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Strike For The South
05-10-2012, 15:45
Kurt Vonnegut

Greyblades
05-10-2012, 16:11
Terry Pratchett

drone
05-10-2012, 16:13
Kurt Vonnegut
So it goes.

I've gone through lots of different stages with fiction authors as I've aged. King, Clancy, Harris, Gibson, the other Harris, Stephenson. I can't really say any are my favorite, they all eventually write something that turns me off of them a little.

Montmorency
05-10-2012, 16:25
Bakker, why not?

Vuk
05-10-2012, 16:33
Strike, you read? ~;)
Seriously though, Howard Pyle for me.

Fragony
05-10-2012, 17:11
Edgar Allan Poe probably, such excellent writing.

Lemur
05-10-2012, 17:37
Charles Stross. Who also maintains one of the better blogs (http://www.antipope.org/charlie/) on the interent tubes.

If you've never read anything by him, I would start with The Atrocity Archives (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Atrocity_Archives), which is immense Cthulhu-themed fun.

Fragony
05-10-2012, 17:40
Read this Lovecraft had a son http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Leaves

Hooahguy
05-10-2012, 18:27
Bernard Cornwell.

Need to finish the Sharpe series before I head to his other works.

Kralizec
05-10-2012, 18:59
Probably Isaac Asimov.

Sasaki Kojiro
05-11-2012, 07:00
hmm I really don't know. Hemingway and Dostoevsky are the only two I've read multiple books of in the past year or so, but I've liked others.

Arthur Ransome, C.S. Forester, and R.L. Stevenson were my favorites growing up...I'm sure I'll pick them up again sometime.

Peasant Phill
05-11-2012, 11:27
I quite like Neil Gaiman.

edyzmedieval
05-11-2012, 13:03
Don't really have a favourite, I like a lot of writing styles. I could go for Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Eiji Yoshikawa, along Clive Cussler.

Kagemusha
05-11-2012, 13:28
Mika Waltari.

Fragony
05-11-2012, 14:29
Don't really have a favourite, I like a lot of writing styles. I could go for Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Eiji Yoshikawa, along Clive Cussler.

Marguez is also one of my favorites, 100 year's of solitude (translation?) is simply fantastic. Soooooooooo tragic

Lemur
05-11-2012, 21:26
Don't really have a favourite, I like a lot of writing styles.
Sure, of course, if you love literature you are probably a slut when it comes to your affections, telling each writer in turn that you love them. Hussy!

I just picked one of my favorites and plopped him down for the thread. Iv'e also been frisky with Lois Bujold (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lois_McMaster_Bujold) and Garth Ennis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garth_Ennis) lately. And no, I don't use protection.

Mouzafphaerre
05-11-2012, 23:18

No favourite. :no: I re-read LotR and Silmarillion at least once a year but that doesn't make Tolkien my favourite over -say- Dostoyevski, whom I haven't read in years. Else? Poe is named above... I'll thump whoever says cliché when I name Shakespeare... Spencer Holst is interesting. Caesar if it's in Latin... and many many others. :book2:

GeneralHankerchief
05-12-2012, 01:06
Mika Waltari.

Out of curiosity, do you have a copy of The Dark Angel? I've been looking for an English translation of that one for ages.

SwordsMaster
05-12-2012, 01:25
Bulgakov, Arturo Perez-Reverte. Oh so many others

Fragony
05-12-2012, 10:04

No favourite. :no: I re-read LotR and Silmarillion at least once a year but that doesn't make Tolkien my favourite over -say- Dostoyevski, whom I haven't read in years. Else? Poe is named above... I'll thump whoever says cliché when I name Shakespeare... Spencer Holst is interesting. Caesar if it's in Latin... and many many others. :book2:


You are simply wrong for liking Shakespear it is unreadable crap. I prefer losing an arm over having to read it. I had to at school and I have never forgiven them.

Kudos for liking Poe though, he is the real master of the English language

SwordsMaster
05-12-2012, 11:36
You are simply wrong for liking Shakespear it is unreadable crap. I prefer losing an arm over having to read it. I had to at school and I have never forgiven them.

Kudos for liking Poe though, he is the real master of the English language

If you want mastery of language - to me it is indisputably Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad.

Fragony
05-12-2012, 11:58
If you want mastery of language - to me it is indisputably Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad.

Poe's 'The Raven' is the absolute hight imho. Wilson's 'Futility' is a great second best

Kagemusha
05-13-2012, 11:47
Out of curiosity, do you have a copy of The Dark Angel? I've been looking for an English translation of that one for ages.


All my Waltari books are in Finnish. It is a real shame that the english translations are so rare.:shrug:

Mouzafphaerre
05-15-2012, 02:30


You are simply wrong for liking Shakespear it is unreadable crap. I prefer losing an arm over having to read it. I had to at school and I have never forgiven them.

:laugh4: I'll sacrifice you on an altar for a single verse of his Sonnets sir! :duel:

a completely inoffensive name
05-17-2012, 02:10
Nora Roberts.

The Stranger
05-17-2012, 10:56
J.K. Rowling