Books to read before you die

Recommended Videos
Jan 23, 2009
2,334
0
41
"How to live forever and profit" written in 2012, published by Apocalypse Media, it's by Malach HaMavet, but actually penned by a ghost writer.
 

TheLiham

New member
Apr 15, 2010
477
0
0
the_bearpelt said:
TheLiham said:
the_bearpelt said:
The Cirque du Freaks series by Darren Shan is also really good. I've never liked vampire stories much (just not my thing), but this one is amazing because it creates a real culture and the story, in the end, isn't ABOUT vampires. Vampires are necessary to tell the tale, but it's not about vampires. It's a series that gets more in depth as it goes by.

The Demonata series by Darren Shan is also great. Very grotesque, very dark. Shan does many things that you would never ever expect in the series. It's extremely well-written.
:O I love Darren Shan

I even has a signed copy of blood beast and a picture of him strangling me :D

OT: Of Mice and Men if freakin awesome!
OMIGOD YOU ARE SO LUCKY
SUPER JEALOUS
I know right! XD

Also Darren Shan is a short fat irish bloke with incredibly soft hands xD

still doesn't stop me shuddering with glee at the thought of having met him :D
 

HotPocket

New member
Jan 5, 2010
164
0
0
westhamhaz said:
HotPocket said:
westhamhaz said:
what are your favourite novels you would suggest I read?, i'm not picky about genre.
my personal favourites include Captain Corelli's Mandolin and 1984
Name of the Wind, it is much better than any of these books posted.
come on now no need to be a fanboy we have enough of that in videogame related forums
Have you read it? No.

So don't talk, I have read pretty much ALL of the books on this thread and I can say for a fact that Name of the Wind is the best book I have ever read.

EDIT: And I mean the whole thread, not just your post.
 

Tdc2182

New member
May 21, 2009
3,623
0
0
Seriously guys?

No one has said Harry Potter yet?

Honestly? For realz?

Wow. I'm disappointed in all of you.
 

Tdc2182

New member
May 21, 2009
3,623
0
0
the_bearpelt said:
The Cirque du Freaks series by Darren Shan is also really good. I've never liked vampire stories much (just not my thing), but this one is amazing because it creates a real culture and the story, in the end, isn't ABOUT vampires. Vampires are necessary to tell the tale, but it's not about vampires. It's a series that gets more in depth as it goes by.
I'm gonna be honest; I really didn't think the ending was good.

But then again, when you create such a stellar series like that you are bound to break a few hearts.
The Demonata series by Darren Shan is also great. Very grotesque, very dark. Shan does many things that you would never ever expect in the series. It's extremely well-written.
Yikes, the most twisted and deliciously grotesque series I think has ever been written.

Wouldn't suggest it for the person who likes happy endings.

P.S. Our library down here had a signed Darren Shan book and didnt even know it.
 

Death916

Senior Member
Apr 21, 2008
776
0
21
Cowabungaa said:
Dune, easily my most favourite work of literature ever. It's oh-so very atmospheric and it's a true linguistical delight.

Then there's The Dresden Files, urban fantasy detective novels with a good helping of black humour with an awesome main character.

And of course Terry Pratchett and Douglas Adams. The same type of writers, the former writing the hilarious Discworld novels (especially the Watch and Death series are recommended) and the former writing the brilliant Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (though the last 2 books aren't that good compared to the first 2).

I also still want to read all the Lord of the Rings novels, and especially The Hobbit. Might do that next.

There's of course a ton more, but those come to mind.
Dune is exactly what I was gonna say. I think everyone should read the whole series, including the prequels. The universe the Herberts and Anderson created is amazing
 

Latinidiot

New member
Feb 19, 2009
2,215
0
0
Rogue 9 said:
Latinidiot said:
...
Do Robots dream of electric sheep?
...
Damn, I think I misread something. These are books I still want to read before I die, not my favourites, because I obviously haven't read them yet.
...
Clearly you haven't read them yet. It's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? =P Just to help you find it when you do get around to reading it. Also, I do highly recommend you and everyone else read it.

