because they're good!
Published on September 23, 2004 By citahellion In Books
Here's some stuff I think more people should read...

Anything by Doris Lessing, but particularly:
  • Canopus in Argos: Archives (a 5-book series; read 'em all!)
  • Briefing for a Descent into Hell (very strange and thought-provoking)

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey. You can watch the movie instead, it's a pretty good adaptation.
Lord of the Flies by William Golding.
The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner.
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess. You can watch the movie of this one too, but read the book for a lot more nuance. Warning: the recently-released-in-America "British version" has an extra chapter that totally dilutes the most powerful element of the book; avoid it until you've read the American version or watched the movie. Or, if you find yourself at the start of chapter 21, just ignore it.
Watership Down by Richard Adams. Yeah, it's about rabbits, but it's good stuff.
Harrison Bergeron by Kurt Vonnegut. A short story, so you may have to find it in an anthology somewhere, but well worth the effort.
The Once and Future King by T.H. White. Very interesting take on the legend of Arthur.
The Ender's Game series (and just about anything else) by Orson Scott Card. I ignored these books for a long time, but I'm very glad I finally got around to them.
SiddharthaI and Demian by Hermann Hesse. Most of his other stuff is good, too.
Anything by Terry Pratchett or P.G. Wodehouse, because they're lighthearted and unceasingly amusing.
Anything by Neil Gaiman, because he's mysterious, informative, and fascinating.
Anything by Ray Bradbury, because he's thoughtful and philosophical.
Anything by H. Beam Piper, because he was a master of "the self-determined man" and of a coherent, interesting future history.
Anything by James P. Hogan, because he's got a great knack for mingling real science with possible science and solid characters to make a great story.

Comments (Page 1)
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on Sep 23, 2004
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess


That was my favorite book in high school.
on Sep 23, 2004
We studied Lord of The Flies in Grade 11 English - it was my favourite unit

and Watership Down - I remember the movie vaguely - Bright Eyes

My dad has alot of Pratchett and Wodehose -- he has almost everything by Roger Zelazny (sp)
on Sep 23, 2004
Since you appear to be a sci-fi fan...You may want to check out the Posleen war series by John Ringo
A Hymn Before battle
Gust Front
Whe the Devil Dances
Hell's Faire
on Sep 23, 2004
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is great as well, and a good counterpoint to 1984. I recommend them both.
on Sep 23, 2004
Yes, that was the question I forgot to ask: What do you think I should read?
on Sep 23, 2004
The Cobra Event by Richard Preston

Gravity by Tess Gerritsen

Jinn by Matthew B.J. Delaney

on Sep 23, 2004
The Ender's Game series (and just about anything else) by Orson Scott Card. I ignored these books for a long time, but I'm very glad I finally got around to them.


Fantastic books. I do, however, tend to think of them more as Ender's Game and then a trilogy that follows. Ender's Game just has such a different feel than the three books that follow it. But I really love them all. I am looking forward to the conclusion of the Shadow series that follows Bean. OSC is one of my all time favorite authors.
on Sep 23, 2004
BlueDev, if I'm not mistaken, that series has concluded. It's just a trilogy and that last part is out in paperback, even.

TW, my brother and I snuck over to the house of a friend who had cable when we were in high school to watch A Clockwork Orange on HBO. Very good, powerful movie/book that presents some great dilemmas.
And can you tell me a little bit about the books you mentioned?

trina, my school never studied much in the way of real classics; I got a lot of my best reading material from my brother's school (he went to a public school, I went to a private one). He read Lord of the Flies in class (probably 11th grade), I read his copy of it later that year. Along with Catcher in the Rye. Which I failed to mention (though I certainly should have included it) because I don't own a copy.

SSGG, yes, I certainly am a fan of SF. There are a lot more SF authors that I also follow regularly but who just weren't engaging enough to make the "short list." Charles Sheffield, Robert Forward, Dave Duncan, Lawrence Watt-Evans, Jack Chalker, Greg Bear, David Brin, Harry Harrison, etc. I also read a whole lot of Asimov and Heinlein when I was younger, but again I didn't include them because they're not in my library. (I got them from the public library before I started my own collection.)

