Important: Read Books

I've finished 1 trilogy and got 3 more lined up. They're all by R.A. Salvatore.
Fucking nerd. *pretends he doesn't know who Drizzt is* Ever read any Wheel of Time books?

well that and Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NYMH
Try Watership Down.

The Stranger is definitely one of the best books I've ever read. I nearly failed 10th grade Honors English because I was hellbent on re-reading it rather than whatever I was supposed to be reading. Mr. Camus's The Plague and The Fall are also fantastic.

I'd put Hermann Hesse's Narcissus and Goldmund and Gunter Grass's The Tin Drum up there, too.

For people who want to read, but find it difficult for some reason id recommend audiobooks .. www.mininova.org , there are loads there.
Audiobooks are all right - I only listen to them on long drives.

If you don't mind reading ebooks, there are a wealth of them available for free from Project Gutenberg: gutenberg.org.
 
roaches said:
Fucking nerd. *pretends he doesn't know who Drizzt is* Ever read any Wheel of Time books?

Nope. The name Robert Jordan seems awfully familiar though. I've read something else by him or someone from school really liked his work.
 
I enjoyed


- The Blythedale Romance
- The Catcher in the Rye
- East of Eden
- Great Expectations (Yes, I really did like that one)
- Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right
- The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
- Pet Cemetary
- The Shining
- The Stranger
- To Kill a Mockingbird
 
"The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" by Mark Haddon
 
Important: Read

Snowman said:
Some good books i read

1. to kill a mockingbird
2. of mice and men
3. the outsiders

a book that none of you would read, but i have

1. the 10 offenses by Pat Robertson

oh sikk i read of mice and men for my gcse english exam last year!
it was good tho. also saw the video to it.

p.s. lenny's a G
 
AmerikazMost:

To you I recommend Edward Jones's The Known World. It's the story of a black slaveowner in the American south. Beyond that, I highly suggest Michael Chabon's The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Klay, the story of two Jewish comic book creators during World War II.

Rahim:

I'd recommend Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint, one of the funniest books I've ever read, and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safrar Foer, which is narrated by a nine-year old boy who searches New York City looking for a lock that can be opened by a key that belonged to his father, who died in the World Trade Center.
 
Favourite book is 'Perfume: Story of a murderer" by Patrick Suskind. It's just so fucking well written. Because the original was in french you'll realise that there are alot of long sentences and such, but the story, the detail and all that is fantastic.

I haven't had time for a book in the past few weeks, but i'm reading King Lear (shakespear) again.

Oh and people, read 'Tuesdays with Morrie'

and business people read 'where's my cheese' (looks like a kids book you'll finish it in 20 minutes, but you'll realise why it's for business people.

I generally don't like self development books but the 7 Habits of Highly effective people is a great read too
 
"The 5 People You Meet In Heaven" by the author of tuesdays with morrie is a thought provoking book. Can't say i really do agree with the idea but it is nonetheless interesting and thought provoking.

ATM i am reading "The Undercover Economist" by Tim Harford.. interesting book, looks @ the world in a very simple economist perspective. also thought provoking, not so much in a philosophical way, but more of an "oh i see" kind of way, where you just look at the mechanics of capitalism in a different/more educated way.

I LOVE john grisham's books - favourites: The Rain Maker, The Testament, The Firm
 
This present darkness by Frank Peretti
and just got done reading "the collapse of evolution" which was very eye opening.
 
My favourite writers are Camus, Dostoyevsky, and Kafka. My favourite books are "The Fall" and Hesse's "Steppenwolf". I was wondering if you've got any recommendations for contemporary American fiction (or at least post-Beat Generation). I have read a bit of Delillo, thought his work was just OK. I have been meaning to read Morrison's "Beloved" for some time now, but I guess I am open to quite a range of books.

bigmack said:
If people would just put the time they do reading novels into reading something educational, the world would be a much better place.
Yes, because reading novels is the cause of the world's problems. Seriously though, you need to pick up a novel sometime and see what a wealth of "education" they hold. And I don't mean some pulp fiction or romantic novel (which is what I hope you had in mind when you said that).
 
HitEmUp21 said:
Yes, because reading novels is the cause of the world's problems. Seriously though, you need to pick up a novel sometime and see what a wealth of "education" they hold. And I don't mean some pulp fiction or romantic novel (which is what I hope you had in mind when you said that).

my proof right here
 
I was wondering if you've got any recommendations for contemporary American fiction
Middlesex by Jefferey Eugenides (he wrote The Virgin Suicides, if you haven't heard of him). It's a look at the three generations of a Greek family who come to America as refugees from the Greece-Turkey conflict. As the title kinda suggests, another main plot point is sexual identity,

*Pointed response*
I'll say that before I read the book, I had no idea that there were Gleek enclaves in Turkey, though now that I think about it it makes perfect sense. The parts of the book that touch upon racial issues - discrimination by auto companies and riots - are definitely an illuminating insight into Detroit. Middlesex is also probably the best look I'll get at a largely invisible portion of the population unless I suddenly discover I am part of that population or I switch my major yet again.

Really, that's what good literature is. A dramatic insight into another setting. I wonder what our collective impression of the Holocaust would be without someone like Elie Wiesel? We'd still be aware of the facts, but you can't really even begin to understand - of course, anyone who wasn't there can never fully understand - the terribleness of it unless you hear a personal account of it. And literary works like Night have helped do that (And if any non-readers have ever wondered - that's why characterization is so important).

Hanging out with Dostoyevsky for a week in Moscow would be great, but it's really not possible. The next best thing I can do is read his works and through them derive understanding and personal enrichment.

Now I'm wondering how contemporary is modern enough. Are the '80s good? I'm trying to drop William Kennedy's name in here, Ironweed is great.

What else is there? Gilead is fantastic. Is Philip Roth contemporary? His last one, Everyman was short, but I liked it a lot.

Neil Gaiman's American Gods is great. It's basically about the old gods of European legends immigrating to America and fighting off the indigenous American gods like computers, credit cards, etc. There's a nice little allegory there. His last book was Anansi Boys, I think. I haven't read it, but I've heard good things.

Shit, I just remembered - Colson Whitehead is definitely worth mentioning. The Intuitionist, which I believe was his first book, is fantastic. It's funny - the book is about two rival philosophies into the art of inspecting elevators - but it's also a pretty deep look into race. It was definitely one of those books that at the end I was like "Oh shit!" and had to reread again in light of what I'd just realized to try to glean what I'd missed. He also has a new one out, Apex Hides the Hurt. I liked it quite a bit - it's about a small town that's blowing up in a New Economy kind of way that hires a guy to rename the town to make it more marketable.
 
bigmack said:
If people would just put the time they do reading novels into reading something educational, the world would be a much better place.


Not sure if that is true or not, I kind of like being the smart one sometimes. There are alot educational books out there that wouldnt benefit the average joe. We would just have some people working at mcdonalds that are awesome at calculus.
 
Chronic said:
Nope. The name Robert Jordan seems awfully familiar though. I've read something else by him or someone from school really liked his work.
If you like fantasy, you HAVE to read the Wheel of Time series, its 11 books long so far and each book is 700+ pages but my god the series is amazing.
 

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