The walls of our house are lined with books. Together, Bethany and
I probably have something in the neighbourhood of fifteen hundred or so, give
or take. And yet, on any given day, I'll walk by the shelves, including the one
that we use to hold current library books, and complain about not having
anything to read. Sound familiar?
So what I thought I do is ask you, the blessed and brilliant
people who read this blog (see what I did there) for your help. I thought we
could help one another find a few surprises this summer. (nothing better than
being pleasantly surprised by an awesome novel) This is your chance to promote
an authour or novel that you love, or perhaps one more people should know
about. And for my fellow independent writer friends, this is a chance to
shamelessly promote your own work. Do it!
Two Kinds of Novels
Yeah, well, I hate those categories. They're boring and elitist, so I break novels down this way.
You have the one written as a KNOCKOUT punch, the one that will change how you
perceive the world altogether, the one you'll remember where you were when you
read it. You'll never read it again, because it has done its job.
And then
there are your VACATION SPOTS, the novels you visit over and over, the ones
that give you safe place to go when your life starts to go off the rails or
you're just having a bad day. (This can be a series, too, or a particular
author) Some books can cross between the two, The Catcher and The Rye comes to
mind, but that seems to be relegated to children's literature. (Go ahead, prove
me wrong in the comments!)
Here's my request: list three of your favourite Knockout Books,
three of your favourite Vacation Spots, and three Other Favourites. (For my
independent friends, this is where you pump your own material. Don't be shy!)
Obviously, this is not a whole list, I’ve read numerous Knockout Books in my
life, these are just the ones that came to mind.
I'll list mine, and just throw yours in the comments section.
Happy hunting, fellow readers!
My Knockout Books
1. Fall on Your Knees by Ann-Marie MacDonald
2. I Know This Much is True by Wally Lamb
3. The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold
My Vacation Spots
1. Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time Series (I
have gone vacationing there a lot over the years. Especially the first one in
the series.)
2. Robert B. Parker’s detective novels,
including Spencer and Jesse Stone (I have such an affinity for Parker’s series,
that I still go to them quite a bit. Love all his characters.)
3. Mike Lupica’s sports novels (If you
haven’t read these, they’re all quite entertaining. A hilarious look at the
bawdy side of professional sports.)
Other Favourites
1. Second Blood by Stephen Burns (Coming in
September, see shameless self-promotion
2. A Boy in A Leafs Camp by Scott Young
(Written in 1968, a kids sports book that I still love)
3. Ninja by Eric Van Lustbader (Written in
1980, a very cool (and thick) novel about a man, half-Japanese and half-Caucasian,
who trains to be a ninja. Fun.)
Here's where you post your favourites, folks!
ReplyDeleteThis is a test!
ReplyDeleteKnockouts:
ReplyDeleteKite Runner - Khaled Hosseini
Not Wanted on the Voyage - Tim Findlay
A Fine Balance - Rohintan Mistry
Vacation:
Miriam Toews
Wally Lamb
John Irving
Faves:
The Corrections - Johnathon Franzen
Life of Pi - Yann Martel
Under the Banner of Heaven- Jon Krakauer
Knockouts:
ReplyDeleteNever Let Me Go -- Kazuo Ishiguro
A Fine Balance -- Rohintan Mistry
The Slave Girl -- Chinua Achebe
Vacation:
Harry Potter -- JK Rowling
Daphne du Maurier
Jane Austen
Faves:
The Power of One -- Bryce Courtney
Ian McEwan -- anything he writes! :)
A Room with a View -- EM Forster
Ooh. You picked Wally Lamb as a Vacatio Spot, Lisa. A crossover?
ReplyDeleteOops! Umm...The Slave Girl -- Buchi Emecheta
ReplyDeleteKnockouts:
ReplyDeleteWorld war Z by Max Brooks
I am Legend by Richard matheson
Age of miracles by Karen Thompson Walker
(The following two I read when was in highschool. But they stuck with me over the years. I probably would feel a bit different about them now, but am not sure if I want to re-read)
Ahab's wife by Sena Jeter Naslund
Colony of unrequited Dreams by Wayne Johnson
Vacation spots:
All of Ian Rankin
Dave Duncan's A man of his word series (I don't even know if its available anymore. I got my copy from my dads library.)
Thomas covenant chronicles by Stephen R. Donaldson (my dad also introduced me to this series and have since tracked down my own copies since I kept borrowing them.)
The hunger games by Susan Collins
Other faves:
The daughter of smoke and bone trilogy by Laini Taylor
The Maze runner by James Dashner
Brandon Sanderson (who will prob become a vacation spot author)
Blood Red Road by Moira Young
Chaos Walking trilogy by Patrick Ness
Oh, good list! I should have included Brandon Sanderson. I Am Legend was better as a book, I guess. (The movie was 'meh') Have to read that!
ReplyDeleteKnockouts #1: Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
ReplyDelete#2 Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
#3a Generation X Tales for an Accelerated Culture by Douglas Coupland
#4b The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
Vacation Spots
Robert B Parker Spencer series especially Early Autumn, A Catskill Eagle, The Widening Gyre and Sudden Mischief. The new ones continued by Ace Atkins are so good they are much better than the late Spencer written by Parker, especially where he took Zebulon Sixkill
Other Favourites
Gary Shteyngart (super sad true love story)
Haruki Murakami (esp. Windup Bird Chronicles) and
Miranda July (esp Roy Spivey)
Sci fi favourites: Philip K Dick, Ursula LeGuin and Ray Bradbury
-Jason
Knockout -
ReplyDeleteV for Vendetta and Watchmen by Alan Moore. Vendetta is more raw and the movie adaptation was actually good. Watchmen, no way they could have made a good movie from this. Classic. Clinical. Everything is used and has a place.
Preacher by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon (9 novels) never reread (yet) but fucking awesome.
And all three are graphic novels.
Vacation Spots
Timothy Zahn's Thrawn trilogy - read it almost once a year for 17 or 18 years. It's Star Wars but the (big) start of the Star Wars book universe.
Gus Hansen's Every Hand Played (poker, but fun. He recorded every hand in a tournament he eventually won, and then wrote most of the hands into a book)
Overwhelming - I have this habit of reading something, and when it gets really good I'll get overwhelmed and put it down, sometimes for a couple of years. Then tread from the beginning again and finally finish.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (breakup) and the Deathly Hallows (waited a year later before I read it)
Shane Jones - Light Boxes. An impulse buy and a short book. I've started reading it three or four times and every time I put it down.
Suzanne Clarke - Jonathan Strange and Mr. norrill - got to the third book and put it down. Since lent it to a friend and am waiting for it back to finish.
Insurgent by Veronica Roth - have the third book, burned through the first book in three days. Second I got stuck on. It was getting too good.
Cobra Trilogy - Timothy Zahn. Love it. SciFi. On the second trilogy where I've done it again.
The Adamantine Palace by Stephen Deas. Loved it. Stuck on the second book.
Absolute -
The Art of Worldly Wisdom by Baltasar Gracian
A classic. Look it up. This is something I will give my future children. I wish I had it when I was younger.
-Jacob
Knockouts:
ReplyDeleteThe Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, David Mitchell
A Thousand Splendid Suns, Khaled Hosseini
The English Patient, Michael Ondaatje
Vacation Spots:
N/A (I never read a novel twice.)
Other Favourites:
Oryx and Crake, Margaret Atwood
Annabel, Kathleen Winter
The Road, Cormac McCarthy
Michale Ondaatje is such a brilliant writer. David Mitchell? I need to check that out! No vacation spots?! Really? Anyway, great list. :)
ReplyDelete