"The 48 Laws of Power" by Robert Greene. It's like a modern-day Machiavelli. And also "Tricks of the 3D Game Programming Gurus" by Andre Lamothe. I'm most of the way through (~1350 of 1600 pages of advanced 3D rendering) but I've been reading it
forever!
Ashkaro: Alright, thanks for clearing that up. Granted, I've only read two of his short stories, "The Beast in the Cave" and "The Alchemist" so far, but both left me quite confused due to their incredibly obvious ending, in spite of Lovecraft's attempts to keep the identity of both of the two antagonists secret. His heroes just come off as incredibly clueless to the point where it's more embarrassing than anything else really.
Anyway, I think I'll stop reading his stories in the order they appear on my book and move on to his better work before I lose any interest in him whatesoever...
Lovecraft's my favorite author, but even I'd admit the ones you've read are early works before he hit his stride and not very good compared to his later works.
A few Lovecraft stories I'd recommend are :
- The Dunwich Horror
- The Haunter in the Dark
- The Shadow Over Innsmouth
- The Shunned House
nmillar: Having started playing Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning, and loving it, I'm interested in reading some of Salvatore's books - anyone got any recommendations about where to start?
AndrewC: The Dark Elf Trilogy, for sure. Who wouldn't want to meet the famous Drizzt Do'Urden, mentioned throughout the whole Baldur's Gate saga?
But a word of warning, even though he's a good writer, I for one consider him totally overhyped in the geek world.
I always suspected this. I've tried reading his Cleric Quintet but the bar was raised pretty high having read Elric of Melnibone and the Dragonlance series. One of these days I'm going to get back to reading fantasy and give him a try. Though I may just end up reading the Conan stories instead.
I rarely read much fiction anymore. Especially with fantasy it's all the fucking same. Heroes win, bad guys lose. Yawn! At least "Villains By Necessity" turned that on it's ear and proposed what would happen after all the good guys won and the world was primarily good. The bad guys become the anti-heroes and revert the balance.
The best, or at least the most fun to read, fiction I've read over the past decade was the
"Meg: series by Steve Alten.
the_bard: The Club Dumas by Arturo Pérez-Reverte. Very good if you're into books in general as it is a book about books. Polanski's "The Ninth Gate" is based on this.
One of my favorite movies. How does the book elaborate on the movie?
JohnWalrus: Harlan Ellison is a bit quirky himself. I remember this one science fiction award show he attended where he squeezed the presenter's (a highly respected science fiction writer herself) boobs! XD But hell, he gets a pass for I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream, if not for his other amazing works.
Have you looked at her (
Connie Willis)? That's probably the best loving she's received in quite a while...