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ceelo
12-11-2010, 12:21 AM
And why?

Jeremydav
12-11-2010, 01:34 AM
Not much of a thread...

MystyrMystyry
12-11-2010, 02:14 AM
I have 5 million 7 hundred thousand 2 hundred and 49 favorite books...


How would you like me to describe them? Alphabetical order?


Then I'll start with the English dictionary - an all time favorite for potted descriptions and definitions of various words and how they came into to being. It's excellent to flip through when you don't feel like anything particularly heavy, and any random page jump produces riches.


Good also for ensuring you know the meaning of words that you may not use but read frequently.

Did you know that 'apricot' and 'precocious' have the same etymology - apricot being a precocious (early ripening) fruit?


Incredible, exasperating, thrilling, discombobulating - all these words and many others may be found within its mysterious covers


My recommendation would be to start with the latest Oxford Concise edition,
and sometimes you may be lucky to find a dusty old illustrated one (they're like mini encyclopaedias bursting at the seams with knowledge, and remind me of Borge's Book Of Sand - though not infinite as far as I know)


My favorite novel is Dickens' Pickwick Papers because it's the funniest book I've ever read.

ceelo
12-11-2010, 05:35 AM
Amusing.

stlukesguild
12-11-2010, 02:13 PM
This question becomes more difficult the more one has read. My knee-jerk response would be Dante's Divine Comedy which I find has a greater wealth of characters and narratives, a blend of tragedy, comedy, satire, history, biography, philosophy and poetry, a variety of poetic styles, a brilliance of formal innovation and perfection of structure that is not equalled by any other single book.

Then again, I might make equally strong arguments for the Bible, the Shanameh, the Odyssey, Don Quixote, War and Peace, the 1001 Arabian Nights, Hamlet, MacBeth, Paradise Lost, In Search of Lost Time... and any number of others.

Seasider
12-11-2010, 04:15 PM
My favourite book? It varies with my mood. Sometimes it's Middlemarch, sometimes Crime and Punishment, sometimesTo The Lighthouse. They are just some of the many books that I realised changed me. I was just not the same person after I had read them. But one does not always live in that state of heightened consciousness.
I was remembering the other evening, don't know what prompted it, about 2 books I read in the fifties which gave me such pleasure then and still make me smile at the recollection. They were by Leo Rosten The Education of Hyman Kaplan and The Return of Hyman Kaplan both based on Rosten's recollections of being a teacher of English in New York to a very mixed group of learners whose goal was sufficient proficiency in the language to qualify them for American citizenship.
Someone reading it 50 years after I did, and,with a raised consciousness of ethnic stereotyping, might think that Hyman Kaplan and his classmates were caricatures rather than people. But the humour was gentle and affectionate. I smiled all the way through them and I still do.:):)

Buddha Frog
12-11-2010, 08:28 PM
Brothers Karamazov. I just could not put this book down and was gutted when I finished it. Dostoyevsky uses his characters to represent ideals and ideas, but they do not suffer for it. Ivan is dark and moody. His chapter on the devil is a work of art in its own right. Dmitri is wild and reckless but engaging. I could go through them all really. Father Ferapont is fantastic (UK TV viewers, Ferapont would scare seven shades out of Father Jack!)

Dostoyevsky has an unbelievable breadth of vision. This novel in particular just opens up more and more, without ever losing its acutely observed, heartfelt, moving depiction. He takes me to 19th C Russia but also shapes how I perceive my own 21st C surroundings. The prose itself is enough to pull me in like quicksand and ok, I read a translation, but the way he delves into the hearts of men is unparalleled in other novels I have read.

Dostoyevsky's portrayal of human nature, in this novel especially, will always be as relevant as it was at the time of writing. I found it an immensely enjoyable book.

Mr.lucifer
12-12-2010, 12:09 AM
Brothers Karamazov. I just could not put this book down and was gutted when I finished it. Dostoyevsky uses his characters to represent ideals and ideas, but they do not suffer for it. Ivan is dark and moody. His chapter on the devil is a work of art in its own right. Dmitri is wild and reckless but engaging. I could go through them all really. Father Ferapont is fantastic (UK TV viewers, Ferapont would scare seven shades out of Father Jack!)

