My 10 Favorite Authors

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июл 2024
  • My 10 Favorite Authors.
    Of fiction anyway.

Комментарии • 136

  • @ImToastAlso
    @ImToastAlso Год назад +27

    Please don’t ever feel you have to apologize for being honest about your opinions or preferences, in writers, books, anything! I come here to hear about books, ideas, writing and reading. It’s so good to get away from the PC world and what it dictates to us. I’m a woman and not one bit offended that these were all men. In fact, I celebrate you being true to yourself.

    • @uhIcy
      @uhIcy Год назад +2

      Facts

  • @teetoo3790
    @teetoo3790 Год назад +5

    You got me excited to read H.G. Wells books again. Haven't read them since my youth. I will read The Time Machine again now this summer.

  • @FreyaVal
    @FreyaVal Год назад +3

    You know you meet a bookworm when they watch a YT video about books and authors with maximum volume at a restaurant

  • @mizukarate
    @mizukarate Год назад +9

    I appreciate your honesty. Don't let the W. Horde tell you what to enjoy. How can people really learn if they are not getting the real scoop. Keep it up buddy your videos are really good.

  • @masonbricke4568
    @masonbricke4568 Год назад +2

    You should read some of Twain's later stories and essays. Some very cynical and dark stuff. Twain and Howard could probably have had a good conversation about life over a few drinks or a fine cigar. Very different from his earlier whimsical writings, though they are enjoyable as well. :)

  • @rufust.firefly4890
    @rufust.firefly4890 Год назад +1

    Steinbeck. "BOY! That Mickey Spillane sure could write." Line from Marty, 1955.

  • @Angel-sh7mn
    @Angel-sh7mn Год назад +9

    People really need to stop being so conscious about liking stuff "dead white guys" did. You like what you like. Dont be ashamed of it.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +2

      I’m not. I just know the kind of comments I often get.

    • @Angel-sh7mn
      @Angel-sh7mn Год назад +2

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 that's why I tend to avoid comments sections everywhere. They're all trash.

  • @angrysquirrel187
    @angrysquirrel187 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the list (though I did keep checking to see if the title wasn’t ‘favorite horror and adventure authors’).
    I use to love and re-read Chandler repeatedly in the 80’s, but I found it much more difficult to engage with recently.
    I loved Hanmet too, though it’s been awhile since I’ve tried rereading him (Red Harvest👍).
    I’m happy I’ve discovered your channel and look forward to checking more of your recommendations and thoughts.

  • @bookfantastic
    @bookfantastic 10 месяцев назад +1

    I tried to think of my choices before watching this video. My choices were close to yours and most one of these authors crossed my mind. I did forget about Hammett and Chandler , but the instant you brought up one I agreed with both. I have never read Ross McDonald, but I must resolve this omission. I went in with the thought that "who are the writers who inspire me to read all of their works?" So I guess it is my conclusion that ten is too few. I would add Clark Ashton Smith, William Hope Hodgson, Mark Twain, and Robert Louis Stevenson, and certainly P. G. Wodehouse. I have never read a book by Wodehouse I have not enjoyed and i believe I have a good 70 more to go.
    Thanks for a great share.

  • @Alittlefruitgoesalongway
    @Alittlefruitgoesalongway Год назад +12

    I'm still relatively new to the reading hobby so I haven't read much more than 1 book from most authors I've read yet. However I can say that Dostoevsky is my favorite. I've read all his 4 major novels this year and loved them all. I also like Dumas a lot, especially The Count of Monte Cristo. My favorite sci-fi/fantasy author atm would be Dan Abnett, primarily for his Eisenhorn series. Very fun!

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +2

      I have not read Dan Abnett yet. I will have to pick up some of his books.

