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Polar Star
Hi Samerron,
I'd say Polar Star is really very good. I've read it a good few times, and I suppose that must make it one of my favourites! It manages to be a spy thriller without having any/many actual spies, and in a fascinating setting. Actually, I am going to have to go and...
Just read The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen. Very effective - creepy and disturbing. The action is all related by the characters - usually to other characters (if you read it you'll see why this is so effective in this case).
Actually, I read some of the Dracula thread this morning, and...
Something Scottish
The Eemis Stane
I' the how-dumb-deid o' the cauld hairst nicht
The warl' like an eemis stane
Wags i' the lift;
An' my eerie memories fa'
Like a yowdendrit
Like a yowdendrift so's I couldna read
The words cut oot i' the stane
Had the fug o' fame
An' history's...
Like most of the folk here, I like Lovecraft for his ideas more than his writing, though there are some genuine chills - I crapped myself when the guy goes down into the ancient tunnels in Australia; I think it's The Shadow Out of Time (or Space, maybe??). Every time I pass through some...
Not exactly spy books, but Gorky Park, Polar Star and Red Square by Martin Cruz Smith are all interesting takes on recent eras from a Russian perspective.
Blind Man's Bluff (sorry, can't remember the authors) is a history of the US nuclear submarine programme - much of their work involved...
Hunger is amazing! Made me want to starve myself... Just kidding. Try Novel With Cocaine by M. Ageyev;
Pan by Hamsun;
for something very weird there's always The Blind Owl by Sadegh Hedayat;
A Voyage To Arcturus by David Lyndsay
The Man In The High Castle by Philip K Dick
Hope this...
Try Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. It has a load on secret operations during WW II; with one of the main characters being a code breaker there is a load on cyphers etc. It's a thrilling read, though the author is a bit of a pain in the bum sometimes. It even tells you how to communicate...
I probably get round to reading Neuromancer about once a year - it's still that good. I've read most of Gibson's stuff, though I think I've missed a couple of the more recent books. Don't think I've read anything by Sterling except 'The Hacker Crackdown' (is that even a title/him at all??)...
Most memorably forgettable - Lord of The rings. Got to half way through Return of the King; could be bothered going on. Thank God for Peter Jackson. To be honest; life is just too short.:eek:
I usually find my mind wandering after a while with one book (My attention span seems to be shortening to that of a gnat). I'm either annoyed with the author or characters, or am stimulated to think about something else. So I then go off to read something else and it all begins again. There...
Cheers!
Hello and thanks for the warm welcome!
Scotland is actually warm and sunny at the moment, but the other day I had to climb into my car through the boot, er, trunk, thanks to a flood of rainwater in the carpark at work - I should have stayed in bed and read!
Hi,
Happy to be surrounded by so many book lovers, and looking forward to a few debates/suggestions. Have strange interests - now reading 'The Imitation of Christ', but have an almost complete collection of David Gemmell; Howard's Conan stories; The Moomin stories, and a load of Scottish...