Favorite Book?
Favorite Book?
I am stuck at work on a Saturday with absolutely nothing going on, so I figured I would haunt the BBS :)
Just curious, what is everybody's favorite book and why?
I'd have to say that mine is Shogun by James Clavell. I first read it in the 7th or 8th grade and read it about twice a year from then until my Sophomore year in college when I went against my usual rule of never loaning a book to somebody and it dissappeared. I bought a used copy a couple of years later and it ended up falling apart on me. A couple of weeks ago we were at the library and I saw the hardback edition with both volumes in the bookstore there. The bookstore was closed so I asked somebody to go back and buy them the next day while I was at work. They ended up being 1st edition printings (Wooo Hoo!).
I thought it was really cool when I started reading it and noticed one of the insults was changed in the later editions. I recalled an author's note that I had read at some point in the past that it was unlikely one of the characters used the words "Thy mother's milk!" as an insult. Reading the 1st edition he says "Thy father's sperm!"
Okay, so I am a dork and probably get too excited over this book. What books excite you? (Penthouse doesn't count as a book Gormal :p )
Just curious, what is everybody's favorite book and why?
I'd have to say that mine is Shogun by James Clavell. I first read it in the 7th or 8th grade and read it about twice a year from then until my Sophomore year in college when I went against my usual rule of never loaning a book to somebody and it dissappeared. I bought a used copy a couple of years later and it ended up falling apart on me. A couple of weeks ago we were at the library and I saw the hardback edition with both volumes in the bookstore there. The bookstore was closed so I asked somebody to go back and buy them the next day while I was at work. They ended up being 1st edition printings (Wooo Hoo!).
I thought it was really cool when I started reading it and noticed one of the insults was changed in the later editions. I recalled an author's note that I had read at some point in the past that it was unlikely one of the characters used the words "Thy mother's milk!" as an insult. Reading the 1st edition he says "Thy father's sperm!"
Okay, so I am a dork and probably get too excited over this book. What books excite you? (Penthouse doesn't count as a book Gormal :p )
Nerox tells you 'Good deal, the other tanks I have don't wanna do it, and since your my special suicidal tank i figure you don't mind one bit!'
Alurissi tells you 'aren't you susposed to get sick or something and not beable to make tia so i can go? :P'
Alurissi tells you 'aren't you susposed to get sick or something and not beable to make tia so i can go? :P'
I'd say if I had to choose only one, then it would be Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson.
A very close second would be Dune.
A very close second would be Dune.
Kesena OOC: 'i wish my daddy bought me power tools'
Dorgh group-says 'damn, even with Cofen helping Mori, they STILL can't kill someone
Hekanut says 'I know level doesn't matter much, but most won't take seriously if a level 2 claims to be the best thing before, during, and after sliced bread.'
Rather than seeing "subpar race/class," see "challenge."
Dorgh group-says 'damn, even with Cofen helping Mori, they STILL can't kill someone
Hekanut says 'I know level doesn't matter much, but most won't take seriously if a level 2 claims to be the best thing before, during, and after sliced bread.'
Rather than seeing "subpar race/class," see "challenge."
the drow elf trillogy or anything by Salvatore
Talona responds to your petition with 'Sweet, I fixed something!'
Talona LFG: [55 Evil Human Nec] 'Don't make me mud castrate you all.'
Some people are like slinkies, not really good for anything but you still cant help smile when you see one tumble down the stairs.
Talona LFG: [55 Evil Human Nec] 'Don't make me mud castrate you all.'
Some people are like slinkies, not really good for anything but you still cant help smile when you see one tumble down the stairs.
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I don't have any one favorite book per se.
I love Gaimans works, all of them. Excellent reads.
Snow Crash and Diamond Age are quite good stephenson books.
The dragoncrown cycle by Stackpole is good, very good.
Gemmell's Drenai Saga, starts with Legend is an excellent read.
Enders game was awesome, great read. Aside from that I think I enjoyed the Shadow series that came after those four.
Actually, I take that back. My all time favorite book/series would have to be Asimovs Foundation series.
That is by far, one of the best series of books ever written.
I love Gaimans works, all of them. Excellent reads.
Snow Crash and Diamond Age are quite good stephenson books.
The dragoncrown cycle by Stackpole is good, very good.
Gemmell's Drenai Saga, starts with Legend is an excellent read.
Enders game was awesome, great read. Aside from that I think I enjoyed the Shadow series that came after those four.
Actually, I take that back. My all time favorite book/series would have to be Asimovs Foundation series.
That is by far, one of the best series of books ever written.
