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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsWhat is your favorite genre of books? I like historical books and mystery books. And you?
Permanut
(8,056 posts)Oregon native here, got hooked on Ann Rule's "Small Sacrifices".
debm55
(56,690 posts)livetohike
(24,034 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)applegrove
(130,636 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)livetohike
(24,034 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)SheltieLover
(77,370 posts)I read 2-3 per day. Self-confirmed book slut.
debm55
(56,690 posts)👍
Srkdqltr
(9,444 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)Polly Hennessey
(8,610 posts)Love mysteries and history. I am reading Best in Snow by David Rosenfelt. I believe SheltieLover turned me on to this writer. Andy Carpenter is a smart aleck defense attorney who also has a Golden Retriever named Tara. My history book this week is Dan Jones book on Henry V. 📚📘📖
debm55
(56,690 posts)Dear_Prudence
(1,061 posts)I was sad when I finished them all. But I am blessed with a poor memory for plots. So, in a few years, I can visit Andy Carpenter again and I'll have no recollection of who-dunnit.
debm55
(56,690 posts)MIButterfly
(2,214 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)ProfessorGAC
(75,958 posts)WW2, Robber Baron era, and a bunch of music biographies. (I read Glynn John's bio late last year.)
Permanut
(8,056 posts)My parents generation. My wife's father was on a supply ship in the Pacific that was hit by a kamikaze plane. Damaged but not sunk: if they had been successful my wife wouldn't exist.
ProfessorGAC
(75,958 posts)My dad's cousin Frank was one of the Band Of Brothers!.
He was a 10 or so years older than my dad, so old enough for WW2.
He was a paratrooper on the 101st and was portrayed by James Madio in the miniseries on HBo.
He went to the HS where I now occasionally substitute teach.
His brother Jack lived in the city too, and his kid became an MLB player. So, Frank became famous & so did his nephew.
I read a few books in the series & my dad was hooked on the miniseries because of the family connection.
pansypoo53219
(22,931 posts)now its videos or buy his books.
Permanut
(8,056 posts)pansypoo53219
(22,931 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)Aristus
(71,778 posts)I do like historical mysteries, though. My two favorite series, the Marcus Didius Falco Mysteries, and the Gordianus the Finder Mysteries, are set in Ancient Rome. The Principate for Falco, and the Roman Republic for Gordianus. I recommend them both highly.
debm55
(56,690 posts)no_hypocrisy
(54,438 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)MustLoveBeagles
(14,951 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)LogDog75
(1,128 posts)I like mysteries. Police, lawyer, or other non-police character mysteries. Series like Jack Reacher by Lee Child, the Prey series centering on Lucas Davenport by John Sanford.
I like classic scifi like The Foundation Series or Job, a Comedy of Errors.
Good, modern scifi novels by Ben Bova, Gregory Benford, and Andy Weir.
Classics like Les Miserables, and Great Expectations.
Not much of a mystery romance fan but I do like the Rockton novels by Kelley Armstrong and the Eve Duncan and kendra Michaels series by Iris Johansen.
debm55
(56,690 posts)electric_blue68
(26,146 posts)Non-fiction: a rare biography quite way back, definitely some straight Science books.
A rarer non SF novel.
One Historical Science Fiction by Connie Willis - ?Duology Blackout/All Clear
I read the 2nd.
A bunch of future time traveling historians travel back to London/England (not sure if they go to Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland) during WW2.
Interesting!
One critic said it wasn't rough enough.
I liked it.
debm55
(56,690 posts)MiHale
(12,688 posts)Not the fluffy Star Wars or Star Trek crap real hard, speculative novels. Time is an interesting subject Im drawn to.
debm55
(56,690 posts)MiHale
(12,688 posts)6 down so far, running a little behind.
debm55
(56,690 posts)justaprogressive
(6,361 posts)have you read "Agent of Chaos"? (Spinrad)
or Supermind & The Weapon Shops of Isher (by AE van VOGT)
MiHale
(12,688 posts)Of course Ive done all the classics, the total Dune series, Foundation along with all the Robot series, most of Iain Banks sci-fi stuff. Lighter reading would include John Varley books
he has a ton.
Lately checking out newer authors, Emily St. John Mandel being one
responsible for Station Eleven, The Glass Hotel and Sea of Tranquility. Blake Crouch
Recursion, Dark Matter, Upgrade, Pines. Daniel Wilson
Robopocalypse and Robogenesis, Hole in the Sky. Adrian Tchaikovsky
is an author that Ive read but need to discover more Alien Clay is my only one so far, started Shards of Earth. Nicholas Binge
Professor Everywhere, Ascension, Dissolution.
Walleye
(43,925 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)Jilly_in_VA
(13,887 posts)Historical fiction, but ONLY if well- researched and well-written.
Speculative fiction, ditto
Alternative history (reading one right now(
Some fantasy, but not romantasy--I kind of like riffs on Peter Pan, for instance.
debm55
(56,690 posts)walkingman
(10,409 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)lark
(25,923 posts)Ritabert
(2,046 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)justaprogressive
(6,361 posts)Science & technology-based.
debm55
(56,690 posts)lark
(25,923 posts)I will read almost anything, but faves are (more or less in order)
Sci-Fi /Fantasy
Spy
Historical novel
Action adventure
Mystery
Comedy
debm55
(56,690 posts)malthaussen
(18,446 posts)Some people manage to combine all three, but it's tough.
Historical fiction is also a toughie. Some authors do their homework and present really good period fiction. Others obviously know nothing about the period they're writing about. Since I am an historian, this is more significant to me than to others who are just looking for a good time.
Sometimes the same thing can be said about sci-fi. The various Star Trek series were entertainment, but the only thing that made them "sci-fi" was that they were set in a speculative future; their science was abominable. Non-existent, really. This is true of most "sci-fi" for the big and little screen.
-- Mal
debm55
(56,690 posts)called Outlander. Loved them. It is a mixture of time travel to Scotland in the past and America. Wonderful series.
Maninacan
(220 posts)Why things break
The perfectionist's.
I also like older language and writing
debm55
(56,690 posts)perfessor
(360 posts)My Life and Games by Milkhail Tal would be my favorite.
Yes, I am a geek.
I also enjoy mysteries and historical.
debm55
(56,690 posts)Dear_Prudence
(1,061 posts)I like cozy mysteries (Mercy Carr and her malinois Elvis mystery in A Borrowing of Bones; Hamish MacBeth mystery in Death of an Outsider), Regency romances (Mary Balogh's Survivors' Club series is good), and ancient epics (wading thru The Mahabharata now).
debm55
(56,690 posts)NNadir
(37,375 posts)My electronic library is dominated by chemistry with heavy attention to the chemistry of used nuclear fuels and subsidiary environmental chemistry, as well as molecular biology and its analytical chemistry, the latter concerned with my job.
At night, while trying to wind down for sleep, I largely read history, generally American and European history, as well as biography.
I recently had occasion to rearrange my personal library in order to have a new furnace installed, and I realized that I have a huge number of history books I have not found time to read.
I generally don't read books cover to cover although I recently did so for a book on the arrest and trial and conviction, followed by imprisonment of the former President of Vichy France, Marshall Petain. Arrest and trial of a former head of State now strikes me as uplifting.
I read at least four or five hours a day.
Right now my current bedtime book is a massive book on the history of the British Empire and the violence on which it depended. It's pretty sobering.
If I retired I could spend every day of my remaining life reading and not have to visit a library again. The problem is that I do visit libraries, far too often.
I have so little time left on this planet and there is still so much I want to know. I regret my wild years and the time lost in them that might have been better invested in study.
debm55
(56,690 posts)pansypoo53219
(22,931 posts)was AWESOME. great ww1 book. i got some studs terkel books. his the "good" war is MILES better than that brokaw shit. i found a book listing all the environmental books. ALL OF THEM. a few old ones i got for the future. and i need to get to my collected volumes of casanova's memoirs. i like diaries. civil war. i got 4 free 1904 encyclopedia 'sat a sale + f so good needed a whole set. found a 1891 set. up to g. fiction is meh.
debm55
(56,690 posts)CTyankee
(67,850 posts)debm55
(56,690 posts)Dorothy V
(465 posts)variations on the same plot with the same characters. Otherwise, everything from biographies to space opera is found in my library and my to-read list. My favorite author is Mark Twain, and my favorite century to read about is the amazing 1800s!