what are some really good books?

> 10 years ago
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Cassa
Cassa
WA
1305 posts
WA, 1305 posts
25 Jun 2009 7:17am
Scar Tissue by Anthony Kiedis
from the chillies
Squid Lips
Squid Lips
WA
708 posts
WA, 708 posts
25 Jun 2009 12:01pm
nebbian said...

Life changing book: The Celestine Prophecy



How long since you read it? I thought the same the first time but 10 years later I started reading it again and found it very cheesy and clichéd.
Paradox
Paradox
QLD
1326 posts
QLD, 1326 posts
26 Jun 2009 4:51pm
JayBee said...

Any Stephen King book.

The Stand
Bag of bones
Desperation and The Regulators (have to be read as a pair to get the best effect)
From a Buick 8
The talisman
Black House



Gotta say that the Dark Tower series was Kings best, but "the stand" was also very good - especially with swine flu "captain trips" floating around at present.

Also agree with Raymon E Feists books, especially Magician and all the follow ons - still buying them as soon as they come out.

Bryce Courtney is great, really liked the "Persimmon Tree", and anything by Arthur C Clarke - "I Robot" was one of his and written in the 60's.

For non fiction, I think every Australian should read a "Kokoda" novel. Peter Fitz's is the best.
DUDE
DUDE
NSW
1132 posts
NSW, 1132 posts
26 Jun 2009 11:35pm
The new Australian kitesurfing "coffee table" book??????
tobes
tobes
NSW
1000 posts
NSW, 1000 posts
27 Jun 2009 9:39am
Paradox said...
anything by Arthur C Clarke - "I Robot" was one of his and written in the 60's.


I Robot was written by Isaac Asimov.
2001 is where to start with Arthur C Clarke, but the movie is better.
If you like that type of thing-
Farenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
sinker
sinker
WA
255 posts
WA, 255 posts
27 Jun 2009 10:44am
Shantaram by Gregory Roberts

Anything by William Gibson (sci-fi)

Pheebobafet
Pheebobafet
NSW
124 posts
NSW, 124 posts
27 Jun 2009 2:10pm
Support home grown, go for Tim Winton. He writes a hell of a lot about outdoor Australia and water is one of his favourite themes. Look for Cloudstreet, The Turning, Dirt Music and Breath. This guy is making a well earned name for himself and I have yet to be dissappointed.
Skid
Skid
QLD
1499 posts
QLD, 1499 posts
27 Jun 2009 2:18pm
Pheebobafet said...

Support home grown, go for Tim Winton. He writes a hell of a lot about outdoor Australia and water is one of his favourite themes. Look for Cloudstreet, The Turning, Dirt Music and Breath. This guy is making a well earned name for himself and I have yet to be dissappointed.


Also on the home grown front....

Steve Toltz - A Fraction of the Whole

cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
28 Jun 2009 4:27am
Papillon - Henri Charriere, made into a great movie.
The Sand Pebbles - Richard McKenna, made into a great movie.
Day of the Jackal - Fredrick Forsyth, made into a great movie.

For really great humour, books by Tom Sharpe, Riotous Assembly, Indecent Exposure, Porter House Blue, The Throwback, Vintage Stuff, Wilt, Wilt on High, Blott on the Landscape and heaps more.

Aussie humour try Robert G Barrett, De Fun Don't Done Yet, Davo's Little Something, Between the Devlin and the Deep Blue Sea and more.

Adventure, The Singh Brotherhood - Lee Falk (the original Phantom story).

More adventure, if you can find them, The Adventures of Captain Good Vibes and his dog Astro.

True history of the world, Worlds in Collision, Ages in Chaos and Earth in Upheaval by Immanuel Velikovsky.

The real deal on global warming and climate change, State of Fear - Michael Crichton.
myusernam
myusernam
QLD
6160 posts
QLD, 6160 posts
28 Jun 2009 7:39am
sinker said...

Shantaram by Gregory Roberts

Anything by William Gibson (sci-fi)




was going to mention shantaram also..good workout for your arms lying in bed at night!
AUS666
AUS666
89 posts
89 posts
30 Jun 2009 11:33pm
I'm a big fan of Terry Pratchet's discworld series (Si-fi comedy). He always has me in fits of laughter on the train, its not a good look. "Going Postal" is a good one to start with. Its a slanderous look at the business world, surprising that he was not sued by both Steve Jobs and Bill Gates! Another good one is "The Last Continent" which is a romp though Oz culture.

Isaac Asimov's Foundation series.

Plus how about a bit of Ian Banks.


JayBee
JayBee
NSW
714 posts
NSW, 714 posts
1 Jul 2009 10:11am
"The old man and mister smith" - Peter Ustinov
Pointman
Pointman
WA
437 posts
WA, 437 posts
1 Jul 2009 1:35pm
poor relative said...



Khaled Hosseini - Kite Runner and A thousand splendid suns. Very Confronting. This guy knows how to tell a story




Read 'A Thousand Splendid Suns' recently, Brilliant

Couldn't put it down. And a helluva insight into Afghanistan which gives some background to the current conflict.

colinwill78
colinwill78
VIC
1395 posts
VIC, 1395 posts
1 Jul 2009 11:38pm
i can't suggest anything as intellectual as th the above,
BUT I just have to add that I really liked the nights dawn trilogy by peter f hamilton. huge space opera thing.
(it was published in six books for dumbass americans so be careful if purchasing on the net)
chronic
chronic
NSW
318 posts
NSW, 318 posts
1 Jul 2009 11:43pm
good surf books - novels/biographies
Eddie Would Go the story of Eddie Aikau
Bustin' Down the Door
MP: The Life Of Michael Peterson
Bunker Spreckels: Surfing's Divine Prince of Decadence
Inside Maverick's: Portrait of a Monster Wave
Kelly Slater: For the Love
My Brother's Keeper
Stealing the wave
High Surf: The World's Most Inspiring Surfers
The lost coast - stories from the surf
Waves: Great Stories From The Surf
Surfing's greatest misadventures
Return by Water: Surf Stories and Adventures
The Moment - where the great surfing photo & the classic surf story meet
Teahupoo : Tahiti's mythical wave
The Mountain and the Wave Quiksilver Story
The Stormrider guide - world - 3 volumes
other books...............
Papillion - crime
Into thin air -mountaineering
Harry Potter - fiction/fantasy
Conquistadors of the Useless -mountaineering
touching the void -mountaineering
the art of war - er the art of war
macheavelli - same again
fit for life -health
lord of the rings - fiction/fantasy
shackleton's boat journey - exploration
cisco
cisco
QLD
12365 posts
QLD, 12365 posts
2 Jul 2009 12:53am
Bring on the Empty Horses by David Niven.

Fillets of Place by Gerald Durrell.
easty
easty
TAS
2213 posts
TAS, 2213 posts
2 Jul 2009 12:20pm
colinwill78 said...

i can't suggest anything as intellectual as th the above,
BUT I just have to add that I really liked the nights dawn trilogy by peter f hamilton. huge space opera thing.
(it was published in six books for dumbass americans so be careful if purchasing on the net)



Another vote for this - I read it a few years ago and have just started on the first book again, it's even better this time around. Awesome. Also good exercise just picking the thing up!
j murray
j murray
SA
947 posts
SA, 947 posts
5 Jul 2009 6:33pm
Crockodile Dreaming by Marie Mahood
CQU press Rockhampton Qld
isbn 1 875998 67 5
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