My favourite author is....
Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

80 months

Sunday 22nd July 2012
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Julian Barnes for sheer virtuosity, Tolkien for breadth of invention, Clive Barker for vividness and boldness of imagery. Jonathan Swift and James Wilmot for bravery, Stephen Donaldson for characterisation, Stephen King for involvement and detail, Lloyd Alexander for truthfulness.

TwigtheWonderkid

48,460 posts

176 months

Monday 23rd July 2012
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Simonium said:
Julian Barnes for sheer virtuosity, Tolkien for breadth of invention, Clive Barker for vividness and boldness of imagery. Jonathan Swift and James Wilmot for bravery, Stephen Donaldson for characterisation, Stephen King for involvement and detail, Lloyd Alexander for truthfulness.
Barbara Cartland failed to make the cut!

anonymous-user

80 months

Monday 23rd July 2012
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bks! Knew I forgotten someone! :-)

SO27

646 posts

237 months

Thursday 26th July 2012
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A current favourite of mine is Jasper Fforde. Well worth a look for the Pratchett fans. The inventiveness of stories is outstanding.

And if you're after a good bit of Pratchett, the assassins' test in Pyramids will make any PHer howl

Xaero

4,063 posts

241 months

Thursday 26th July 2012
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Steven Leather is my favourite author. I've only read a few of his books but they are very easy to read, the pacing is good and they are full of action.

MacW

1,349 posts

202 months

Thursday 26th July 2012
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Peter F Hamilton is among my favourites for sci-fi.

Sir Pterry obviously for humour.

I tried to like Stephen King for my horror fix but after The Stand and It (which were both superb) I thought the rest of his stuff was severely lacking. Currently trying out Brian Lumley for the horror stuff, after a few books I'm getting the feeling that his stories all follow the same path though.

Tango13

9,939 posts

202 months

Sunday 29th July 2012
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rlw said:
Iain Banks
I started to like Iain Banks the day his Grandmother exploded wink

Jw Vw

4,915 posts

189 months

Sunday 29th July 2012
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Ian Rankin.

Riley Blue

23,155 posts

252 months

Monday 30th July 2012
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SO27 said:
A current favourite of mine is Jasper Fforde. Well worth a look for the Pratchett fans. The inventiveness of stories is outstanding.

And if you're after a good bit of Pratchett, the assassins' test in Pyramids will make any PHer howl
Another Jasper Fforde reader here, can't put his books down once started. I've never read Pratchett, perhaps I should.

BenM77

2,835 posts

190 months

Tuesday 31st July 2012
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It would be very hard to choose a favourite so here are a few smile

Robert Ludlum
Wilbur Smith
Harry Harrison
Eric Van Lustbader


I have just started reading again after a few years of not finding the time, reading Robert Ludlum at the moment.

castex

5,142 posts

299 months

Tuesday 31st July 2012
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Aldous Huxley for imagination. Kafka for insight. Steinbeck because nobody has mastered the language like he did. Awesome.

DuncanM

7,357 posts

305 months

Thursday 2nd August 2012
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Tolkien
Patrick O'Brian

Many brilliant authors but these two top my list.

Can't pick between them.

soad

34,447 posts

202 months

Thursday 2nd August 2012
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Xaero said:
Steven Leather is my favourite author. I've only read a few of his books but they are very easy to read, the pacing is good and they are full of action.
yes

AMacA

195 posts

227 months

Friday 3rd August 2012
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soad said:
Xaero said:
Steven Leather is my favourite author. I've only read a few of his books but they are very easy to read, the pacing is good and they are full of action.
yes
Another Leather fan here. Just had the latest Spider Shepherd novel delivered from Amazon during the week, will get it started soon.

If you like Leather's work, try Vince Flynn's "Mitch Rapp" series of books, they're along similar lines, although can be a bit grating at times at just how good the main character is portrayed to be.

coppice

9,625 posts

170 months

Monday 6th August 2012
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Hemingway is at the top of my list; Annie Proulx very well placed too. Martin Amis writes like a god , his autobiographical 'Experience' is startlingly good. Graham Greene , of course and for one off utter brilliance 'The Living Mountain' by Nan Shepherd. Richard Ford- yet another US author is utterly superb- his latest'Canada' rightly got lots of acclaim.Sadly very few motoring books are worth reading - most are little more than picture books or ghost written pap - but David Tremayne's stuff is excellent - especially 'The Lost Generation' re the tragic loss of Brit GP drivers Brise, Williamson and Pryce in the early 70s .

Cars and racing apart my other passion is flyfishing and in this genre (a far richer one than cars sadly )John Gierach is utterly brilliant- funky zen tinged stuff- another Yank ! And two books you should buy(re flyfishing , life and the universe) are 'A Dream of Jewelled Fishes ' and 'The Glorious Uncertainty '. Why? 'Cos I wrote 'em and I need the royalties......

Edited by coppice on Monday 6th August 19:08

g3org3y

22,262 posts

217 months

Wednesday 8th August 2012
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Not a favourite as such but I am partial to the works of Irvine Welsh and Alain de Botton.

Blatter

910 posts

217 months

Thursday 23rd August 2012
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rlw said:
Iain Banks
+ 1 although I pefer his earlier work.

I'm not really a sci-fi fan, but as Iain M Banks he's produced some very readable books

Bhuvsta

234 posts

188 months

Friday 24th August 2012
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Terry Pratchett is ace, I really enjoy Alastiar Maclean books too.

MillenniumFalcon

469 posts

209 months

Friday 24th August 2012
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Simply for the Hitchhikers Guide series, Douglas Adams.

havoc

33,023 posts

261 months

Friday 24th August 2012
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Douglas Adams for the missed deadlines, certainly. Can't decide between him and Sir Pterry for humour - TP's writing overall is better, but DA predated him and really hit the intelligent, social sarcasm nail squarely:-

DNA said:
"They vote for a lizard because they don't want the wrong lizard to get in."
Sci-fi: Greg Bear for hard sci-fi - stunning depth and breadth of imagination and conceptualisation. Read 'Eon' and I defy you not to be blown away! Probably Kim Stanley Robinson too, purely for his Mars trilogy...slightly* left-of-centre idealistic writing, but some of the best characterisation, story-telling, plot development and sheer scope/scale.


Honourable mentions: Elizabeth Bear, Joe Scalzi, Richard Morgan, Jon Courtenay Grimwood.


* OK, fairly, but no more so than Star Trek, and I cannot fault his ideology - liberal, genuinely social left not statist left!