Shevarash OOC: 'what can I say, I'm attracted to crazy chicks and really short dudes'
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i read the war of the spider queen series, better than any of the other salvatore books imho.
personaly i like piers anthony. any book by him is a great.
my fav fantasy book is a tie between xone of contention and martin the warrior (redwall)
my fav scifi is definatly hyperion.
thats prety much what i read. i have never read ender's game and im still looking for a copy to read. if anyone wants to ups me a copy ill give them my adress :P
personaly i like piers anthony. any book by him is a great.
my fav fantasy book is a tie between xone of contention and martin the warrior (redwall)
my fav scifi is definatly hyperion.
thats prety much what i read. i have never read ender's game and im still looking for a copy to read. if anyone wants to ups me a copy ill give them my adress :P
i dont know what your problem is, but i bet its hard to pronounce
myspace.com/tgchef
myspace.com/tgchef
The Long, Dark Tea-time of the Soul. Douglas Adams.
Danahg tells you 'yeah, luckily i kept most of it in my mouth and nasal membranes, ugh'
Dlur group-says 'I have a dead horse that I'm dragging down the shaft with my 4 corpses. Anyone want to help me beat it?'
Calladuran: There are other games to play if you want to play with yourself.
Dlur group-says 'I have a dead horse that I'm dragging down the shaft with my 4 corpses. Anyone want to help me beat it?'
Calladuran: There are other games to play if you want to play with yourself.
amolol wrote: i have never read ender's game and im still looking for a copy to read. if anyone wants to ups me a copy ill give them my adress :P
You would have to pry my copy out of my cold dead fingers! It really is an engrossing read. I have had 2 copies of it; the first I gave to my best friend, he never read a damned thing even though I was reading books all of the time. I had him read Ender's Game and he was hooked on sci-fi and fantasy thereafter. When he moved to a different state, I gave it to him as a gift.
Yer not my best friend, so you don't get this copy :p
Nerox tells you 'Good deal, the other tanks I have don't wanna do it, and since your my special suicidal tank i figure you don't mind one bit!'
Alurissi tells you 'aren't you susposed to get sick or something and not beable to make tia so i can go? :P'
Alurissi tells you 'aren't you susposed to get sick or something and not beable to make tia so i can go? :P'
amolol wrote:idd fedex it back silly:P
Yeah, and the guy that borroed Shogun from me in college promised he would return it too :p
Nerox tells you 'Good deal, the other tanks I have don't wanna do it, and since your my special suicidal tank i figure you don't mind one bit!'
Alurissi tells you 'aren't you susposed to get sick or something and not beable to make tia so i can go? :P'
Alurissi tells you 'aren't you susposed to get sick or something and not beable to make tia so i can go? :P'
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- Sojourner
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Klosh wrote a book?
Support Your Addiction! Vote for TorilMUD Today!
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Why Nerox is jealous of me:
Nerox tells you 'man this thing is kicking my ass and i have blisters!'
Nerox tells you 'ok attempting it again put tape on my fingers for easier sliding'
Top Mud Sites: http://www.topmudsites.com/cgi-bin/topmuds/rankem.cgi?id=shev
Why Nerox is jealous of me:
Nerox tells you 'man this thing is kicking my ass and i have blisters!'
Nerox tells you 'ok attempting it again put tape on my fingers for easier sliding'
I'm not saying its my favorite, but I recently had the opportunity to read the Harry Potter series and it blew me away. Always thought it was a kids series until my wife got into it and I figured I'd check out what all the fuss is about. Well worth the time... except now I'm fiending like mad for the 7th installment. Sigh.
Corth
Corth
Having said all that, the situation has been handled, so this thread is pretty much at an end. -Kossuth
Goddamned slippery mage.
Goddamned slippery mage.
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Here's a list of books I have compiled which I have never read but will endeavour to sometime.
Many of them I have hardly ever heard of except in some references in various forums and magazines etc.
The top 20 or so I will try and get a hold of earlier, rather than later.
---
Books to Read:
Ender's Game (Orson Scott Card)
The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged (read Fountainhead , then Atlas Shrugged) (Ayn Rand)
Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert A. Heinlein)
Fight Club (Chuck Palahniuk)
Dragon (and others) (Clive Cussler)
1984 (George Orwell)
Brave New World (Aldus Huxley)
Cryptonomicon (Neal Stephenson)
The Demon Haunted World (Carl Sagan)
Schrodinger' Kitten and the search for reality (John Gibbon) (quantum physics)
Black Holes and Baby Universes (Stephen Hawking)
The Secret Country (Aust.)
