Showing posts with label list. Show all posts
Showing posts with label list. Show all posts
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Top Ten All-Time Favorite Authors

Posted by Marie on Wednesday, April 22, 2015 in , , , , , , , , , , ,
So how did this came about?

There's this activity in one my book clubs (The Filipino Groups there in Goodreads), where the moderator told us to list down our top ten favorite authors of all time.

So okay, challenge accepted.

I'm glad it's top ten favorite authors and not top ten best authors because it's easier to just rely on my biased opinions (from which the latter is based on), rather than try to be an objective reviewer (from which the former is based on).

So anyway, here's my top ten favorite authors (in alphabetical order):

Jane Austen 

I like how polarizing Jane Austen can be. After all, most of her characters are very much preoccupied with parties, social chit chat, and other trivial matters. In a time when social standing and connection is a matter of life and death (sometimes literally), marriage is an essential undertaking, most especially for women. In a time when people are judged by their superficial looks and manners, how you bear yourself is very important, most especially for women. Austen wrote her books much like how women must present themselves in her time: seemingly modest, seemingly simple, seemingly light, seemingly trivial. To appreciate Austen, one must read deeper. Modesty belies the intensity of her drama (which, rather than explode outwards in Bronte-like bursts of passion, her characters prefer to implode inwards, with minimalist but accurate language). Modesty also veils the wit and the satirical tone of her texts, the ironies and (surprisingly for some people) the realism.

New readers should start with: Persuasion (then follow with Northanger Abbey) 


Ray Bradbury

I find it unfair when people describe Ray Bradbury merely as a science fiction writer. This is because while most of his story has some science fiction or fantastical aspects in them, it is the "heart" - the warmth, the optimism for the future, the down-to-earth human-ness - in his stories which makes them very good, and what defines them. There is a lyrical simplicity and honesty to his language. It is a language of sadness but also of hope, of kindness but also of cruelty brought simply because we are all merely human.

New readers should start with: The Martian Chronicles (then follow with his short stories, particularly There Will Come Soft Rains) 


Anton Chekhov 

Anton Chekhov knew people. He knew how they think and how they react. He knew that lives can be funny, melancholic, exciting, and mundane all the same time. His stories are a reflection of these. He wrote stories of characters who are both ordinary and strange. Of small dramas that have good and bad endings. He wrote of stories that are heartrendingly familiar, even to modern readers (for example, the very short story, "The Head of the Family" suddenly took me back to my childhood). He even wrote stories of oppression and cruelty, not just of the rich, but also by the poor. Rationality is seldom the focus, and his characters are primarily swayed by their emotions. No solution comes in endings, but mostly a complete presentation of the issue at hand. Life is such a complicated mess, and Anton Chekhov knew that.

New readers should start with: The Lady with the Dog and Other Stories (particularly the titular story, and Ionitch) 

Arthur Conan Doyle 

Yes, I know that Arthur Conan Doyle wrote other stories besides the Sherlock Holmes canon. Unfortunately for Professor Challenger (I swear I'll try to put his stories in my TBR), it is Sherlock Holmes that I love the most. Arthur Conan Doyle had the ability to write characters that are so well fleshed out they seem to be real people (heck, some people really do believe that Sherlock Holmes and John Watson were real as you and me). His stories are a nice blend of comfortable tropes and brilliant storytelling. They are not meant to be deep (remember that these stories were first serialized in Strand Magazine), but there is a timeless quality to them and the characters, such at more that 120 years later, people still loves everything Sherlock Holmes.

New readers should start with: A Study in Scarlet (then follow with The Sign of the Four)

Franz Kafka 

Unsettling is the word that comes into my mind when I think of Franz Kafka. His stories are like dreams - strange things happen in it, and you recognize its strangeness, but you accept it anyway. Most of his story are familiar frustrations and anxieties: futile struggles against the bureaucracy, striving fruitlessly for one's goals, and of loneliness and alienation. I had found reading Kafka to be a personal experience - because it is useless to comprehend his stories rationally, your interpretation is as valid as anyone else's.

