One of my favorites is One Hundred Tears of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez. I cry like a baby every time! Also enjoy the work of Paulo Coelho, especially The Alchemist.
Would love to hear more recommendations.
Since I am not sure of your tastes, here are a few random ones:Like you, I enjoy military history. I read Shirer's book when I was in high school. I recently bought Dreadnought and Shattered Sword but have yet to read them.
The Count of Monte Cristo, Alexander Dumas (my favourite)
Ender's Game, Orson Scott Card (my previous favourite)
The Catcher in the Rye, J. D. Salinger
To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee
Flowers for Algernon
Pretty much anything by H. G. Welles or Jules Verne
The Gaunts Ghosts series, or anything written by Dan Abnett for the Warhammer 40,000 universe.
The Maltese Falcon, Dashail Hammet. Just as good as the movie.
The Plague Dogs. Only book that made me cry.
If you are more into history/non-fiction:
Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William Shirer, a man who witnessed it first hand.
Shattered Sword-an account of Midway from the Japanese perspective.
A World Lit Only By Fire- Europe struggles out of the Dark Ages.
Dreadnought, Robert K. Massie. The very first arms race was between Great Britain and Germany building their navies.
War Without Mercy- US vs Japan and the racial overtones of the conflict.
As you can see, I am somewhat of a military buff. Originally Posted by Mysterydate023
What type?The ones Marcus listed are all very good. As he asked, genre matters as well (just like regular television).
Ghost in the shell?
Full metal Alchemist?
Bleach?
Ecchi?
There are many genre. Originally Posted by Marcus Aurelius
Anyone ever read Capote's In Cold Blood.I love well written true crime books.
The all american family slaughtered like a bunch of rabid dogs.
I couldn't finish the damn thing, capote is so descriptive and detailed
you start to feel like you are reading about some of your own family.
That, and knowing that they really were real people.
The only book ever that I couldn't finish.
He did too good a job on that one.
Well that one and the phone book, I got bored at about G Originally Posted by bojulay
I love well written true crime books.The contrast of the whole thing was most disturbing to me I guess
The thing that disturbed me most about In Cold Blood, was how well Capote got access to the murderer's mind. He did an amazing job of ingratiating himself with the murderer. Which, of course, is what a good journalist does. But there was a component of it in terms of using the murderer for his story --- appearing sympathetic to coax the murderer to tell him more --- that bothers me.
But very well written.
I've always found the story that Fatal Vision was based upon to be utterly compelling.
Jeffrey MacDonald - a true American psychopath still trying to get free
Here's a lengthy article about the case. I consider Brian Murtagh a personal hero after reading it. Originally Posted by proudoftexas
I would recommendThose two are really good!!
A child called "it"
The Lost boy
These are my all time favorites!!! Originally Posted by rotciescorts