I think Charles Ellertson did this first....http://benchrest.com/showthread.php?84685-Favorite-Books ..... and I enjoyed that interchange so an homage,
any readers here?
As in "read for entertainment" readers?
I've some favorite authors....... some involved with shooting but many others too. SF is a favorite venue of mine, and a good fantasy is a treat.
Generally speaking I've found that any book or author honored by New York Times, Pulitzer, NPR, USA Today, Newberry, or any Hugo post 1980 to be absolute garbage.....any "Editors Pick" will be virtue signaling dreck.
For an example, all you vets who don't agree with me should try a (preferably free!) 'Tree Of Smoke' by Denis Johnson ........... "the first hand, gritty, true-to-life, unbelievably realistic account of the Vietnam experience" which won innumerable prizes, with reviews like "it's as if God himself wrote this"...... to find an indescribably inaccurate fantasy written by a man (ambulatory penis) who's quite obviously never walked off hardsurface in his tiny bleak life.
But that aside, I read.... and I get my new authors by asking other readers so in that light here are some of mine in no particular order;
Shooting/Africana-Peter Hathaway Capstick, Robert Ruark, Corbett, John Henry Patterson, Elmer Keith, Julian S Hatcher, Teddy Roosevelt
Adventure/mystery-Dick Marcinko, Stephen Hunter, Brian Garfield, David Morrell, Dean Koontz
SF&F-Tolkien, Terry Pratchett, Larry Niven (and co-conspirators), Louis L'Amour. David Brin. Iain Banks, Vernor and Joan Vinge, Frederick Pohl, Robert A Heinlein, Stephen R Donaldson, Orson Scott Card, Peter F Hamilton, Alan Dean Foster, CS Lewis
Some notable titles;
Legacy of Heorot (Niven/Pournelle/Barnes)
The Deed Of Paksenarrion (Elizabeth Moon)
Pondoro, Last of the Ivory Hunters (Taylor)
The Last Voyage of the Karluk (Bartlett)
The DaVinci Code (Dan Brown)
Hell I Was Their (Keith)
Megalodon (Robin Brown),,,,,(only the original by Brown... all the followups and series are awful!)
Old Man's War (John Scalzi)
Years ago Francis Becigneul sent me a copy of 'Mermelstein's Guide to Metallic Cartridge Evolution' which offers a fascinating insight into cartridge development from a decidedly Jewish perspective. For all you SF readers it's like 'Asimov on Cartridges'
https://www.amazon.com/Mermelsteins...ix=mermelstein+cartridges+book,aps,329&sr=8-1
I fired back with Brian Garfield's 'Wild Times' which he said "even his wife enjoyed" .... Fun stuff.
https://www.amazon.com/Wild-Times-B...swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1662149938&sr=8-1
I find books to be a window into another's soul, a journey with someone outside oneself and hence useful and enlightening.
any readers here?
As in "read for entertainment" readers?
I've some favorite authors....... some involved with shooting but many others too. SF is a favorite venue of mine, and a good fantasy is a treat.
Generally speaking I've found that any book or author honored by New York Times, Pulitzer, NPR, USA Today, Newberry, or any Hugo post 1980 to be absolute garbage.....any "Editors Pick" will be virtue signaling dreck.
For an example, all you vets who don't agree with me should try a (preferably free!) 'Tree Of Smoke' by Denis Johnson ........... "the first hand, gritty, true-to-life, unbelievably realistic account of the Vietnam experience" which won innumerable prizes, with reviews like "it's as if God himself wrote this"...... to find an indescribably inaccurate fantasy written by a man (ambulatory penis) who's quite obviously never walked off hardsurface in his tiny bleak life.
But that aside, I read.... and I get my new authors by asking other readers so in that light here are some of mine in no particular order;
Shooting/Africana-Peter Hathaway Capstick, Robert Ruark, Corbett, John Henry Patterson, Elmer Keith, Julian S Hatcher, Teddy Roosevelt
Adventure/mystery-Dick Marcinko, Stephen Hunter, Brian Garfield, David Morrell, Dean Koontz
SF&F-Tolkien, Terry Pratchett, Larry Niven (and co-conspirators), Louis L'Amour. David Brin. Iain Banks, Vernor and Joan Vinge, Frederick Pohl, Robert A Heinlein, Stephen R Donaldson, Orson Scott Card, Peter F Hamilton, Alan Dean Foster, CS Lewis
Some notable titles;
Legacy of Heorot (Niven/Pournelle/Barnes)
The Deed Of Paksenarrion (Elizabeth Moon)
Pondoro, Last of the Ivory Hunters (Taylor)
The Last Voyage of the Karluk (Bartlett)
The DaVinci Code (Dan Brown)
Hell I Was Their (Keith)
Megalodon (Robin Brown),,,,,(only the original by Brown... all the followups and series are awful!)
Old Man's War (John Scalzi)
Years ago Francis Becigneul sent me a copy of 'Mermelstein's Guide to Metallic Cartridge Evolution' which offers a fascinating insight into cartridge development from a decidedly Jewish perspective. For all you SF readers it's like 'Asimov on Cartridges'
https://www.amazon.com/Mermelsteins...ix=mermelstein+cartridges+book,aps,329&sr=8-1
I fired back with Brian Garfield's 'Wild Times' which he said "even his wife enjoyed" .... Fun stuff.
https://www.amazon.com/Wild-Times-B...swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1662149938&sr=8-1
I find books to be a window into another's soul, a journey with someone outside oneself and hence useful and enlightening.