what are your favorite books

Discussion in 'Non Surf Related' started by metard, Apr 28, 2014.

  1. metard

    metard Well-Known Member

    Mar 11, 2014
  2. TropicStormTrash

    TropicStormTrash Member

    24
    Mar 26, 2014
    The Blood Meridian. Anything and everything by Cormac McCarthy
     

  3. cepriano

    cepriano Well-Known Member

    Apr 20, 2012
    there is only 1 book and 1 book only and that's the greatest word the word of gawd hallyjuewa amen
     
  4. babybabygrand

    babybabygrand Well-Known Member

    652
    Nov 1, 2012
    and it comes in 7 parts...Harry muthafurkin to the max Potter! only thing sadly missing is surfing...
     
  5. Slashdog

    Slashdog Well-Known Member

    May 22, 2012
    'The Seldom Seen Christmas Special,' William Paddington
     
  6. MY SAVIOR

    MY SAVIOR Well-Known Member

    259
    Feb 21, 2014
    'The BIBLE' GODS WORD
     
  7. Slashdog

    Slashdog Well-Known Member

    May 22, 2012
    It's agreed, we're all into fiction.
     
  8. BassMon

    BassMon Well-Known Member

    436
    May 8, 2013
    I like to read allot. Surf wise all 3 of Alan C. Weisbecker are good. Non-surf related on the road by Jack kerouac, or anything by him. Rules of attraction by Bret Easton Ellis. The electric kool aid acid test by Tom Wolfe. And a father's story Brett Jeffery Dahmers father.
     
  9. DosXX

    DosXX Well-Known Member

    Mar 2, 2013
    We had a similar thread last year. That's cool, mine are:
    John Steinbeck: Cannery Row
    Ernest Hemingway: The Old Man and the Sea
    James Michener: Chesapeake, Hawaii
    Louis L'Amour: Paperback westerns. Good, light reading at night before hitting the rack.
    Books on religions, art history, California history, various nature guides, and
    children's books written in German (I still struggle with those).
     
  10. DosXX

    DosXX Well-Known Member

    Mar 2, 2013
    Entertaining as all get-out, but the saga was left uncompleted. Or I just missed it.
     
  11. yankee

    yankee Well-Known Member

    Sep 26, 2008
    You gotta list something if you start the thread, homey.
     
  12. metard

    metard Well-Known Member

    Mar 11, 2014
    just like the first poster......blood meridian by cormac mccarthy

    the long road home, martha raddatz

    glass castles, jennette walls

    the things they carried, tim o'brien

    they fought for each other, kelly kennedy
     
  13. World B Free

    World B Free Well-Known Member

    502
    Feb 7, 2013
    .
     
    Last edited: Jan 10, 2022
  14. Agabinet

    Agabinet Well-Known Member

    309
    May 3, 2012
    To be totally serious . . . With all the great books I read in school and after . . . Tapping The Source by Kem Nunn is my desert island book, no sh*t. I know it's a surf book, but damn does he nail the growing up experience, the awesomeness of learning to surf, the cool of a key to Hollister ranch (ok, he calls it Trax ranch in the book). I love that book. I agree with Blood Meridian and Cormac McCarthy too . . . And Waiting For The End of The World by Madison Smartt Bell.
     
  15. Agabinet

    Agabinet Well-Known Member

    309
    May 3, 2012
    And +1 for The Things They Carried. Tim O'Brien!
     
  16. worsey

    worsey Well-Known Member

    Oct 13, 2013
    'COSMOS' and 'TALES FROM FORGOTTEN ANCESTORS' By CARL SAGAN.
     
  17. njsurfer42

    njsurfer42 Well-Known Member

    Nov 9, 2009
    i am a book nerd...before moving in w/ my now-wife, my apartment had stacks of books all over the place. i've down-sized my library some since then, but this the bare bones; if i had to cut it down to one box of books, these are it:

    bruce chatwin- the songlines (my "must have" travel book...my copy has more miles on it than my jeep does)

    allan weisbecker's first 2 books, "cosmic banditos" (his best work, IMO) & "in search of captain zero"

    douglas adams' "hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy" series...really, though, you can stick to the first 3 books.

    robert a. heinlein- stranger in a strange land

    jimmy buffett- "where is joe merchant?" & "tales from margaritaville"

    "big wednesday" by dennis aaberg & john milius

    willard bascom- "waves & beaches"

    joseph heller- "catch-22"

    larry niven & pohl anderson- "lucifer's hammer"

    ernest hemingway- "the old man & the sea"

    j.d. salinger- "the catcher in the rye" & "9 stories"

    rachel carson- "the edge of the sea"

    the norton complete works of william shakespeare

    carl hiaasen- "tourist season"

    christopher moore- "fluke"

    dan duane- "caught inside"
     
    Last edited: Apr 29, 2014
  18. seldom seen

    seldom seen Well-Known Member

    Aug 21, 2012
    I love a good book thread, I'll play. Some stuff I haven't mentioned in previous book threads, non-surf related and mostly non-fiction.

    My fave Ed Abbey: Desert Solitaire, Beyond The Wall, Down The River

    Jeremy Narby- The Cosmic Serpent and Terence Mckenna's Food of The Gods; both deal with plant psychedelics and pre-industrial cultures/issues in modern human culture.

    I really enjoyed the Hagakure and The Book of Five Rings when I was training, still do.

    William Cronon- Changes In The Land-fantastic interdisciplinary work(history/ecology/anthopology) on the differences in worldview and subsistence strategies b/t the colonists and native tribes of southern New England, and how each impacted local ecology...VERY specific, like, down to changes in tree/plant species.

    Paul Stamets-Mycelium Running...will completely change how you view the Kingdom of Fungi.

    This book on Yellowstone wolf pack behavior which I can't recall the title of right now.
     
  19. ChavezyChavez

    ChavezyChavez Well-Known Member

    Jun 20, 2011
    Weisbecker's stuff although his last book was all over the place.
    Never read Blood Meridian but The Road got to me.
    Riding on the Edge: A Motorcycle Outlaw's Tale: I was part of that life years back. A good read for those that want to know what the 1% outlaw life was like before they became nothing more than criminal organizations.
    Anything by Shelby Foote. His narratives on the Civil War are long but very colorful.
    Kem Nun's stuff is good.
    Dan Duane
     
  20. aka pumpmaster

    aka pumpmaster Well-Known Member

    Apr 30, 2008
    Atlas Shrugged and Anthem

    Reading the Game of Thrones books right now. Pretty good stuff.