Dostoyevsky has an unbelievable breadth of vision. This novel in particular just opens up more and more, without ever losing its acutely observed, heartfelt, moving depiction. He takes me to 19th C Russia but also shapes how I perceive my own 21st C surroundings. The prose itself is enough to pull me in like quicksand and ok, I read a translation, but the way he delves into the hearts of men is unparalleled in other novels I have read.

Dostoyevsky's portrayal of human nature, in this novel especially, will always be as relevant as it was at the time of writing. I found it an immensely enjoyable book.

From what I've heard, his original prose was considered to be pretty bad.

Buddha Frog
12-13-2010, 09:46 AM
I'm not sure what you mean by original prose. Do you mean an original version of BK, or his earliest novels? If it's the latter then I would agree there is a difference in quality between some of the earlier stuff and his greatest works. The Double, for example, still has its charms (it seems to spawn from Gogol's The Overcoat in some ways), but it could not compare well with Devils.

Having said that, I would encourage you to discover for yourself rather than going on the opinion of others - particularly if those opinions have led you to believe that Dosty was rubbish!

Mr.lucifer
12-13-2010, 11:07 AM
I was talking about his prose that was orginally written in russian. Thats the biggest criticism I've heard from him. I'm actually own a copy of the brothers karamazov but haven't gotten around to reading it. Don't get me wrong, Doestoesky sounds interesting to me. I don't think a writer that is still remembered after over 100 years would be rubbish.

stlukesguild
12-13-2010, 12:26 PM
Who made the criticism of Dostoevsky's prose style in Russian? I suspect it was Nabokov, who was quite critical of his work in general. Of course they were polar opposites as artists. Dostoevsky wrote with social and even spiritual aspirations (the artist as prophet) in a broad sprawling manner (not unlike Cervantes), where Nabokov was ever the formalist artist... the maker of perfect objects... producing the most consciously polished writing. Personally, I like them both and might have placed the Brothers Karamazov at the top of my list of great books many years ago.

LuggageFan
12-13-2010, 02:48 PM
Ooo, this is tough.

I can't possibly answer that. I'll have to think about it and get back to you here maybe tomorrow.

kelby_lake
12-13-2010, 06:07 PM
Original question, lol. We've never seen that on a book forum before (!)

But to be fair, you might be talking about 'book' in an abstract sense, instead of another word for 'novel'. In that case, I forgive you :)

faithosaurus
12-14-2010, 01:53 AM
Blood and Gold. The main character's personality is so prestigious, and the whole story-line is wonderful. It takes place starting during ancient Roman times all the way to modern times.

sithkittie
12-14-2010, 04:56 AM
I had to think of an answer to this a few weeks ago, and I managed to boil it down to Charles Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities. Why? Sydney Carton. The story itself is good, though to be honest it gets a little tiring in the middle, but what makes it my favorite is Syndey, hands down. I'll save the details in the interest of spoilers, but the ending, if you've read it.

Part of me wants to say 1984, because I think that's the only book that's actually terrified me, but I can't really say "I loved it" or "It's my favorite" because it did scare the pants off me. It's hard to put that one in a ranking... I do tell people to read it all the time, but it's really hard to say "It's a good book" on the end of that. It's well written...

JakWil
12-14-2010, 07:03 AM
For the last few years it's pretty consistently been Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow. Nothing else is so intricate, dense, absurd, and stylistically perfect in my humble opinion.
Other times though I prefer things like Hemingway. All depends on the mood.

Alexander III
12-14-2010, 08:55 AM
I have to go with Les Miserables, Victor Hugo created the novel/poem genre which would become what was expected of novelists of the future.

faithosaurus
12-14-2010, 03:32 PM
Part of me wants to say 1984, because I think that's the only book that's actually terrified me, but I can't really say "I loved it" or "It's my favorite" because it did scare the pants off me. It's hard to put that one in a ranking... I do tell people to read it all the time, but it's really hard to say "It's a good book" on the end of that. It's well written...

