TheMoog 0 Posted February 12, 2009 Share Posted February 12, 2009 The Necroscope series of books by Brian Lumley - sort of a horror/crime/sci fi thing all rolled in to one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jimbo 175 Posted February 13, 2009 Share Posted February 13, 2009 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo - Stieg Larsson.   Arnold Bennett - a bestselling novelist in his day - was said to have carried a mint-condition £10 note in his wallet wherever he went. If he chanced to see someone reading one of his books in public, he was going to give this lucky individual (it was a considerable sum in the 1900s) the tenner. Needless to say, the money was still in his possession when he died. I'm not certain what this apocryphal anecdote says about the nature of bestsellers, time, literacy and so forth, but what I do know is that, were the Swedish thriller writer Stieg Larsson to return from the grave and wander through modern Britain, he'd need a sack of banknotes on his back in order to honour all his readers. To date, the three books of Larsson's Millennium trilogy have sold three million copies in the UK. Assuming an RPC (readers per copy) of 1.5, it means one in ten of the literate population has read at least one of these books.  Mushy Swede I find this deranging - just as I find the mass consumption of assorted John Grisham legal thrillers, Harry Potter junior wizardry and Twilight teen vampirics equally bizarre. No doubt all books that become bestsellers have intrinsic qualities that make them attractive, but it seems to me that, beyond a certain point when the sales become exponential, other more irrational factors come into play.  In part, bestsellers must partake of the general hysteria of any craze, from the Rubik's Cube to Sudoku and back again. With books, however, the underlying dynamic seems to me much crazier. Books are involving - even the worst of them - and they call upon the reader to project herself imaginatively into other psyches and situations. Books take a long time to read: a Larsson, weighing in at over 500 pages, is a good ten hours plus for the average reader. It's one thing to engage in a craze for something akin to masturbation - repetitive, staple sensuality - and quite another to give your entire conscious mind over to a lot of tedious Swedes cutting each other to pieces.  To be fair, I've only read half of the first Millennium thriller and everyone tells me that they get better. Even so, I was shocked by quite how greyish and pulpy the prose was, with nary an involving metaphor nor even an amusing juxtaposition of two words. Instead, clichéd description is followed by actual cliché, and always there is a devilish amount of detail about clothes, about office routines, about laptops - about Swedish social services ferchrissakes. This could be because of the translation, but I doubt it.  Mind games Even so, snob that I am, as I chomped my way through Larsson's cardboard prose, it began to seem curiously flavoursome. This was probably because of what it lacks. Don't get me wrong: I'm no fan of literary fiction that lays down egregious simile after precious metaphor like speed bumps on a suburban street. "Slow Down," it proclaims, "and Admire My Style!" Bestseller prose has the virtue of being solid paper engineering - not this fancy découpage.  But more importantly, I was aware of a commonality of felt experience. I was a Larsson reader in a way that I could never be a Jamesian or a Conradian; moreover, as the plot ratcheted me forward with the inexorability of a funicular grinding up a Stockholm hillside, it occurred to me that the readability of bestsellers may have an occult origin; by which I mean not some hocus-pocus, but a mysterious attribute of the collective human mind. A decade or so ago, quite serious research was published on the concept of "morphic resonance", which appeared to demonstrate that texts are more easily absorbed if they have been learned by other people; that if 2,000 Japanese schoolchildren memorise "The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock", then 2,000 Hungarian kids will commit this poem to memory with greater facility than, say, Sweeney Agonistes.  Morphic resonance would certainly account for what it feels like to read bestsellers. When I read The Da Vinci Code (worldwide sales in excess of 80 million), it seemed as if my eyes were being dragged forcibly along the lines of text, such was the speed with which my mind sucked in the - admittedly facile - meaning of Dan Brown's prose.  In the last analysis, the truth of the matter - and this is something which Bennett understood only too well - is that nothing succeeds like success. How mad is that?  http://www.newstatesman.com/lifestyle/2010...oks-bestsellers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dr Gloom 22184 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 the girl with a dragon tatoo series is good, especially if you're on holiday with some time to kill by the beach. it's an old fashioned page turner. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JawD 99 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 the girl with a dragon tatoo series is good, especially if you're on holiday with some time to kill by the beach. it's an old fashioned page turner. Â Our lass has read them and thoroughly enjoyed them. We just watched the first film last night as well which was canny. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Walliver 0 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 I read The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand recently, best book I've read in a long, long time. Any one else read anything by her? Not sure where to go next. Â Howard Roark. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 Â Halfway through. Â Very funny stuff. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ayatollah Hermione 14066 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 Â Most excellent. I'm not a big sci-fi man but it's been a great read so far. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sammynb 3517 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 John Connolly's Charlie Parker novels if you're into crime stuff but looking for something with a different edge. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kevin 1 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 Â Almost halfway through, great read. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wavey Davey 0 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NJS 4411 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 Just started reading Christopher Hitchens' autobiography which has been made poignant by his preface where he talks about having to get it done before death (it was written before his diagnosis). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DanTheMan 0 Posted August 2, 2010 Share Posted August 2, 2010 (edited) Christ, I had no idea about his illness until I read that. Always loved his stuff, I have a book of his essays that I usually take with me on my travels, he's such a good writer. What a loss to the world he'd be. He shines out like a beacon of light in his TV work, considering some of the awful punditry you get mover the pond. Edited August 2, 2010 by DanTheMan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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