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Top 5 Authors You Would Read Regardless
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Catamorandi
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Mar 22, 2009 02:16PM

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Michael Palmer
Michael Connelly
Sidney Sheldon
Tess Gerritsen
Those are really the only ones that I have read almost all of their books.... my guilty pleasures with James Patterson being the ONLY one I have read everything he has written.

Salman Rushdie
Junot Diaz
Haruki Murakami
Joseph Heller
Kurt Vonnegut
F Scott Fitzgerald
Thomas Pynchon
And I really wish I could read more by John Kennedy Toole. If only..."
Megha, did you read The Neon Bible by Toole? I wasn't a fan of A Confederacy of Dunces myself, but have been curious to know what people thought of his other book.

Manday, Invitation to a Beheading was my first Nabokov as well....and I really liked it. Very strange and twisted.
I hit the Nabokov jackpot at a library sale earlier this year, and am currently reading Despair.
I hit the Nabokov jackpot at a library sale earlier this year, and am currently reading Despair.

How is despair?
Im only 35 pages in right now. Its written as though he is speaking to me, the reader, and can get a little dry... but I have high hopes.
Ive also read Laughter in the Dark (bonus for being a Lost Lit novel too!), and Pale Fire. So far none have matched the quality and intrigue of ItaB.
Ive also read Laughter in the Dark (bonus for being a Lost Lit novel too!), and Pale Fire. So far none have matched the quality and intrigue of ItaB.


Here are mine:
Margaret Atwood
Haruki Murakami
Anita Shreve
Edith Wharton
Shakespeare
I'm sure there are others I can't think of right now, but that's 5 so...I'm done.

1. Thrity Umrigar - The Space Between Us (a fav)
2. Anita Shreve - I've read all her books (Testimony is most recent)
3. Chris Bohjalian - I've read all his books too
4. Jodi Picoult - read all her books: new one - Handle With Care is terrific
5. Wally Lamb - love his books but they are few and far between

James Lee Burke
Jan Karon
Anne Rivers Siddons
Sue Grafton
Nevada Barr
Dorothea Benton Frank
Oops, more than five. What a surprise....

2. Meg Cabot (Ditto)
3. Laurie Graham (Funny while set in times of war, etc so I get a sense of a differet lifetime while still being able to read humorous characters)
4. Elisabeth Young (Funny, funny, funny)
5. Stephen King (Maybe because hes also from Maine and maybe because he is also a great writer... and horror is not really my thing but I still love him)

1.Cathy Marie Hake
2. Deeanne Gist
3. Janette Oke
4. Jane Austen
5. Paula Deen-lol

Did you see her halloween costume? She was a stick of butter!

2. Ernest Hemingway
3. Ray Bradbury
4. Fyodor Dostoevsky
5. J.K. Rowling (I agree with everyone else though, no Harry Potter rip-offs, just her stuff please! And yes, I do read her "supplement" books like Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. Love it!)

I sooo couldn't cut mine down!
In order of when I discovered them:
1.Anne McCaffrey - she was my first fantasy addiction, and I can't discount her now, even though I hardly read her now, I still aim to own all of her Pern series in hardback. :)
2.Elizabeth Peters - her newer stuff less so, but I still buy it.
3.Fannie Flagg
4.Amy Tan
5.Robin McKinley - Sunshine!!
6.Jane Austen
7.J.K. Rowling
8.Terry Pratchett
9.Jasper Fforde
10.Sophie Kinsella
11.Diana Wynne Jones
12.Tamora Pierce
Oh! and Shakespeare he would come second in the line up. Charles Dickens should probably also be up there, but he's a budding favorite, I've only read three of his books so far.

