available in it...Last edited by AtW; 19 August 2006, 13:58.
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Originally posted by AtWHave you read and understood them?
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