I had to think long & hard about this because there are many books I’ve reread several times. But the most reread has probably been Tyrell by Coe Booth.
I had to think long & hard about this because there are many books I’ve reread several times. But the most reread has probably been Tyrell by Coe Booth.
Sometimes it work, depending on the series. Some authors create a fictional world so complex one can’t imagine anybody else writing in that space. But as long as it doesn’t end up like a V.C. Andrews situation where you have some author continuing to write books under her name. That’s always felt weird to me.
Definitely Patterson. And what frustrates me is that, if you look at Patterson’s early work, it’s actually quite good. This leads me to believe that, though he’s capable of being a great novelist, he just chooses not to be, going instead to be a literary machine. And that’s fine (because he surely has a devoted audience), it’s just disappointing.
Until his death, it was Walter Dean Myers. Every time he was set to put out a new book, I had it pre-ordered.
Just to name a few: Count of Monte Cristo, Prince & the Pauper, All Quiet on the Western Front, The Coldest Winter Ever, Every Time A Rainbow Dies, Tyrell