    • @phronze1
      @phronze1 Год назад +2

      Here to give Dostoyevsky additional praise. Brothers Karamazov was so deep and such a brilliant study of the variety of human beliefs and values. One of those books that crossed centuries and oceans to teach me about myself

  • @Carlo-V.
    @Carlo-V. Год назад +3

    Hi Mike! I just wanted to congratulate for this video. I mean, it's hard to single out a favourite author, at least for me ... Maybe I would go with HPL ... but there are so many, mainstream and not... What really makes me appreciate your discussion is that you actually nailed it down, you got to the point of what is literature and what is not. Howard wrote fantastic stories, but what makes him a "serious writer" is the fact that, as you said, put himself into his stories, his own philosophy, his worldview. He was not a hack, he was an artist.

  • @ZosoLU
    @ZosoLU Год назад +4

    Great video! I'm currently reading Hammett's Red Harvest. The Continental Op does not mess around. What a fantastic badass character.

  • @denisadellinger4543
    @denisadellinger4543 Год назад +12

    As a girl, I am not drawn into men's adventure. But you are making me develop an appreciation for it. HG Wells is an author that we all need to read. But the stories of Robert E Howard stir me the most. I am all ears when you share about the characters and the stories, and I am going to find them and read some.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +1

      Thank you! Robert E. Howard was so good. I’m sure you will enjoy his work.

    • @markw.loughton6786
      @markw.loughton6786 Год назад

      highly recommend REH, he lived a short life, but whatever he did write was always entertaining, love his horror stories.

    • @MarkAS56
      @MarkAS56 Год назад +1

      Talbot Mundy has a couple shorter books you could start with too. Especially The Nine Unknown.

    • @Messihaz
      @Messihaz Год назад +2

      that makes no sense but ok

    • @rufust.firefly4890
      @rufust.firefly4890 Год назад

      Try Daphne du Maurier. I read Edna Ferber's Giant, but I failed to see what the big deal was. Going back some, you might want to see about Edith Wharton as well.

  • @paulmonahawk4921
    @paulmonahawk4921 Год назад +1

    Great video! Really enjoyed it. Chandler has been one of my favourites for a long time but I only recently read hammett, the Maltese Falcon is masterful indeed!!

  • @williebarkley7046
    @williebarkley7046 Год назад +2

    I want to thank you for putting me on to H.P. Lovecraft
    I purchased a complete fiction of his and am loving it
    I just read “old bugs” and “the transition of Juan Romero”
    Awesome
    Thanks again

  • @MichaelRomeoTalksBooks
    @MichaelRomeoTalksBooks Год назад +1

    Good line up. I totally agree with your mystery entries.

  • @abhilashmaddali7158
    @abhilashmaddali7158 Год назад +4

    I am a big fan of Howard, Lovecraft and Burroughs. Also started getting into Machen, Hammett.

  • @supernova1969
    @supernova1969 Год назад +9

    Thank you for your great list, and this very illuminating video. I learn so much from you. In particular, my father was right to encourage me to read Herbert George Wells, Edgar Rice Burroughs, H.P . Lovecraft, Robert E. Howards and many of the authors mentioned.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +3

      Thanks Super Nova! Your father was obviously a man with great taste in literature.

  • @vilstef6988
    @vilstef6988 Год назад +1

    Raymond Chandler also wrote the screenplay to The Blue Dalia. I was expecting to find H Rider Haggard on your list.

  • @bookssongsandothermagic
    @bookssongsandothermagic Год назад +1

    Ahhh Richard Matheson. You know I relate to that one! I’d love to do a Wells video before the end of the year if I can….I’m amazed that you chose Machen above Doyle. Have you done a video on Machen yet? I can’t remember seeing one…..? I like the way you describe Lovecraft’s style….a difficult thing to articulate in some ways. Love this video.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +2

      I did talk about Machen, but it’s been a while. I should do that. You’ve convinced me! Also, I look forward to that Wells video.

  • @suzannes8017
    @suzannes8017 Год назад +1

    The depth of your reading of individual authors is impressive! And it probably enables you to come up with a list of favorites. By contrast, I have read quite broadly but not in depth--which probably makes me something of a dilettante--so I am really unable to make a list of favorite writers. Some of my favorite books are by writers on your list (Conan Doyle, Dashiell Hammett and Burroughs).

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +1

      My reading only has this much depth because I’m old and I’ve read every day since I was quite little.