That is a great book. Definitely in my top 10 (though I'm a junkie for horror).

Patrick_Bateman
12-14-2010, 03:40 PM
Has to be the first book I read recreationally

1984

Because it made me want to read more

Cunninglinguist
12-14-2010, 04:14 PM
I have to go with, albeit rather childish, all the Calvin & Hobbes comic books by Bill Watterson.

sithkittie
12-15-2010, 08:41 AM
I have to go with Les Miserables, Victor Hugo created the novel/poem genre which would become what was expected of novelists of the future.

I couldn't get into it. I liked the story, but the writing just dragged on and on. Maybe it would have been better to read in installments (isn't that how it was written?). I really wanted to love that book, because the story is really good. Wish the movie did it any justice. I really liked Javert, and Gavroche (and I probably spelled that wrong, my French is non-existent).


That is a great book. Definitely in my top 10 (though I'm a junkie for horror).

It's definitely up there for me, but it still just gives me the creeps. A few months after I read it, I had an orientation for a company that I was going abroad with. I seriously had second thoughts after meeting the guy in charge. O'Brien to the T, holy cow. Probably should have listened, cause that company was messed up like nobody's business. Creepy. Really freaking good book though.

byquist
12-17-2010, 06:55 PM
George Elliot's "The Mill on the Floss." The ending made me fall apart, weep, etc. and I am no teary-eyed type. George Elliot is genius incarnate.

Wilde woman
12-17-2010, 07:26 PM
At the moment, probably John Gardner's Grendel.


Blood and Gold.

Anne Rice's book? Really? I thought her earlier VC stuff was much better written.

TheChilly
12-17-2010, 08:52 PM
My current favorite right now is War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy, due to the overwhelmingly crazy attention-to-detail throughout each passage, its fully fleshed-out characters, its vivid and graphic detail of the battle sequences described, and most definitely the fact that each character (especially the character of Prince Andrey) is fully fleshed out and detailed. Unlike other novels, I feel that there is almost NO boring point that I encountered during my reading. Though dense and lengthy, I feel it's also emotionally and hugely rewarding.

Drkshadow03
12-17-2010, 10:06 PM
I have 5 million 7 hundred thousand 2 hundred and 49 favorite books...


How would you like me to describe them? Alphabetical order?


Then I'll start with the English dictionary - an all time favorite for potted descriptions and definitions of various words and how they came into to being. It's excellent to flip through when you don't feel like anything particularly heavy, and any random page jump produces riches.


Good also for ensuring you know the meaning of words that you may not use but read frequently.

Did you know that 'apricot' and 'precocious' have the same etymology - apricot being a precocious (early ripening) fruit?


Incredible, exasperating, thrilling, discombobulating - all these words and many others may be found within its mysterious covers


My recommendation would be to start with the latest Oxford Concise edition,
and sometimes you may be lucky to find a dusty old illustrated one (they're like mini encyclopaedias bursting at the seams with knowledge, and remind me of Borge's Book Of Sand - though not infinite as far as I know)


Heh. This was a really funny post!

faithosaurus
12-22-2010, 12:31 AM
At the moment, probably John Gardner's Grendel.



Anne Rice's book? Really? I thought her earlier VC stuff was much better written.


It's probably because I'm a MAJOR Marius fan. I love Lestat too, but there's just something about Marius..

sonictheplumber
12-22-2010, 08:56 PM
This is a pretty lame/cliche choice, but Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas really changed my life.

Alexander III
12-23-2010, 07:24 AM
I couldn't get into it. I liked the story, but the writing just dragged on and on. Maybe it would have been better to read in installments (isn't that how it was written?). I really wanted to love that book, because the story is really good. Wish the movie did it any justice. I really liked Javert, and Gavroche (and I probably spelled that wrong, my French is non-existent).



haha my favorite thing about the novel is Hugo's prose, I loved it as it was not prose, it was not a novel, it was something new and beautiful, taking the stagnating epic form and re-adapting it to the new times. I got drunk of his prose!

