OT - Best Book You Have Read?
So, I love to read and between news, sports, and of course mgoblog, I read whatever book strikes my fancy. But I'm stuck and don't have a book "on deck" like I usually do. So what are the best books you have read? Suggestions? I mostly read fiction, but a well written non-fiction or biography can keep my attention.
off the top of my head you should read On the Yard by Malcom Braly, or something by Maslowska
That's a pretty good list. I have read about half of those and will definitely look into the others.
Fountainhead, yes. Hell yes.
Atlas Shrugged, no. Takes a significant chunk of time to digest, and in the end I felt unsatisfied with it. Like you have to convert to her idealistic philosophy to get it, and if you don't then it's your fault. Bah!
I don't know if you have ever heard her speak, but most of what she says comes across that way. What I know about Atlas Shrugged is that some of the most powerful people in the world cite this as the book that started their lives and that it is, but some sources, considered the second most influential book of all time, behind the Bible. Now, I haven't read the book because of its daunting size (combine that with a slow reader and you get problems), but I have to think that there is at least some validity to what she wrote.
Atlas Shrugged is the book that helps you rationalize being a selfish asshole when you're 17. Sure, it has some valid points, but it's pretty strawman heavy. So read it, but read it with a discerning mind.
"Who is John Galt?"
but, yes, I'd have to agree. The book is/was essentially a vehicle for her philosophy objectivism, and one of its prime underlying themes is that there are more important people in society than others. These 'prime movers' (yes, no accident that there's a Rush song of same name-- Hold Your Fire?) operate on a different level than the rest of us, and should play by different rules and not have to feel apologetic or a sense of debt to the rest of society.
Now, is there some ring of truth to all that? Sure. But can you see why the book is a favorite of so many of those self-righteous celebrities and silver-spoon-fed trust fund babies out there? It's easy to see why Angelina Jolie wanted the lead role so badly in the rumored film adaptation, and why so many others in Hollywood claim the book as gospel. To them, it's an elitist license to keep one's nose high in the air (and not what Rand intended in the first place).
Epic literature, perhaps. But I just don't buy what the esteemed Ms. Rand was selling.
True, I most definitely could have worded that better, but in full disclosure that was more of a cut on my adolescent psyche than anything else. When I first read that, around the age of 17 (I was applying to college at the time I remember), I did not think through all the implications of the propositions put forth in that book. I barely scratched the surface of the "You deserve to profit from your hard work" ethos put forward and only years later was I able to think back upon it with a a more critical mind.
One of the best essays I've ever read was a little foreward by Stephen King to his Dark Tower series. It's about being 19 (but is as appicable to 17) and feeling like the world can go fuck itself if it thinks it can fuck with you.
prime underlying themes is that there are more important people in society than others
If you choose to view the book in an entirely negative light, yes. A broader view of her beliefs, IMO, is that the very well intentioned and understandable desire to help those less fortunate, taken to extremes, will only end up shackling the best and brightest and ultimately hinders progress for all.
She very much criticized conservatives in this country as well as the left, FYI.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oTf6NK0wsiA
Video was taken in 1961 but everything she says applies to current politics, IMO.
My favorite quote on the topic:
"There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old's life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs."
Good list, some other ones I've really liked:
Atlas Shrugged, my favorite
The Cold War by Lewis Gaddis
Historty of Western Philosophy by Bertrand Russell
Brave New World
Farenheit 451
Beginnings by Asimov
Sophie's World
Demian
The Stranger
Chronicle of an announced death my Garica Marquez
Anything by Mario Vargas Llosa
Guns, Germs & Steel by Diamond
Cash Nexus or Ascent of Money by Niall Ferguson
Currently reading the Rise and Decline fo Nations by Olson.
Btw, thanks everyone, I just ordered 5 books that I gathered from recommendations in this post... many thanks
Which 5?
The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory
American Gods: A Novel
Candide (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
We (Modern Library Classics)
The Brothers Karamazov
I have to second Ender's Game. This was the first book I read (forced) in high school that made me realise why people read books for pleasure. I continue reading constantly thanks to this gem. Only book I've ever read more than once. Currently i'm reading the Dark Tower series by Stephen King. It's good but really out there.
Ender's Game is IMO the best sci fi book ever written. For history I would recommend Primo Levi's Survival in Auschwitz (I took a seminar with Professor Ralph Williams on Primo Levi that was unbelievable), We were Soldiers Once...And Young, or Band of Brothers. For sports books I have to agree with Friday Night Lights (I read that one in a class called The Sociology of Sport). As for fiction, I would love to say Don Quixote, which was great, but I would have to say the Harry Potter books are pretty fun.
and the side series about Bean is also very good. However, gotta say that, IMO, the Dune series trumps Endor's Game for best sci-fi series. It's thick reading but any fan of sci-fi will love this series. A lot of newer sci-fi steals elements of Dune, especially Star Wars.
but I'm one of those folks who fail to see the greatness of it. I enjoy it, it's a read I would recommend to others, but I can't put it into the 'Pantheon' of great reads. It's sterile to me, lacking depth necessary for the grounds of Card's work, namely saving mankind. That's simply my preference, what I would like to see in a writing of such scope, which is worth roughly 2 cents.
Love it. Had to read Ender's Game for a pop culture class in college and ended up buying the whole set of Ender's Game/Shadow series and re-read it once a year.
The Game by Neil Strauss is my favorite book. I don't read that many books but i read this one twice.
As a huge baseball geek this is the standard answer... But it's just fascinating to try and peer into a man's mind like Billy Beane...