New readers should start with: The Metamorphosis (then follow with Amerika) 


Gabriel Garcia Marquez 

The same way with Ray Bradbury, I find it unfair to call Gabriel Garcia Marquez as solely a magical realist author, simply because he is so much more. The way he described scenes, places, and people are just so vivid. When he described the plantations of Macondo (for example), you can almost see the bananas swaying with the hot wind, while you shield your eyes from the unyielding tropical sun. And my God, the stories. The words present themselves as such that you feel them rather than read. You feel the slowness of time and the frustrations of the Colonel while waiting for his letter. You feel like the dread of the inevitable fate of Santiago Nasar. And One Hundred Years of Solitude is not a read, it is an experience.

New readers should start with: No two ways about it. Begin with the awesome One Hundred Years of Solitude. 


Vladimir Nabokov 

I was angry with Vladimir Nabokov in college. He manipulated my emotions. He made me like Humbert Humbert. Only on the second read (and with the help of my other book club) did I saw Humbert as the monster that he really is. It's not that there were no clues. It's just that Nabokov wrote Humbert Humbert with such charm that I had unconsciously ignored the alarms. Only in later years did I appreciate the preciseness of Nabokov's prose, the careful arrangement of words that had made me fall under Humbert's charm. My takeaway lesson from Nabokov is that readers should not judge books as good or bad merely from their empathetic reaction with the story or characters ("the story made me sad/the main character is a terrible person, and that is why I rate this as 0 stars"). One should also think of the way the story is made, the style, the prose, the character development, and many many more.

New readers should start with: Lolita (then follow with the wonderful Pnin) 

Ambeth Ocampo

One day in college, despite having a report deadline in PI 100, I finished the Ambeth Ocampo book collection in the UP Main Library. That's six books in two hours. That just show how accessible and easy to read Professor Ocampo's books are. He had made history so approachable and alive, especially for the young folks (I'm not sure I'm still included in this lot, hahaha!). Personally, I like reading Ambeth Ocampo's books in between heavy fictions. They are the perfect palate cleansers, not because they are pieces of fluff (for example, Meaning and History and Bones of Contention are meaty reads), but because of the welcome change of topic, and easier pace and tone.

New readers should start with: Rizal Without the Overcoat (then follow with Aguinaldo's Breakfast) 

Tony Perez 

Tony Perez dwells in the unusual. Not just the supernatural, mind you, (although he does head the Spirit Questors) but those that are beyond the normal. I hesitate to call it bizarre, after all bizarre is in the eyes of the beholder. Take Cubao, for example. The day gives it a matter-of-fact, business-as-usual look. But at night, Cubao takes a mysterious, seductive, and dangerous sheen. Tony Perez's stories are rife with characters with subversive thoughts and intentions. His language is gritty, grimy, and disturbing, and his story are full of twists and turns, sometimes for good, but most of the times, for the worse.

New readers should start with: Cubao Midnight Express (then follow with Cubao Pagkagat ng Dilim) 


J.R.R. Tolkien

Finally, J.R.R. Tolkien. Many of the fantasy tropes in fiction began with him. Because of the familiarity, people tend to get bored with him. Not me. I had re-read Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, and The Silmarillion so many times that I lost count. Bilbo, Frodo, Sam, and the rest of the Fellowship had become dear friends that every read's end brings a tear in my eye (yes, literally). I'm not really sure why I love Tolkien's stories to bits. Maybe it is the comfort that chaos and evil does not last, and that order will sometimes be restored, not exactly the way it was, but at least to some satisfaction of most people. That journeys does not really end, and people return from these journeys quite changed. And that stories goes on and on, even after you had read the last page, even after you had closed the book.

New readers should start with: The Lord of the Rings, (then follow with The Hobbit)

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9

My 2011 reading plan

Posted by Marie on Tuesday, July 12, 2011 in , , , ,
I'll probably remember this year as the one when Jose Saramago & Christopher Priest were bitter rivals (in my mind, of course) for my literary affections.


It started when I read Blindness for the March book discussion. It was a painful but satisfying read, and I liked it so much I'd promptly declared it as my best book for 2011.

Photo from Locus Online

But then, a fellow book blogger, FFP member and friend, Peter, who was a bit concerned of my earlier dismissal of NYRB books, lent me Christopher Priest's The Inverted World (thank you so much!). He was convinced that I won't just like the book but love it. And he was right. It was a mind-bending read but it was very, very good.

When my ardor shifted from Saramago to Priest, I thought, this is a bit unfair of me. I can't easily dismiss someone who won the Nobel Prize in Literature. After all, I can't judge an author by reading just one or two of his creations, right? Thus, I made an imaginary contest between the two authors for the most-coveted prize of all: my best author & book for 2011.

