Hilldodger
Guru
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Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks is well inside my top ten.
Perfect Virgo said:I’ve started then abandoned a lot of novels in the past decade. Weak vocabulary and writing style often spoil a good premise and I can’t stick with it. I am as much drawn in by style and technique as storyline. There have been only a handful of authors whom I couldn’t put down. Mostly the books on this list are highly authentic fictional studies in human nature and character:
1998 Wally Lamb – I Know This Much is True
a truly astonishing insight into mental illness and how it affected the sane half of twins. Lamb completes one novel every 6 or 7 years and his exhausting effort shows. His dialogue is natural and convincing.
1998 Douglas Coupland – Girlfriend in a Coma
2002 Sue Monk Kidd – The Secret Life of Bees
2002 Alice Seebold – The Lovely Bones
2003 Siri Hustvedt – What I Loved
2004 Iain M Banks – The Algebraist
2005 Jackson Tippett-McCrae – The Bark of the Dogwood
An incredibly complex work of art set in Georgia and NYC. Reminiscent of Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil but infinitely superior. This is a story within a story about a man at last able to research and confront his childhood. It is a long novel but not a single word is redundant. Various layers are intricately interlaced and even the characters and place names are clever but unobtrusive anagrams. It reaches a devastating climax which could have been agonising to read if it weren’t so exquisitely phrased. Utterly recommended.
2008 Stephen King – Duma Key
I find McCrae and Lamb are modern masters of the English language who write effortlessly.
Yes indeed. Also his earlier "She's Come Undone." It must be rare for a man to write so convincingly about a woman, especially in a first person narrative.goo_mason said:I'll need to look over the bookshelves when I get home to remind myself of what I've read since 1999, but Wally Lamb's "I Know This Much Is True" was certainly one of them and one I'd put on my list. His latest work, based around the Columbine killings, was another great read.
Yellow Fang said:I'm scratching my head a bit here to remember what I've read in the last ten years![]()
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The Long Firm, Jake Arnott. I loved the different perspectives on the same man, especially the Open University lecturer.
He Kills Coppers, Jake Arnott. I thought this was really good too. I especially liked the journalist, occasional serial killer character.
Hilldodger said:Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks is well inside my top ten.
Andy in Sig said:This thread is filled mainly by works of two kinds of authors:
a. Those of whom I have never heard.
b. Those whose names crop up on the review pages but I've never come across anybody who's actually read their books. Until I read this thread that is.
I am clearly grossly inadequate in literary terms. .
Unkraut said:FM - it won't be that long before 'books' like The Blue Balloon, Thomas the Tank Engine and Little Miss Cyclist etc. etc. will be added to your list - to be read over and over and over again until either they fall asleep, or you do.![]()
rich p said:I have an unproven theory that his wife wrote it as every other book of his has been sheer tripe IMHO.
Stig-OT-Dump said:The Kite Runner and / or A Thousand Splendid Suns- Khaled Hosseini
The Shipping News, by E Annie Proulx misses out by some 5 years. The fantastic Ashley Book of Knots, referred to in the shipping news, misses out by many more years but has got to be up there with some of the best books ever published, it really is a work of beauty.