The Next Best Book Club discussion
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Series you would choose for a desert island

The First Man in Rome
The Grass Crown
Fortune's Favorites
Caesar's Women
Caesar A Novel
The October Horse A Novel of Caesar and Cleopatra
And, not truly part of the series, but a side note:
Antony and Cleopatra A Novel
Song of Troy




Interview With the Vampire
The Vampire Lestat
The Queen of the Damned
The Tale of the Body Thief
Memnoch the Devil
The Vampire Armand
Pandora
Merrick
Blood and Gold
Blackwood Farm
Blood Canticle
:D

I agree. Everytime I read the books again, especially the first ones, I'm always suprised at how many things were put in the books that you didn't notice that applied to later events. Excellent books.

Interview With the Vampire
The Vampire Lestat
[book:The Queen of the Damned|43..."
I have only re-read Interview, but I would certainly be willing to re-read all of them if the "need" arose:D
Good choice.
oh no, does it have to be a series? Or can it be a collection? Or singular books? You are killing me... I dont want to bring a series....
If it had to be a series:
Odd Thomas
If it could be a collection:
The Works of Jules Verne
If it could be a single novel:
Mysterious Island by Verne (its got tons of interesting things in it that would be helpful when stranded on an island!)
If it had to be a series:
Odd Thomas
If it could be a collection:
The Works of Jules Verne
If it could be a single novel:
Mysterious Island by Verne (its got tons of interesting things in it that would be helpful when stranded on an island!)

The Summer Tree
The Wandering Fire
The Darkest Road
To have more books for re-reading, I would take the Melanie Rawn Series (cheating a little since it's really 2 related trilogies)
Dragon Prince
The Star Scroll
Sunrunner's Fire
Stronghold
The Dragon Token
Skybowl

I think I'd probably have to go with the Dark Tower series, because I'd sneak in The Stand and Salem's Lot and The Talisman and Black House, and Everything's Eventual and Eyes of the Dragon and Insomnia, which are all directly connected to the series... Is that cheating?
If I was not allowed the related books, I'd definitely have to go with Harry Potter. There is just so much packed into those 7 volumes that it would be enough. Plus I'd have Ron. I love Ron.
Man, I hope I never really have to choose which books I'd take off a sinking ship. I'd be anchored to the ocean floor with books I just couldn't leave!




but for LONG term, Hardy boys, Nancy drew or goosebump many books in that series : )



Hey Rach, I am reading the Gunslinger now, and am planning on re-reading the ones I have already read, and finishing the series by Christmas. They are beautifully written, and so, so entangled with everything he's ever done. Very satisfying:)


Jim: I guess.
Dwight: Then I would bring an axe, no books.
Jim: It has to be a book Dwight.
Dwight: Fine. Physician’s Desk Reference…
Jim: Nice. Smart.
Dwight: …hollowed out. Inside: Waterproof matches, iodine tables, beet seeds, protein bars, NASA blanket and, in case I get bored, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. No – Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. Question, did my shoes come off in the plane crash?
hahaha...
I am so torn. I love The Dark Tower series, Roland, Jake, Susannah, Eddie are all familiar and intriguing characters and I absolutely adored Wizards and Glass, but I'd also want to maybe try a series where I haven't read all of the books, but have greatly enjoyed what I already read, i.e. The Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan or the Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon. I think if I get trapped on a desert island, I would hope it was a magical desert island with a library.

Dresden is Harry Potter for adults: wizardly world meets modern world. I liked the Harry Dresden's voice (first person narrator) enough to get me through the first two books, which I thought were just okay, but by book three it really got going. Book 1 is Storm Front.
The Codex Alera series was really fun. It's more traditional fantasy, I suppose, though it has a clever alternate take on "magic," which the people of Alera don't really think of as magic. The Furies of Calderon is book 1.

Jim: I guess...."
LOL April!
I would have to agree on the Outlander series. Big, meaty, time consuming books that never fail to engage my interest.



Outlander
Dragonfly in Amber
Voyager
Drums of Autumn
The Fiery Cross
A Breath of Snow and Ashes

It would take forever to get through it and since it's so vast and the writing so thick I would enjoy reading and rereading it over and over again without ever getting bored because I'd always find some new detail.
Or the Bible, if that somehow counts...

If it's a deserted island with plenty of coconuts (ever tried opening one of those suckers by hand?), bamboo(to build a hut), and a fresh-water lagoon with a waterfall, like most deserted islands are (according to Hollywood), I'd want a big book on astronomy so I'd know what I'm looking at every night(kinda like a TV Guide). A book on marine life, so I'd know which fish and shells are safe to eat. A book on how to prevent or treat tropical diseases. And a copy of Twain's, 'Huckleberry Finn', so I can learn to build a raft and get off this dumb island someday.
j
www.jguevaranovels.com

There are nineteen of them so far. So that could keep me reading for a while and I know I like that author- and that's the problem. I've already read them.
So I'm thinking the Outlander series by Diana Gabaldon
Also the In Death series by J.D. Robb look interesting.

From that, I enjoyed most of the Twilight series. I don't know if it could work for the rest of my life in an island. And I liked what I read from C.S. Lewis as well as the "Gretchen Lowell" series.
So, final verdict:
The Chronicles of Narnia or the Gretchen Lowell Series.




There are nineteen of them so far. So that could keep me reading for a while and I know I like that a..."
Im with you on JD Robb's In Death series. Great characters, great chemistry (Eve and Roark; Peabody and Ian...etc).
Are there more than thirty books now?

Harry Potter series would definitely be up there.
Also, if collective works count, I'd take The Complete Novels of Jane Austen.

Other contenders:
Stephen King's Dark Tower series
Marion Zimmer Bradley's extensive Darkover series
Edit to add: Ooh, or the Year's Best Science Fiction series! That ought to keep me busy a while.

Books mentioned in this topic
Little House on the Prairie (other topics)Anne of Green Gables (other topics)
The Lord of the Rings (other topics)
Outlander (other topics)
The Complete Novels (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Alice Munro (other topics)Alice Munro (other topics)
Laurell K. Hamilton (other topics)
Lilian Jackson Braun (other topics)
Janet Evanovich (other topics)
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In case of a looooooong wait for rescue, it would need to be re-read worthy. Possibly re-read time and time again!
Please post the links so we can look at your choices. Gotta love book voyeurism.