And rather than reiterating all the books I'd choose that others have already mentioned, I'll just add a few recommendations of my own to the list - Magician by Raymond E Feist and The Earthsea Quartet by Ursula Le Guin are both classics of fantasy writing that should be read by anyone that enjoys the genre. The 13 and 1/2 Lives of Captain Bluebear by Walter Moers is far and away one of the most incredibly imaginative and enjoyable books I've ever read.

And straying into the graphic story telling medium for a moment, Pluto, Naoki Urasawa's 8 volume adaptation of the classic Astro Boy story arc "The Greatest Robot on Earth" is one of the finest works I have ever read in any medium, and one I have no hesitation recommending to anyone, whether they read manga/graphic novels or not.
And that saves me hours of pointless searching, thank you kindly.

I read magician, It is one of the awesomest fantasy books I can think of. I recomend reading WAylander and other Gemmel books if you like Feist.
 

Toaster Hunter

New member
Jun 10, 2009
1,851
0
0
The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien

The Song of Ice and Fire Series by George R.R.Martin

Dune by Frank Herbert

Starship Troopers by Robert Heinlein

Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk

The Iliad and Odyssey by Homer

Beowulf by Unknown

Just some of my favorites
 

Cowabungaa

New member
Feb 10, 2008
10,806
0
0
Wintermute_ said:
Also, I hope you've read all of Herberts Dune sequels? I'm still trying to work my way through 'em. Its gooood stuff.
Sadly not, I haven't found the time yet. I'm planning to read The Hobbit next, I think I'll go for another Dune book after that. Or the Sprawl Trilogy. There's do damned much...
Tdc2182 said:
Seriously guys?

No one has said Harry Potter yet?

Honestly? For realz?

Wow. I'm disappointed in all of you.
They're fun but, honestly, compared to most other books offered in these threads they pale in comparison.
 

YouBecame

New member
May 2, 2010
480
0
0
One flew over the Cuckoos nest - Ken Kesey
Brave new world - Aldous Huxley
Nineteen Eighty-Four - George Orwell
A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
The Odyssey - Homer
Post Office - Charles Bukowski
The curious incident incident of the dog in the night-time - Mark Haddon

Some of my favourite books there; certainly worth a pop!
 

44-Blue

New member
Jul 1, 2010
23
0
0
books to read before you die? my answer is as many possible - good and bad - like food, tv, movies and games, the bad make you appreciate the great that much more.
 

Korenith

New member
Oct 11, 2010
315
0
0
Appologies for any repeats in here but I'd recommend:

American Psycho- Bret Easton Ellis
Oryx and Crake- Margaret Atwood
The Road- Cormac MacCarthy
A Clockwork Orange- Anthony Burgess
The Inheritors- William Golding
I Am Legend- Richard Matheson
The Wasp Factory- Iain Banks
The Cement Garden- Ian McEwan
Lannark- Alasdair Gray
Ulysses- James Joyce
The Malazan Book of the Fallen- Steven Erikson
Song of Fire and Ice- George R R Martin
Catch 22- Joeseph Heller
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest- Ken Kesey
Never Let Me Go- Kazuo Ishiguro
Perfume- Patrick Suskind
The Epic of Gilgamesh- ?? (recommend to anybody who enjoyed reading Homer because they liked seeing how tale telling differed back then since it's even older)
Divine Comedy- Dante Algiheri
Paradise Lost- John Milton
The Wasteland- T S Eliot
The Picture of Dorian Gray- Oscar Wilde
The strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde- R L Stevenson
 

Korenith

New member
Oct 11, 2010
315
0
0
44-Blue said:
books to read before you die? my answer is as many possible - good and bad - like food, tv, movies and games, the bad make you appreciate the great that much more.
Liking this answer too though. Can't appreciate talent unless you've got something to compare it to. It's nice to know Dan Brown and all those celebrity autobiographies do serve a purpose.