including comic books.
If I have to pick just one, Oathbringer by Brandon Sanderson, which is a 3rd book in the Stormlight Archive series.
Galactic Pot-Healer by Philip K. Dick
Three series:
- The Wheel of Time
- The Dark Tower
- The Expanse
Based and cultured
A real person of culture, kudos my friend
- Necromancer by William Gibson gripped me hard.
- anything by Terry Pratchett. Hard to choose, but probably Feet Of Clay.
- anything by Ursula Le Guin, probably The Dispossessed.
Probably forgetting a few, those would all be in my top 5 though
Neuromancer… Necromancer is TOTALLY different!
Shibumi by Trevanian
I hate L Ron Hubbard, but absolutely love Battlefield Earth.
Tales of the Dying Earth by Jack Vance; a collection of 5x short stories, 2x novels, and 3x novellas set in the far, far future Earth. Wonderful mix of SF and Fantasy.
Reading Nevada by Imogen Binnie finally allowed me to come out as trans to myself when I was in my teens. No other book has changed my life that profoundly.
Ada or Ardor, by Vladimir Nabokov. Sweet Blue Flowers, by Shimura Takako, is my favorite comic.
Short but always like Hatchet.
Hatchet is a 1987 young-adult wilderness survival novel written by American writer Gary Paulsen.
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace, with Catch-22 a very close second.
The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress, by Robert Heinlein. I read that when I was in high school over 30 years ago and it had more impact on me (no pun intended if you’ve read it) than anything before or since, I think. I read Stranger In A Strange Land shortly after and that one did a number on me, too. Heinlein’s place in the pantheon of science fiction gods was well earned.
For lighter stuff, the Scions of Shanarra series, by Terry Brooks, is one I have gone back to many times.
The Moon is a Harsh Mistress is also my favourite book!
Tomorrow it’ll probably be something else, but today I’d say Foundation (Isaac Asimov). Such a good classic of science fiction.
Books: the Animorphs series
Comics: The Flintstones (2016)
This is one of those questions where the answer will probably change from day to day.
Today I’ll say Count Zero, the middle book of William Gibson’s Cyberpunk trilogy. It built on the ideas he explored in Neuromancer and was tighter and less rambling than Mona Lisa Overdrive.
Haha I’m always arguing with a friend over which is best, I prefer MLO out of the three.
It reallyy depends on a lot of factors.
I don’t really have the favorite.
But I’d consider these books/series as my favorites:
- Hitchhikers guide series
- Children Of Time series
- Three body problem series