  • @knapalo
    @knapalo Год назад +2

    I have to try Hammett and Mathessen. I probably misspelled their names, and I apologize. Could you maybe talk about that Black Leather Star Trek book I see in the background? Like your Flat cap by the way.

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt Год назад

    Great List

  • @DDB168
    @DDB168 Год назад +1

    Had a feeling Howard and Lovecraft would be at the top. Good to see Matheson in there too. 👍

  • @nikkivenable3700
    @nikkivenable3700 Год назад

    Ross McDonald is one I’ve never heard of. Do recommend I start with book 1 of the Archer series? Also, I read Lovecraft for the first time today. I read Dagon earlier and then The Rats in the Wall. I’m not sure how I feel yet but the guy can sure tell a story.

  • @Monsterblood
    @Monsterblood Год назад

    Great video! The only ones I would have guessed were Lovecraft and Howard

  • @NP-Hunt
    @NP-Hunt Год назад

    Great list Michael. I think the only major surprise here for me was that Doyle wasn't up there in the top 5. Either way, there are a lot of writers here who I'd also put in my own top 10 of all time.

  • @DoUnicornsRead
    @DoUnicornsRead Год назад

    Great list! Nice to see some of those noir writers like Chandler and Hammet.

  • @markbaker737
    @markbaker737 Год назад

    Can’t forget Herman Melville.. just finished Typee.. great story

  • @fithfath3615
    @fithfath3615 Год назад +2

    I know and have read most (not all) of the authors on your list and they are great writers. I have a question though, have you found any authors in the later half of the last century or in the last 20 years that meet the same standard you are applying to your top ten? Could you extend your list to a top twenty and if you did would it include any more recent authors?

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      To be honest, most of my favorites are pretty old. There are exceptions, like Joe Abercrombie, but not many.

  • @MarkAS56
    @MarkAS56 Год назад

    Great respect for this list, we have the same #1 and much overlap. I'd have Mundy and Haggard on my list though, in place of the mystery authors. I have little to no experience with them yet.
    Absolutely love The Nine Unknown and She, especially. And Mundy's Athelstan King, i think i actually like him more than Jimgrim.

  • @earlleeruhf3130
    @earlleeruhf3130 Год назад

    While I love Howard, Wells, Lovecraft and Burroughs I was waiting for Jack London, Kipling, and Jules Verne. I haven't read any of the crime writers mentioned except Doyle but all together a great list.

  • @marys32333
    @marys32333 Год назад +2

    Glad to see this list, Michael. I want to mention one improvement for this kind of video which I would offer to almost every booktube video: please put names and titles on the screen as you talk about the person or the book. It isn't always easy to understand what is being said and certainly spellings can vary. I enjoy your videos and would welcome this additional information.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      That would be better, I admit, but that kind of thing can take some time. Not much, but more than I had. I generally have so little time that I do these in one take and hope for the best. I couldn’t do a video a day otherwise.

    • @zatanna321
      @zatanna321 Год назад +1

      An alternative could be to physically hold up a book with the name on it or a piece of paper?

    • @muhlenstedt
      @muhlenstedt Год назад

      As a non native english speaker I find very difficult to understand the name those are new for me. Perhaps Michael could write the names below the video.

  • @ronbo11
    @ronbo11 9 месяцев назад

    Any person is limited by their language(s), cultural background and just dealing with being finite beings with restrictions on time, so to have a list of Top 10 "dead white guys" as your favorites is very understandable. Obviously, they are all English language authors as well. If I were to compile such a list, I'd only have 1 (possibly 2) authors who are non-English writers. Of course, I'm limited to the quality of the translations as well in these cases. Detective fiction is one area I've not gained a great affinity for, but I do like cinematic adaptations of a lot of these books. Maybe I should try some Chandler/Hammett novels.
    The only living author I'd have on my list is also the one that is non-English. The Japanese author Haruki Murakami has captured my imagination in so many of his works that he quickly shot up in my internal rankings. Not all his works are superlative, but he has a number of them that are. He is sort of a magical realist author in the most basic categorization, but it's just a blunt way to describe the subtle touches of fantasy in his best fiction.
    Thanks for sharing your list!
    ---Edit---
    Oh heck, here would be my list as it now stands:
    Mark Twain
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    J.R.R. Tolkien
    Philip K. Dick
    Haruki Murakami
    Michael Moorcock
    Ernest Hemingway
    H.P. Lovecraft
    Sharon Kay Penman
    Edgar Allan Poe