1. Philip Gulley. He can be found in the religion section although he doesn't preach in his books. He's a Quaker minister who writes about a Quaker minister and his congregation(?). Gulley cracks me up - there are some real characters in his books!
2. Brendan O'Carroll - he wrote The Mammy series - it's a riot.
3. Elinor Lipman - I wish she would write more. I've enjoyed everything she's written. The first book of hers that I read was The Inn at Lake Devine. I don't usually re-read books but that's one that I will re-read.
4. Marian Keyes.
5. Jane Austen.
And women authors are the majority on my list :)

1. Gabriel Garcia Marquez
2. V.S. Naipul
3. Dr. Irv Yalom
4. Elizabeth Marshall Thomas
5. Paul Scott
6. Damon Runyan
I was always good at English and could never do maths. Shows, doesn't it :-D

2. Philip Pullman: His stories are just amazing. He's a very talented author.
3. Diana Wynne Jones: I haven't been a fan of her for to long and have only read about 3 books from her, but what I have read I love. I just like how she writes, her stories are so good.
4. Walter Dean Myers: His books are very good and I love the characters in his books.
And I really can't think of a 5th one right now, but if I do I'll add it.

1. Harry Turtledove - for his alternate histories usually involving the US, Crosstime Traffic, American Empire, etc
2. Eric Flint - same thing, the Ring of Fire series
3. S.M. Stirling - the Novels of the Change series
4. Tom Clancy - mostly for the novels involving Jack Ryan
5. William Shatner and his vision of Captain Kirk in the Star Trek universe, they're interesting

2. Agatha Christie
3. Richard Montanari
4. Simon Kernick
5. Kate Morton
And I'll probably pick up JK Rowling's next offering, and then decide based on that.

1. Harry Turtledove - for his alternate histories usually involving the US, Crosstime Traffic, American Empire, etc
2. Eric Flint - same thing, the Ring of Fire series
3. S.M. Stirling -..."
I think I'll have to look up Shatner's. I'm a huge trekkie and am interested to see how he would write Kirk! Do you have a reccommendation on where to start?

2. Amy Tan
3. David Ebershoff
4. Sinclair Lewis
5. Wilkie Collins
Is it weird to have classic authors on there? Every time I run across a new-to-me book/story by either of them, I check it out immediately!

2. Albert Camus-- He's a literary genius.
3. John Green-- Because he's John Green.
4. Sarah Dessen-- Writes absolutely amazing chicklit-ish young adult fiction.
5. Maureen Johnson-- I love how all of her novels never actually have a "proper" ending.

Jack Kerouac
Jack London
Henry Miller
George Orwell
William Burroughs

Anne Rivers Siddons-I love her description of Outer Banks area.
Pat Conroy-I will read anything by him
Alexander Dumas-He is an all time favorite of mine
and last but not least I have discovered Hermann Hess. Where have I been all these years.
My daughter got me hooked on Hess.

John Steinbeck - His descriptions of life in the Salinas Valley are great!
Jim Butcher - Yay for Harry Dresden, and the Codex Alera.
Louisa May Alcott - her stories always make me feel good.
Agatha Christie - The Grande Dame of mystery. Her books were some of my faves growing up.

1) Terry Pratchett: My all time favorite writer!
2) Diane Duane: Even though her books are "for kids" their insight on the world and how it works in exciting and comforting. Plus she doesn't shy away from serious topics. She is one of those people that doesn't underestimate the mind of a child.
3) Diane Wynn Jones: I love almost all fantasy books, but the one author who consistently comes out with good and interesting fantasy book is this women right here.
4) Suzanne Collins: After the Underland Chronicles (which was my first books I have read of hers and devored on the bus ride home) and the hunger games (which I devoured under the covers on a school night) I would read ANY of her books.
5) Sarah Dessen: There is just something amazing about picking up one of her books. It just makes you feel good about the world. That no matter how crappy life is that sarah Dessen will always be there to cheer you up.
Wendy Mass: Her stories aren't fantasy or romances like what I dabble in, but they are slice of life. It's all about kids trying to find themselves in this crazy world, and it is amazing.
Laurie R King: I've read all of her Mary Russle books and I fell in love. Mixing both sherlock Holmes and a headstrong girl is what I have been dreaming of since I was a child.

