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What Genre?
You like alot of actions?
Alot of talking?
Super heroes?
Mysteries?
LOTR/Eragon type books?
What do you like eh?
Tell me please! What books are you people interested in?

2006-09-28 03:47:00 · 26 answers · asked by ? 5 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

Great people! Keep on answering! I want and will read all of what books you guys/gals like.

2006-09-28 16:43:33 · update #1

26 answers

I like inspirational fiction best. I think books have the power to change your life (if you are open to change)Some of my favorite authors of that genre are Penelope Stokes, Richard Paul Evans, and Nancy Moser.

I also have always enjoyed mysteries. My favorite mystery writer is Dorothy Gilman.

I read some non fiction. My favorites are The Bible and any Christian books by Tony Evans and Rick Warren.

I have loved historical fiction for about half my life. Some of my favorite authors are Irene Hunt, Beverly Lewis, Jannette Oke, and John Steinbeck.

Even though I am a grown adult, I still like reading children's books because I find them relaxing, especially the ones I read as a kid. Some of my fave authors of that genre are Beverly Cleary, Ellen Conford, Bill Peet, John Fitzgerald, and Ann Martin.

Hope this info helps.

2006-09-28 05:03:17 · answer #1 · answered by Puff 5 · 0 0

I like Civil War, Romance, World War I, Horror, I don't like Mysteries, Super Heroes, or anything else like that. Just regular books. My favorite titles are All Quiet on the Western Front- (World War I), Last Citadel-Petersburg, Virginia June 1864-April 1865-(Civil War) Once A Rebel (The Fortunes of Texas Reunions)-(Romance), and the new series of Civil War books I'm writing are the "Death in the Trenches series, which I'm hoping to make a movie out of those 6 books I'm writing.

2006-09-28 04:50:45 · answer #2 · answered by cppanm1615 1 · 0 0

History, Archaeology, Mystery, Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Thriller, Adventure, Geographical Explorations, Ancient Civilizations specials.

2006-09-28 13:37:30 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Different genres! I like books with great well developed charecters I can relate to.

1. The Wold According to Garp by John Irving
2. Bagombo Snuff Box by Kurt Vonnegut
3. Mona Lisa Overdrive by William Gibson
4.The Stand by Stephen King
5. Jurassic Park by Michael Cricton
6. The Language of God by Francis S. Collins
7. Moby Dick by Herman Melville
8. Enders Game by Orson Scott Card
9. Blue Beard by Kurt Vonnegut
10. Sideways by Rex Pickett

2006-09-28 04:30:46 · answer #4 · answered by Ralph 7 · 0 0

I like mystery books (grew up reading The Hardy Boys), which is why I enjoyed The da Vinci Code. I also enjoy John Grisham books, Michael Crichton and I am now starting to read Bill Bryson books.
Oh, and I did enjoy LOTR and The Chronicles of Narnia.

2006-09-28 03:57:27 · answer #5 · answered by borscht 6 · 0 0

Eragon/LOTR books are great. I don't like too much talking in the books, I prefer to have the plot revealed with details. Historical fiction is good, and fiction. Basically everything works.

2006-09-28 08:18:16 · answer #6 · answered by girlshadow212 4 · 0 0

I love Anne Rice (Interview with a Vampire, Lestat, Witching Hour), Stephen King, Tim LaHaye & Jerry B Jenkins (The Left Behind Series), Dean Koontz, Mary Higgins Clark, Wally Lamb..

2006-09-28 03:57:55 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Sci Fi, Mystery, Action, History, Bios, Non Fiction,

Just reading in general is good, it expands your mind and you even get to learn a thing or two. Too many people watch the idiot box instead of learning something from a book.

2006-09-28 03:57:10 · answer #8 · answered by paki 5 · 1 0

I like mysteries...Mary Higgins Clark is a good author,
the HP series by JK Rowling is good too, Moby Dick, Huckleberry Finn, 1984, Don Quixote, etc , old classics

I love reading, and am taking literature courses at university, so there are some good ones that I wouldn't have picked up normally, but am glad I had a chance to read.

2006-09-28 03:53:29 · answer #9 · answered by Andie183 3 · 0 0

technology fiction and fable, yet no longer media tie-ins, crime, some non-fiction, some classical. Philip ok Dick, Christopher Priest, Stephen Donaldson, Christopher Fowler, CJ Sansom, the Inspector Dalgleish novels, the in the previous Kay Scarpetta, Jane Austen, Anne Radcliffe, the Barchester Chronicles of Anthony trollope, Oliver Sachs books on neurological issues (attractive), James Herriott, Lewis carroll's Sylvie and bruno books and that i somewhat beloved The remains of the day and the pony Whisperer.

2016-11-25 00:31:34 · answer #10 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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