Ice Station (Matthew Reilly)
The Life of Pi (Yann Martel)
The Bourne Trilogy (Robert Ludlum)
The Foundation Trilogy (Isaac Asimov)
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
Hackers (David Levy)
Beat The Dealer (Edward Thorp)
Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
Shogun (James Clavell)
Bloodsucking Fiends: A Love Story (Chris Moore)
Animal Farm (George Orwell)
Lullaby (Chuck Palahniuk)
Love is the Answer: Creating Positive Relationships (Gerald G. Jampolsky and Diane V. Cirincione)
The Prophet (Kahlil Gibran)
Jude the Obscure (Thomas Hardy)
Narcissus and Goldmund, and Siddhartha (Herman Hesse)
The Kama Sutra (Vatsyayana)
The entire Wheel of Time series
The Sword of Truth series
Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal (Christopher Moore)
Good Omens (Terry Pratchet and Neil Gaimen)
Thus spoke Zarathustra (Friedrich Nietzsche)
The Glassbead Game (Herman Hesse)
On the prison island (Kafka) (short story)
The Art of War (SunTzu)
The Talisman (1982?) (Steven King and Peter Straub)
Black House (Sequel) (Steven King and Peter Straub)
One flew over the Cuckoo's nest (Ken Kesey)
The Eight (Catherine Neville)
Future Shock (Alan Toffler)
The Perfect Storm (Sebastian Junger)
Master of the Game (Sidney Sheldon)
Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, That Hideous Strength (Clive Staples Lewis)
Catcher in the Rye (J.D. Salinger)
Profile of a Prodigy (Frank Brady)
The five Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books (Douglas Adams)
Seven Songs of Merlin, Fire(s) of Merlin, Mirror of Merlin, Wings of Merlin
The Little Prince (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)
Desperation (Steven King)
Terminal Man (Michael Crichton)
Galatea in 2D (Aaron Allston)
The Fire and Ice Saga (George R. R. Martin)
The Dark is Rising (Susan Cooper)
Neuromancer (Will Gibson)
Memoirs of a Geisha (Arthur S. Golden)
Timeline (Crichton)
DNS & Bind (Albitz and Liu)
The Shadow of the Torturer (Gene Wolfe )
Claw of the Conciliator (Gene Wolfe)
Darwath Trilogy (Barbara Hambly) - "The Time of the Dark," "Walls of Air," and "Armies of Daylight."
Villains by Necessity (Eve Forward)
Battlefield Earth (L. Ron Hubbard)
Fear (L. Ron Hubbard)
The Decameron (Boccaccio)
The Satanic Bible (Anton Szandor LaVey)
100 Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez)
---
.. comments? additions?
Many of them I have hardly ever heard of except in some references in various forums and magazines etc.
The top 20 or so I will try and get a hold of earlier, rather than later.
---
Books to Read:
Ender's Game (Orson Scott Card)
The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged (read Fountainhead , then Atlas Shrugged) (Ayn Rand)
Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert A. Heinlein)
Fight Club (Chuck Palahniuk)
Dragon (and others) (Clive Cussler)
1984 (George Orwell)
Brave New World (Aldus Huxley)
Cryptonomicon (Neal Stephenson)
The Demon Haunted World (Carl Sagan)
Schrodinger' Kitten and the search for reality (John Gibbon) (quantum physics)
Black Holes and Baby Universes (Stephen Hawking)
The Secret Country (Aust.)
Ice Station (Matthew Reilly)
The Life of Pi (Yann Martel)
The Bourne Trilogy (Robert Ludlum)
The Foundation Trilogy (Isaac Asimov)
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
Hackers (David Levy)
Beat The Dealer (Edward Thorp)
Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
Shogun (James Clavell)
Bloodsucking Fiends: A Love Story (Chris Moore)
Animal Farm (George Orwell)
Lullaby (Chuck Palahniuk)
Love is the Answer: Creating Positive Relationships (Gerald G. Jampolsky and Diane V. Cirincione)
The Prophet (Kahlil Gibran)
Jude the Obscure (Thomas Hardy)
Narcissus and Goldmund, and Siddhartha (Herman Hesse)
The Kama Sutra (Vatsyayana)
The entire Wheel of Time series
The Sword of Truth series
Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal (Christopher Moore)
Good Omens (Terry Pratchet and Neil Gaimen)
Thus spoke Zarathustra (Friedrich Nietzsche)
The Glassbead Game (Herman Hesse)
On the prison island (Kafka) (short story)
The Art of War (SunTzu)
The Talisman (1982?) (Steven King and Peter Straub)
Black House (Sequel) (Steven King and Peter Straub)
One flew over the Cuckoo's nest (Ken Kesey)
The Eight (Catherine Neville)
Future Shock (Alan Toffler)
The Perfect Storm (Sebastian Junger)
Master of the Game (Sidney Sheldon)
Out of the Silent Planet, Perelandra, That Hideous Strength (Clive Staples Lewis)
Catcher in the Rye (J.D. Salinger)
Profile of a Prodigy (Frank Brady)
The five Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books (Douglas Adams)
Seven Songs of Merlin, Fire(s) of Merlin, Mirror of Merlin, Wings of Merlin
The Little Prince (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)
Desperation (Steven King)
Terminal Man (Michael Crichton)
Galatea in 2D (Aaron Allston)
The Fire and Ice Saga (George R. R. Martin)
The Dark is Rising (Susan Cooper)
Neuromancer (Will Gibson)
Memoirs of a Geisha (Arthur S. Golden)
Timeline (Crichton)
DNS & Bind (Albitz and Liu)
The Shadow of the Torturer (Gene Wolfe )
Claw of the Conciliator (Gene Wolfe)
Darwath Trilogy (Barbara Hambly) - "The Time of the Dark," "Walls of Air," and "Armies of Daylight."
