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Thread: Male Top 10 favourite books and Female Top 10 favourite books

  1. #31
    Procrastinator
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    Since the title calls for people's favourite books and not the ones they think contain the best writing (and the two are not the same) I will be completely honest and to hell with my guilty pleasures being known. This is list is subject to change (and would probably be different tomorrow and would have been different yesterday) but right now:

    Female

    In alphebetical order of writer ('cause I'm that kind of geek);

    Adams, Douglas The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Gallaxy
    Bronte, Charlotte Jane Eyre
    Dickens, Charles Bleak House
    Eliot, George Middlemarch
    Faulkner, William The Sound and the Fury
    Heller, Joseph Catch 22
    Nabokov, Vladimir Lolita
    Niffenegger, Audrey The Time Traveller's Wife
    Safran Foer, Jonathan Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close
    Woolf, Virginia Mrs Dalloway


    Also, I have stuck to novels because to add plays etc would have made it too complicated.
    Last edited by Dark Lady; 09-07-2009 at 05:51 PM. Reason: To add last sentence
    If you'd like to talk about Blake I promise I'll keep checking this thread. http://www.online-literature.com/for...ad.php?t=45098

  2. #32
    escape reality rimbaud's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Griffith View Post
    Which would be the best?? Crime and punishment?? Anyway, Dostoyevsky was a real genious. It´s really difficult to choose "the greatest masterpiece".
    well if I HAVE to choose i'd say The brothers Karamazov
    it's the best for me
    Touched by Genius. Cursed by Madness. Blinded by Love.

  3. #33
    yup. SupaStudy's Avatar
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    Might as well throw an 18 year old's favorites into the mix, I'm not ashamed of having less than refined tastes ;p
    (in no particular order)

    The Invisible Man - Ralph Ellison
    Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
    The Dark Tower (series) - Stephen King
    The Divine Comedy (trilogy) - Dante Alighieri
    In Cold Blood - Truman Capote
    Protector of the Small (quartet) - Tamora Pierce
    Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky
    The Perks of Being a Wallflower - Stephen Chbosky
    The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - Douglass Adams
    Its Kind of a Funny Story - Ned Vizzini

    Just to point it out, the Dark Tower series is quite engrossing and really beautiful; maybe Stephen King is a bit commercial and a lot of his horror can be campy, but if you put aside those prejudices you really find The Dark Tower series (which is non-horror btw) is something new and great.
    As far as gender differences, I'm not sure if there will be a huge change. For instance I put the Protector of the Small series which I've always loved, and that's about as feminist as you get (as far as modern medieval/fantasy goes).
    "If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you"

  4. #34
    alter kakker
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    Big Old Man Top Ten

    Karamozov
    Huckleberry Finn
    East of Eden
    O Pioneers
    Anna Karenina
    The Old Man and the Sea
    Franny and Zooey
    Eugene Onegin
    Quiet Flows the Don
    The Sea Wolf

  5. #35
    O dark dark dark Barbarous's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by SupaStudy View Post
    Might as well throw an 18 year old's favorites into the mix, I'm not ashamed of having less than refined tastes ;p
    (in no particular order)

    The Invisible Man - Ralph Ellison
    Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
    The Dark Tower (series) - Stephen King
    The Divine Comedy (trilogy) - Dante Alighieri
    In Cold Blood - Truman Capote
    Protector of the Small (quartet) - Tamora Pierce
    Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky
    The Perks of Being a Wallflower - Stephen Chbosky
    The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - Douglass Adams
    Its Kind of a Funny Story - Ned Vizzini

    Just to point it out, the Dark Tower series is quite engrossing and really beautiful; maybe Stephen King is a bit commercial and a lot of his horror can be campy, but if you put aside those prejudices you really find The Dark Tower series (which is non-horror btw) is something new and great.
    As far as gender differences, I'm not sure if there will be a huge change. For instance I put the Protector of the Small series which I've always loved, and that's about as feminist as you get (as far as modern medieval/fantasy goes).
    Great choices. I love the Dark Tower series as well and Invisible Man is the definition of the American novel.
    If the fool would persist in his folly he would become wise.
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  6. #36
    Skol'er of Thinkery The Comedian's Avatar
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    Male

    Walden
    Watchmen
    Desert Solitaire
    Arctic Dreams
    My Antonia
    Lord of the Rings
    Odyssey
    Republic
    The River Why
    Lonesome Dove
    “Oh crap”
    -- Hellboy

  7. #37
    laudator temporis acti andave_ya's Avatar
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    female

    The Bible
    The Lord of the Rings trilogy
    Gaudy Night (Dorothy L. Sayers)
    Busman's Honeymoon (ditto)
    Lord Peter (also ditto)
    Collected Poems by Yeats
    The Brothers Karamazov
    Modern British Poetry (compiled by Louis Untermeyer)

    Those are the top of my list. More later.
    "The time has come," the Walrus said,
    "To talk of many things:
    Of shoes--and ships--and sealing-wax--
    Of cabbages--and kings--
    And why the sea is boiling hot--
    And whether pigs have wings."