  • @briteskin
    @briteskin Год назад

    Robert E Howard is the only author from your list that would make mine. Since finishing high school I've sadly kept to my comfort authors, for the most part. Stephen King, Kathe Koja, Neil Gaiman, David Morrell, Caitlin R Kiernan are examples of some that would make my list.
    That is why I turned to book tube in the first place because I realized I shouldn't be treating novels like comics (lots of rereading while sticking to characters, artists, writers) and more like movies.

  • @HeyYallListenUp
    @HeyYallListenUp Год назад +1

    Interesting list. I've read a couple of them. I'll most likely skip the mystery writers, but the others I need to check out at some point.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +1

      You might like the detective stuff. They are about guys almost as tough as you!

  • @TheNineteenthCentury
    @TheNineteenthCentury Месяц назад

    My ten favourites, saving the best authors to the last, go something like this --
    10. Arthur Machen
    09. Stanley G. Weinbaum
    08. J.R.R. Tolkien
    07. Edgar Rice Burroughs
    06. Jules Verne
    05. Edgar A. Poe
    04. Rudyard Kipling
    03. H.P. Lovecraft
    02. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    01. Sir H. Rider Haggard
    Honourable mentions: Lord Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton, H.G. Wells, Voltaire, Jerome K. Jerome, Yann Martel, Mary Shelley, Robert Bloch, M.R. James, and Dame Agatha Christie.
    I still need to get round to Homer, Herodotus, Virgil, A. Merritt, Algernon Blackwood, Lord Dunsany, Sax Rohmer, Talbot Mundy, Robert E. Howard, Clark Ashton Smith, Thomas Kent Miller, and so on. My list will probably change slightly once I read these.
    My top two (Conan Doyle and Rider Haggard) are somewhat interchangeable, depending as they say on what day of the week it is. Haggard might just be favourite, though -- he is the greatest adventure writer ever, and his works are as underrated as Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. However, Doyle's The Lost World is my single favourite book of all time, challenged in this regard only by its sequel and several of Haggard's works.

  • @troytradup
    @troytradup Год назад +1

    That's a hard list to make. I thought I had a vague handle on it, but then got to wondering -- can someone hit the top ten on the basis of only one book? Are the authors of my ten favorite novels my ten favorite authors by default? Finally I just had to go lie down.

  • @DopamineSink
    @DopamineSink Год назад +1

    Machen and Blackwood deserve a decent, fine/private press edition. The only decent Machen volume is the Oxford one, and the quality is very poor: glued binding, acidic paper(which means it will degrade), thin boards, thin cloth fabric, no illustrations, no typesetting... Hopefully a mainstream press will give us something with heavy boards, some good illustrations, ph neutral rag paper, Smyth sewn binding etc. Something these guys deserve to have. Maybe Folio Society? Their MR James volumes were solid.

  • @sethball2475
    @sethball2475 Год назад +1

    Thanks for your countdown. Predictable, but overdue, as a basic way of finally knowing how you would rank the ones you really love. And, here I go:
    P. G. Wodehouse (Humorous)
    Fredric Brown (Crime & Mystery; SF)
    Bob Shaw (SF)
    Ramsey Campbell (Horror; Dark Fantasy)
    Patricia Wentworth (Crime & Mystery; Romance)
    William Marshall (Crime & Mystery)
    Jo Nesbo (Crime & Mystery)
    Octavia E. Butler (SF; Horror)
    H. G. Wells (SF; Horror; English Lit)
    Eugene Sue (Horror; Crime & Mystery)

    • @farhad_s
      @farhad_s Год назад

      Nothing compares to P.G. Wodehouse. Outside of Wooster and Jeeeves, Blandings Castle, PSmith, and all, the two funniest books I've read are Three Men in a Boat (Jerome. K Jerome) and Pickwick Papers (Charles Dickens). And all of Discworld (Terry Pratchett) of course.

