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:iconhesir:
As it says in the title... this is just a bunch of stuff I've read and would happily recommend to anyone with similar interests etc...

THIS EDIT: FEBRUARY 2011

....................................................

BOOKS:

:bulletred: Fifth Business - Robertson Davies - authors site [link]
:bulletred: The Rebel Angels - Robertson Davies
:bulletred: Outside the Dog Museum - Jonathan Carroll - authors site [link]
:bulletred: American Gods - Neil Gaiman - authors site [link]
:bulletred: Knowledge Of Angels - Jill Paton Walsh - [link]
:bulletred: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay - authors site [link]
:bulletred: The Forgetting Room - Nick Bantock - authors site [link]

...and,

:bulletgreen: The Death and Life of Miguel de Cervantes - Stephen Marlowe
:bulletgreen: The Good Fairies of New York - Martin Millar (though I would recommend anything by Martin Millar really)
:bulletgreen: Norwegian Wood - Haruki Murakami
:bulletgreen: Baltazar and Blimunda - Jose Saramago
:bulletgreen: Grendel - John Gardener
:bulletgreen: the "Bob Howard/Laundry" series - Charles Stross (and his excellent Halted State for you techies) - a great blogger too [link]
:bulletgreen: God Bless You, Mr. Rosewater - Kurt Vonnegut
:bulletgreen: Long John Silver - Bjorn Larsson
:bulletgreen: The Wandering Jew - Stephan Heym
:bulletgreen: Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco
:bulletgreen: One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
:bulletgreen: The Three Musketeers/Ten Years After - Alexander Dumas
:bulletgreen: Iron Council - China Meiville (any of his books also)
:bulletgreen: Labyrinths - Jorge Luis Borges
:bulletgreen: Hawksmoor - Peter Ackroyd
:bulletgreen: The Alienist - Caleb Carr
:bulletgreen: The Falls - Ian Rankin
:bulletgreen: The three-volume historical epic "The Baroque Cycle" (the individual novels being; Quicksilver, The Confusion, and The System of the World) - Neal Stephenson
:bulletgreen: The Last Kingdom & The Pale Horseman - Bernard Cornwell

:bulletblue: … all the Felix Castor novels by Mike Carey
:bulletblue: … any of the “Rebus” novels by Ian Rankin
:bulletblue: ... any of the Henry Gresham stories by Martin Stephen
:bulletblue: ... any of the Conan stories by Robert E. Howard
:bulletblue: ... any of the "Sharpe", "Grail Quest" and "Warlord" novels - Bernard Cornwell
:bulletblue: ...anything from the Burke series of novels by Andrew Vachss [link]
:bulletblue: ...anything by Joe R. Lansdale, in particular the "Hap and Leonard" novels (this is the guy that wrote Bubba Ho Tep, the novella not the movie).

:bulletgreen: ... and pretty much anything and everything by Jonathan Carroll and Robertson Davies & the great H.P Lovecraft...


(If you don't know Cornwell's work you can check out his site here [link] )

..............................................

COMICS:

:bulletgreen: Heartbreak Soup - Gilbert Hernandez' beautiful piece of magic-realist fiction, heartbreaking and life affirming... I must read this once a year... [link] (Hey, let's face it, pretty much anything from the "Love & Rockets" stable by the Hernandez Bros. is worth checking out).

:bulletgreen: Hellboy - Mike Mignola (colours by the amazing Dave Stewart) the most beautifully designed set of books on my shelves - Aw hell, just read anything, seriously anything to do with Mignola... treat yourself.

:bulletgreen: Logicomix - Apostolos Doxiadis, Christos H. Papadimitriou, Alecos Papadatos and Annie Di Donna - "Covering a span of sixty years, Logicomix was inspired by the epic quest for the Foundations of Mathematics. This was a heroic intellectual adventure most of whose protagonists paid the price of knowledge with extreme personal suffering and even insanity. The role of narrator is given to philosopher and pacifist Bertrand Russell. It is through his eyes that the plights of such great thinkers as Frege, Hilbert, Poincaré, Wittgenstein and Gödel come to life" - [link] - An amazing book, really worth your attention, read it alongside Neal Stephenson's "The System of the World" if you want to bend your head right out of shape...

