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Right then, Kiwis: similar idea to the long-running Desert Island Discs radio show. What are the five books (in no particular order) that you'd pick if they were the only ones you'd ever get to read again and why did you pick them?
Treasure Island - R.L Stevenson - One of the first real books I ever read (and the first audiobook I owned), still enjoy it now, after 50+ re-reads. Long John Silver was the first villain I couldn't help rooting for.
1984 - George Orwell - Brilliantly laid out and (regrettably) terrifyingly prescient, it's as compelling a read now as it was when it was published in the late 40s. The first book report I got to choose to do at school was for 1984 and the concept of Room 101 terrified me as a kid, well into my teens, truth be told.
Guards! Guards! - Terry Pratchett - Pokes fun at a lot of the established fantasy tropes without ever being sneery about it, "star turns" by some of his best (and best loved) characters and one of Pratchett's funniest, IMO. His use and abuse of the English language and its peculiar quirks and foibles is unparalleled, if admittedly not unprecendented.
The Dark Tower - Stephen King - Thirty-odd years from conception to the fruition of the series, betrayal, loss, romance, politicking, chivalry are all explored in King's idiosyncratic style (divisive as he is, you can't knock how many books the man has shifted.) in multiple worlds or versions thereof and this book is the final chapter of the spaghetti western/fantasy/sci-fi series. Forget the trashfire movie, this is the real deal, the ending absolutely destroys me every single time I read it. If this thread was pick 1 and not pick 5, this would be the one, most likely.
The Complete Robot - Isaac Asimov - "31 short stories about robots" sounds like it would be a dull read but Asimov's human characters (and often, his robots) make for compelling protagonists/antagonists. This was my introduction to sci-fi as a genre and thousands of books later, I still come back to this one every so often and wonder at my enjoyment.
So, what have you lot got?
Treasure Island - R.L Stevenson - One of the first real books I ever read (and the first audiobook I owned), still enjoy it now, after 50+ re-reads. Long John Silver was the first villain I couldn't help rooting for.
1984 - George Orwell - Brilliantly laid out and (regrettably) terrifyingly prescient, it's as compelling a read now as it was when it was published in the late 40s. The first book report I got to choose to do at school was for 1984 and the concept of Room 101 terrified me as a kid, well into my teens, truth be told.
Guards! Guards! - Terry Pratchett - Pokes fun at a lot of the established fantasy tropes without ever being sneery about it, "star turns" by some of his best (and best loved) characters and one of Pratchett's funniest, IMO. His use and abuse of the English language and its peculiar quirks and foibles is unparalleled, if admittedly not unprecendented.
The Dark Tower - Stephen King - Thirty-odd years from conception to the fruition of the series, betrayal, loss, romance, politicking, chivalry are all explored in King's idiosyncratic style (divisive as he is, you can't knock how many books the man has shifted.) in multiple worlds or versions thereof and this book is the final chapter of the spaghetti western/fantasy/sci-fi series. Forget the trashfire movie, this is the real deal, the ending absolutely destroys me every single time I read it. If this thread was pick 1 and not pick 5, this would be the one, most likely.
The Complete Robot - Isaac Asimov - "31 short stories about robots" sounds like it would be a dull read but Asimov's human characters (and often, his robots) make for compelling protagonists/antagonists. This was my introduction to sci-fi as a genre and thousands of books later, I still come back to this one every so often and wonder at my enjoyment.
So, what have you lot got?