    • @sethball2475
      @sethball2475 Год назад +1

      @@farhad_s Loved Three Men in a Boat. Changing Places by David Lodge is pretty funny. A Canadian humourist named Donald Jack has some great entries in his Bartholomew Bandy series, especially a later one called Me Too. A writer named Ben Schott is daring to write Jeeves & Bertie novels...and doing very well. He's got nerve, I'll give him that - but Jeeves and the King of Clubs was amazing, so I put Jeeves and the Leap of Faith on order. I never thought he would have the audacity to try write in the Wodehouse tradition twice!

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      Excellent! Great list!

  • @frankmorlock9134
    @frankmorlock9134 Год назад +2

    This is more like a list of favorite SciFi, Adventure, Detective and Horror novelists writing in English. And as such it is a good list. I certainly agree that H.G. Wells and Arthur Conan Doyle. belong on just about anybody's top ten. But I think Jules Verne, Alexander Dumas pere, V. Hugo, Tolstoi, Dostoevski, Turgenev, Diderot, Dickens and Trollope would be on mine. In SciFi I would like to include Connie Willis, in mystery Agatha Christie and Mary Roberts Rinehart, G.Simenon; adventure Anthony Hope, H.Rider Haggard, in horror E.A. Poe.
    And where would we put Herman Melville, Walter Scott ,Henry James and Jane Austen ?

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +1

      Yeah, my favorite kind of stuff is pretty obvious from this list. Dumas came very close, as did Dostoevsky.

  • @potatopower2144
    @potatopower2144 Год назад

    Great video 👍

  • @fidelogos7098
    @fidelogos7098 Год назад

    As an avid reader, I was drawn to your video about your favorite authors. Most of them I've read and liked. I wonder if you read books outside the two genres you seem to like the most? My favorite authors are all over the spectrum. Terry Pratchett, Douglas Adams, JRR Tolkien, GRR Martin, Jane Austen, P.G. Wodehouse, Jodi Picoult, James Thurber, Mark Twain are my top ten, but not necessarily in that order. I think I'm drawn to any well-written humor, but George R R Martin and JRR Tolkien don't fit that category very well!

  • @jamesfetcho6315
    @jamesfetcho6315 Год назад

    I agree with the whole list except for 2 of those detective writers...,and would exchange them for David Gemmell, and Brian Lumley. Great Video, and List.👍😁👍

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      The more Lumley I read the higher I’m sure he will go. I would read him this month but I really can’t think of his stuff as Garbaugust material. I think he is underrated as it is.

    • @jamesfetcho6315
      @jamesfetcho6315 Год назад

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 👍

  • @rmonak9175
    @rmonak9175 Год назад +2

    My favorite writers:
    1. Robert E. Howard
    2. H.P. Lovecraft
    3. J.R.R. Tolkien
    4. Andrzej Sapkowski
    5. Stanislav Lem

  • @farhad_s
    @farhad_s Год назад +1

    1. Terry Pratchett
    2. P.G. Wodehouse
    3. Arthur Conan Doyle
    4. J.R.R. Tolkien
    5. Agatha Christie
    6. Stephen King
    7. Jules Verne
    8. H.P. Lovecraft
    9. Tom Sharpe
    10. Bernard Cornwell
    Honourable mentions - Lewis Carroll, H.G. Wells, Charles Dickens, Robert Louis Stevenson, Edgar Allan Poe, Frederick Forsyth, Isaac Asimov, Neil Gaiman, and, growing up, Enid Blyton.

