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I guess I took my cue from the title of the thread, which to me implied sharp, cunning, quick-witted, etc. as opposed to best writer, which is why I threw Twain out there. But yeah, Hemingway's not bad.
Yea, this is why I wouldn't necessarily use Steinbeck or Hemingway. Great writers, but their style is really plain and straightforward. Not much in the way of cunning.I guess I took my cue from the title of the thread, which to me implied sharp, cunning, quick-witted, etc. as opposed to best writer, which is why I threw Twain out there. But yeah, Hemingway's not bad.
I guess I took my cue from the title of the thread, which to me implied sharp, cunning, quick-witted, etc. as opposed to best writer, which is why I threw Twain out there. But yeah, Hemingway's not bad.
John Steinbeck without a a doubt for me. I greatly appreciate character development and don't think anyone is/was better at that then Steinbeck. Recently I've been on a fiction kick and have really enjoyed Patrick Rothfuss.
This one is hard for me, as I have a butt-ton of favorite authors. So, I'll pick a few:
- JD Salinger. I think every teenager should read the breadth of Salinger's work, particularly Catcher In the Rye. It doesn't resonate on the same personal level as much as I get older, but the writing is just impeccable, and captures thought patterns so well.
- Jane Austen. I'm a big fan of classical Brit lit, and she's the queen.
- Kurt Vonnegut. His loss was deep and real. One of the great satirists, and had a way of making dystopia fun.
- Chuck Palahniuk. All of his work is fascinating, including Fight Club. He has a very clever writing style, very interesting. Always takes on sort of a writing tic with each book that makes it interesting.
- Christopher Moore. Very interesting contemporary author, and it's hard for me to find many current authors I like. Writes everything from vampire novels to reworking Shakespearean plays.
In terms of favorite authors:
from my early years: Louis L'amour.
now my tastes run more mainstream:
George RR Martin, John Grisham, JK Rowling, PD James, Margaret Atwood.
I love the Dr. Seuss mention. my son got a boxset of Roald Dahl's complete works and we've been reading them. I'd only read a couple before, but they are all really good.
My thoughts went the same direction as KentKel. Aaron Sorkin writes the most amazing, intelligent, witty, thoughtful dialogue of anyone in the screenwriting business. I've loved pretty much everything he has written (of course, it helps if they pick the right actors who can pull of the rapid-fire speeches).
For straight books...
Tom Clancy (the early ones that he actually wrote...not the later special ops & rainbow six stuff)
Dean Koontz (Strangers, Watchers, & Lightning are my favorites)
F Paul Wilson (Repairman Jack Series)
Lincoln Child & Douglas Preston (together and separately)
James Rollins
William Bernhardt (series about a rather hapless lawyer from Tulsa who occasionally gets paid in chickens, and his rather diverse staff)
Pretty eclectic choices.
There are many other authors I like, but these seven I have read & re-read.