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#11
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hehe...i ordered some books today based on all these threads...blood meridian and confederacy of dunces...looking forward to them...
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#12
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I think you would really like most Elmore Leonard books
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#13
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[ QUOTE ]
Anything by Dan Brown Anything by John Grisham [/ QUOTE ] These books are extremely popular and mainstream. If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. |
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#14
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] Anything by Dan Brown Anything by John Grisham [/ QUOTE ] These books are extremely popular and mainstream. If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. [/ QUOTE ] There's a tone here that makes me think that you think stuff like Catch-22 and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest is obscure, underground literature. |
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#15
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] [ QUOTE ] Anything by Dan Brown Anything by John Grisham [/ QUOTE ] These books are extremely popular and mainstream. If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. [/ QUOTE ] There's a tone here that makes me think that you think stuff like Catch-22 and One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest is obscure, underground literature. [/ QUOTE ] Okay, I have a few issues with this. 1) I was actually giving honest advice. I think looking through the amazon.com top 100 list would probably be a pretty good idea for this person because his tastes seem to coincide with a lot of other people. If he told me he really liked something weird or obscure I would have given other advice. 2) I don't think Catch 22 and Cuckoo's Nest are obscure or underground or something. They happen to be classics that a lot of people don't enjoy. For example, based on the OP's description of what he likes, I don't think he would enjoy them. The movie The Seven Samurai is neither obscure or underground, but I woudl not recommend it to someone who said "Recommend some movies for me, I really enjoyed Titanic and Old School but I don't enjoy movies that are slow paced". |
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#16
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If you like Brown and Grisham, you will probably love Greg Iles. He is most famous for The Quiet Game, but Dead Sleep and Bloodprints are excellent as well.
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#17
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books I just read:
Dali Lama - Art of Happiness The Master Cleanser |
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#18
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Any hemingway (since you hate long windedness or something)
Catch-22 Catcher in the Rye (since you like confederacy of dunces) Animal Farm (since it's a good book) |
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#19
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[ QUOTE ] 1) I was actually giving honest advice. I think looking through the amazon.com top 100 list would probably be a pretty good idea for this person because his tastes seem to coincide with a lot of other people. If he told me he really liked something weird or obscure I would have given other advice. [/ QUOTE ] I don't doubt that you were giving honest advice, and I actually agree with the advice you're giving (though I'll point out there are plenty of books that make bestseller lists - I'm thinking things like Middlesex, Curious Incident, etc. - that while "mainstream and popular" are nothing like Grisham or Brown) Do you agree or disagree that there is a difference in tone between: [ QUOTE ] These books are extremely popular and mainstream. If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. [/ QUOTE ] and [ QUOTE ] If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. [/ QUOTE ] As mentioned in my original post, the tone is really all I was commenting on. I think I'm more attuned to it thanks to Bruiser's post which was more openly snobby earlier in the thread. |
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#20
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] 1) I was actually giving honest advice. I think looking through the amazon.com top 100 list would probably be a pretty good idea for this person because his tastes seem to coincide with a lot of other people. If he told me he really liked something weird or obscure I would have given other advice. [/ QUOTE ] I don't doubt that you were giving honest advice, and I actually agree with the advice you're giving (though I'll point out there are plenty of books that make bestseller lists - I'm thinking things like Middlesex, Curious Incident, etc. - that while "mainstream and popular" are nothing like Grisham or Brown) Do you agree or disagree that there is a difference in tone between: [ QUOTE ] These books are extremely popular and mainstream. If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. [/ QUOTE ] and [ QUOTE ] If this is what you like you could probably just go over the books on bestseller lists and get plenty of ideas. [/ QUOTE ] As mentioned in my original post, the tone is really all I was commenting on. I think I'm more attuned to it thanks to Bruiser's post which was more openly snobby earlier in the thread. [/ QUOTE ] Yeah I guess the way I wrote it sounds strange, especially if you say it out loud. I will come clean and say I don't really read books like that, so maybe my inner snobbiness was shining through. |
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