Right now, I'm currently reading three:
Nickel and Dimed, by Barbara Ehrenreich--pretty good book, but depressing as all heck.
Moonraker, by Ian Fleming--I started reading all of the James Bond novels last year (after seeing the films zillions of times), and they are quite good, very different from the films--more grounded in reality. Although, so far, Moonraker has a feel very similar to the film Bonds.
The Stand, by Stephen King--I just started re-reading this for, I'm sure, at least the twentieth time. It's like phoning your dearest friend whom you haven't spoken to in ten years, and all of the memories and good feelings just immediately start flooding over you.
And, if you are interested in three excellent non-fiction tomes, try these: The Perfect Storm, by Sebastian Junger (as for the movie, it's like a high school drama department interpretation of the vastly superior book); Into Thin Air, by Jon Krakauer (the Gold Standard of non-fiction harrowing adventure tales... I LOVE THIS BOOK!); and Under the Banner of Heaven, also by Jon Krakauer (a highly controversial, jaw-dropping account both of killing in the name of one's god, and the history of the founding of a uniquely American religion).