Villains by Necessity (Eve Forward)
Battlefield Earth (L. Ron Hubbard)
Fear (L. Ron Hubbard)
The Decameron (Boccaccio)
The Satanic Bible (Anton Szandor LaVey)
100 Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez)
---
.. comments? additions?
BEER
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I'll respond to what I know.
Ender's Game (Orson Scott Card)
Excellent read, as many people have already said in this thread.
Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert A. Heinlein)
1984 (George Orwell)
Brave New World (Aldus Huxley)
- All good reads, classics.
Black Holes and Baby Universes (Stephen Hawking)
- Hawking has some damn good books, but if you want to read an interesting book on string theory read Hyberspace by Michio Kaku(I can't remember his correct spelling of the name, but I think that' sit)
The Life of Pi (Yann Martel)
-Suprisingly a REALLY good read. I was pleasantly suprised by this book.
The Foundation Trilogy (Isaac Asimov)
- It's around 7 books actually and I loved all of them, Asimov writes spectacularly. I also suggest reading Nightfall, the short story and the book he co-authored with someone else.
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
-Another classic, everyone who likes science fiction should read that.
Hackers (David Levy)
-Levy was way overrated. Read Mitnicks unauthorized autobiography. I can't remember then name at the moment.
Good Omens (Terry Pratchet and Neil Gaimen)
-GREAT read. Reminded me so much of Douglas Adams in some places. I highly suggest picking this up.
The Art of War (SunTzu)
-Another good read, interesting to think a lot of this the tatics and ideas in this book are still used and it was written some 2000 years ago? Around there.
The five Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books (Douglas Adams)
-Best five book trilogy, ever.
The Fire and Ice Saga (George R. R. Martin)
-Wonderful fantasy books, a lot of political intrigue, keeps you on the edge of yoru seat and book #4 is due out November 8th!
Timeline (Crichton)
-Decent read, but Circhton has had some better stuff.
Villains by Necessity (Eve Forward)
-Great book. Nilan actually turned me onto this book. Wonderful idea.
Battlefield Earth (L. Ron Hubbard)
-Hubbard lost all credibility with Scientology. The book isn't even that good.
Additions?
Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson.
ssar wrote:Here's a list of books I have compiled which I have never read but will endeavour to sometime.
Many of them I have hardly ever heard of except in some references in various forums and magazines etc.
The top 20 or so I will try and get a hold of earlier, rather than later.
---
Books to Read:
Ender's Game (Orson Scott Card)
Excellent read, as many people have already said in this thread.
Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert A. Heinlein)
1984 (George Orwell)
Brave New World (Aldus Huxley)
- All good reads, classics.
Black Holes and Baby Universes (Stephen Hawking)
- Hawking has some damn good books, but if you want to read an interesting book on string theory read Hyberspace by Michio Kaku(I can't remember his correct spelling of the name, but I think that' sit)
The Life of Pi (Yann Martel)
-Suprisingly a REALLY good read. I was pleasantly suprised by this book.
The Foundation Trilogy (Isaac Asimov)
- It's around 7 books actually and I loved all of them, Asimov writes spectacularly. I also suggest reading Nightfall, the short story and the book he co-authored with someone else.
Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
-Another classic, everyone who likes science fiction should read that.
Hackers (David Levy)
-Levy was way overrated. Read Mitnicks unauthorized autobiography. I can't remember then name at the moment.
