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What's a book you really enjoyed, that you feel like no one else on lemmy has read?

I read some free kindle books back in the day, that probably only a few thousand other people have read, so very plausibly no one on Lemmy has ready.

So, what books have you enjoyed that you feel confident no one else on Lemmy has read?

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  • At the time he died, I'd been a fan of Douglas Adams for about 25 years. After he died, they released a collection of essays, works in progress, notes and such. In it, he described the amazement he had for his favorite author, who he described as having an amazing way with words. The guy that amazed me with "It flew in much the same way a brick doesn't." was amazed by someone else's way with words. So, I put down Salmon, walked to the nearest bookshop, and bought a couple of volumes by P.G. ( if I may call him that) Wodehouse and began a new era of fandom that rivals my adoration of dear old Doug.

  • A Salty Piece of Land by Jimmy Buffett... No, seriously.

    He has the reputation as "the patron saint of drunken uncle beach bums", but if you dig into his earlier catalogue, its rife with beautiful, lyrical storytelling songcraft. When you consider that, itss no suprise that he can write a decent book.

  • I have to mention Being Mortal by Atul Gawande, though it was popular when it was published so I bet a number of you Lemmings have read it.

    It's a surgeon's first-person account of learning how to address and deal with death, both among his very sick patients and his aging family members.

  • Curse of the Reaper. It's like reading an 80s slasher flick. Nothing too amazing but still a good and fun read!

  • Since no one doesn't seem to be meant literally, 13 1/2 Leben des Kapitän Blaubär (13 1/2 Lives of Captain Bluebear). It's a very humourous and arguably pretty absurd fantasy story, one of a handful of books I've actually read twice. Unfortunately I can't really say much about the English translation but if that's decent it should be very enjoyable to read.

  • A lot of old, norwegian scifi fan on Lemmy? No? In that case I'm sure my favorite scifi book-series from my youth, Starship Alexandria, is very much unread by anyone here. I cant even find copies of it at libraries anymore. Yeah, I know thats a unfair suggestion since none of you can pick it up and read it anywhere anyway. The author had a bit of Isaac Asimov feeling to how he wrote scifi. So that series was my launch-point to more scifi books.

    But for a more modern suggestion, anyone read A Cyberpunk Saga by Matthew A. Goodwin? It's not great books but not bad either. His writing improves with each book, imho. And it has a well-written ending. It isnt a forever continious or unfinished series. I never heard anyone recommend it. People just recommend the same top few cyberpunk genre books, like Neuromancer, Snow Crash, Wind-up Girl, etc. Never anything smaller. Was mostly because of Cyberpunk 2077 I found that book: I wanted something not too depressing but still cyberpunk where the focus was on a team and not a single protagonist, so I downloaded a cyberpunk short-story collection where his story caught my interest.

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