ZombieGenesis said:
As a writer I've recently decided that I haven't read enough books. So I'm putting together a list of books to chop my way through, and would like to hear any suggestions on what the learned people of 'The Escapist' forum would consider a must-read.
So far my shopping list for tomorrow consists of;
Atlas Shrugged
Lolita
The Golden Man
1984
Necromicon
Bearing in mind I have read SOME works (like Pride and Prejudice, Dorian Gray, LoTR...)
I tried my hand at being a writer just long enough to realize I don't have the talent for it. I could toss out a bunch of my favorite pop culture time wasters, but going by your list your looking for some more "weighty" fiction so to speak
I recommend
#1: "House Of Leaves" by Mark Z Danielewski
#2: "Demon Theory" by Stephen Graham Jones
Both are interesting and if your looking for some interesting literary tricks and so on, both are good, solid, horror works, and pretty thought provoking in their respective ways.
In a more general sense I'd recommend almost anything by Robert Heinlan or Kurt Vonnegaut, and feel that everyone should read Asimov's "Foundation" and Roger Zelazny's "Amber" books at least once. I'd recommend checking out some of James Schmidt's stuff (his "Federation Of The Hub") stories as they are pretty cool and highly influential to a lot of science fiction that came later.
For pure fairly low-brow horror, I recommend "Edward Lee". His stuff can be fairly hard to track down at times, since he seems to get printed in limited quantities through companies like "Necro Press". He's fairly prolific though. It's hardly deep, but he does some pretty "hardcore" horror and has been called "the father of splatterpunk" by some. "Flesh Gothic", "City Infernal", "Shifters", "Coven", "The Backwoods" and others are all pretty good. One of the things that sort of impresses me that while universally nasty he does seem to be able to write in differant styles, ranging from campy and tongue and cheek, to more serious. But then again I got tired of guys like "Steven King" who turned into formula writers no matter what their central ideas were. I slogged through his "Under The Dome" earlier this year and it was a bit slow.
If your interested in fantasy at all, I'll say that Jim Butcher's series both for "Codex Alera" and his modern wizard-detective series "The Dresden Files" are very good.
A lot of rambling thoughts, however if your looking for stuff that might give you some ideas as a writer, the first two suggestions are probably the best bet.
I'll also say that while the ideas are interesting Ayn Rand is not someone I recommend reading for pleasure. This is coming for someone that has a relatively high threshold for both boredom and "message stories" (which I frequently criticize later).