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The Last Book That Took You Somewhere?
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Morning all,
I wondered if you could offer me any recommendations for books which "took you somewhere else" - where the world you were drawn into was some completely realised and compelling that it feels like a "real place".
I recently reread "Ghostwritten" by David Mitchell and found the locations profoundly real.
What's your nomination for the best realised world in a novel?
I wondered if you could offer me any recommendations for books which "took you somewhere else" - where the world you were drawn into was some completely realised and compelling that it feels like a "real place".
I recently reread "Ghostwritten" by David Mitchell and found the locations profoundly real.
What's your nomination for the best realised world in a novel?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Since I am a Sci-Fi fan -
"Only Forward" - Michael Marshall Smith. One of the best and most original pieces of science fiction i have ever read, with a truly remarkable take on the world of dreams and how they interact with reality.
All of Iain M.Banks "Culture" Sci-Fi novels. "Consider Phlebas" "Player of Games", "Excession". A highly idealised view of a future society. I have been re-reading them lately with a degree of melancholy because he recently announced he is dying of pancreatic cancer- only has a few months to live. This made me very sad...
"Only Forward" - Michael Marshall Smith. One of the best and most original pieces of science fiction i have ever read, with a truly remarkable take on the world of dreams and how they interact with reality.
All of Iain M.Banks "Culture" Sci-Fi novels. "Consider Phlebas" "Player of Games", "Excession". A highly idealised view of a future society. I have been re-reading them lately with a degree of melancholy because he recently announced he is dying of pancreatic cancer- only has a few months to live. This made me very sad...
Lazygun, thank you for the Banks recommendations - I've only read The Wasp Factory. While it's always sad when a much loved author is moving securely towards death, it is sometimes sadder when they're a Sci-fi or Fantasy writer - as if the worlds they create should excuse them from such indignities!
The Night Circus has come recommended to me before I think. One line summary?
The Night Circus has come recommended to me before I think. One line summary?
OK Ed. I would recommend 'Rendezvous with Rama' trilogy by ACC, or The City and the Stars which you may find paerticularly interesting as it may have some parallels to AB ;-)- The city of Diaspar is completely enclosed. Nobody has come in or left the city for as long as anybody can remember, and everybody in Diaspar has an instinctive insular conservatism. The story behind this fear of venturing outside the city tells of a race of ruthless invaders which beat humanity back from the stars to Earth, and then made a deal that humanity could live - if they never left the planet.
As for Michael Moorcock, you can't beat Dancers at the End of Time. YTou may then like to read some of the other books with Jherek Carnelian as a character at various points throughout time and his various incarnation's. Note his initials (I wont say any more).
As for Michael Moorcock, you can't beat Dancers at the End of Time. YTou may then like to read some of the other books with Jherek Carnelian as a character at various points throughout time and his various incarnation's. Note his initials (I wont say any more).
Not like all the other books suggested.
I've just finished Stray-by A.N.Wilson. It is an "autobiography"...a life story told by an elderly alleycat to his grandkitten.
Horrific in places as it describes the cruelty of Man to animals. Written in a way that makes you see the world through a cats eyes.
I've just finished Stray-by A.N.Wilson. It is an "autobiography"...a life story told by an elderly alleycat to his grandkitten.
Horrific in places as it describes the cruelty of Man to animals. Written in a way that makes you see the world through a cats eyes.
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