Your favorite unpopular authors...
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Your favorite unpopular authors...
- Eric
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Thanks for the tip! I've never heard of this guy at all, I look forward to checking him out. I'm racking my brain for something a bit obscure which I can reccomend but I guess I'm too cautious, I spend all my time reading things that others have already said are good. One book which I really loved and I don't think many people have heard of (though it isn't fiction), was The Old Way by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas. It is about the so-called bushmen of the Kalahari, very interesting story.Eric wrote:I'm the only person I know who's into Ngugi wa Thiong'o, a radical Kenyan novelist.
- sleepydumpling
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- FavoriteMistake
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- The Mythwriter
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- Woodland Nymph
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When I bring up Holly Black or Washington Irving, I mostly get blank stares. But I'm sure everyone knows The Legend of Sleepy Hollow; they just don't know the man who wrote it.
- BoxingClever
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- tinyViolin
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Oh, I'll be sure to check that out; it sounds like just what I'm into.C.N. and A.M. Williamson; a husband and wife team. They wrote several books together from 1898 through 1920 or so. Nobody remembers them today, which is a shame! Their novels mainly focused on road trips and adventures in several different counties, and there was always plenty of romance and sugary wit.

I tend to go for what other people recommend, too. But, has anyone read Elizabeth Smart's At Grand Central Station I Sat Down And Wept? I found it at random when I was 13 and loved it. Because I was 13 and a sap, I don't know if I'd like it today. It's "prose poetry" and recounts the affair Smart had with a then-famous poet who was married. Very lyrical and~painful.
- Craigable
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I also admit that I like Dan Brown's books. The Da Vinci Code is my favorite, followed by Angels & Demons, Inferno, and Deception Point. I am just a sucker for his thrillers and I have no shame (well, maybe a little) admitting that I really cannot put his books down.