Rule7 Forums
Home       Members    Calendar    Who's On
Welcome Guest ( Login | Register )
        


«««123

Are any authors good? Expand / Collapse
Author
Message
Posted Friday, September 01, 2006 1:46 PM
Heroic Knight

Heroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic Knight

Group: Basic Members
Last Login: Sunday, October 05, 2008 3:55 PM
Posts: 224, Visits: 1,165
see, I just tend to tell people to leave me the hell alone if they try to criticise books i'm reading.  I'm old enough and well-read enough to make up my own mind, thank you!  Anything you suggest as good, there are a hundred people to tell you that you're wrong, and it all comes down to personal taste anyway.  So read around, make up your own mind, and don't try to tell others what they should or shouldn't be reading. 

The only people whose reading advice I take are the authors I know I like - find their websites, blogs or whatever, there's usually books and writers that they enjoy and admire, and the chances are you'll agree because you'll be looking for the same stuff as the author you already know.

Maelstrom - Elspeth Grigori - Holy Martyr
Lilith Sartia - I see weird people!

EOS - Maram-amma Suran - The Very Important Wife

Reality - Rebecca Willatts

Post #12217
Posted Sunday, September 03, 2006 9:41 PM


Heroic Knight

Heroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic Knight

Group: Basic Members
Last Login: Yesterday @ 12:26 PM
Posts: 118, Visits: 300
I remember feeling, at 17, that Starship Troopers was the most disturbing book I'd ever read.

I avoid fantasy, it does nothing for me. Though, in recent years I found Rowling, Pullman and Sachar all very satisfying reads. I quite enjoyed Dan Brown, although I await the day he discovers a second plot. I'm tending to read more factual stuff, these days, in particular those books with a rye or dark humour.

I don't see myself going back to Pratchett, I reread Lords and Ladies last year for the first time in a decade, but I didn't really laugh. It had some nice memories of reading it at uni, but that was it.

These days I go for Palahniuk, Ken Macleod, Chris Sagan, and Kipling, on the fiction front. I remember trying to read Hassel when I was in my early teens. I believe he's French, but I might be wrong.

T.

--
CP - Kjell Larssen, Iron Wolves
PD - The L-plate Ref
SG - JT van Horne
Bristol Vampire - Julius Linnett, Tremere
Post #12359
Posted Monday, September 04, 2006 1:07 AM
Squire

SquireSquireSquireSquireSquireSquireSquireSquire

Group: Basic Members
Last Login: Sunday, April 20, 2008 12:29 PM
Posts: 31, Visits: 44
I feel I have to chime in on behalf of Alastair Reynolds. Brilliantly written sci-fi books, particularily century rain (The "picture in your head" will run in black and white...). I've yet to meet anyone who's read one of his novels and not liked it, and he definetely rates as my favorite author. For fantasy I've heard good things about the ice and fire books from several independant sources.

To answer the main question I'm not a King fan (The books start well, then just sort of flap aimlessly.) and I can see why people would find Tolkien objectionable, even though I didn't. I haven't read enough of the other authors stuff to really comment.

Still not read dead famous, should probably either do so or give it back really...

J~

Member of the league of vague gamers: www.vaguenet.com

Post #12382
Posted Thursday, September 07, 2006 9:54 AM
Knight

KnightKnightKnightKnightKnightKnightKnightKnight

Group: Basic Members
Last Login: Monday, February 18, 2008 1:40 AM
Posts: 56, Visits: 99
Anything by Robert Rankin is sheer genious, i am also quite partial to a little Raymond E Feist

_____________________________________________________________________________

After saying goodbye to sanity, you throw it off the edge and watch it tumble into the fierce furnace below... The Volcano rumbles, and then the Volcano God himself suddenly manifests in front of you. In response to your offering he curses you with a sarcastic god queue pass.

Post #12856
Posted Thursday, September 07, 2006 10:44 AM
Heroic Knight

Heroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic Knight

Group: Basic Members
Last Login: Thursday, August 21, 2008 4:02 PM
Posts: 206, Visits: 644
Phillip Reeve's Traction sequence (Mortal Engines, Predators' Gold, Infernal Devices and A Darkling Plain) are astonishing.  You might need to go shopping for them in the kids' (or "young adults'") section of Waterstones, but fuck that - there's nothing immature about the stories at all.

On a side-note, I think describing Gaiman as a "nice easy read" is a little unnecessarily patronising.  There are flashier authors, but he's a phenomenal story-teller, and that should never be undervalued.

                                                                                              
No spoken or written word can ever be a substitute for one's own practical experience.  No-one too can convince another who does not wish to believe what he is told - only the doubter loses by his incredulity - T.C. Lethbridge
Post #12861
Posted Wednesday, October 04, 2006 2:04 PM


Heroic Knight

Heroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic KnightHeroic Knight

Group: Basic Members
Last Login: Monday, August 18, 2008 4:45 PM
Posts: 195, Visits: 224
Depends what you want in a book I guess... I hate narrative written in the first person, but it doesn't mean someone else will find the same book as crap as I do.

Can I recommend John Fowles as being a really interesting read. Especially The French Leiutenants Woman, The Collector and The Magus...

_____________________________

Maelstrom - Carl Whitesnake
Scavenger LRP - Organiser
Post #15692
« Prev Topic | Next Topic »

«««123

Permissions Expand / Collapse

All times are GMT, Time now is 6:59am

Powered by InstantForum.NET v4.1.4 © 2008
Execution: 0.461. 9 queries. Compression Disabled.