April 2026
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    My current reading challenge is to read at least twelve 800+ page books this year.

    And since I’ve already gotten some favorite reads from this group, I’d love to hear your recs. So far this year I’ve read Lonesome Dove, Shōgun and The Priory of the Orange Tree. Lonesome Dove was my favorite of the three.

    Fiction or nonfiction, but if it’s nonfiction, I’d say make it either narrative style, investigative or maaaybe something in the popular science genre. Doesn’t have to be “literary,” whatever that means. I do often do hybrid listening/reading since I have a work commute, so if any of your big book faves have a good audio version, feel free to mention it!

    Obviously 800 is an arbitrary cutoff, but it’s my arbitrary cutoff.

    (I’ve already read War & Peace, Count of Monte Cristo, The Brothers Karamazov, Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter & The Bible, so not looking to repeat any of those)

    Thanks!!!!!

    by FaceOfDay

    29 Comments

    1. Robert Caro – The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York
      A biography of the city panner Robert Moses, responsible for much of the modern driving infrastructure and many of the public works in New York. It’s over 1000 pages, and it’s riveting. I never thought that city planning and the business of roads could involve so much villainy.

      William T. Vollman – Fathers and Crows
      Technically volume 2 of an ongoing (and likely to never be finished) series called Seven Dreams, about encounters between Native Americans and Europeans. You don’t need to have read volume one to understand it, this book (and all the other books in the series) are able to stand alone. The book is about the encounters between the Northwestern Indian Confederacy and White settlers (mainly the Jesuits) during the 18th century. It’s got quite a lot of detail about Catholic theology and Native American mythology, Vollman’s a great researcher.

    2. Pretend-Piece-1268 on

      Neal Stephenson knows how to write big books, like Cryptonomicon and Reamde.

    3. cascadingtundra on

      At this point, you’ve gotta do Moby Dick! It’s a classic big book!

      It’s… not the best book ever, I won’t lie. But it’s quite fascinating. It’s got such in depth discussion and knowledge of the sea and whaling, as well as, segues about religion, society, and life itself.

      Be prepared for lots of tangents, in depth almost non-fiction passages about whale biology, and a quest for vengeance that encapsulates the age-old battle of man vs nature.

    4. BasicSuperhero on

      Question, have you tried the Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan? 14 books, and the average page count is around 800.

    5. The Luminaries by Catton is amazing, and probably something you’d enjoy based on your reads

      4321 by Paul Auster

      Bubblegum by Adam Levin

      The Instructions by Adam Levin

      Night Sleep Death the Stars by JCO

      The Dying Grass (or Fathers and Crows) by William T Vollmann

      Against the Day by Pynchon

      The Invented Part by Fresán (first of a trilogy, and a dear favorite of mine)

      Praiseworthy by Alexis Wright

      Underworld by DeLillo

      The Books of Jacob by Olga Tokarczuk

      A Fine Balance by Mistry

      The Cairo Trilogy by Mahfouz

      XX by Rian Hughes

      A few of these fall a bit short of 800 pages but are worth your time and you’ll feel invested in them.

    6. Livid_Parsnip6190 on

      Forever Amber by Kathleen Winsor is the longest book I’ve read at 972 pages. It flies by, too. It was considered very racy in the 1940s, not so much today.

    7. Edward Rutherford has a number of historical fiction books that number over 800 pages.

      11/22/63 by Stephen King is also over 800.

    8. Owlbertowlbert on

      Executioner’s Song

      The Naked and the Dead

      Both by Norman Mailer

      Edit: TN&TD is 736 pages, my bad

    9. Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke is delightful fantasy, way higher quality than most of what’s written nowadays.

    10. Joseph and His Brothers, by Thomas Mann. About 1500 pages. Not gonna lie, it took me a while to get into it, but it was worth it in the end. And yes, it is the story of the coat of many colors, all the way down to Joseph saving his brothers from famine. That story is like… 10 pages or so in Genesis. So Mann obviously embellishes a tiny bit.

    11. TheGameDoneChanged on

      Matterhorn and Deep River by Karl Marlantes
      It, Under the Dome, and 11/22/63 by Stephen King
      Swan Song by Robert Mccammon
      Shogun by James Clavell (also Tai Pan andNoble House)
      A Brief History of Seven Killing by Marlon James

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