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Do you have a favourite author? Mine is...

91 replies

BumgrapesofWrath · 07/11/2014 17:30

Margaret Atwood.

When I read her books I get whisked away. She has such a great imagination, and such a skill with words. And her books always make me "feel" something. Just got to the end of The Blind Assassin, and I feel like someone has winded me.

So who is your favourite author?

OP posts:
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Squeakyheart · 11/11/2014 18:55

As mentioned by previous posters

Christopher brookmyre, roll on January! Though if I am honest some of his later ones have been a bit of a slog
Mary Stewart

Others
Diana Gabaldon - cross stitch / outlander series. I am so in love with Jamie and a little with lord john too

Dick Francis always a good read, and often really informative

William horwood though haven't read recently as they are long! But amazing characters.

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MiddleAgeMiddleEngland · 11/11/2014 21:11

Squeakyheart I remember years ago reading Horwood's The Stonor Eagles on a wet cold weekend. Curled up in a big armchair and read it in 2 days. I don't know if I'd enjoy it so much now, but at the time I really wallowed.

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Lovelydiscusfish · 12/11/2014 00:58

Yes, William Horwood's Duncton Wood series (about the moles) is wonderful. Quite unsettling books at times, but very absorbing. Loved them in my adolescence, and would love to re-read them now (think I have kept them - hurray!) Was mildly disappointed by the Stonor Eagles, but may be being unfair - may be a more adult novel I was reading as a naive teenager,

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FrostedFlakes · 12/11/2014 10:27

MiddleAgeMiddleEngland I've just started reading V S Naipaul's A House for Mr Biswas

I recommend Zola's L'Assommoir if you haven't read it. His description of Gervaise's pleasure in washing her customers' laundry should be x-rated Blush .And the banquet scenes will leave you reaching for an Alka-Seltzer.

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MiddleAgeMiddleEngland · 12/11/2014 12:34

FrostedFlakes Mr Biswas is really good, as long as you remember it's set in it's time. It's not at all politically correct for nowadays! But a good read, one of my favourites of Naipaul's fiction.

I haven't read L'Assommoir for years, but have it on the shelf. He is quite "earthy" as one of my college lecturers used to say Grin

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Postchildrenpregranny · 12/11/2014 21:16

Love Edith Wharton-read The Squire if you are pregnant

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applecatchers36 · 12/11/2014 21:26

Kate Atkinson for family drama
Sophie Hannah for crime

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GeordieRose · 18/11/2014 13:55

I have so many!

Shakespeare, Dickens, the Brontë sisters, G.R.R. Martin, Tolkien, Richard Dawkins, Thomas Harris, Stephen King...and I've been very fond of the Marquis de Sade since I was about 16 Blush

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DoctorTwo · 18/11/2014 15:03

Like others I love Steinbeck. East Of Eden is just about perfect.

I also love John Connolly, especially the Charlie Parker books.

My favourite book is probably Rant by Chuck Pahlahniuk. It's sort of about time travel and is really hard to describe the plot and do it justice because it's such a strange premise.

I still love reading Douglas Adams.

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aoife24 · 19/11/2014 22:55

A recent favourite of mine is Evie Wylde. Her books are very intense with damaged people but some hint of hope, perhaps. Tim Winton is also a favourite. I also would add Graham Greene and John Le Carre.

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aoife24 · 19/11/2014 23:00

'Wyld'

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SinisterBuggyMonth · 21/11/2014 00:23

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ZingOfSeven · 21/11/2014 00:32

toss up between Steinbeck and Vonnegut

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Wailywailywaily · 24/11/2014 17:16

Yrsa Sigurdardottir

If you like Nordic Noire she is great. I find her writing funny and dark at the same time and normally I haven't managed to guess the endings. Her books take me to Iceland - sometimes its a beautiful place, others quite frightening.

I have to admit, given my username, that I love Pratchet too.

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mistymeanour · 03/12/2014 21:22

FrostedFlakes - L'Assomoir is my "desert island book". I absolutely love it.- funny, sexy and heart breaking. Glad to know there is another fan as most people have not heard of it and rate Germinal and Therese Raquin.

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FrostedFlakes · 05/12/2014 12:54

mistymeanour Smile I'm reading it again at the moment. Just read the passage when the main character falls from the roof, a pivotal scene in the book. I was expecting the description to go on for paragraphs but Zola used only one sentence. Absolute genius.
And in that sentence he compared the sound of the fall to that of a wet bag of laundry - and of course his wife runs a launderette...

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