Your top 3 book rec...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] Your top 3 book recommendations ever?

109 Posts
76 Users
0 Reactions
615 Views
Posts: 8318
Full Member
 

okay skimmed the thread and it’s clear that 98% of the books read by blokes are written by blokes.

The three I picked are all written by men and I picked them for the impact they had on me at the time of reading them. If you asked me to just go and get all the books of my shelves that I've really enjoyed then it might well be 50:50 for male and female authors.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 4:00 pm
Posts: 9136
Full Member
 

I like the occassional Jodie Piccoult - Small Great Things changed the way I think on race.

James Clavel – Shogun

I read all of Clavell’s stuff when I was a teenager. Early last year I saw Shogun in a 2nd hand bookshop for 99p and sat down to re-read it, for the first time in 35 years probably. God, it was terrible. Proper supermarket best-seller, trashy, shallow, brainless rubbish with cardboard characters, Robin Hood action sequences and far too many pages. Shame – I remember his books with affection.

Oh man - I just came here to say how much I loved that book. 🙁


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 4:06 pm
Posts: 8247
Free Member
 

Oh man – I just came here to say how much I loved that book.

Try and re-read it. I'd be more than happy to be told I'm wrong, but genuinely saddened that I hated it last year!


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 4:14 pm
 hugo
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I am pilgrim is just absolutely terrible.

Wait until you read the sequel.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 4:29 pm
Posts: 20561
Free Member
 

okay skimmed the thread and it’s clear that 98% of the books read by blokes are written by blokes.

And? Go on Mumsnet and ask the same question there. Do you think you would be surprised at the results?


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 4:37 pm
Posts: 9136
Full Member
 

Try and re-read it. I’d be more than happy to be told I’m wrong, but genuinely saddened that I hated it last year!

I, err.... I bought a new copy last year as I'd read my original one to tatters and, err... Still loved it. 🙂


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 5:52 pm
Posts: 5787
Full Member
 

I am pilgrim is just absolutely terrible.

Yes!
Love the mention of the Forever War by Joe Haldeman.

For me, Only Forward by Michael Marshall Smith
Probably something China Mieville - The City and the City, or the Scar
Possibly the complete Flashman (which I bought as one book on my Kindle)


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 6:16 pm
 Spin
Posts: 7655
Free Member
 

I don't think it would go in my top 3 but right now I'm very much enjoying 'Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes'.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 6:20 pm
Posts: 4166
Free Member
 

okay skimmed the thread and it’s clear that 98% of the books read by blokes are written by blokes.

And? Go on Mumsnet and ask the same question there. Do you think you would be surprised at the results?

Just an observation. On our shelves you've a 9/10 chance of guessing who bought what based just on gender of author.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 8:08 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not sure I have three books that stand out but one does and it simply the best thing I've read.

'Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Journey' by Alfred Lansing.

An outstanding survival story that still amazes me every time I read it.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 8:29 pm
Posts: 1185
Free Member
 

On a similar theme I recommend The Worst Journey in the World by Apsley Cherry-Garrard.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 8:34 pm
Posts: 3642
Free Member
 

okay skimmed the thread and it’s clear that 98% of the books read by blokes are written by blokes. Bar George Elliot

You missed The Reality Bubble by Ziya Tong


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 8:42 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

For a desert island I'll need a bit of epic escapeness, so...

Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry, reread recently and still fantastic.

American Tabloid by James Ellroy, just started Black Dahlia yesterday and will read the LA 4 and AT too. American Tabloid best of the bunch though.

The Druss books by David Gemmell. Can read these again and again, classics.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 10:22 pm
Posts: 495
Full Member
 

Dune - Frank Herbert
Learning to Breathe - Andy Cave
Let my people go surfing - Yvon Chouinard


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 10:38 pm
Posts: 33325
Full Member
 

It’s just not possible to pin down three books, three hundred, perhaps?
And, while most of mine are by men, a fairly significant number of my favourite books are by women, I’m currently re-reading ‘The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August’, by Claire North. I’ll work my way through all her books in order, as I haven’t read them for a while, then I’ll go back and read ‘A Madness of Angels’, by Kate Griffin, and work through the six books in that series, then I might go further back and re-read all the YA books by Catherine Webb, the actual name of Kate Griffin and Claire North. I haven’t counted them up, but she written about twenty books or so.
If I had to choose three, then possibly three of Robert Macfarlaine’s books.


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 11:33 pm
Posts: 2256
Free Member
 

Just skimmed this thread and I've got this to add, just backing up what has went before.

Read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance twenty five years ago and it still has me focused on quality rather than quantity. Very pertinent in today's society.

Endurance by Alfred Lansing is certainly about greatest adventure/leadership story I've read.

Third book......no idea.....well actually many ideas, just can't decide. Just wish I could read more than the 10 minutes I manage most days, I tend to fall asleep!


 
Posted : 16/02/2021 11:47 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Hey! My top two choices were written by women.


