Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 16 to 30 of 31
  1. #16
    Join Date
    Jun 1999
    Location
    Westleigh, Sydney
    Age
    78
    Posts
    1,332

    Default

    Pretty well anything, except anything by JRR Tolkein. Especially like anything by Douglas Addams. All time favourite is "Such is Life" by Joseph Furphy - written 100 years ago but most of the characters are still living down the NSW riverina.
    Visit my website
    Website
    Facebook

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    Kyabram
    Age
    45
    Posts
    171

    Default

    I can't read.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Perth WA
    Posts
    780

    Default

    Patrick Robinson; Nimitz Class, Kilo Class, HMS Unseen, Seawolf etc

    Bryce Courtney; all of them, but read Smokey Joe's Cafe 3 times.
    Gerald Seymour; Holding the Zero, Traitors Kiss
    Judy Nunn; Best one was Territory
    Jolife's Outback
    Garfield
    The Drinking Man's Survival Guide by Nicholas Read
    Gone Troppo by Nino Culotta (John O'Grady), have to read it every couple of years
    My Wicked Wicked Ways by Errol Flynn
    Grants Guide to Fishes
    A Vision Splendid the complete works of BP
    The adventures of the Muddle Headed Wombat by Ruth Park
    Squizzy

    "It is better to be ignorant and ask a stupid question than to be plain Stupid and not ask at all" {screamed by maths teacher in Year 8}

  4. #19
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Stirling, ACT
    Age
    60
    Posts
    18

    Default

    Silent,

    If you like Iain Banks in his Complicity/Crow Road mould I'd be surprised if Christopher Brookmyre wasn't up your street too. I've liked all of his so far, especially the Jack Parlabane ones. John McCabe is also good for a daft romp with Banks-like over-tones. Try "Paper" if you see it somewhere.

    Apart from Iain Banks (though not with the M) I like Ian Rankin for a good whodunnit and Andrew Grieg for something more meaty. His reworking of John Buchan's "John Macnab" ("The Return of John Macnab") was great, though not as dark as "When They Lay Bare". Irvine Welsh is always worth a read except when he gets too up himself in his short stories. Have you read "Porno" (the sequel to "Trainspotting") yet? Absolute laugh!

    Being fairly new to these shores I'm still finding my way round the local authors. Just found Shane Maloney, love John Birmingham, open to suggestions from those with more local knowledge than me.

    Cheers,
    John

  5. #20
    Join Date
    May 2001
    Location
    Queanbeyan
    Age
    60
    Posts
    732

    Default

    In no particular order and for no particular reason - ( I used to be a big SF fan but over the last 10 years or so have moved onto other pastures - so prior to this list pencil in Dune, Stranger in a Strange Land, Diceman, Foundation, LOTR ya da ya da .....)

    Cloudstreet : Tim Winton
    Grapes of Wrath : John Steinbeck
    Unbeliever series : Stephen Donaldson
    Corellis Mandolin : Whats his name
    Rustle in the Grass : Whats his name
    The Fatal Shore : Robert Hughes
    Going the Tonk : Warick Todd
    Patio : Jamie Durie

    Any renovation, gardening, woodworking book, magazine, show ever written...
    There was a young boy called Wyatt
    Who was awfully quiet
    And then one day
    He faded away
    Because he overused White


    Floorsanding in Canberra and Albury.....

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    113

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by vsquizz
    Patrick Robinson; Nimitz Class, Kilo Class, HMS Unseen, Seawolf etc
    Good Books.

    + John Grisham novels...although each story can be similar
    The Thief of BadGags

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Mount Colah, Sydney
    Age
    73
    Posts
    0

    Default

    Very eclectic tastes

    Mainly Sf/Fantasy. Include Asimov;Heinlein;Arthur C Clarke;Poul Anderson;Ann Maccaffery,the Dune books;Tolkein;Steven Donaldson; David Eddings;the Hitch Hiker books;Wilson Tucker; etc, etc.

    To make it worse, my daughter is a voracious reader, with a similar bent, and as fast as I sell her on my favourites, she is hooking me on new ones.

    General fiction: Steinbeck; Ayn Rand; Shute; Alistair MaClean; Seb Faulkes; Jody Picoult; Bryce Courtenay; Geoffrey Jenkins; Wilbur Smith; Hammond Innes; and on and on

    Non Fiction : Woodworking and woodturning (DUH)

    Alastair

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Boyne Island, Queensland
    Age
    52
    Posts
    176

    Default

    Robert G Barrett.