  • @uhIcy
    @uhIcy Год назад

    Fantastic list

  • @ericr8048
    @ericr8048 Год назад +1

    Most of my favorite authors would not be considered to be the best, either. For instance, one of my all-time favorites is Dennis Wheatley. He was criticized in his life for his lack of writing style, yet he sold like crazy (well, not as much here in the U.S.). However, I have read so many of his books and found them to quite enjoyable. A few are not that great, of course.
    I would have to agree with Lovecraft and Howard. For some reason, they really seem in their element with the short fiction. Of course, short fiction works quite well for horror, in general, and they both wrote some really good horror. I am currently reading a volume of Howard’s Conan stories.
    Then there is Jack Ketchum. His first novel, Off Season, is one of my absolute favorite books and I have read it three times so far (with me reading a different edition each time, like a damn nerd). The Lost, The Girl Next Door, Cover, and the list goes on. His writing is pretty much lean and mean. It is typically also pretty brutal. He wrote some great short fiction too.
    I guess Stephen King would be in there, too. He has written some great stuff and he has written some absolute clunkers (Insomnia comes to mind), but like Wheatley, I have read so many of his books and generally enjoyed them.
    I am honestly not really sure who else I would include in a top ten list. I rather enjoy Sax Rohmer, but I don’t know if he would quite make it to top ten. Same for James Herbert. I mainly like his early work.

  • @occultdetective
    @occultdetective Год назад +2

    Great list, Michael. Hard to argue with any of it.
    My list: (10) Dennis Wheatley (9) Manly Wade Wellman (8) Arthur Machen (7) Neil Gaiman (6) Robert Anton Wilson (5) Algernon Blackwood (4) Katherine Kurtz (3) HP Lovecraft (2) JRR Tolkien (1) Robert E Howard

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +2

      Excellent! I’m in the process of hunting down some Dennis Wheatley now.

    • @occultdetective
      @occultdetective Год назад

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 I'm jealous. I started reading Wheatley as a child. Would love to revisit him with fresh eyes.

  • @gavinmcintosh5716
    @gavinmcintosh5716 Год назад

    If you love Lovecraft and Howard then you got to get to Clark Ashton Smith. The third guy doing this stuff who was a friend of both.

  • @mikebrough3434
    @mikebrough3434 Год назад

    Best discussion of HPL's racism I've read - he hated everyone.

  • @TheJohno95
    @TheJohno95 Год назад +1

    Sir, we share a lot of favorite writers in common! And I have to give you a high-five for having Robert E. Howard as Number One! Most people put as as Number 2 to H.P. Lovecraft, but I have a strong love for Howard's work! I've been reading his boxing fiction recently and it is so much FUN! What most people would think sounds boring on the outside is just exciting and a good time when you get into it. Maybe it's because I share a lot of the slang with Sailor Steve, but I always get a good laugh out of those! And while his stories are formulaic, I never get tired of the formula!

  • @snowysnowyriver
    @snowysnowyriver Год назад +1

    I love your list and if I had 20 picks, three of your choices would also be on my list. But just for 10 picks it would have to be these.....in no particular order: .
    CS Lewis,
    JRR Tolkien,
    Dorothy L Sayers,
    GK Chesterton,
    Evelyn Waugh
    JK Rowling,
    Dennis Wheatley,
    Ellis Peters,
    Daphne Du Maurier,
    Edgar Allen Poe,

    • @knittingbooksetc.2810
      @knittingbooksetc.2810 Год назад +1

      Many of these are in my list. But I have no idea who Dennis Wheatley is.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +1

      Excellent!

    • @snowysnowyriver
      @snowysnowyriver Год назад +2

      @@knittingbooksetc.2810 Oh my! You must give him a try! He wrote horror, thrillers, historical fiction and non-fiction. He was one of the world's best selling authors of the mid-20th century. Some of books were made into films. The hero in his thrillers was one of Ian Fleming's inspiration for James Bond. Wheatley worked for intelligence operations in WW2 and lived in the world he wrote about. Many of his fans believe (as I do) that his character Gregory Sallust was more credible and believable than James Bond.

  • @jasongeis679
    @jasongeis679 Год назад +1

    I’m always surprised, given your love for the pulps, that Clark Ashton Smith doesn’t seem to show up much on your lists. Personally, I prefer him to Lovecraft, though Howard was always my favorite of the three.

