Favourite Writer? (playwright poet author etc.)

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Rolling Thunder

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Dec 23, 2007
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Hey-someone else out there who likes Naomi Novik..... grand. Problem with me is, I haven't read past the third book becasue this country gets literature roughly half a milennia behind the rest of the world.... and before youask, we have all read the new testament.... the reviews are still coming out.

But other than that, i read so many books that if I attempted to list the authors, we'd add another four pages.
 

PedroSteckecilo

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Feb 7, 2008
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Khell_Sennet said:
L.B. Jeffries said:
Cormac McCarthy

Blood Meridian is the best book about violence I've ever read.
OOh, you might be interested to know that his novel "The Road" is being made into a movie.
I wonder it it will still feature baby-eating?
It's being directed by John Hillcoat, best known for the "darker than dark" aussie western, The Proposition, it'll probably at least allude to baby eating and other disturbing acts, if not depict them in some manner or another.
 

MrHappy255

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Mar 10, 2008
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Iain M Banks is probably my favorite writer at this moment, but Frank Herbert, William Gibson, Phillip K Dick, and Larry Niven are also amazing imo. I guess for guilty pleasure Stephen King.
 

Larenxis

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Dec 13, 2007
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Kurt Vonnegut Jr. People may have dropped the 'Jr' these days, but I can't get out of the habit. What can I say, it's what's on my books.

Also: Douglas Adams, Neil Gaiman, Oscar Wilde, and for the sake of my childhood, Garth Nix. I think Garth Nix was always below my reading level, but the creativity was brilliant.
 

bowsmand

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Mar 23, 2008
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H.P. Lovecraft, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., Jorge Luis Borges, Douglas Adams, Albert Camus, and Thomas Ligotti.

If you haven't read Borges or Ligotti... do yourself a favour. Ligotti, in particular, has several short reads which will haunt you for the rest of your life.
 

sammyfreak

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Dec 5, 2007
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The Russian master, the ultimate climax of all human culture and art: Fyodor Dostoevsky

This man writes books that contain 90% dialogue/monolgue and still manages to make them impossible to turn down. Sometimes it can take a day to read two three pages, or to understand them atleast.
 

L.B. Jeffries

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Nov 29, 2007
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PedroSteckecilo said:
Khell_Sennet said:
L.B. Jeffries said:
Cormac McCarthy

Blood Meridian is the best book about violence I've ever read.
OOh, you might be interested to know that his novel "The Road" is being made into a movie.
I wonder it it will still feature baby-eating?
It's being directed by John Hillcoat, best known for the "darker than dark" aussie western, The Proposition, it'll probably at least allude to baby eating and other disturbing acts, if not depict them in some manner or another.
As long as they keep the back story right, I'm cool with it.

'The Road', like 'Children of Men' had the guts to be realistic about an apocalypse scenario. You don't need a zombie virus, you don't need vampires. If there was a major cataclysm and plants stopped growing, people would not need much to resort to extreme barbarism. Same if people stopped being able to reproduce, I liked that movie because it reminded you how thin a veil civilization really is for people.
 

bamforth

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Mar 10, 2008
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*Michael Crighton (Sphere, Jurrasic Park, The Andromeda Strain...)
*Antony Beevor who wrote "Stalingrad" which is the best history book I have ever read.
*Phillip Pullman and Tolkien because they are both brilliant.
*Jeremy Clarkson because he is funny.
 

PedroSteckecilo

Mexican Fugitive
Feb 7, 2008
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TheNecroswanson said:
Topping it all off with Hickman and Weiss for The Death Gate Cycle.
Oh Snap! Another thing I totally forgot about, excellent and original series there. Their best work in my opinion.
 

ThaBenMan

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Mar 6, 2008
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My favorite author is probably George R. R. Martin. He creates amazing, complex characters that you just get so caught up with, whether you love them or hate them. His works run the gamut of popular fiction - the "A Song of Ice and Fire" series for fantasy, Tuf Voyaging and Dying of the Light for sci-fi, Fevre Dream for horror, the Armageddon Rag for modern day (with a touch of fantasy I guess), all amazing works.

Another favorite is Neil Gaiman, the master of modern day fantasy. His prose is beautifully poetic, and just so imaginative - reading him just evokes this sense of wonder like no one else can.

Another author worth mentioning is Jeff VanDerMeer - his work is just so unique. I'm having trouble in explaining it... just go out and read "City of Saints and Madmen"