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Best book ever?

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 18:02

To date, I've read maybe 2 good books, and those were 'Stranger in a Strange Land' and 'Confederacy of Dunces'. I'm currently reading 'City' and 'Atlas Shrugged'.

Is any book as genius as 'City', as smooth as 'Stranger in a Strange Land', or as powerful as 'Atlas Shrugged'?

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 19:07

>>1
I haven't ready any of those so I can't answer your question, but how have you managed not to read anything else good?

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 19:46

Atlas Shrugged? Powerful?

I hope you mean powerfully bad; that shit is terrible.

Try reading something with actual characters instead of walking strawmen.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 21:28

I'm going to say "The Stranger" by Albert Camus, but I think I have a philosophical bias for liking that book. There are still some parts that are absolutely beautiful, like when Meursault bummed a ride off a trolley during sunset.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 22:21

>>3
I hope you mean powerfully bad; that shit is terrible.
Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaw

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 22:27

There really is no way of truly determing that, as it would greatly depend on the time and mood. The genre, tone, setting, plot... any might not sit well with a reader at any time.

But I'm being a stiff. I'll put my vote down for Catch-22.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 22:28

Gilgamesh.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-17 22:33

The Butter Battle, by Doctor Seuss.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-18 21:07

The Da Vinci Code

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-19 21:24

The End of Faith, by Sam Harris.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-20 7:17

The Sound and the Fury

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-25 1:49

1984

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-25 3:58

The Sound and the Fury

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-25 4:20

Anything by Chuck P., author of fight club.
Also read Survivor and Choke. Mind-Blowing.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-28 8:41

Single book? Probably Good Omens by Terry Pratchet (not one of the Discworld series). It seemed to explain the way I feel about angels and daemons a little too closely for comfort sometimes.

It was as if he'd litterally looked inside my head and taken my beliefs and put them on a page, with his usual twisted humour.

Single Non-fiction? The sign and the seal, It's Douglas Hancock's search for the Holy Grail and the Arc of the Covenant. It's not a story at all but a diary of his investigations and is rivetting from cover to cover.

Series? Well, I know I'm bound to get stick for it, but I really love Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time books.

In my own opinion they are just as well written, thought out and historied as Tolkiens work and, if you stick by it through the more complicated and brain scratcher parts, everything slowly starts to come together.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-28 11:14

The Sound and the Fury

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-28 16:46

Quicksilver
The Confusion
System of the World


Read them now.

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-29 14:11

Rape: A History from 1860 to the Present, by Joanna Bourke

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-29 18:43

>>18
Is it worth it?

Name: Anonymous 2008-07-31 16:48

>>19
Depends on who the victim is.

Name: Anonymous 2008-08-02 3:26

The Sound and the Fury

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