Opened this thread with the intention of mentioning Orwell, for real, 1984 is a top notch read and the fact it still wields relevance today makes for an even more intriguing read.wub wrote:Thinking about it, I don't believe I've ever read an Orwell book. Seen the films, never read the books. Feel like a bit of a heathen for that.
Great Writers
Forum rules
Please read and follow this sub-forum's specific rules listed HERE, as well as our sitewide rules listed HERE.
Link to the Secret Ninja Sessions community ustream channel - info in this thread
Please read and follow this sub-forum's specific rules listed HERE, as well as our sitewide rules listed HERE.
Link to the Secret Ninja Sessions community ustream channel - info in this thread
Re: Great Writers
skimpi wrote:yeah you fuckin handle!!tacospheros wrote:you sir are one of those things on a door which you turn in order to open it
-
- Posts: 83
- Joined: Thu May 27, 2010 4:55 pm
Re: Great Writers
Got 'Trainspotting' for Xmas, it was amazing, definitely gonna read some more Irvine Welsh.
Re: Great Writers
volcanogeorge wrote: Surprised nobody has said Jack Kerouac yet, "On the Road" is a book I think everyone should read at least once in their lifetime.

Ik read it while hitchhiking around Europe and sleeping in parks, it was great. Almost finished Dharma Bums which I think is perhaps even better, some passages in there just make me stop everything and sit in a field. (No but in a good way)
This is one of my favourite books ever, not particularly deep but so, so well written:

My name is Dom and I like making ambientish music and drinking tea. Nice to meet you.
Soundcloud
Kid Lazarus - Kochari - Free music
Soundcloud
Kid Lazarus - Kochari - Free music
-
- Posts: 5929
- Joined: Mon Nov 16, 2009 6:40 pm
- Location: In that palace in the sun
Re: Great Writers
I started On The Road and got fed up with it about halfway through. I think its importance outweighs its quality. I will give it another go at some point though. I'm not going dismiss it that quickly.
Capote's remark about Kerouac made me chuckle.
"That's not writing, it's typing"
Capote's remark about Kerouac made me chuckle.
"That's not writing, it's typing"
Last edited by Motorway to Roswell on Thu Jan 05, 2012 5:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"...we now pause to test the soul of the Steppenwolf"
-
- Posts: 5079
- Joined: Tue Mar 10, 2009 5:36 pm
- Location: LEEDS
-
- Posts: 2110
- Joined: Tue Apr 13, 2010 8:58 pm
- Location: Newcastle via Lincoln
Re: Great Writers
Motorway to Roswell wrote:I started On The Road and got fed up with it about halfway through. I think its importance outweighs its quality. I will give it another go at some point though. I'm not going dismiss it that quickly.
Capote's remark about Kerouac made me chuckle.
"That's not writing, it's typing"

