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Best Fiction Books


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I inspire new possibilities to deepen love, intimacy and self-expression. I mainly write articles about that, but you'll also find refrences on design, fitness and finance. More

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The four agreements by Don Ruis Miguel

Third and last part of the Silo series.

Honestly the worst of the three books. All the mystery has been explained by this point and you kind of just want to know how it ends. But hey, entertaining enough.

Dust by Hugh Howey

Third and last part of the Silo series.

Honestly the worst of the three books. All the mystery has been explained by this point and you kind of just want to know how it ends. But hey, entertaining enough.

Little house in the big woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder

It's really sweet. Simple text of course since it's for children. Very good insight to how life was back in the day too and surviving without modern technology.

Cat’s cradle by

It’s a story about a writer who sets out to write a book about the day the atom bomb was dropped and starts by contacting the children of the inventor.

It’s very interesting. It’s very funny. It’s written simply and the story is absurd but there is great skill tying it all together. I suppose the main message is questioning religion by having us look at the absurd one the protagonist discovers.

Ender's game by Orson Scott Card

It’s about a time a few hundred years in the future when humans have has battles with an alien race. Now they’re training kids to fight them. The story is about one of those boys in training school in space, learning through game battles.

Really good. Works for all ages without being too childish even if it’s about children. It got elevated from just good thanks surprises and the sophisticated ending.

Shift by Hugh Howey

A prequel to Wool, but you need to read Wool first. Wool is about life in the silo and Shift is about how the silo came to be and jumps both through time and different perspectives. Really three stories intertwined.

Not as good as the first one but still great. Impressed with how it ties in so well with everything in the first book.

Wool by Hugh Howey

Its about a silo spanning over 100 floors underground. A bunker where people have lived for generations. The protagonist tries to uncover mysterious deaths and ends up uncovering what the silo really is.

Love it. One of my favorite science fiction books. I’ve read it two or three times. A lot of suspense and smart twists but also sweet moments making it a well-rounded story.

Red rising by Pierce Brown

It’s like hunger games but in space and with a cast structure of different human races.

It was just an alright first quarter. Pretty predictable. Then it got more and more interesting with twists and surprises. Overall it was good. Glad I read it. Might read the rest of the series because the the full story isn’t over at all. The world he’s invented is interesting but not one of the best. Doesn’t have the depth or the wow of others.

Three laws lethal by David Walton

An object of beauty by Steve Martin

Forgettable. I suggest reading Shopgirl instead. Even The Pleasure of My Company was better than this.

The lost symbol by Dan Brown

Like the Da Vinci Code but in Washington DC.

Everything is illuminated by

American jew goes to former USSR to find his roots.

Tell all by Chuck Palahniuk

After having read a few other books by the author which I liked, I report with disappointment this is his worst.

Last updated 07 July 2016

About

I inspire new possibilities to deepen love, intimacy and self-expression. I mainly write articles about that, but you'll also find refrences on design, fitness and finance. More

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