    Go team Norton!

    http://www.harpercollins.com.au/robertgbarrett/
    Dan

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Blackburn, Vic
    Age
    57
    Posts
    424

    Default

    It seems almost a cliche now, but my favourite book of all time is Lord of the Rings. The movie gave me a real dilema as on the one hand it was a brilliant rendition of the book but on the other hand I knew it would ean me having to convince people that it really has always been my facourite book since I struggled to read it as a 13 yr old. Before the movie I probably read it every 5 years.

    Favourite authors: Iain Banks, Pratchett, Ben Elton, Stephen Fry, Nick Hornby

    Good books: Last Orders by Graham Swift, With Nails by Richard E Grant

    I like to read old classics to see why they are so well thought of: I read the Phillip Marlow books by Raymond Chandler and they were very good if you like crime and stories of post-depression America. To Kill a Mocking Bird rates very high on my all time list.

    I'm also a big fan of popular science: A brief history of time started it for me, others are Longitude, the Code Book, Fermat's Last Theorem

    Simon
    They laughed when I said I was going to be a comedian. They're not laughing now.
    Bob Monkhouse

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Winnsboro,SC USA
    Age
    72
    Posts
    0

    Default Favourite book/author

    Mickey Spillane, Raymond Chandler, James Michener, Wallace Stegner
    About once a year, I read Nevil Shute. So far, I have read
    BEYOND THE BLACK STUMP
    PASTORAL
    BREAKING WAVE
    TRUSTEE FROM THE TOOL ROOM (my favorite)
    A TOWN LIKE ALICE
    I am currently reading THE FAR COUNTRY
    I enjoy narratives, travel ( TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT & THE QUIET AMERICAN both by Graham Greene ) mysteries & true adventure ( Sir Richard Burton's accounts of his travels in the middle & far east & Brazil )
    Just about anything on woodworking & shopbuilt jigs and methods.

    Good reading to ya
    Spence

  11. #26
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    South Oz, the big smokey bit in the middle
    Age
    68
    Posts
    1,914

    Default

    Anything dark or horror based.
    Clive Barker, Stephen King, Ray Bradbury, Grahme Masterton, Richard Matheson, and on and on and on.
    The best of the lot is King - his work can be patchy but that's because he is so prolific and at his best, he's the master.

    Crime also, lots of crime.

    And the stuff that used to be calle 'ripping yarns' but which has no vanished under the weight of political correctness and this stupid desire that things be 'real' (yeah, like fantasy is real). I've nearly every one of J E Macdonnell's yarns about the Aussie Navy.

    Richard

  12. #27
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Mackay Qld
    Age
    50
    Posts
    1,039

    Default

    The best writer of this age is Salman Rushdie.(Midnights Children, The Satanic Verses, et al) I also like Gabriel Garcia Marquez.(One hundred years of solitude, love in the time of cholera)
    Norman Mailer and some older stuff, Kafka, Beckett.
    Mick

    avantguardian

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Lake Eacham, Atherton Tablelands
    Age
    50
    Posts
    287

    Default

    Fantasy such as JRR Tolkein with lord of the rings, silmarillion & hobbit, Raymond E Feists Magician series, and the Dragonlance series as well.

    History books, particularly military/aviation.

    Tom Clancy isnt bad either although his latest stuff is a bit out there...

    But Tolkien is 'the' favourite at the moment

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    brisbane
    Posts
    200

    Default

    It depends on my state of mind, I've been reading a lot of my kids books lately (wonder what that says about my state of mind) . I borrowed a book called northern lights by philip pullman off my daughter recently and couldn't put it down till I had finished it and the other two books in the series.

    mostly though I like humor the blacker the better anything that holds up a mirror to humanity and lets my laugh myself silly at it. names that spring to mind are Ben Elton, Spike Milligan, Douglas Adams, Kurt Vonnegut, Robert A Wilson and William S Burrows.

    books that have really impressed me

    shrodingers cat trilogy Robert A Wilson
    the adventures of huckleberry finn
    Hard Times Charles Dickens
    last chance to see douglas adams
    Yertle the Turtle Dr Zuess

    Can't stand bryce courtney

  15. #30
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Mackay Qld
    Age
    50
    Posts
    1,039

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by julianx
    William S Burrows.
    I would never have picked Burrows for someone who would die by any means other than drugs. Came as a shock to learn that he'd done a Hemingway at 60 or so.
    Mick

    avantguardian

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •