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Great book suggestions? — Brooklynian

Great book suggestions?

I am trying to revive my somewhat dying Book Club. I think it would be helpful for our next book to be really great (we've read some awful books). Can anyone suggest a book they have read recently that they were blown away by? Thanks so much!

Comments

  • The Road
    Into the Wild (non-fiction)
    James Salter's Last Night (short stories)
    Maile Meloy's Half in Love (s.stories)
    Absurdistan
    Ken Kalfus' Thirst (s.stories)
  • I just had to pick for my book group, so I feel your pain. The tricky thing is finding a book that's not only enjoyable, but good discussion fodder. A couple of our winners:

    At Swim, Two Boys - Jamie O'Neil
    The Blind Assassin - Margaret Atwood
    Founding Brothers - Joseph Ellis (nonfiction)
    The Good Earth - Pearl S. Buck
    Atonement - Ian McEwan (I'm hesitant to rec this, as I personally hated it. But the other group members liked it - one even called it the best book he'd read in decades. And it did lead to a lively discussion. YMMV.)
  • The Road. Absolutely. Fantastic book.
  • I'd second Into the Wild and also offer up the following

    The Tricky Part (Martin Moran)
    The Girl In the Tangerine Scarf (Mohja Kahf)
    Our Schools (non-fiction)
    A Long Way Gone (Ishmael Beah)
    State of Fear (Michael Crichton)
  • MOD NOTE: This is a great thread for the Lounge, so I'm moving it over there.
    The neighborhood boards are for nabe stuff. . .
    :D
  • Thanks for moving it to the appropriate place. I wasn't sure when I posted it actually. And thanks for all the book suggestions. Keep 'em coming. When I slow down at work, I will make my own suggestions for other people.
  • Subject: enjoyable books

    jeffrey archer is a great author
    and all his books are great
    e.g.
    A Matter Of Honor
    First among equals
    A prodigal daughter
    Kane and Abel
    etc etc
    his short stories are good as well
  • Blindness - Jose Saramago...but I'm guessing many have read it
  • "Istanbul : Memories and the City" and "My Name is Red" by Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk - among the most beautifully written books I have ever read.
  • Subject: comparative read

    Read McCarthy's The Road up against PestHouse by Jim Crace
  • Goodbye Lemon
    You Shall Know Our Velocity
    The Ha-Ha
    God Jr.

    all great reads.
  • Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

    This is a novel about the Biafran War. Very good book with plenty for discussion fodder. (And doesn't have those annoying book club questions in the back! A real book, yay!)
  • best books i've read lately (not all new):

    a river runs through it by norman maclean (WOW. i'd seen the movie and everything, but WOW. love and helplessness and fishing.)

    on beauty by zadie smith

    the bottom of the harbor by joseph mitchell (re'pub'd as part of "up in the old hotel" -- essays about nyc from the 40s and 50s. the notion that the real nyc is vanishing is apparently not new.)
  • My tops:

    Hopscotch by Julio Cortizar

    Blindness by Jose Saramago

    Out by Natsuo Kirino

    Liars in Love by Richard Yates (Maybe out of print, dunno) or Revolutionary Road (soon to be a movie)

    Rats - I forget the author

    Native Speaker by Chang Rae-Lee
  • The Road
    Lipstick Jihad
  • Subject: Re: Great book suggestions?

    mixergirl wrote: I am trying to revive my somewhat dying Book Club. I think it would be helpful for our next book to be really great (we've read some awful books). Can anyone suggest a book they have read recently that they were blown away by? Thanks so much!
    Hasn't been mentioned yet, but have you looked at www.goodreads.com? Get a few friends to join with you and see if other people that you know are already on...
  • oh, and if you're a foodie, i also recommend
    Heat (Bill Buford)
    The Devil in the Kitchen (Marco Pierre White)
  • I liked thirteen by richard morgan a lot. but it's pretty hardcore sci fi.

    re-read the spy who came in from the cold by le carre - still awesome.
  • Yay, hardcore scifi!!

    Interface by Neal Stephenson is a good one. Entertaining and it's pretty topical, what with an election coming up.

    Then one of my all-time favorites is The Wandering Jew by Stefan Haym.
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