So here's the tally & the plan so far (not that I have these books right now, though I do hope I'll acquire/borrow some of them soon):

Jose Saramago
Blindness (read)
Death with Interruptions (read)
The Double
The Gospel According to Jesus Christ
Baltasar & Blimuda

Christopher Priest
The Inverted World (read)
The Prestige
The Separation
The Extremes
The Affirmation


I ought to post reviews for these books, no? I'll do that as I go along, I promise. So what do you think, guys and gals? Is best out of five fair enough? Or should I read more?

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Philippine Top 100 Bookmooch Wishlisted Books

Posted by Marie on Saturday, April 12, 2008 in , ,


  1. 1. Author: Khaled Hosseini
    ISBN: 1594480001
    Title: The Kite Runner




  2. 2. Author: Stephenie Meyer
    ISBN: 0316160199
    Title: New Moon (Twilight, Book 2)




  3. 3. Author: Markus Zusak
    ISBN: 0375842209
    Title: The Book Thief (Readers Circle)




  4. 4. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0061122092
    Title: By the River Piedra I Sat Down and Wept: A Novel of Forgiveness (P.S.)



  5. 5. Author: Sophie Kinsella
    ISBN: 0385338724
    Title: Remember Me?




  6. 6. Author: J. K. Rowling
    ISBN: 0439358078
    Title: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (Book 5)




  7. 7. Author: Haruki Murakami
    ISBN: 1400079276
    Title: Kafka on the Shore




  8. 8. Author: Khaled Hosseini
    ISBN: 1594489505
    Title: A Thousand Splendid Suns




  9. 9. Author: Audrey Niffenegger
    ISBN: 015602943X
    Title: The Time Traveler's Wife




  10. 10. Author: Frank Warren
    ISBN: 0060899190
    Title: PostSecret: Extraordinary Confessions from Ordinary Lives



  11. 11. Author: Frank Warren
    ISBN: 0061196681
    Title: My Secret: A PostSecret Book




  12. 12. Author: Cormac McCarthy
    ISBN: 0307387895
    Title: The Road (Oprah's Book Club)




  13. 13. Author: Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    ISBN: 0307389731
    Title: Love in the Time of Cholera (Oprah's Book Club)




  14. 14. Author: Stephenie Meyer
    ISBN: 0316015849
    Title: Twilight (Twilight, Book 1)




  15. 15. Author: J. K. Rowling
    ISBN: 0545010225
    Title: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7)




  16. 16. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0060589280
    Title: Eleven Minutes: A Novel (P.S.)




  17. 17. Author: Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    ISBN: 0060740450
    Title: One Hundred Years of Solitude (Oprah's Book Club)



  18. 18. Author: Meg Cabot
    ISBN: 0060880155
    Title: Pants on Fire




  19. 19. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0060930136
    Title: The Fifth Mountain




  20. 20. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0061124265
    Title: Veronika Decides to Die: A Novel of Redemption (P.S.)




  21. 21. Author: Frank Warren
    ISBN: 0061198757
    Title: The Secret Lives of Men and Women: A PostSecret Book




  22. 22. Author: Leo Tolstoy
    ISBN: 0143035002
    Title: Anna Karenina (Oprah's Book Club)




  23. 23. Author: Salman Rushdie
    ISBN: 0312270828
    Title: The Satanic Verses: A Novel (Bestselling Backlist)




  24. 24. Author: Cecily von Ziegesar
    ISBN: 0316011827
    Title: Gossip Girl #9: Only In Your Dreams: A Gossip Girl Novel (Gossip Girl)




  25. 25. Author: Cecily von Ziegesar
    ISBN: 0316011835
    Title: Would I Lie to You?