Although, now that I'm thinking of it, there is one more author I can't believe I forgot to mention: Patricia McKillip. Her best-known series is The Riddle-Master of Hed, which is certainly a classic trilogy, but all of her work is somehow simultaneously dense and ethereal, like having your brain wrapped in a magical fog through which phantasms and wonders loom and roam. She writes mostly straight fantasy. It's absolutely brilliant; for most of a book, you are completely immersed in what's going on without understanding more than about a quarter of it. Finally, though, everything falls beautifully into place as the key underlying elements are revealed.

Cacto, those are great additions to the list. Read them both, loved them both.
on Sep 23, 2004
The Once and Future King by T.H. White. Very interesting take on the legend of Arthur.


That one looks good. I'll keep an eye out for it.

I recommend "We Were The Mulvaneys" by Joyce Carol Oates (if you ever had a concept of a "normal family" this one's a good read), "A River Out of Eden" by John Hockenberry, and "Complications: A Surgeon's Notes on an Imperfect Science" by Atul Gawande. I made my students read that last one. It was an eye-opener for most of them, but some were still (pardon my bluntness) dumb enough to not get it.

Bonus novella: "A River Runs Through It" by Norman Maclean. Best book ever. The movie is almost as good, but the words are beautiful in the book. It's poetry disguised as prose. I love it. I really, really love it.

-A.
on Sep 23, 2004
BlueDev, if I'm not mistaken, that series has concluded. It's just a trilogy and that last part is out in paperback, even.


Nope. There is a fourth book due to come out. The rumored title is "Shadow of the Giant" - hinting at Bean's genetics. I have Ender's Shadow, Shadow of the Hegemon, and Shadow Puppets in hardback and am quite positive that there needs to be a fourth. Shadow Puppets just left too much hanging.

Oh, and I frequent OSC's website where there was a lot of talk about "Shadow of the Giant" a while back.
on Sep 23, 2004
TW, my brother and I snuck over to the house of a friend who had cable when we were in high school to watch A Clockwork Orange on HBO. Very good, powerful movie/book that presents some great dilemmas.
And can you tell me a little bit about the books you mentioned?


I read the book first and then looked for the movie . . . I'm surprised I actually found it. At the time, the message of the book had a very profound effect on me . . . I have almost forgotten what it was about entirely with the passage of time. Sad, huh? I actually watched the movie with my mom, and I remember thinking once we were already watching it that it was a bad idea.

The Cobra Event is a bioterror thriller. I think it's my favorite book ever. Richard Preston typically writes non-fiction about diseases and bioterror, and those are also good. It was just a really great book.

Gravity is also a disease book . . . I am quite interested in that type of thing and have read many a book about Ebola and about bioterrorism.

Jinn is about a lot of stuff . . . I enjoy reading gory thrillers like Jinn, and it is an excellent and fast-paced read.

I read brainless stuff. You would never have guessed that about me, huh?
on Sep 24, 2004
I'll probably recommend those to my woman, TW, but I'm not much into that sort of thing myself. (She loves Patricia Cornwell, Mary Higgins Clark, and Sue Grafton in particular.)

That's great to know, BlueDev! I guess I'll be out looking for that soon too.
on Sep 24, 2004
Good list citahellion.  I've read most of those books, although I  haven't had the chance to read Ender's Game which I have heard so many good things about.  Have you read Underworld by Don Delillo? it's a great book with incredibly vivid imagery.  I agree with you on Ray Bradbury, I've only read Fahrenheit 451 but it was a great book.  I think you should list Chuck Palahniuk on your list he is another great contemporary writer.
on Sep 24, 2004
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey


Lord of the Flies by William Golding.


A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess


Watership Down by Richard Adams


The Ender's Game series (and just about anything else) by Orson Scott Card.


SiddharthaI and Demian by Hermann Hesse


Terry Pratchett or P.G. Wodehouse,



citahellion, these are all on my 'already read' list, except for the orson scott card (i've only read a few of his but i loved them), and some wodehouse, pratchett, and one hesse . i'll add the rest to my 'to be read' list. great stuff !


mig XX

on Sep 25, 2004
Dig into some John Irving. My favorite of his is A Prayer for Owen Meany, but almost anything he's written is good.

If you're into A Clockwork Orange, you might try some Chuck Pahalunik. You may remember Fight Club, made from one of his books. Warning though, not for the weak of stomach. I particularly recomend Survivor

Bonus novella: "A River Runs Through It" by Norman Maclean.

damned fine author, read the whole collection by the same name, not just the one story though.

And the Ender books have several....well, not sequels, call them "side" books as well, covering things from Bean's "and others" viewpoints.
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