Which book would you recommend me as my first ever book?

  • I’d second all the recommendations here, but I’d also want to know what reading level you’d be interested in, and also why you haven’t ever read a book for fun before? It would be helpful to know to be able to point to books that would avoid whatever your sticking points may have been. As far as introductory fun books I’d recommend:

    • The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien (Not too long, it’s a classic and is one I’ve read multiple times over the years)
    • Hatchet by Gary Paulsen (While it’s a YA novel, it was very formative for me as I read it in like 3-4th grade, is basically something that could have happened in reality but is a fictional account.)
    • Cradle series by Will Wight (A bit off the path from traditional fantasy, it’s more properly in the subgenre of progression fantasy, which is basically what the genre of Dragon Ball Z would be, the unifying premise of these stories is that the MC starts fairly weak and then gets stronger over the course of the series, with generally an unlimited upper cap to how powerful characters can get through various kinds of training/levelling up/finding new gear/items/spells etc)
  • I would recommend any of the Neil Gaiman books, very readable and fascinating. For shorter reads go with Good Omens, Coraline, Neverwhere, Stardust and for a longer read American Gods (my fav).

    If you like horror Stephen King is incredibly easy to get into.

  • In /r/fantasy, someone recently read Mistborn as their first book and loved it! I would recommend this one. Brandon Sanderson is very approachable, and he doesn’t employ tropes like deliberately leaving the reader utterly confused at the same time as the main character (only a little, in manageable doses), or having a huge number of plotlines that intersect at very confusing times in confusing ways, or etc.

    Which isn’t to say the plot is straightforward! There’s lots of twists and turns, and you’ll be amazed where the series ends up :) Very suspenseful and engaging trilogy.

  • @s804 I’d recommend Terry Pratchett books, and more specifically Guards! Guards!.

    If you’re more into hard fantasy, Brandon Sanderson wrote very enjoyable books, you should check his Mistborn book (which expands in to a trilogy).

    If you want some easy to read SF, Asimov’s Foundation is still a blast, and so is Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card. Plus they can be read as one shots, but they have sequels in case you enjoyed them enough.

    • Excellent suggestions, Guards! Guards! was what finally let me break into the Pratchett universe too, such a good and fun book to read. Mistborn series is one of my favorites, easy and pleasant to read but with a wild and engaging fantasy story.

      I’d maybe recommend the Robot series before Foundation for SF fans, they are generally shorter stories and easier to follow. Foundation was pretty hard for me to follow and truly enjoy due to its weird no-protagonist structure.

      • Ah ah, I read Pratchett in the publication order and loved it, but after about two decades recommending it to everyone I know it’s way easier to get people in by starting with the Nightwatch cycle. :D

        Yes, the Robots short stories are indeed a nice addition, and probably easier to get into than Foundation! I did not enjoy the Robots full-fledged novels as much, though.

        Still in SF, and keeping with the short stories idea, I’d also recommend The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury.

    • Mistborn second series just wrapped up recently. Eagerly awaiting the third series so we can get on with Stormlight part 2 (where the two series merges into one. there is only one book left in Stormlight part 1, and release is expected next year i think).

  • Andy Weir’s The Martian or Project Hail Mary are both amazing books that are real easy reads! Though I would actually recommend the audio book version of the latter.

  • What kind of fiction do you like? As a sci fi nerd Ender’s Game is the book that made me love reading.

    For a lot of people it was Harry Potter or Hunger Games more recently.

    Honestly if there’s a movie you love that was adapted from a book give the book a go. You know you like the story - it’s just a more detailed take.

    • yeah i love all kinds of movies like harry potter, hunger games, lotr, and some sci-fi stuff. i loved harry potter growing up so i feel that the books would be too childish for me now.

      • I just read them alongside my daughter, having previously skipped them in favor of the movies. I’d actually say they’re a perfect entree into reading for pleasure, and while hardly Faulkner or James Joyce, they’re sophisticated enough that you won’t feel silly, and the writing subtly grows with the characters (and the original audience), so the last book is longer and denser than the first, though again, it’s not trying to make you dance with the prose or analyze the book in order to glean any enjoyment.

        Jo Rowling is who she is, as a writer and a person, and I won’t judge if you find a way to read them for free, but she really did assemble something magical with that original run of books.

      • The Harry Potter books are a bit kiddish but that’s largely motivated by Harry being a young character. They tend to mature as you read through them and a good trait of kiddish books is they’re easily digestible. If you want to try something similar feeling to Harry Potter but new to you check out The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan - it’s the first Percy Jackson book. You can read the 5 book series or there’s so many spin offs now you can spend a long time in that universe

  • World War Z the original novel by Max Brooks is very easy to get into as it tells the story through a series of short stories.

    It has no relation to the movie, which was already filmed before buying the rights to the name.

  • anything by Brandon Sanderson, especially his Cosmere stuff. Light reads despite density, story gets complex under the hood once you realize what’s going on in the greater Cosmere universe glimpsed through the various book series.

  • I’d go with Slaughterhouse Five or Cat’s Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut. Vonnegut is funny, witty, and satirical. But despite being funny and easy to read, his novels also often deal with weighty topics like free will and the search for meaning and purpose.

  • I would suggest some books that aren’t too long. The ones that got me to read more were:

    • Brave New World (sci-fi, dystopian)
    • Red Rising (sci-fi, longer and is part of a series but it is a page turner)
    • Name of Wind (fantasy, has a more poetic prose)
    • Invisible Monsters (bit of a wild ride, this one)