  26. 26. Author: Cecily von Ziegesar
    ISBN: 0316011843
    Title: Gossip Girl #11: Don't You Forget About Me: A Gossip Girl Novel (Gossip Girl)




  27. 27. Author: Stephenie Meyer
    ISBN: 0316160202
    Title: Eclipse (Twilight, Book 3)




  28. 28. Author: Adobe Creative Team
    ISBN: 0321321847
    Title: Adobe Photoshop CS2 Classroom in a Book (Classroom in a Book)




  29. 29. Author: Philippa Gregory
    ISBN: 0743227441
    Title: The Other Boleyn Girl




  30. 30. Author: Philippa Gregory
    ISBN: 0743246071
    Title: The Queen's Fool: A Novel





  31. 31. Author: John Connolly
    ISBN: 0743298853
    Title: The Book of Lost Things: A Novel




  32. 32. Author: Neil Gaiman
    ISBN: 1401210821
    Title: Sandman, Vol. 1 (Absolute Editions)




  33. 33. Author: Mitch Albom
    ISBN: 1401303277
    Title: For One More Day




  34. 34. Author: J. K. Rowling
    ISBN: 1582348251
    Title: Harrius Potter et Philosophi Lapis (Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Latin Edition)




  35. 35. Author: Rhonda Byrne
    ISBN: 1582701709
    Title: The Secret




  36. 36. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 006251279X
    Title: The Pilgrimage: A Contemporary Quest for Ancient Wisdom




  37. 37. Author: Shel Silverstein
    ISBN: 0060256710
    Title: The Missing Piece 30th Anniversary Edition (Ursula Nordstrom Book)




  38. 38. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0060527986
    Title: Warrior of the Light: A Manual




  39. 39. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0060527994
    Title: The Devil and Miss Prym: A Novel of Temptation




  40. 40. Author: Gregory Maguire
    ISBN: 0060747226
    Title: Son of a Witch: A Novel




  41. 41. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0060832819
    Title: The Zahir: A Novel of Obsession (P.S.)




  42. 42. Author: Meg Cabot
    ISBN: 0060847166
    Title: Sweet Sixteen Princess: A Princess Diaries Book (Princess Diaries)



  43. 43. Author: Meg Cabot
    ISBN: 0060852003
    Title: Queen of Babble in the Big City




  44. 44. Author: Gregory Maguire
    ISBN: 0060988649
    Title: Lost: A Novel




  45. 45. Author: Jodi Picoult
    ISBN: 0140230270
    Title: Harvesting the Heart: A Novel




  46. 46. Author: Elizabeth Gilbert
    ISBN: 0143038419
    Title: Eat Pray Love




  47. 47. Author: Umberto Eco
    ISBN: 0151008124
    Title: On Literature




  48. 48. Author: Yann Martel
    ISBN: 0156027321
    Title: Life of Pi




  49. 49. Author: Pablo Neruda
    ISBN: 0292760280
    Title: 100 Love Sonnets: Cien sonetos de amor (Texas Pan American Series)



  50. 50. Author: Haruki Murakami
    ISBN: 0307265838
    Title: After Dark




  51. 51. Author: Lauren Weisberger
    ISBN: 0307275558
    Title: The Devil Wears Prada




  52. 52. Author: Emily Giffin
    ISBN: 0312321198
    Title: Something Borrowed




  53. 53. Author: Emily Giffin
    ISBN: 0312323867
    Title: Something Blue




  54. 54. Author: Malcolm Gladwell
    ISBN: 0316010669
    Title: Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking




  55. 55. Author: Elizabeth Kostova
    ISBN: 0316011770
    Title: The Historian




  56. 56. Author: Cecily von Ziegesar
    ISBN: 0316735094
    Title: Gossip Girl #8: Nothing Can Keep Us Together: A Gossip Girl Novel (Gossip Girl)




  57. 57. Author: Scott Kelby
    ISBN: 0321330625
    Title: The Photoshop CS2 Book for Digital Photographers (Voices That Matter)




  58. 58. Author: Eve Ensler
    ISBN: 0345498607
    Title: The Vagina Monologues




  59. 59. Author: Haruki Murakami
    ISBN: 0375704027
    Title: Norwegian Wood




  60. 60. Author: Markus Zusak
    ISBN: 0375831002
    Title: The Book Thief (Book Sense Book of the Year Children's Literature (Awards))



  61. 61. Author: Christopher Paolini
    ISBN: 0375840400
    Title: Eldest



  62. 62. Author: Chuck Palahniuk
    ISBN: 0385517874
    Title: Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey



  63. 63. Author: J.K. Rowling
    ISBN: 0439139597
    Title: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (Book 4)



  64. 64. Author: Ken Follett
    ISBN: 0451225244
    Title: The Pillars of the Earth (Deluxe Edition) (Oprah's Book Club)



  65. 65. Author: Peter S. Beagle
    ISBN: 0451450523
    Title: The Last Unicorn



  66. 66. Author: Jane Austen
    ISBN: 0553213105
    Title: Pride and Prejudice (Bantam Classics)



  67. 67. Author: Jasper Fforde
    ISBN: 0670038717
    Title: Thursday Next: First Among Sequels



  68. 68. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0722535201
    Title: By the River Piedra I Sat Down and Wept.



