Pretty much anything from Neal Stephenson, really.Me55enger said:REAMDE - Neal Stephenson.
Longest one I personally can recall that isnt a series of books. Similar in design to a brick.
Not that far through, however, but I had to read Snow Crash for Uni, which was superb.
Remember: Always check for a Dentata.
Bugger! I really should have thought of that.Bedla said:Another great (though somewhat unorthodox) read is Sandman from Neil Gaiman. Although it may have started as a series, it kinda grew from there. The last parts don't make much sense without all before them.
This! One of my favorite reads of all time.Captain Billy said:The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri- It's commonly regarded as one of, if not the, greatest poem ever written, and that's not without good reason. By turns a theological and metaphysical discourse, traditional epic, political commentary, love story, and slasher film, it's nothing if not diverse, but never schizophrenic. If you can stomach an unrelentingly graphic torture scene (read: the entirety of Inferno), you'll be rewarded with the best and arguably most influential journey story ever written. Its beauty ranges from perverse to serene, but it never loses the central contrapasso elements that make the story a cohesive and arresting whole.
Speaking of Stephen King, 11. 22. 63. is a very good book.Total LOLige said:Insomnia by Stephen King is pretty decent and like 800+ pages I think, not sure if that counts as insanely long.
I second this. All-though it seems only books that have a Swedish translation come into question and I don't believe Infinite Jest is as good in any other language then in English, but who knows. (I live in Germany by the way and I have read a fair share of translations and originals, so I can safely say that the original is always better.)t4nz1t said:Two thumbs up for this one.Axolotl said:Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace.
How broadly do you define fantasy?Queen Michael said:2. No fantasy. It doesn't interest me a bit, with very few exceptions. And absolutely no "I know you said that you don't like fantasy, but I think you'd like this one..." Ehehehe, I think I wouldn't. Thanks, but no thank you.
3. No series. What I want is a long book that offers a complete story in one novel.