Who's Your Favorite Author?
- ChrisSamsDad
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 02 Oct 2009, 11:41
- Bookshelf Size: 0
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: 05 Sep 2009, 18:19
- Bookshelf Size: 0
- tinyViolin
- Posts: 53
- Joined: 19 Oct 2009, 07:47
- Bookshelf Size: 0
As for me, I think I have read everything by Virginia Woolf. For some reason, I just click with her writing. Orlando has to be among my favorite books.
Yoko Tawada~Her stuff is bizarre. I <3 bizarre.
Marcel Proust
Milan Kundera
Hmmm, drawing a blank now! I wish I knew more American authors. I heard early Philip Roth is good. So maybe I'll try him?
-
- Posts: 59
- Joined: 28 Oct 2009, 07:07
- Bookshelf Size: 0
- LauraH
- Posts: 110
- Joined: 11 Sep 2009, 08:18
- Bookshelf Size: 0
I've read a lot of Green and Hopkins too. I'm not familiar with Bantock, but have you read Katherine Marple yet? I just found her a few months ago. Also Will Leitch's book "Catch" was very very very good.kitty5495 wrote:I love John Green, Ellen Hopkins, and Nick Bantock.
Along with a bunch other, probably, but whatever. Haha.
-
- Posts: 50
- Joined: 28 Oct 2009, 10:43
- Bookshelf Size: 0
My favourite one is Julio Ramón Ribeyro, "La Palabra del Mudo" is a master piece for me, every story has something different on it but at the same time they all present the contrasts between the different social classes in Lima. i specially love it cause many writers always write about poor or rich people, but he talks about "normal" people from an avarage class.
Second will be Gabriel García Márquez, Gabriel Niezen Matos and Jaime Bayly maybe

-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: 06 Nov 2009, 00:31
- Bookshelf Size: 0
-
- Posts: 43
- Joined: 23 Nov 2009, 07:17
- Bookshelf Size: 0
-
- Posts: 3
- Joined: 23 Nov 2009, 08:55
- Bookshelf Size: 0
Well my favourite author is Paulo cohelo his novels shows the realityScott Hughes wrote:Who's your favorite author? Why?
My favorite author is Henry David Thereau. I love Civil Disobedience. My favorite quotes are as follows:
I heartily accept the motto, "That government is best which governs least"; and I should like to see it acted up to more rapidly and systematically. Carried out, it finally amounts to this, which also I believe--"That government is best which governs not at all"; and when men are prepared for it, that will be the kind of government which the will have.Under a government which imprisons unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison.
- avidreader
- Posts: 1
- Joined: 24 Nov 2009, 13:08
- Bookshelf Size: 0
- Gannon
- Previous Member of the Month
- Posts: 14464
- Joined: 17 May 2009, 01:48
- Favorite Book: Pillars of the Earth
- Currently Reading: Heaven's Net is Wide.
- Bookshelf Size: 52
I am also a military history buff and love all the authors you have mentioned. Ancient Rome is my favourite. I love Colleen McCullough, Alan Massie, David Wishart, Lindsey Davis. Just recently I have read the two Rome books( mainly about Cicero) "Imperium" and "Lustrum" by Robert Harris. I love Simon Scarrow's Eagle series and his Revolution books about Napoleon and Wellington are great as well.Nuts4aYarn wrote:I'm a Military History Buff so a few of of my favorites are Patrick O'Brian,Bernard Cornwell, Simon Scarrow, Harold Coyle and W.E.B. Griffin.
-
- Posts: 3
- Joined: 01 Dec 2009, 19:41
- Bookshelf Size: 0