What Should I Read Next?

I’m assuming this is yet another site that everyone else knows about but me, but check this out: enter a book & author, and find out what books you may like next.

I’m curious about the database behind it. I entered “High Noon” by Nora Roberts, and was told I’d like a mixture of historical and contemporary romance – kind of a gamble, I think. Personally, I do like both but I know more than a few romance fans who stick almost exclusively to one or the other. My recommendations:

Brighter Than the Sun – Julia Quinn (Read it, love it, but like “The Duke and I” better).
Mirror Image – Sandra Brown (Now that is a book I read a long, long time ago, and I did rather enjoy it, in a campy 80’s miniseries sense.)
Heartbreaker – Julie Garwood (Never read it)
You Only Love Twice – Elizabeth Thornton (See above- also, isn’t this historical?)
The Barefoot Princess – Christina Dodd (meh)
Fast Women – Jennifer Crusie (Not my fave Crusie but not bad by a long shot either)
Dust To Dust – Tami Hoag (Never read it)
Full Speed – Janet Evanovich, Charlotte Hughes (Never read it)
Once Upon a Midnight – Nora Roberts, Jill Gregory, Ruth Ryan Langan (Never read it)
Second Sight – Amanda Quick (Never read it – also, isn’t this historical?)

I’m not 100% sold on the site, but the concept is clever, and if I’m hurting for something to read or want to play with a database, it’s kind of fun.

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  1. Castiron says:

    This makes me think of the once and future Hypatia at Alexandria Digital Literature; that was a great recommender, and hopefully will be running again some day.

  2. KarenF says:

    Hm, I think I have read all those on that list except for The Barefoot Princess and Full Speed.

    I would highly recommend any of the Tami Hoag books that take place in Minnesota though – she can be hit or miss for me, but “Ashes to Ashes,” “Dust to Dust,” “Prior Bad Acts,” “Night Sins,” and “Guilty as Sin” all were fantastic romantic suspense books (some of the characters recur through the books).

  3. Stephanie says:

    So weird. Being the narcissist I am, I entered my own novel title and got recommendations for books by Academy Award-nominated Tom Perotta, former poet laureate Robert Pinsky and potty-mouth Steve Almond (I can say that as I know him). What do I have in common with any of these gents? I once did a reading with all of them. How did this site know that?

  4. Brandyllyn says:

    You can give it more than one book you’ve liked, and the answers will get more and more specific to those books.  Although, I think you may have to register to do that – but I also believe it’s free.

    If I remember correctly, the site bases its responses on what people who have read, say ‘High Noon’, also liked.  If you had given the system four or five contemporary romances, you likely wouldn’t have gotten the historicals in there.

  5. Wryhag says:

    Anybody hear of or have opinions about Sarah Monette?  I’m supposed to read her stuff.

  6. Jennie says:

    It’s a lot like Netflix for books.  🙂

  7. Billie says:

    Wryhag-

    Sarah Monette is fantastic (in both senses of the word). I’ve read Melusine, The Virtu, and Mirador and enjoyed them immensely. The relationship between Felix and Mildmay is dark and complicated and constantly shifting and is what keeps me coming back for more.

  8. distracted says:

    I’m not sold on this, though it seems fun to play around with.  I put “Bet Me” by Cruise and got the following selections:
    the Free Lunch – Spider Robinson
    Murder By Deception – D. R. Meredith
    Someone Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe – Nan Lyons, Ivan Lyons
    Family Man – Jayne Ann Krentz
    The Wizard of Whitechapel – Simon Hawke
    Gate of Ivory – Doris Egan
    For Love of Evil: Book Six of Incarnations of Immortality – Piers Anthony
    Howling at the Moon – Karen Macinerney
    The Wizard of Seattle – Kay Hooper See
    Maybe Baby – Lani Diane Rich

    In reading their descriptions, I don’t think I’d really like any of these books.  Hmmm.

  9. DS says:

    D. R. Meredith’s “Murder By” books used to be hard to find.  In fact, I don’t even admit to having copies in case someone wants to borrow them and I know I won’t get them back.  There’s a story arc through the series of books although each mystery is complete in itself.

    She has had two other series about a sheriff in the Texas Panhandle and a reading group meeting at a book store but neither of these had the same appeal.

  10. Steph’s not the only narcissist.  I put in Adiós and this is what it gave me:

    Our Recommendations

    These are our suggestions based on readers’ recommendations.

    Oh My Goth – Gena Showalter
    6X: The Uncensored Confessions – Nina Malkin
    Alphabetical Hook-Up List A-J – Phoebe McPhee
    Miss Match: A Lauren Holbrook Novel – Erynn Mangum
    Waking Lazarus – T. L. Hines
    The Book of Luke – Jenny O’Connell
    The E Before Christmas – Matt Beaumont
    JAMES BOND: THE SPY WHO LOVED ME. – Ian. Flemming
    The Pursuit of Happiness – Tara Altebrando
    Kissing Doorknobs – Terry Spencer Hesser

    I’m a wee bit bemused by The Spy Who Loved Me, but hey, it might be the only time I’ll ever even marginally be on the same list with Flemming, so okay then.

  11. And Stephanie, apologies for shortening your name.  I did it automatically since it seems every Stephanie I know shortens to Steph.

    That and I’m severely sleep-deprived at the moment.