  • @arekkrolak6320
    @arekkrolak6320 Год назад

    try Marlon James, he is very alive black man and he is pretty good too!

  • @rigohook1160
    @rigohook1160 Год назад

    Howards Conan was way better than of all the Autors that copied him over the years. So vibrant and brimming with live. I find all of his "pulp" way better than what modern fantasy writers bring to the table nowadays.

  • @RobVanDelay_WholeFnContest
    @RobVanDelay_WholeFnContest Год назад

    The thin Man is a all time great

  • @apscis_3417
    @apscis_3417 Год назад

    0:58 - as a living white guy, my blood is boiling right now! 😄
    I enjoy all of these writers as well, incidentally, although Ross MacDonald is hit or miss for me - The Zebra-Striped Hearse is probably one of my favorite detective novels, though. Highly recommend some John Dickson Carr if you haven't read him! The Three Coffins, The Burning Court, He Who Whispers... all nice horror/mystery hybrids.

  • @Brunette_Rapunzel
    @Brunette_Rapunzel Год назад

    I like J.R.R. Tolkien, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, CS Lewis, Alexandre Dumas, John Steinbeck, Jane Austen, Michelle Moran, JK Rowling, Stephen King, and B.A. Paris, in sort of that order, but not necessarily. :)

  • @ThisJustInBookTube
    @ThisJustInBookTube Год назад

    The only surprise on this list is that Doyle squeaked in at number ten. I haven’t yet read Macdonald or Hammett. I should fix that soon.

  • @nedmerrill5705
    @nedmerrill5705 Год назад

    I didn't realize Arthur Conan Doyle had such an impressive moustache.

  • @glockensig
    @glockensig 11 месяцев назад

    When you said " nothing nefarious".....I thought someone had accused you of bumping off these old white guys!!😅

  • @revenantreads
    @revenantreads Год назад +1

    Didn’t I recently hear a 28-year-old influencer suggest that Howard was a trash writer? Kids these days.

  • @hughminor9369
    @hughminor9369 Год назад

    My top 7
    1. Lester Dent (Kenneth Robeson)
    2 Jules Verne
    3. Ernest Hemingway
    4 Agatha Christie
    5. Arthur Conan Doyle
    6.Rex Stout
    7. Ian Fleming

  • @johannemilsom7503
    @johannemilsom7503 Год назад

    👍

  • @redwawst3258
    @redwawst3258 2 месяца назад

    😊

  • @theobaldlolworth4717
    @theobaldlolworth4717 Год назад +1

    A good choice! Of the Three Greats of Weird Tales Howard was the best narrator and story-teller (while HPL was the best at myth/mythography, and Klarkshton the best (prose-)poet).

  • @johnmoller9738
    @johnmoller9738 Год назад

    Have you ever read Clark Ashton Smith’s works?

  • @jeremyfee
    @jeremyfee Год назад

    Starting out the video, I just know Blake Crouch is going to be #1, right, right... awww, LOL. Now I'm wondering how my current top ten list would turn out... hmmmmm...

  • @Leebearify
    @Leebearify Год назад

    Ursula ??? what no Ursula ??? Oh no !!!

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      To be honest, I don’t feel I’ve read enough of her yet. When I get around to doing this again she might rate a lot higher.

  • @sgriffin9960
    @sgriffin9960 Год назад +4

    Interesting - most of these dead white guys I’ve not seen pictures of before, I just know them by name.

  • @carenome1
    @carenome1 Год назад

    With your love of detective mysteries, I'm surprised that Agatha Christy isn't on your list.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      Even more surprising is that I’ve barely read Christy. I’m planning on changing that.

  • @kabiansadi
    @kabiansadi Год назад +2

    One of my favorite authors, Machado de Assis, is a black dead guy. So I guess I'm safe.

  • @BookTimewithElvis
    @BookTimewithElvis Год назад

    Wonderful choices but no Haggard oh dear oh dear 🤣

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      Is Haggard in your top ten? See, now you have to do this!