  8. #38
    Literature Fiend Mariamosis's Avatar
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    I am of the female gender and my top 10 would have to be:

    'David Copperfield' by Charles Dickens
    'Germinal' by Emile Zola
    'Crime and Punishment' by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    'Mysterious Island' by Jules Verne
    'The Grapes of Wrath' by John Steinbeck
    'The Mayor of Casterbridge' by Thomas Hardy
    'King Solomon's Mines' by H. Rider Haggard
    'A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court' by Mark Twain
    'The Sirens of Titan' by Kurt Vonnegut
    'The Idiot' by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    Last edited by Mariamosis; 09-07-2009 at 08:37 PM.
    -Mariamosis

  9. #39
    Ataraxia bazarov's Avatar
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    Dostoevsky - Brothers Karamazov, Crime and Punishment, The Idiot
    Tolstoy - Anna Karenina, War and Peace
    Cervantes - Don Quixote
    Turgenev - Fathers and Sons
    Selimović - Dervish and The Death
    Hugo - Les Miserables
    The Bible
    At thunder and tempest, At the world's coldheartedness,
    During times of heavy loss And when you're sad
    The greatest art on earth Is to seem uncomplicatedly gay.

    To get things clear, they have to firstly be very unclear. But if you get them too quickly, you probably got them wrong.
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  10. #40
    Quote Originally Posted by rimbaud View Post
    well if I HAVE to choose i'd say The brothers Karamazov
    it's the best for me
    The brothers karamazov is like something bigger than a novel.i agree with you,i can't even compare it with the other dostoyevskis i've read.
    While you live your life, you are in some way an organic whole with all life. But once you start the mental life you pluck the apple.You've severed the connexion between,the apple and the tree:the organic connexion. And if you've got nothing in your life but the mental life, then you yourself are a plucked apple...
    You've fallen off the tree.

  11. #41
    Registered User Delarge's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by My name is red View Post
    The brothers karamazov is like something bigger than a novel.i agree with you,i can't even compare it with the other dostoyevskis i've read.
    I completely agree. The Brothers Karamazov is in it's own league. You can't explain it, you got to read it!

  12. #42
    escape reality rimbaud's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Delarge View Post
    I completely agree. The Brothers Karamazov is in it's own league. You can't explain it, you got to read it!
    and that's why he's the king
    hahaha
    i kinda yelled this after I first read the book
    Touched by Genius. Cursed by Madness. Blinded by Love.

  13. #43
    Philo-zoon
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    Female.
    Journey to the End of the Night
    The Portrait of Dorian Gray
    In search of Lost Time
    Wuthering Heights
    The Sound and the Furry
    Lolita
    The Myth of Sisyphus
    Dune
    The Foundation Series
    and..the HP series. lol

    my taste is kinda..diverse.

  14. #44
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mariamosis View Post
    'Germinal' by Emile Zola
    Great book, indeed. I have forgotten the great Emile Zola.

    About the Dostoevsky discussion, someone thinks that Notes from underground has been hyped for a long time?? I´m not saying it´s bad but if you compare with The possessed, The Idiot, The Brothers Karamazov, Crime and Punishment and Notes from the House of the Dead the book is going to look clearly inferior. Even so, it´s incommensurably superior than any work of Kafka or other deceiver.

  15. #45
    escape reality rimbaud's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Griffith View Post
    Great book, indeed. I have forgotten the great Emile Zola.

    About the Dostoevsky discussion, someone thinks that Notes from underground has been hyped for a long time?? I´m not saying it´s bad but if you compare with The possessed, The Idiot, The Brothers Karamazov, Crime and Punishment and Notes from the House of the Dead the book is going to look clearly inferior. Even so, it´s incommensurably superior than any work of Kafka or other deceiver.

    well, I wouldn't agree
    I agree on that Dostoevsky is the best for me, and many others, the man is a genious, no one can deny, but to say that his "compared to the others inferior work" is still "incommensurably superior than any work of Kafka or other deceiver" is just wrong
    you can express your opinion without forcing it on the others, this is online literature forum, which means that there are fans of Dostoevsky as well there are fans of Kafka.
    Touched by Genius. Cursed by Madness. Blinded by Love.

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