  12. Rebecca says:

    It’s interesting but I have to wonder.

    I entered in The Spymaster’s Lady by the newly published JOanna Bourne and all I got were two titles:

    The Serpent Prince by Elizabeth Hoyt
    Dedication by Janey Mullany.

    I know neither of these ladies’ books
    so have no idea if they have similar characteristics to Bourne’s novel.

    It doesn’t seem to be driven by any great set of metadata on the back-end as Netflix or Lastfm are.

  13. Estelle Chauvelin says:

    I’d like to point out that everybody’s local library probably has one or more databases that do the same thing, and which quite likely allow you to select the subject headings under the book that you like which you want in your recommendations.  Say you put in a book at NoveList involving a secret baby and pirates.  You want another romance with pirates but you don’t really care one way or another about the secret baby.  You check “love stories” (which seems to be the genre heading NoveList uses for the concept of genre romance- Romance seems to mean more along the line of Romantics) and “pirates,” and it knows those are the parts of the book that you like.

    The other most common one besides NoveList is actually called “What Do I Read Next?”, which confused me when I saw this post and I thought “That’s not available without a subscription!”

  14. I put in “Portrait of a Killer” by Patricia Cornwell and they recommended (among others) a Garrison Keillor book.  ????!!!!

  15. Wryhag says:

    Sarah Monette is fantastic (in both senses of the word). I’ve read Melusine, The Virtu, and Mirador and enjoyed them immensely. The relationship between Felix and Mildmay is dark and complicated and constantly shifting and is what keeps me coming back for more.

    Thank you, Billie!  I’m intrigued and must look into this further.

  16. foleydog says:

    I already use Amazon’s ‘Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought’ list to expand my reading.  I put in a contemporary series that I liked immensely, Anything for You by Sarah Mayberry, and got books that sound like my cup of tea EXCEPT they’re paranormals.  I studiously (in my small minded way) avoid books with either maps or unknown human forms.  What the heck is a Valkyrie anyway and would I be interested in their romantic lives?  But the site’s a cute idea?

  17. Ha, Barb—the first thing I did was enter my books, too. I got books that made sense. But the process creeped me out. Do you ever call your own house and hope to hell you don’t answer?

  18. Stephanie says:

    Barb,

    No worries on the name abbreviation. I answer to almost anything (including siblings’ names). Thanks for not leaving me hanging as the sole narcissist.

    Stephanie

  19. Iasmin says:

    If they were really really smart they’d find a way to scam…er..stea…er reverse eng…create something similar to the Pandora.org classifications for music. Good lord, I’d never leave the damned house if I had pandora and hot romances available on demand like that.

  20. Alaina says:

    I think this is how it works: Members of the website enter lists of their favorite books and then, when you enter in what book you just read, it gives you a list of books that commonly show up on the same favorites list as the book you just read.  So, while I think it’s a good concept, a lot of what you get depends on the “good” taste of others.

  21. Tamara says:

    I was curious, so I randomly put in Lover Unbound by J.R. Ward. My recs were surprising:

    Carpe Demon: Adventures of a Demon-Hunting Soccer Mom – Julie Kenner
    The Prince – Nicolo Machiavelli, Ian Richardson
    Urban Shaman – C. E. Murphy
    Ship of Destiny – Robin Hobb
    Undead and Unemployed – Mary Janice Davidson
    Undead and Unwed – MaryJanice Davidson
    The Iliad – Homer, Peter Jones, D.C.H. Rieu, E.V. Rieu S
    Beowulf: A New Translation – Seamus Heaney
    The Canterbury Tales – Geoffrey Chaucer
    The Tell-Tale Heart – Edgar Allan Poe

    The whole undead thing seems relevant but I’m scratching my head at The Prince, Iliad, Beowulf, Canterbury Tales and The Tell-Tale Heart. WTF?

    I’m too scared to do it again for fear Tolstoy’s War and Peace might show up on the list.

  22. Francois says:

    Shame it doesn’t also tell you if the books are any good!

  23. MplsGirl says:

    Oh man, I just spent 10 minutes entering titles to see what they’d suggest. It’s addictive . . . and as others have said, some of the suggestions are a little wonky, but then so are most people’s reading tastes.

    I like Library Thing’s message boards for reading suggestions. People tell what they’re reading and whether and why they like it (or don’t).

  24. Tina C. says:

    I put in The River Knows by Amanda Quick and got:
    Vampire, Interrupted – Lynsay Sands
    EVA Moves the Furniture – Margot Livesey
    Behind the Scenes at the Museum – Kate Atkinson
    The Namesake – Jhumpa Lahiri

    Not one of them appears to have anything to do with a historical romance/mystery.  And then there was the absolutely strange result I got for White Night by Jim Butcher:  Telling Lies for Fun & Profit: A Manual for Fiction Writers – Lawrence Block

  25. Jen says:

    ….

    I entered in Harry Potter and a few other fantasy novels (more in the YA arena) that I like to read, and a recommendation was David Mamet’s Oleanna.

    WTH. This is cracked.

  26. Rhea says:

    HeartBreaker by Julie Garwood is really good, actually. Nora Roberts is one of my favorite Contemporary writers, and so is Julie Garwood. Not nearly as prolific, but a very good writer. Her prose is lovely.

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