Oh and, the novel was not written in installments, it was published as one big book. Though at the time opinions of the book were very different. Baudelaire said it was great in public, but in private he confessed he did not think much of it. His publishers hated it and considered it a weak work compared to his others. Flaubert said of it that he could find in it neither "neither truth nor greatness". However it was a very popular book amongst the confederate soldiers in the civil war, interestingly enough. Also Rimbaud thought it was the greatest poem he had read, though he despised Hugo's earlier works.

Requiem
12-23-2010, 01:12 PM
Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. I love revenge stories and this happens to be the best I've read.

stlukesguild
12-23-2010, 03:31 PM
I quite enjoyed Les Miserables myself. I read it in a period right before starting college in which I was obsessively reading lots of big, epic novels: Les Miserables, War and Peace, Don Quixote, The Brothers Karamazov, Doctor Faustus (Mann), The Glass-bead Game, David Copperfield, etc... While the novel had endless digressions, as with Byron's Don Juan, I found those digressions imminently interesting (although with Byron the digressions are often far more interesting than the story itself... to the point that the greatest character in Don Juan is the narrator).

Mr.lucifer
12-23-2010, 08:33 PM
X is the best book ever.

robertenem
12-26-2010, 03:43 PM
This is difficult because I've only read a handful of books that I would consider great. For me, it's a toss up between Brave New World and Naked Lunch. The influence of both of these works is undeniable. Not to mention, they're two of the most distinctly imaginative works I've ever read.

dfloyd
12-26-2010, 08:02 PM
and put it in the trash can where it can have a suitable repose. What a selection for best book: better than Cervantes, Dickens, Fielding, Elliot, et al? I shouldn't have read this post. the worst and best books threads are generally answered by those who don't qualify as legitimate readers. I don't mean to be disrespectful or querelous, but really, William S. Burroughs is the best you've read? How ignominious.

Mr.lucifer
12-27-2010, 12:12 AM
and put it in the trash can where it can have a suitable repose. What a selection for best book: better than Cervantes, Dickens, Fielding, Elliot, et al? I shouldn't have read this post. the worst and best books threads are generally answered by those who don't qualify as legitimate readers. I don't mean to be disrespectful or querelous, but really, William S. Burroughs is the best you've read? How ignominious.

I agree that what you shouldn't confuse your favorite writer with the best one but the writer you enjoy the most should be the most valuable to you. The canon must be respected but you shouldn't have to conform the tastes of your enjoyment to what the scholars say.

Hyacinthine
12-29-2010, 01:36 PM
My favorite books... ones I've read over and over.

The entire Harry Potter series

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce

Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee

One Hundred Years of Solitude

These are the ones that are coming to me off the top of my head. I'd say Portrait of the Artist and Harry Potter are the two (if you count all of Harry Potter as one unit) I'd take to a desert island.

Emil Miller
12-29-2010, 04:53 PM
I'd say Portrait of the Artist and Harry Potter are the two (if you count all of Harry Potter as one unit) I'd take to a desert island.


:smilielol5:

Hyacinthine
12-29-2010, 11:30 PM
:smilielol5:

Well, yes, you could say my two favorites seem odd together. They fulfill two very different needs.

tomt
12-30-2010, 03:06 AM
The reigning champion (at least until something better comes along) is Until I Find You by John Irving. He really makes your work for it in part I but part II is a stunning work of literature all on its own.

Kyriakos
12-30-2010, 03:45 AM
Probably one of my collections of short stories by Guy De Maupassant :)

This was one of those writers who do not simply write, but create an entire universe to fill their mental world. And although im sure 19th century France was not like he describes, much like 19th century Russia is not what Dostoevsky saw, again i am very much amazed by the depth of his vision, and the vividness of the image he presented of it.

arrytus
12-30-2010, 03:58 AM
Probably one of my collections of short stories by Guy De Maupassant :)

This was one of those writers who do not simply write, but create an entire universe to fill their mental world. And although im sure 19th century France was not like he describes, much like 19th century Russia is not what Dostoevsky saw, again i am very much amazed by the depth of his vision, and the vividness of the image he presented of it.