Soundcloud
"Gettin' paid like a biker with the best cranks, spray it like a high ranked sniper in the West Bank"
√BEETS
"Gettin' paid like a biker with the best cranks, spray it like a high ranked sniper in the West Bank"
√BEETS
Re: Great Writers
+1 on ishiguro. haven't read all of his work but the ones i've read are absolutely excellent. "a pale view of hills" is haunting. really big fan of tim o'brien, as well.
i just finished "norwegian wood" by murakami and it was good but i wasn't blown away...might check out some more of his stuff later, though. got a lot of reading to catch up on thanks to this thread, haha.
i just finished "norwegian wood" by murakami and it was good but i wasn't blown away...might check out some more of his stuff later, though. got a lot of reading to catch up on thanks to this thread, haha.
Re: Great Writers
I've read Slaughterhouse 5, thought it was good but not necessarily great. Probably needs a re-read though.magma wrote:Somehow I've never got round to reading Slaughterhouse 5... but I *really* enjoyed "Slapstick or Lonesome No More!" the other year. It even changed the way I brush my teeth. Not many novels do that.lloydnoise wrote:Kurt Vonnegut is one of humanity's finest writers imo, Slaughterhouse 5 is a miracle of literature. He melts your mind in the best possible way. I urge all ninjas to check him out.
I should probably include Sherri S Tepper in my list of great writers, although her more recent books haven't been as good. I haven't included my favourite author Stephen Baxter because while I really like his books, I think his writing could be better. Same again with Arther C Clarke (probably almost blasphemous for a SF reader).
Re: Great Writers
probably more to do with the stylevolcanogeorge wrote:Motorway to Roswell wrote:I started On The Road and got fed up with it about halfway through. I think its importance outweighs its quality. I will give it another go at some point though. I'm not going dismiss it that quickly.
Capote's remark about Kerouac made me chuckle.
"That's not writing, it's typing"is this a reference to it being supposedly written in three weeks?
-
- Posts: 5929
- Joined: Mon Nov 16, 2009 6:40 pm
- Location: In that palace in the sun
Re: Great Writers
^noam wrote:probably more to do with the stylevolcanogeorge wrote:Motorway to Roswell wrote:I started On The Road and got fed up with it about halfway through. I think its importance outweighs its quality. I will give it another go at some point though. I'm not going dismiss it that quickly.
Capote's remark about Kerouac made me chuckle.
"That's not writing, it's typing"is this a reference to it being supposedly written in three weeks?
it's just saying he's a poor writer
"...we now pause to test the soul of the Steppenwolf"
Re: Great Writers
i have a japanese film of the same name on DVD is it the same thing??bright maroon wrote:Lafcadio Hearn
basically japanese ghost story
Re: Great Writers
Don't know many Authors (don't read much Fiction) so I'm not sure if this post makes me hugely uncool but, I recommend Steigg Larson's Millenium series, and any Jo Nesbo book.
- Naan_Bread
- Posts: 879
- Joined: Sat May 28, 2011 2:24 pm
Re: Great Writers
See avatar ->
The Fall is probably my favourite book, ever. if you don't know it's Albert Camus
Hemingway obv.
Huxley obv.
Need to read more Vonnegut.
H.G Wells is also great for a bit of escapism; it's like Doctor Who but old and slighlty more intellectual.
Pre-World According to Garp John Irving is also very nice for subtle, intelligent wit. The Water Method Man is very underated IMO - it's basically WATG without everything that made that so shit.
I'm currently reading Empire Of The Sun by J.G Ballard and really enjoying it.
The Fall is probably my favourite book, ever. if you don't know it's Albert Camus
Hemingway obv.
Huxley obv.
Need to read more Vonnegut.
H.G Wells is also great for a bit of escapism; it's like Doctor Who but old and slighlty more intellectual.
Pre-World According to Garp John Irving is also very nice for subtle, intelligent wit. The Water Method Man is very underated IMO - it's basically WATG without everything that made that so shit.
I'm currently reading Empire Of The Sun by J.G Ballard and really enjoying it.
-
- Posts: 5929
- Joined: Mon Nov 16, 2009 6:40 pm
- Location: In that palace in the sun
Re: Great Writers
thought I should probably put a book or two i'd recommend for eachMotorway to Roswell wrote:Burroughs - Naked Lunch, the Nova Trilogy
Vonnegut - Cat's Cradle
Thompson - Fear & loathing in Las Vegas, Hell's Angels
Pynchon - Gravity's Rainbow (seriously, read this)
Hesse - Steppenwolf
Dostoyevsky - Notes from Underground
"...we now pause to test the soul of the Steppenwolf"
Re: Great Writers
TheGambler - Dostoyevsky is the only one of his novels i've managed to finish
cos its so short
its brilliant though
cos its so short
its brilliant though
Re: Great Writers
Sergei Lukyanenko
Re: Great Writers
Some good advice, here. I've just read The Heart is a Lonely Hunter by McCullers and it's amazing. Alasdair Gray is strongly recommended to anyone who likes Vonnegut - kind of similar in tone if a bit heavier. James Kelman just makes most over writing feel like literary masturbation - I'd strongly recommend An Old Pub Near the Angel as an intro.muggle wrote:james kelman, alasdair gray, carson mccullers
And from reading an interview with Kelman I found out about Tillie Olsen who is incredible.
Re: Great Writers
I thought the ideas in the Phillip Pullman trilogy were really good when I read em. It was about 4 or 5 years ago though. One of the best books I've read was called "The Dice Man" by Luke Rhinehart.
Author wise pretty much everyones been named already for me. I dont read all that often! Love Bret Eaton Ellis, Orwell & Thompson!
Author wise pretty much everyones been named already for me. I dont read all that often! Love Bret Eaton Ellis, Orwell & Thompson!
BLOG - http://wearelucid.net/
I'm not a fan of [genre]. It was much better back in [year]. I have fond memories of [year] [genre] when I used to [activity]. Good times."
House/Garage Mix - Joy O, Lakosa, Dusky, Alex Coulton, Dusk & Blackdown
Soundcloud
I'm not a fan of [genre]. It was much better back in [year]. I have fond memories of [year] [genre] when I used to [activity]. Good times."
House/Garage Mix - Joy O, Lakosa, Dusky, Alex Coulton, Dusk & Blackdown
Soundcloud
- meanmrcustard
- Posts: 829
- Joined: Sun Oct 24, 2010 1:45 am
- Location: London, UK
Re: Great Writers
I borrowed 1984 off my ex and never gave it back!magma wrote:I'm the same with Easton Ellis. It's a nightmare being a book fan in 2012, there's too much to read...wub wrote:Thinking about it, I don't believe I've ever read an Orwell book. Seen the films, never read the books. Feel like a bit of a heathen for that.![]()
Orwell's definitely worth it, though. Animal Farm is pretty much short enough to do in an evening or afternoon in the park, too. I lent 1984 to my ex and never got it back.![]()
...are you my ex? :/
I've read everything Orwell's written and love it all, but Down and Out in Paris and London is the one for me.
Another name to throw out I don't think I've seen mentioned is Saul Bellow. Especially The Adventures of Augie March (one of his first) and Ravelstein (his last).
- tuckerlinen
- Posts: 325
- Joined: Sat Mar 19, 2011 11:46 pm
Re: Great Writers
classy ninjas in this thread
a few that haven't been mentioned
DAVID FOSTER WALLACE
Borges
Nietzsche (Thus Spoke Zarathustra is a work of fiction)
a few that haven't been mentioned
DAVID FOSTER WALLACE
Borges
Nietzsche (Thus Spoke Zarathustra is a work of fiction)
))
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests