Book suggestions
Oct. 30th, 2008 03:06 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It's time for our book group to draw up a new list, and once more I'm turning to you guys for some good ideas. The ones we ended up with last time are listed here, to give an idea of the sorts of things that people go for.
All I've got so far is William Hope Hodgson's The Casebook of Carnacki the Ghost Finder, which I've been meaning to read for ages so this seems a good excuse. I have to suggest five titles, and it'd be good to have a couple of non-fiction and a couple of modern / recent ones.
The criteria, as last time, are:
All I've got so far is William Hope Hodgson's The Casebook of Carnacki the Ghost Finder, which I've been meaning to read for ages so this seems a good excuse. I have to suggest five titles, and it'd be good to have a couple of non-fiction and a couple of modern / recent ones.
The criteria, as last time, are:
- can be new or old;
- can be fiction, non, play, or anything else really;
- should be something I'm likely to find interesting;
- and so are the rest of the group, who are quite a mix of types, ages, etc;
- shouldn't be deep-genre, ie. relying on existing knowledge of genre for enjoyment -- but fringe-genre is fine;
- must be readily available in paperback in the UK;
- not too long, people get antsy over about 400 pages;
- in English (although can be a translation of course);
- probably some other things I haven't thought of.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-30 04:25 pm (UTC)I second the recommendation, but add a caveat: it's pretty harrowing stuff. Depending on your book group's tolerance for harrow, it might not be a good choice (I don't think I'd suggest it for ours, and I wasn't sure of my willingness to finish it when I started it).
no subject
Date: 2008-10-31 09:09 am (UTC)