I just don't understand how a man can run a baseball team and never watch any of their games. Even if he is trying to take an objective look at a subjective game...
And also, he's pretty much abandoned the moneyball approach and is way into soccer now, but it's still a great read.
James Joyce's Ulysses. It really is the best
James Joyce was the centerpiece of a drunken rant the night I met my girlfriend at a bar in Evanston. I bitched near endlessly about the nonsense on the first page of "A Portrait of an Artist as a Young Man."
When you wet the bed, first it is warm then it gets cold. His mother put on the oilsheet. That had the queer smell.
I may remember that line until I die.
raise your hand if you were an English major at UM and specialized in UK lit
ugh.
Anything Bret Easton Ellis is great way to spend a few nights. I would suggest American Psycho.
Moneyball is excellent, but for me it's Friday Night Lights. The original book is outstanding.
Definitely. I read that book about 4 months ago over two long plane flights and loved it. It's a great, fast read for sure.
Ayn Rand
The World According to Garp
The World According to Garp is definitely one of my favorites. A Prayer for Owen Meany (also by John Irving) is amazing, too. Also... 1984, Dune, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, Middlesex, Something Wicked This Way Comes, and The Catcher in the Rye.
What about The Hotel New Hampshire, another John Irving classic, although not nearly as good as Garp was, still a very entertaining read.
The Hotel New Hampshire is an awesome book. I've read a lot of John Irving's stuff and love it all. I just picked up Last Night In Twisted River but haven't started it yet.
Also, I've posted on here before about Cormac McCarthy, but he's another favorite of mine. Blood Meridian, No Country for Old Men, All the Pretty Horses....I'd recommend any of them.
If you like fiction and well written non-fiction, you may like One Second After by William Forstchen. It is about the impacts and aftereffects of an EMP strike over the United States. I couldn't put it down. While unlikely, it is still a possibility, and Forstchen does a great job telling the story.
Also, anything by Jon Krakauer, great adventure writer, as he wrote Into the Wild and Into Thin Air.
I will check out One Second After. I've read both of Jon Krakauer's books that you mentions and liked them. I would recommend A Walk In the Woods by Bill Bryson if you liked the Krakauer books. It's not as adventurous, but it's a story of a man's journey of hiking the Appalachian Trail. It has a bit of humor in it as well. Good, easy read.
I loved a Walk in the Woods as well.
Another Krakauer-like book is Crazy for the Storm by Norman Ollestad. It's about a kid (12 or 13 I think) who survives a plane crash and has to work his way down a mountain. A lot of the book is spent explaining how his adventures with his father have prepared him for the moment.
I'm an airplane nerd, but a good biography is Boyd by Robert Coram. It's about the Air Force's top fighter pilot in the late 50's who wrote the book on air-to-air tactics, then reinvented himself as an engineer and made major contributions to the F-15 and F-16 programs. After he retired, he got really into war strategy and his ideas led to the war plan for the Gulf War. He was a really colorful character and it's a great read.
If you're looking for fiction, my favorite writers are Christopher Moore and Nick Hornby. Moore writes pure comedy. I think I loved Fluke and Lamb the most. Fever Pitch is probably my favorite Hornby, followed by High Fidelity.
Michigan coach Lloyd Carr got his inspiration for (1997) season by reading the best selling book, "Into Thin Air," a non-fiction account of one expedition's tragic attempts to conquer Mt. Everest.
Loved both Krakauers you listed. Shadow Divers is another great adventure non-fiction title that will get your heart pumping. The Lost City of Z is a recent favorite.
History- With The Old Breed- E.B. Sledge. Provided much of the Pacific battle source material in Ken Burns 'The War,' shocking what those guys went through. The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt- Edmund Morris.
Sports- Playing For Keeps: Michael Jordan and the World He Made- David Halberstam. A Jordan bio that digs deep (& I mean deep) into the basketball world of the Jordan-Magic-Bird era. Instant Replay- Jerry Kramer- like being in Lombardi's locker room.
Fiction- Catcher in the Rye, The Martian Chronicles, The Dark Tower series, Crime & Punishment, Lord of the Rings, The Three Musketeers, Old Goriot, Watership Down.
When I was much younger one of my favorite books was "I Want To Go Home". I forget the author, but it was about a kid who got sent to summer camp and spent most of the time trying to escape.
A Tale of Two Cities, if we're allowed to go a little further back.
I hate that book. Maybe it's because I had to write a 30 page paper comparing Revolutionary France and the allegories towards the social injustice of his time. Then with all the sowing and reaping and sowing and reaping...
I'm bitter.
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, but like in most times, the Jug was in Ann Arbor.
I've become addicted to Patrick Obrien's novels about Jack Aubrey and Stephen Maturin. There's a bunch of them. They were the source for the movie Master and Commander, with Russell Crowe a few years back. The first one is called Post Captain, and they go from there. Amazing reads. Very fun and entertaining. Can't put em down.
YES!
Actually, OP, I'd go with this guy's recommendation. Since you seem to like history and want some fiction. An excellent, excellent series.
I disagree with the O'Brien recommendation. I've read a few, but I found them to require far too much technical sailing knowledge to be palatable. I've sailed before, but I don't know enough about a sailing a square-rigged ship to understand alot of what's going on. For my money, the Horatio Hornblower novels by C.S. Forester are a better execution of the same concept. Admittedly, Hornblower isn't quite as complex a character as Aubry, but there is enough to make the plot and characterization good while avoiding some of the jargon that seems to plague O'Brien.
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide by Douglas Adams
Shogun by James Clavell
It's Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life