PaulB said:
Has anyone read Will Self's "The Book of Dave"? I read this about two years ago and haven't spoken to anyone else who's ever had the pleasure since. It's an amazing book from a writer at the top of his form. I won't spoil it for those yet to experience it but again, it is strongly recommended.
I read it about the same time and really enjoyed it, though I found some of the ideas about the future a little too pat ('ello Moto). My favourite Will Self book is still Great Apes, I love the social satire.
For me the thing that makes a book great is if I find it sticks in my head and from then on makes me see something partly through the author's eyes. Will Self is great for this: business meetings for me now always have a slight hint of Dr Busner asserting his authority by climbing to the highest point in the room and throwing sh*t around

and a bit of me firmly believes there is a suburb in London where the dead live. (Self called it Dulston but I always think of it as Dulwich.)
I recently read "A Prayer for Owen Meany" and thought it was fantastic, very warm and human. I like books which happen in the mundane world but have something magical or otherworldly in them. (I don't however like fantasy, unless it's Terry Pratchett)
I picked up "The Historian" knowing nothing about it and was absolutely gripped by it right up to the end, when unfortunately it was a bit rubbish. But the book is still worth reading: it's about a girl who finds a book in her father's papers, and the story of how he had found the book and through it became connected to a series of researchers who had tried and failed to find the grave of Dracula / Vlad the Impaler. The earlier researchers leave notes and research which are found later ones, so you have a multi-layered story that revisits the same places and events at different times with different people.
The other one that I've read recently that stuck with me was The Orphan's Tales. The only way I can describe it is fractal - a storyteller starts a story in which the protagonist meets a storyteller, who starts a story in which the protagonist...so you whirl in and out of stories as they wind around each other. It's kind of annoying at first as all you get are stories starting, but once you start coming back to them it gets much more readable. (Unlike If on a Winter's Night a Traveller..., which is just annoying and in my opinion only exists because someone's theory said it had to).