2~Richard Russo
3~Ian McEwan (and that's based on 1 book!)
4~Cormac McCarthy
5~Nathaniel Philbrick (non-fic)
5b~John Steinbeck
"
I like Anne Tyler also. I have not read anything lately of hers though.

Don DeLillo
Kurt Vonnegut
Lidia Yuknavitch
Kazuo Ishiguro
Elizabeth Kostova
Maureen Johnson
Patricia Briggs
Holly Black
Melissa Marr
Justine Larbalestier
Scott Westerfeld
Rachel Vincent
Terri Windling
Ellen Datlow
Maggie Stiefvater
John Green
Mur Lafferty
I'm sure there's more, but that's all I can think of, off the top of my head.

1. Barbara Kingsolver
2. Diana Gabaldon
4. Jane Kirkpatrick
5. Danielle Steel (I know, I'm shameless)
I have others, but can't say I would add them to the list because I might have only read one or two books by the author.

2. James Rollins (just discovered last year and devoured all of his books)
3. Maria V Snyder (loved the Study Series, not as found of the glass-maker series)
4. Rachel Caine
5. JK Rowling
6. Nora Roberts
7. Karen Kingsbury
There are others, but I am blanking right now.

Haven't found another author to latch onto completely but Neil Gaiman is climbing the charts! Haven't been disappointed at all.
Lisa See /used/ to be but after reading Shanghai Girls, I need to re-think her.

2. J.K. Rowling
3. Neil Gaiman
4. David Sedaris
5. um, that's it, I guess.
Does anyone know if Khaled Hosseini (The Kite Runner, A Thousand Splendid Sunds) is going to be putting out another book anytime soon? Both of his books really touched me in a way that no other books have.

1. J.R.R. Tolkien (if they found an old portfolio with his notes on anything, I'd read it =D)
2. Carlos Ruiz Zafon
3. Steve Berry
4. Jane Austen (same reason as Tolkien)
5. ...can't think of a fifth author *blushes*

Mercedes Lackey - They're formulaic at times, but it's a formula that I enjoy coming back to, especially in her Valdemar books.
Lois McMaster Bujold - Arguably my current favorite author. I love her Vorkosigan books, and her Chalion books were top-notch.
Tanya Huff - So much fun. I always seem to laugh when I'm reading her books.
Carol Berg - I loved Transformation so much that I have to pick up everything she writes, even though I'm a bit behind in reading them.
Robert Jordan - The Wheel of Time may have deteriorated at the end, but I still need to read all of them eventually, and I will read Brandon Sanderson's conclusion to the series.
Patricia Briggs - Love her contemporary fantasy stuff, but also adored the first of her Hurog books, with the second on my to-read list.
Elizabeth Moon - Her Vatta's War series has made me really happy, so I've bought up a bunch of her other books.
L. E. Modesitt Jr. - I obsessed over his Recluce books for a long time, and I still am buying them, despite the formulaic nature of them. Like Mercedes Lackey, it's a formula that I tend to enjoy.
Madeleine L'engle - My childhood goal of reading every book she's written has not changed, even though I'm not pursuing it as actively anymore.
Kristin Cashore - Even though she only has one book out so far, I loved Graceling so much that I burn with the need to read more by this author.
Laurie Halse Anderson - Speak was so amazing that I think I'll keep pursuing this author for a while.
There are probably more, but I can't think of them at the moment. :)

Richard Russo
Miriam Toews
John Irving
Barbara Kingsolver
Tom Robbins
Khaled Hosseini
Ann Patchett
Rohinton Mistry
David Sedaris
Elizabeth Hay
Books mentioned in this topic
The Inn at Lake Devine (other topics)Despair (other topics)
The Neon Bible (other topics)
A Confederacy of Dunces (other topics)
Flowers for Algernon (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Rohinton Mistry (other topics)Ann Patchett (other topics)
David Sedaris (other topics)
Miriam Toews (other topics)
Barbara Kingsolver (other topics)
More...