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 5:14 am
Posts: 2473
Free Member
 

The Feast of the Goat by Mario Vargas Llosa.
Germinal by Emile Zola and Bonfire of the Vanities by Tom Wolfe.The book is brilliant and the film is gash!


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 5:19 am
Posts: 2256
Free Member
 

I'm specifically thinking of desert island books here, books that I would be happy reading over and over. That means I'm not just thinking about good plot, character, dialogue, etc, but the sort of writing where each line can be a treat by itself. I'm also going to cheat by taking two 'complete works ...'

1: Complete Jane Austen: "The person, be it gentleman or lady, who has not pleasure in a good novel, must be intolerably stupid."

2: Complete Jeeves and Wooster: “It has never been hard to tell the difference between a Scotsman with a grievance and a ray of sunshine.”

3: Moby Dick: "As for me, I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas, and land on barbarous coasts."

edit: I've just noticed that Moby Dick features strongly in the 'worst books ever' thread. Oh well.


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 11:37 am
 Nick
Posts: 607
Full Member
 

100 Years of Solitude - Gabriel García Márquez
Slaughterhouse 5 - Kurt Vonnegut
Papillon - Henri Charrière


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 11:38 am
Posts: 2256
Free Member
 

100 Years of Solitude is a great choice. I might seem over to your island to swap.


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 11:42 am
Posts: 8247
Free Member
 

Probably something China Mieville – The City and the City,

I read that around Xmas. It was awful. 150 pages in, halfway, I realised that apart from finding the body nothing had happened. Then things happen for a hundred pages or so. Then I realised that the main character hadn't actually found a singe clue to what was happening, and was just guessing. Then he spends the last twenty pages explaining what's happened. (Any book where characters tell each other what's happening is rubbish!)

One review I read of it (after I read it) suggested that it had been heavily edited, taking out some key passages, which may explain why a lot of the dialogue makes no sense at all. I'd re-read a passage wondering what I missed before finding that I hadn't missed anything, it just didn't make sense. Terrible book but loved by a lot of people it seems.


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 12:33 pm
Posts: 2862
Full Member
 

On Extended Wings - Diane Ackerman. Excellent recounting of her efforts to learn to fly and gain her pilots license. She had such a difficult time of it, it sort of inspires you into keeping going when things are a bit shit. She makes the technical and potentially boring details of flight beautiful and relatable.

Neuromancer - William Gibson. Woukd have the time on the island to properly read it and understand what it's all about!


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 2:31 pm
 Rona
Posts: 378
Full Member
 

but the sort of writing where each line can be a treat by itself.

Love this, and I do find this with both Austen and Wodehouse. Almost tempted to try Moby Dick ... even having read the other thread.

I've been pondering my top books since this thread began - still no closer to an answer!

If it truly was for a desert island, then it would have to be something philosophical to keep my spirits up, something practical to minimise the risks of starving or being eaten by some monstrous creature, and something comforting - Five on a Treasure Island from the distant past would seem suitable. 🙂


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 3:00 pm
Posts: 8318
Full Member
 

Slaughterhouse 5 – Kurt Vonnegut

I haven't read that in over 30 years, so it goes


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 3:04 pm
Posts: 4166
Free Member
 

Right then. On a quick spin of the thread I've read a conservative 63 of the top threes, and that's not counting the honorable mentions or complete works (I've read some Jeeves, three or four Jane Austen etc, but not all) or ones I probably have but can't remember (Lem? Read all the scifi in headingley library when i was a kid, inappropriate as much of it was - ballard - surprised he's not come up. Being forgotten maybe? Which will include Lem but I can't name books), and it's not counting the ones I've started but not finished (Moby Dick come on down. Amazed Ulysses hasn't been mentioned, also not finished - and I've finished 2666 by Roberto Bolano...). Or indeed bought but not actually opened (Sapiens). So there. Not that I'm competitive or anything: 63 full ticks...


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 3:36 pm
 StuE
Posts: 1672
Free Member
 

Picking only 3 is a hard one but these are mine
Endurance by Alfred Lansing- extraordinary story of bravery and resilience
Wuthering heights by Emily Bronte
The Plague by Albert Camus


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 3:49 pm
 StuE
Posts: 1672
Free Member
 

Think Stig of the Dump should probably have been on there


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 3:51 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I've just finished Neuromancer. Total head**** but a beautifully created world.


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 4:12 pm
Posts: 6203
Full Member
 

okay skimmed the thread and it’s clear that 98% of the books read by blokes are written by blokes.

It's a fair cop and something I noticed with my own reading and have been trying (a bit) to rectify. So that gives me an excuse to post a top three by women authors. Starting with Beloved. A book I bought because I thought I ought to read it then really enjoyed (if that's the right word). Then Shipping News (of course) and finally that Eleanor Oliphant thing that I picked up in Tesco on a whim and found to be much darker and much more powerful than I expected.


 
Posted : 17/02/2021 6:57 pm
Page 2 / 2

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!