Quick, someone rec me a book or three. My biweekly library trip is tomorrow and I'm fresh out of ideas for things to read.
Please?
(Although I suppose I could just read fic, watch TV, and force myself to write over the next two weeks if I'm bookless...or I could delve further into my shelf of Classics I've Totally Been Meaning To Read For A While NowBut Never Will Until Just This Sort of Situation...)
ETA: Most of you know my tastes, but for those of you who don't, I'll read practically anything except a straight romance. I have particular penchants for sci-fi, fantasy, quirky literary/mainstream fiction, humor of any stripe, travel writing, and historical novels or nonfiction, but really, anything goes.
Please?
(Although I suppose I could just read fic, watch TV, and force myself to write over the next two weeks if I'm bookless...or I could delve further into my shelf of Classics I've Totally Been Meaning To Read For A While Now
ETA: Most of you know my tastes, but for those of you who don't, I'll read practically anything except a straight romance. I have particular penchants for sci-fi, fantasy, quirky literary/mainstream fiction, humor of any stripe, travel writing, and historical novels or nonfiction, but really, anything goes.
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Date: 2007-06-16 07:46 pm (UTC)Big fan of Bill Bryson here. Sadly, I've read everything he's written so far. :( Pratchett I am lukewarm on. Sometimes I like what I read, sometimes I don't. But I own ten Discworld books, so surely that says something.
I cannot stand the movie version of TPB. Is the book substantially different? I might give a go if it is.
I basically bypassed the entire young adult genre when I was a preteen and went straight to general fiction. (I think my library at the time was actively trying to keep teens out, so they didn't have much in that way--mostly Christopher Pike and Sweet Valley High, ugh.) I did run into Wrede later, though, which was good, as I like her stuff. What's good by Wynne Jones? I haven't been able to get into anything I've tried to read by her. I've never heard of Velde.
Tamora Pierce has so much out there that I wouldn't know where to begin. Suggestions?
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Date: 2007-06-16 09:11 pm (UTC)As for the teen fantasy books:
- I'm glad you've read Wrede. I don't know what of hers you've read, but I HOPE that it includes both Dealing With Dragons (and sequels), and Sorcery And Cecelia (and sequel). In fact, now that I think of it, you would be the perfect audience for Sorcery And Cecelia. Yes. Read it.
- Diana Wynne Jones was my favorite author for a very long time, taking that title from Roald Dahl when I was about twelve or so, and only losing it (to Terry Pratchett) round about the time I entered college. She's brilliant. I wish that the world were crazy about her rather than J. K. Rowling.
The best Jones books, in no particular order: Dark Lord of Derkholm, The Lives of Christopher Chant (and sequels), Howl's Moving Castle (and sequel), Deep Secret, Eight Days of Luke, Archer's Goon, and A Tale of Time City.
- Tamora Pierce just keeps cranking 'em out. I think her books have become a bit formulaic now, but the early ones are gems. Most people would point you toward the Alanna books, but I'm convinced that her best work is the Immortals Quartet, which I used to read over and over and over again. (In order, the Immortals books are Wild Magic, Wolf-Speaker, Emperor Mage, and The Realms Of The Gods.)
- Vivian Vande Velde isn't quite as stellar as the other three, but she lives in Rochester, and sets many of her books there, so I've a soft spot for her. Her best books, I think, are her two novels about virtual reality gaming: User Unfriendly and Heir Apparent. Oh, and if you're fortunate enough to find a copy of The Rumpelstiltskin Problem, thank your lucky stars and read it immediately.
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Date: 2007-06-16 10:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-06-16 10:52 pm (UTC)Really? I thought everyone knew this about me. Where others find it satiric, I find it insipid and faintly stupid.
Of Wrede, I've read the Mairelon books, the second of which I loved greatly (first wasn't bad either, but was obviously much more for kids), and Snow White and Rose Red (a retelling of the fairy tale in an Elizabethan setting, with elements of Tam Lin thrown in). I tried the Sorcery and Cecilia books, and while they sound like they should be just my sort of thing...they weren't. I'm not really sure why.
I owned Deep Secret for a while, and read about a quarter of it, but it wasn't terribly interesting, and I eventually sold it to the used bookstore. I did enjoy Miyazaki's version of Howl's Moving Castle, though, so I'll look into the book.
My library does in fact have The Rumpelstiltskin Problem. :)