Right now, I am reading - The Man who Mistook His Wife For A Hat : And Other Clinical Tales. It is a very interesting read on neurology and psychology.
My anatomy teacher talked about that book, and I was actually trying to remember the name of it the other day. How did it turn out? Is it a good read? It sounded cool in class.
Michael Chrichton is the best novelist out there today, and it's a sad, sad thing whenever hollywood gets ahold of one of his story's. Eaters of the Dead could have been so good
The one thing that really irritates me about his books is that he apparently doesn't know any synonyms for the word "said". Maybe he's gotten better in recent books, but many of the books I read, it was always "he said, she said, they said, I said, you said, we said" etc. After I noticed that in his books, I fixated on it until the book became unreadable.
Terry Goodkinds Sword of Truth series makes Jordan's WoT eat shit and die.
I agree the first couple books blizowned WOT, but he's really stretching it in the later series with his overuse of Deux ex machina. Richard spends 4/5 of any book denying he's anything more than a poor, lost woodsman from the Heartlands, and crying about it, but can miraculously divine the solution to the problem when all hope seems lost. Every time. I mean.. wtf, he's lying there barely conscious and dying, but he just HAPPENS to be able to divine the *exact* measurements of all ingredients needed for a antidote for poison that no one else knew? C'mon..
I really like the George R. R. Martin books, and have just started A Feast for Crows. Love the series so far, even though it secretly pisses me off whenever he kills another character I was just getting attached to. And I <3 the character of The Hound, even though I think I'm not supposed to. Tyrion 4tw as well.
Loved The Da Vinci Code and am looking foward to picking up Angels and Demons (I think I read those out of order).
There's a bunch of other fantasy books I liked, but I can't remember all the authors off the top of my head.