Good Omens (Terry Pratchet and Neil Gaimen)
-GREAT read. Reminded me so much of Douglas Adams in some places. I highly suggest picking this up.
The Art of War (SunTzu)
-Another good read, interesting to think a lot of this the tatics and ideas in this book are still used and it was written some 2000 years ago? Around there.
The five Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy books (Douglas Adams)
-Best five book trilogy, ever.
The Fire and Ice Saga (George R. R. Martin)
-Wonderful fantasy books, a lot of political intrigue, keeps you on the edge of yoru seat and book #4 is due out November 8th!
Timeline (Crichton)
-Decent read, but Circhton has had some better stuff.
Villains by Necessity (Eve Forward)
-Great book. Nilan actually turned me onto this book. Wonderful idea.
Battlefield Earth (L. Ron Hubbard)
-Hubbard lost all credibility with Scientology. The book isn't even that good.
Additions?
Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson.
Shevarash OOC: 'what can I say, I'm attracted to crazy chicks and really short dudes'
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- Sojourner
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Arilin Nydelahar wrote:Black Holes and Baby Universes (Stephen Hawking) - Hawking has some damn good books, but if you want to read an interesting book on string theory read Hyberspace by Michio Kaku(I can't remember his correct spelling of the name, but I think that' sit)
I actually did an AP Physics term paper with that book and got an A ... awesome awesome book. Too bad my teacher borrowed it and never gave it back :P
**Edit**
Did an Amazon search, seems like he put out a new book last year, I might pick it up.
Parallel Worlds: A Journey Through Creation, Higher Dimensions, and the Future of the Cosmos
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... ce&s=books
Well, I can't believe no one from this crowd has mentioned Tolkien yet, but I will...they were my first real novels and I still get them out occassionally.
I also wanted to mention the Gutenburg Project...something like 10k free ebooks and misc stuff. Pretty cool:
http://www.gutenberg.org
I also wanted to mention the Gutenburg Project...something like 10k free ebooks and misc stuff. Pretty cool:
http://www.gutenberg.org
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- Sojourner
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- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 2003 7:11 pm
Books
The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien
Don Quijote by Miguel de Cervantes
Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein
Watership Down by Richard Adams
Vampire in the Mists by Christie Golden
Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan
Any book by John Bellairs
Le Petit Prince by Antoine de Sainte-Exupery
Versos Sencillos by José Martí
Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges
The Prydain Chronicles by Lloyd Alexander
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
Twain, Poe, Darío, couple of others off-hand.
Don Quijote by Miguel de Cervantes
Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein
Watership Down by Richard Adams
Vampire in the Mists by Christie Golden
Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan
Any book by John Bellairs
Le Petit Prince by Antoine de Sainte-Exupery
Versos Sencillos by José Martí
Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges
The Prydain Chronicles by Lloyd Alexander
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
Twain, Poe, Darío, couple of others off-hand.
I don't have much time to read anymore, but I'm a big fan of epic books. I can burn through your standard 300 page paperback in about 3-4 hours, so buying them is almost a moot point for me.
Centennial by James Michener. I read this my sophomore or junior year in high school over the course of a weekend for an essay. Excellent read.
Stephen King - Skeleton Crew, It, The Stand, The Shining. Great books. Skeleton Crew is a collection of short stories. My favorite is the first one titled "The Mist."
Any of Troy Denning's FR work. His quality of writing is far greater than Salvatore's and doesn't resort to battle sequences every ten pages.
I also read a series called The Changewinds about 10 years ago, I can't recall the author, but a great sci-fi/fantasy crossover trilogy.
Centennial by James Michener. I read this my sophomore or junior year in high school over the course of a weekend for an essay. Excellent read.
Stephen King - Skeleton Crew, It, The Stand, The Shining. Great books. Skeleton Crew is a collection of short stories. My favorite is the first one titled "The Mist."
Any of Troy Denning's FR work. His quality of writing is far greater than Salvatore's and doesn't resort to battle sequences every ten pages.
I also read a series called The Changewinds about 10 years ago, I can't recall the author, but a great sci-fi/fantasy crossover trilogy.
Support Your Addiction! Vote for TorilMUD Today!
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Why Nerox is jealous of me:
Nerox tells you 'man this thing is kicking my ass and i have blisters!'
Nerox tells you 'ok attempting it again put tape on my fingers for easier sliding'
Top Mud Sites: http://www.topmudsites.com/cgi-bin/topmuds/rankem.cgi?id=shev
Why Nerox is jealous of me:
Nerox tells you 'man this thing is kicking my ass and i have blisters!'
Nerox tells you 'ok attempting it again put tape on my fingers for easier sliding'
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