  69. 69. Author: Philippa Gregory
    ISBN: 0743272498
    Title: The Constant Princess



  70. 70. Author: Jodi Picoult
    ISBN: 0743496728
    Title: Nineteen Minutes: A Novel



  71. 71. Author: J.K. Rowling
    ISBN: 0747551006
    Title: Harry Potter and the Order of the PhoeniX



  72. 72. Author: Kim Barnouin
    ISBN: 0762424931
    Title: Skinny Bitch



  73. 73. Author: Neil Gaiman
    ISBN: 0785125418
    Title: Eternals By Neil Gaiman HC (Book Market Edition)



  74. 74. Author: Mitch Albom
    ISBN: 0786868716
    Title: The Five People You Meet in Heaven



  75. 75. Author: Lisa See
    ISBN: 0812968069
    Title: Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: A Novel



  76. 76. Author: Bill Watterson
    ISBN: 0836218051
    Title: The Essential Calvin and Hobbes



  77. 77. Author: Bill Watterson
    ISBN: 0836218523
    Title: The Calvin and Hobbes Lazy Sunday Book



  78. 78. Author: Bill Watterson
    ISBN: 0836218620
    Title: Weirdos From Another Planet!



  79. 79. Author: Bill Watterson
    ISBN: 0836218787
    Title: Scientific Progress Goes 'Boink': A Calvin and Hobbes Collection



  80. 80. Author: Nick Bantock
    ISBN: 0877017883
    Title: Griffin & Sabine: An Extraordinary Correspondence



  81. 81. Author: Neil Gaiman
    ISBN: 1563890119
    Title: The Sandman Vol. 1: Preludes and Nocturnes



  82. 82. Author: Anonymous
    ISBN: 1843172836
    Title: The Book With No Name



  83. 83. Author: Joanne K. Rowling
    ISBN: 3551354014
    Title: Harry Potter und der Stein der Weisen. Bd. 1



  84. 84. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 000725184X
    Title: The Witch of Portobello


  85. 85. Author: Cecily von Ziegesar
    ISBN: 031601768X
    Title: Gossip Girl: It Had to Be You: The Gossip Girl Prequel



  86. 86. Author: Margaret Atwood
    ISBN: 038549081X
    Title: The Handmaid's Tale: A Novel



  87. 87. Author: J.K. Rowling
    ISBN: 043932162X
    Title: Harry Potter Schoolbooks Box Set: Two Classic Books from the Library of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry



  88. 88. Author: Geraldine Brooks
    ISBN: 067001821X
    Title: People of the Book: A Novel



  89. 89. Author: Jonathan Stroud
    ISBN: 078683868X
    Title: Bartimaeus Trilogy, The: Ptolemy's Gate - Book #3



  90. 90. Author: Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    ISBN: 140003468X
    Title: Love in the Time of Cholera



  91. 91. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0007116055
    Title: The Devil and Miss Prym



  92. 92. Author: Paulo Coelho
    ISBN: 0007166044
    Title: Eleven Minutes



  93. 93. Author: James Finn Garner
    ISBN: 0028604199
    Title: Once upon a More Enlightened Time: More Politically Correct Bedtime Stories



  94. 94. Author: Rebecca Godfrey
    ISBN: 0060094850
    Title: The Torn Skirt



  95. 95. Author: Meggin Cabot
    ISBN: 0060096195
    Title: The Boy Next Door



  96. 96. Author: Shel Silverstein
    ISBN: 0060256575
    Title: The Missing Piece Meets the Big O 25th Anniversary Edition



  97. 97. Author: Elizabeth Young
    ISBN: 0060507845
    Title: A Promising Man (and About Time, Too)



  98. 98. Author: Neil Gaiman
    ISBN: 0060515198
    Title: Anansi Boys



  99. 99. Author: Neil Gaiman
    ISBN: 0060515228
    Title: Fragile Things: Short Fictions and Wonders



  100. 100. Author: Meg Cabot
    ISBN: 0060525118
    Title: Size 12 Is Not Fat: A Heather Wells Mystery



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