Coming in late on this thread, but it's amazing to me how out of touch I've become with modern authors. My favourites include people like Leon Uris, James A. Michener, Sydney Sheldon (am I dating myself?), Wilbur Smith (especially his 'River God' series) and Patrick O'Brian ('Master and Commander').
One Christmas, my sister gave me a Science Fantasy trilogy to which I said a weak 'Oh. Thanks very much.' When everyone else was asleep after Christmas dinner and, having nothing else to do, I read 'The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant' and that put me on a Sci-fan binge that lasted over twenty years. I'm over that now, though, having read Anne Mc Caffrey, David Eddings, Frank Herbert etc etc etc.
More recent great reads have been the Sookie Stackhouse series by Charlaine Harris and the Dresden Files by Jim Butcher (who knew vampires and witches could be so bl**dy funny?) Patricia Cornwell is good and very different, only after a while her stories seem to suffer from same-oldness.
I enjoy reading good childrens' literature too. Susan Cooper's 'Greenwitch' series is based in British pagan mythology (a subject close to my heart) as is 'The Owl Service' by Alan Garner.
One young adults' series I'd recommend to *everybody* is the 'Tomorrow' series by John Marsden. It's about teenagers in a sleepy Australian country town. They've just finished school and go on a camping trip to celebrate and relax before moving on into Real Life. Only, while they're away in the wilderness, a foreign country invades Australia and life as they knew it ends abruptly! Their families are all interned in impenetrable camps, their homes are given away to new settlers and they have to try and exist in this new, scary world, fighting to stay alive and to reconnect with their families. It's BRILLIANT reading!
I have to add this (how could I not?) Since I learned Latin, I've been reading Caesar's adventures in Gaul and Pliny the Elder's Natural History (the chapter about birds, of course). Both are every bit as rivetting as any modern author you could name and there's a bucketload of other ancient authors I want to get to in time as well.
