I have alot of time on my hands and have been reading and reading, i’ve recently run out of things to read so i’m looking for recommendations!
To start the ball rolling…
The last book i read was One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. I would wholeheartedly recommend it. To what sort of person i don’t know, but it is the magical-realist story of several generations of a family in South America. I felt sad when I finished it, I thought it was so great.
The Devil’s Advocate, by Morris West. It’s about a dying English priest who travels to an impoverished village in Italy a few years after WWII to investigate a possible new saint. West looks at the nature of faith, politics, and basic human survival, and how they all relate to each other, and the characters are all, IMHO, extremely well-drawn. I’d definitely recommend it.
Warped Factors: A Neurotic’s Guide to the Universe by Walter Koenig about, well… Walter Koenig and sure, I’d recommend it to any *Trek * or *B5 * fan.
I’m currently reading A Different Flesh, an alt-history novel by Harry Turtledove about North America being populated by *Homo Habilis * instead of Homo Sapiens. I’d reccomend it so far too.
I picked up a copy of Jack Olsen’s “Son–The True Story of a Psychopath and his Victims” for 50 cents. I would recommend this book to anyone who reads the true crime genre. And I plan to get some more of Olsen’s books. “Doc” sounds fascinating.
The last book I read was Devices and Desires by P.D. James. It was classic James–a solid, well-crafted murder mystery. I’d recommend it to mystery fans.
Before that I read, Affinity by Sarah Waters, a novel set in a Victorian women’s prison. It’s quite well-written and full of interesting tidbits about not only 19th century prison life, but also the spiritualism craze.
The last two personal books I read were Hominids and Humans by Robert J. Sawyer. I’d recommend them to any sci-f fans.
Last book I tried to read was The Philosophy of History. Hegel does not hold my interest in the least. Last book I actually finished (or almost finished) was the Meditations on First Philosophy by Descartes. Geesh, I need to get back on top of my reading. I should be doing a book a day, not a book a month.
Oh, and I don’t recommend those books to anyone not studying philosophy.
I read Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides. It’s a fictional story about a hermaphrodite (boy) who was raised as a girl. But it’s more than that. It’s about Detroit in the 60’s and 70’s and Greek culture.
I’m also reading Blue Latitudes In it, the author (whose name escapes me) goes to all the places Captain Cook has gone. If you like reading books by Bill Bryson, you’d like this one.
A friend & I were talking about children’s books & she recommended THE PHANTOM TOLLBOOTH, so I got it at the library. It’s totally delightful, intelligent & imaginative- encouraging kids in clarity of thought & speech. Totally cool!
Also, Philip Yancey’s SOUL SURVIVOR- How My Faith Survived The Church- the C’nity Today columnist talks about maintaining Evangelical faith in spite of an intellectually & emotionally indefensible ultra-Fundy background, with the help of Christian writers & thinkers in history & his personal experience. I recommend anything by Yancey- even if I disagree with some points (which I don’t so far in this book).
Generation X by Douglas Coupland. I loved this book and to be perfectly honest, it was the first fiction book that I had read in years. Used to read alot up to Grade 9, then I stopped. Anyways, the reason I enjoyed it was that in spite of the fact that it was written 13 years ago, large portion of the book still connected with me in a way that no book ever has.
I’d recommmend to others for sure, but I have to admit not everyone will enjoy it.
I just finished The Other Boelyn Girl by Phillipa Gregory and liked it so much I started a thread to find more books like it. It is the story of Anne Boelyn’s sister, who led a fascinating life of her own. The author does a great job of making history come alive.
Now I am reading the sequel to The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency and am enjoying it, but I am eager to get back to some fictionalized history.
Ave Minerva, I adored Perdido Street Station. It’s some of the best fantasy I’ve read in years. The Scar, which is set in the same world, is great, too, though not as dark.
I’m rereading The Masters of Rome series and I’m currently on the final book, The October Horse. You want an incredibly researched historical fiction series on Ancient Roman and Julius Caeser, this is it.
I just read *Chelsea Horror Hotel * by Dee Dee Ramone. It’s just…bizarre. If you like squalor, gore, violence, and pointless weirdness, by all means read it.
Now I’m reading *Venus In Furs * by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, but as I am only on page 10 I can’t say yet whether or not I’d recommend it.
A few weeks ago I read Arthur Koestler’s *Darkness at Noon, * the story of an old bolshevik who is imprisoned during the Stalinist purges and who ponders what went wrong with the revolution and what the extent of his own guilt is. I highly recommend this book to anyone.
Cloud 8 by Grant Bailie
A book by a local author. It’s a somewhat frightening view of what awaits us in the afterlife. James Broadhurst is killed in a car accident, but instead of everyone’s idea of heaven, he’s stuck in a small, nondescript apartment with an evasive and uncommunicative roommate and a suitcase full of his favorite things on earth: his favorite shirt, tie, pants, mug, book, etc. And no one will tell him where to find other deceased members of his own family. He spends his initial time sitting on the comfy sofa, drinking free beer and watching his family on the television set. Finally he is interviewed for a job he didn’t apply for, and ends up working as an ad copywriter on a user’s manual for an office software program. The problem is nobody at the company seems to be able to tell James exactly what the program is supposed to do. I would recommend it, but you’d probably have to get it through the internet.
The Fountainhead. By Ayn Rand. Interesting book although I find it disgusting. If you want a book where the hero is an egotist rapist, this is it.
Mrs Rand philosophy, on the other hand, is not intersting.