Would Wild Birds Eat Grapes If They Were...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Anything by Christopher Brookmyre. Described as "trtan noir"....dark but often hilarious.
Anything by Iain Banks (or Iain M Banks, if you like sci-fi). Absorbing stories, often unusual. The Wasp Factory is my favourite.
The Meaning of Liff and The Deeper Meaning of Liff - both by John Lloyd and the much missed Douglas Adams. The funniest, laugh-out-loud, tears-streaming-down-my-cheeks books I have ever read (not novels tho) and I have read both countless times.
Angels and Demons - Dan Brown
Adventure, thriller which I personally think is better than The Da Vinci Code.
Somebody Else's Kids - Torey Hayden
"They were all "just somebody else's kids" - four problem children placed in Torey Hayden's class because nobody knew what else to do with them"
Memoirs of a Geisha - Arthur Golden
"Summoning up more than 20 years of Japan's most dramatic history, the geisha's story uncovers a hidden world of eroticism and enchantment, exploitation and degradation"
Lovely Bones - Alice Sebold
A 14 year-old girl is raped and murdered, the book focuses on her idea of heaven and watching how her family and friends cope, as well as watching the person who killed her.
Sickened: The True Story of a Lost Childhood - Julie Gregory
A real-life story relayed from the victim of a mother with Muchausen by Proxy. It made me cry, and some bits are a bit gorey/ pukey.
look at www.whichbook.net for ideas!
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Jasper FForde!
The Eyre Affair, Lost In A good Book, The Well of Lost Plots and Something Rotten. New one out in July.
Excellent books, literary fantasy, jumping in and out of fiction, time travel, bad puns. Books you can read again and again.
Also Perfume by Patrick Suskind. Amazing. If you like that try De Sade's Valet, sorry can't remember the author's name, but I think he's Norwegien.
Enjoy!
Skallagrigg by William Horwood.
It's a bit of a hard sell, but it's the only book to ever move me to tears and changed quite a few of my preconceptions about people who suffer from various disabilities.
Anyway, it follows the stories of Arthur and Esther, two cerebral palsy sufferers. Arthur's story is mainly set in the past, and Esther's is contemporary. Arthur is severly afflicted, but able to communicate, and tells stories of the "Skallagrigg" - a mythical being who helps those whose disabilities mean they cannot help themselves. In the present, Esther is searching for the truth behind the myth.
It's very moving and nowhere near as depressing as a synopsis makes it sound!
If you like fantasy, try George R.R. Martin's Song of Ice and Fire books. Then regret it, as he seems to be years in between volumes.