Now I need books please

Legacy Account

Active member
Yep, that Auschwitz book is superb. Not the lightest reading, but essential reading...

What\'s this about schools stopping using it? Last I heard the series based on the book was forming one of the core components of some of the history teaching going on, with kids even getting the opportunity to visit the place on a trip at one of the schools I taught at.
 

Aliengod3

Active member
I am a star wars novel fan and if you liked ANY of the movies then you will like the books.

I recommend:
New Jedi Order Series (21 books)
Force Legacy (9 books)


Also:
Watership Down
The Waterborn
Dreamcatcher

Author Alfred Bester:
The Stars My Destination (excellent)
Demolished Man
Psycho Shop

Terry Pratchet is a great author and made some good books, check them out if you can.
 

War Griffon

New member
I heard from several sources last year that it was going to be dropped this year and also there was a national petition going around trying to stop them from doing removing it.

Apparently in todays PC UK it is upsetting the muslims who apparently say the Holocaust didn\'t happen.

I may be wrong though as I have just found this Holocaust
 

Thecadian

Active member
heck we were still taught about the holecaust at my school.Infact 1/4 of my history gcse was on it. Additionally when i went to berlin with school i visited a concentration camp. I would reccommend to anyone to go and visit one, one of the most moving and meaningful days of my life.
 

alextheartist

New member
How can people deny the Holocaust, its like say 9:11 didn\'t happen (exteme example, for an extreme subject)

Thats my 80 percate anyway..
Alex
 

Davyboy74

New member
If you want something a bit different try getting Alistair Gray\'s books (Glasgow writer & artist...illustrates his own books too!)

Fantastic artist, fantastic writer, makes Irvine Welsh look like a chimney sweep! (and i know! Having met them both lol)

Oh yea, and Ian Banks too...Wasp Factory is his most famous book but IMHO far from his best. Check out \'Whit\' and \'The Bridge\' from him....great stuff!

DB74
 

War Griffon

New member
The emails put out were quite convincing quote Mcarther (I think it was)and what he said when he walked into the first camp they found.
 

Torn blue sky

New member
A bunch I would reccommend have already been listed so best not to add it yet again!

I would add anything by an author called \"Karen Slaughter\" , however. Obviously a pen name but very dark writer.

Also Stephen Kings \"IT\", the book by and far surpasses the film. The film took so much away from an epic work! In fact I watched the film again after reading it the last time and remember thinking how crap it was lol
 

mattrock

New member
Lots of books here that I haven\'t read...I\'ll pick up some suggestions myself ;)

I read a lot of Fantasy. I tend to like \'grown up\' fantasy though, not the hokey stuff. I like my fantasy gritty and edgy. In my opinion, here are the best:

George RR Martin\'s Song of Ice and Fire series: As I mentioned above, for my money, they are the best books ever written. Even better than LOTR. Yeah, I said it.

Stephen Erickson\'s Malazan Book of the Fallen series: There are three possible entry points, but I\'d suggest Gardens of the Moon. Character driven stories, very gritty, FANTASTIC world-building.

Greg Keyes\' Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone series: Another great author who can be a bit edgy. Again, character-driven. First book in the series is The Briar King and the series is complete at only four books so it\'s a comparatively quick read.

Robin Hobb\'s Farseer Trilogy: Really great books by a really great author. First book is Assassin\'s Apprentice.

Scott Bakker\'s Prince of Nothing Series: Maybe one of the best series out there next to GRRM\'s ASOIAF. Kinda has an eastern feel to it, but rife with political intrigue and games of warfare. Only three books in this one, beginning with The Darkness That Comes Before.

These books break the Tolkeinian mold rather than trying to copy that work with different players. LOTR will always be a fantastic work and is a must read, but it has almost been TOO influential in the fantasy community. These books take their own route to greatness. If you like an edge, you will not be disappointed, I assure you.
 

Friar

Dorks for Orks
3 favorite books of mine are Big Sur by Kerouac, Steppenwolf by Herman Hess, Meditation in Action by Chogyam Trungpa. But the only book I can say that I read that changed my life and had a story and charecters that made me addicted to the story is the Fountainhead by Ayn Rand.
 

Dragonsreach

Super Moderator
Staff member
Missed a couple off my original list:

The Lies of Locke Lamora, by Scott Lynch


Sundiver,
Startide Rising,
The Uplift War
By David Brin


Dreamsnake
The Exile Waiting,
Fireflood and other stories
By Vonda N McIntyre (can\'t believe I omitted her!)
 

Amazon warrior

New member
I just finished reading \"I am legend\" by Richard Matheson. It was fantastic- written in 1954 and reads like it happened yesterday. Forget Will Smith (although annoyingly he appears on the cover of my copy)- this is the real thing.
 

Undave

Flockwit
Freakinacage just reminded me of what a great author Robert Rankin is (not to be confused with Ian Rankin who writes rather different books:D ).

Try \"The book of ultimate truths\" or the Brentford Trilogy.
 
Best I\'ve read....

Pillars of the Earth - Follett
Shogun - Clavell
Prayer for Owen Meaney - Irving
Cider House Rules - Irving
The Godfather - Puzo
The Gold Coast - DeMille
The Talisman - King/Straub
The Mists of Avalon - Bradley
Silence of the Lambs - Harris
Guns of Navarone - McLean
Elvis Cole/Joe Pike novels - Robert Crais
\"Prey\" series - John Sandford

I\'d take a chance on almost anything by Follett, Crais, Sandford or DeMille

Shogun and Pillars are special IMHO.
Read each of them twice.
 
Back To Top
Top