:bulletgreen: All Over Coffee - Paul Madonna

:bulletgreen: Feynman - written by Jim Ottaviani and so simply (and brilliantly) illustrated by Leland Myrick

:bulletgreen: Journalism - Joe Sacco

:bulletgreen: Finder - Carla Speed McNeil [link]

:bulletgreen: Goliath - Tom Gauld

:bulletgreen: Wet Moon 1, 2 & 3 (series of graphic novels) - Ross Campbell

:bulletgreen: Maus – Art Spiegelman [link]

:bulletgreen: A Contract with God - Will Eisner

:bulletgreen: Dork - Evan Dorkin (Big laughs and yucks from the House of Fun) [link]

:bulletgreen: Cages - Dave McKean [link]

:bulletgreen: Why I Hate Saturn - Kyle Baker

:bulletgreen: Maakies - Tony Millionaire [link] Ahh, Drinky Crow! Thou art my role model...

:bulletgreen: Powers – Bendis/Avon Oeming [link] (also check out Oeming's work on "Hammer of the Gods" if you like your Norse/Viking stuff).

:bulletgreen: Saga - written by Brian K. Vaughan and illustrated by Fiona Staples.

:bulletgreen: Desolation Jones, Made in England - Warren Ellis, why no more of this Marlow-esque hard-boiled genius happened I have no idea...

:bulletgreen: Blacksad - created by Spanish authors Juan Díaz Canales (writer) and Juanjo Guarnido (artist).

:bulletgreen: BPRD and Associated "Hellboy" universe titles - Various

:bulletgreen: Hawkeye - Matt Fraction & David Aja

:bulletgreen: Age of Bronze - Eric Shanower [link]

:bulletgreen: Cerebus - Dave Sim (I am Cerebus - at least I can empathise with, and see parallels, with him until the end of "Form and Void" ... sad but true) [link] [link]

:bulletgreen: …and pretty much anything written by Mark Carey [link] particularly his "Lucifer" and "Hellblazer" for DC (the best guy in the field right now for fantasy based gritty comics, they're also re-releasing his "Inferno" work for Calibre I believe).

I'm going to add the link to Suture's Essential Graphic Novel list here too (I believe they are going to update it or add a "part 2" at some point) - [link]

..........................

You can find my movie recommendations elsewhere in my galleries on DA.

h.
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:iconthulinh3t:
hey, nice bookself, guy ^^
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:iconzombiesatemyyoghurt:
~Zombiesatemyyoghurt Jul 25, 2010  Hobbyist General Artist
I approve :D
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:iconhesir:
~hesir Jul 26, 2010  Professional General Artist
Cool.
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:iconsno-oki:
~Sno-Oki May 30, 2010  Student Digital Artist
I've been reading One Hundred Years of Solitude and The Name of the Rose for school! Brilliant books - I haven't been able to read anything else without looking for more layers in the text. XD
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:iconyarn7132:
Mood: Joy ~Yarn7132 Feb 24, 2010   Photographer
This is such an amazing list, I have read some and haven't been able to put them down. The Jim Carey Books are amazing and have recommended them to a few friends who have really liked them also. You have kept me entertained for a good year. Cheers =)
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:iconfuzzballthegreat:
Hey, stumbled across your gallery, and being a big reader myself, had to check out this deviation.

What startled me most, here, was to finally find someone else who actually knows about and actively reads Felix Castor. IMO, the Castor novels are amongst some of the best series ever written, so yay. Can't wait for part four ^^
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:iconhesir:
~hesir May 14, 2008  Professional General Artist
I'm really enjoying the series too... Ever since his stuff for Caliber Comics (Inferno) I thought his prose would've translated into novels well... It's great that he got around to doing it at last.

h.
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:iconfuzzballthegreat:
Despite, I think, the fact that the novels are wrongly sold as horror. At least, that's where I usually find them in bookshops. (which is how I came across them in the first place, been a horror reader, mostly)
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:iconstadt:
You've read all the Felix Castor novels, but you haven't got any of the Dresden Files? What is your damage? XD

And if you liked American Gods, Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett is a riot. Best end-of-the-world story ever.

I've got a couple of skulls on my bookshelf.. Mind you, one of them's a wax replica and the other one's a novelty ashtray. ^_^;
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