I like Maupassant, and he's like a French Chekov [although earlier of course] but if you like Maupassant you've absolutely got to read Balzac. His humor, knowledge and breadth, as well his creation of his own little world is the definition of literary genius.

blazeofglory
12-30-2010, 04:56 AM
My favorite book is the Prophet.

This book is a collection of poems, not exactly poems but poetic expressions. By Khalil Gibran this book has transformed more than any other books I have read.

I like war and peace and the Brothers Karamazov were some of the books that moved me and their philosophies something I find highly enlightening.

I like The Road by MC carthey too.

The greatest book, the Mahabharata is unbeatable and no books were or will be written of that grandeur and philosophy and a thousand bibles cannot equal its depth and substance

louisgeorge
07-19-2012, 11:04 AM
I like Harry potter serious and i think don't to define "why" .every one knows :)

tonywalt
07-19-2012, 12:55 PM
Razor's Edge - Somerset Maugham
Catcher in the Rye - JD Salinger

Desolation
07-21-2012, 04:56 PM
Ulysses by James Joyce

It moved me and spoke to me like no other book has. Simple as that.

Adolescent09
07-21-2012, 06:05 PM
My favorite for now is Victor Hugo's Les Miserables. But I have only read like... 50 classics or so, I'm not precocious, I'm 21 so I think that by the time I've aged like wine my knowledge of literature will expand. I also love The Inferno by Dante (I think somebody mentioned it already), John Milton's Paradise Lost, Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, Dostoevsky's The Idiot and Crime and Punishment (The Brother's Karamazov comes pretty close too although I did not care for The Adolescent, which is ironic considering I get my forum name from that book and the fact that I was an adolescent at the time I read it). Anyway choosing a favorite book is hard for most people because the depth and breadth of the classic, poetry, prose, contemporary etc... catalogue is so extensive it is a daunting task to choose just one.

djameson
07-22-2012, 02:04 AM
I have five: Wise Blood, The Death of Ivan Ilyich, To Kill a Mockingbird, Of Mice and Men, and The Picture of Dorian Gray. Which I list at a given time depends greatly on where I'm at in my living at the moment I'm asked.

Adolescent09
07-22-2012, 02:34 AM
I have five: Wise Blood, The Death of Ivan Ilyich, To Kill a Mockingbird, Of Mice and Men, and The Picture of Dorian Gray. Which I list at a given time depends greatly on where I'm at in my living at the moment I'm asked.

I've read all except Wise Blood. Perhaps you could whip up a dish of your take on it? I'd like to know why you like it so much.

djameson
07-23-2012, 02:53 AM
I've read all except Wise Blood. Perhaps you could whip up a dish of your take on it? I'd like to know why you like it so much.

Well first, it's the first novel by one of my most-loved writers, Flannery O'Connor. As a person who adores Southern Gothic, and struggles with issues of faith, her work--all that I've read, at least--resonates deeply with me. It is evocative and, particularly in the case of Wise Blood, revolves around characters with deep moral flaws. I was introduced to O'Connor by a close friend almost ten years ago, and I've been in love with her since.

Often, when I'm of a mood, I will list O'Connor as my favorite author when asked, sliding her above Tolstoy. She was, in my opinion, a genius storyteller. At just over 200 pages, Wise Blood is a fairly quick read, and if you're anything like me, you'll probably read it in one or two sittings. And her attempts to understand faith and doubt through the eyes of heretical Motes is just brilliant stuff.

peterr77
07-24-2012, 11:09 AM
My favorite book is Heights by Emily Bronte.

larryF
07-24-2012, 08:13 PM
Infinite Jest - Wallace
Naked Lunch - Burroughs
Brave New World - Huxley
Slaughterhouse-Five - Vonnegut
Falconer - Cheever