I learned to read in grade school like pretty much everyone else I know, and I remember really enjoying reading for a very narrow portion of my younger years. When reading books became a compulsary part of school, that enjoyment just vanished, and video games ended up filling that void of “solitary passtime”. I dont even really like video games all that much, eheh.

Now that im older, I dont really have authority figures threatening my future if I dont read the dryest books known to man, so I’m open to the idea of just reading again - it certainly cant be worse than just browsing lemmy posts for hours, right?

The thing is, I have absolutely no grasp on what the current book scene really looks like. I dont really know what authors are considered masters of the craft, or where to even really get a finger in the pulse on which I’d be into. If you could recommend someone who writes books you like, or just a few standouts, it would really help me get my bearings.

If it helps, I’m currently reading “A hundred years of solitude”, “Berserk”, and “Le fluers de mal”, and am generally open to tragedies, horror, and narratives that are either experimental or just weird. If you know of any manuals or informative books that are particularly well written, im also interested in those!

  • @HipsterTenZeroOP
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    21 year ago

    Watching media isn’t really my thing, though I can say I enjoyed Everything Everywhere All at Once recently. As far as games go, I’d say Silent Hill, Warframe, Pyre and Disco Elysium would be the best to establish the sort of narratives I’m into the most.

    • @JaymesRS@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      I don’t read a bunch of strict Horror, but I have enjoyed the ones I’ve read by Grady Hendrix.

      Otherwise, based on your answer, here are a few books I’ve read that line up for one reason or another. I’ve placed them in a specific order but they are all enjoyable:

      Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi John Dies at the End by David Wong Dark Matter by Blake Crouch The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turton This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe by Charles Yu Echo Wife by Sarah Gailey

    • @JaymesRS@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      Something else just occurred to me, you might try the Dungeon Crawler Carl series by Matt Dinniman or This Quest is Broken series by J.P. Valentine too. They are a newer genre called LitRPG where the conventions of gaming (like things being “quests” or health/mana bars are directly apparent to the characters and it makes for some interesting moments.