    • @BookTimewithElvis
      @BookTimewithElvis Год назад

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 he is indeed and yes I'll give it a go though I do appreciate narrowing it down to ten is a challenge 😁

  • @donaldmartineau8176
    @donaldmartineau8176 Год назад

    I've read most of these authors. Great list! Dickens, Poe, Solzhenitzyn, Michener, Updike, the Brontes, M. M. Kaye, Tolstoy, Dostoevski, Dumas, Hugo, Follett, and many,many, many.......... more. Just to name a few.

  • @neorich59
    @neorich59 Год назад

    There are a few dead (and living) white men and women, who'd make my top 10: Armistead Maupin and Marion Bradley to name two.
    You describe one author as being "a man of his time." Quite, we are increasingly living in a world where such (and there are many of them) authors are being derided and looked at through the lenses of our attitudes today. But, I'm not in favour of "cancelling" such works.
    Hopefully, we're still able to enjoy them, while being aware (while not approving) of the attitudes of the authors.
    Otherwise, what's left to read, or in the case of films, watch, or in the case of music, listen to?

  • @tonygriego6382
    @tonygriego6382 Год назад +2

    Great list but, no Rudyard Kipling? No Jules Verne? Not even Walter B Gibson?...

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +1

      Well, it’s a top ten list. I love all those authors. I just like these ten more.

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 10 месяцев назад

    Hemingway Twain Nabokov Stendahl Chandler Hammett Didion St Matthew Spillane Kerouac Burroughs Jim Davis

  • @chevalierdulys
    @chevalierdulys Год назад

    what''s the problem of white guys? My favorite wrtiers are all white (although one woman is there haha)... it doesn't matter the race or sex.. what matters in books is the content :D that's my take... you've got several of my favorite. thank you for this list

  • @donniehuynh2391
    @donniehuynh2391 Год назад

    My top 5 favorite authors at this moment are Ray Bradbury, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Astrid Lindgren, Dashiell Hammett, and Edgar Rice Burroughs.

  • @gregmoore167
    @gregmoore167 Год назад

    I am surprised no Jules Verne! Would he be number 11 on your list, or do you not really care for him?

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад

      I like Jules Verne a lot. I’m not sure where I would place him on a list. I’ll have to think about that.

  • @masonbricke4568
    @masonbricke4568 Год назад

    Ten extra credits for being so impeccably dressed, and for mentioning Burroughs and Doyle, both of whom wrote westerns when Zane Grey was the literary big dog of that genre. Sadly, a demerit for not making at least a passing mention of O. Henry, one of the best popular writers of the early twentieth century. Please do better next time.
    Now stop reading the comments and get back to your books. :)

  • @mr_reborn
    @mr_reborn Год назад +10

    You need to apologise for the race of your favourite authors? Really? You like classic western literature, gee, what a crime.

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  Год назад +2

      I wasn’t apologizing. I just know I’ll get pointed comments about it.

  • @duffypratt
    @duffypratt Год назад +1

    Cheater. Where are the Greek historians?
    Also, is it just a coincidence that they’re all dead, or have you been up to something?
    I’m a big fan of Hammett Chandler, and McDonald (and his brothers John D. and Philip). Surprised not to see James Cain here. He often goes along with the hard-boiled guys. Also, have you read Lawrence Block or Elmore Leonard. I think they are in the same league.

  • @kevinrussell-jp6om
    @kevinrussell-jp6om 25 дней назад

    You mean your favorite authors DON'T include Colleen Hoover, Ottessa Moshfeg, or N'deta Magwengway???
    By all that the Bronte sisters held dear, HOW DARE YOU???!!!

    • @michaelk.vaughan8617
      @michaelk.vaughan8617  25 дней назад

      Sorry!

    • @kevinrussell-jp6om
      @kevinrussell-jp6om 25 дней назад

      @@michaelk.vaughan8617 No apologies necessary. Funny thing, none of these women are on my list either.
      John D. Macdonald is, IMO, superior to Ross, but it's just a question of taste. HGW, Conrad, and your two detective fiction stars, Hammett and Chandler are MY go-to pleasure reads.