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Your favourite book/lierature.

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Old 03-11.-2007, 03:56 AM   #1
limerickman
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Default Your favourite book/lierature.

In my opinion, one of the most important things that any human being can do is to be able to read.
The ability to read informs, ones ability to learn.
Reading allows a person the chance to learn, to get an education.

But in other ways, reading can liberate a person and open them up to new experiences, new locations, allows them to visit times past and it allows access to thoughts and deeds of people, with whom they may never have any contact with.
One may never get the chance to visit Antartica - but read Ernest Shackelton's biography and you're immediately placed in that desolate location.
Thankfully many of us will never experience the life of a soldier in WW1 - but read Sassoon or Wilfred Owen and one is transported back to a time/place which can only be regarded as hellish.

Which books have you read and which you could say have made a great impression on you?

My list would have to include the following (in no particular order) :

1. 1984, Animal Farm, by George Orwell.
2. Most of Shakespeares works.
3. Ulysses by James Joyce
4. Strumpet City by James Plunkett
5. Most of Charles Dickens stories.
6. The Time Machine by HG Wells
7. Pilgrims Progress by John Bunyan
8. Catch-22 Joseph Heller
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morelike hypocrisy.
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Old 03-11.-2007, 05:38 AM   #2
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

In no particular order:
  1. The Gates of the Forest, by Elie Wiesel
  2. The first three Foundation books, by Isaac Asimov
  3. The Metamorphosis, Franz Kafka
  4. Still Life with Woodpecker, Tom Robbins
  5. Illusions, Richard Bach
  6. The entire Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series, by Douglas Adams
  7. The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Milan Kundera
  8. Feynman Lectures on Physics, a three book series, by Richard Feynman
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Old 03-11.-2007, 07:57 AM   #3
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

The Bible, The Far Side gallerys, The Crucible, and Laura Ingalls Wilder
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Old 03-11.-2007, 08:13 AM   #4
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

In no particular order:
1) Steppenwolf by Herman Hesse
2) Dracula by Bram Stoker
3) Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens
4) Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
5) Oddesy and Iliad by Homer
6) War and Peace by Leon Tolstoy
7) Metamorphosis by Franz Kalfka
8) The entire Lord of the Rings Trilogy and the Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein
9) All of the Clive Cussler Novels just for entertainment
10) The Bicycling Guide to Complete Bicycle Maintenance & Repair for Road & Mountain Bikes by Todd Downs

Just for a diversion, I love to read Calvin & Hobbs collections. I am also almost finished with a book called The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova which may well be added to this list.
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Old 03-11.-2007, 08:17 AM   #5
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

I need to read a bit more.

The Lord of the Rings by J R R Tolkien.
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Old 03-11.-2007, 08:43 AM   #6
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by kdelong
In no particular order:
1) Steppenwolf by Herman Hesse
2) Dracula by Bram Stoker
3) Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens
4) Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
5) Oddesy and Iliad by Homer
6) War and Peace by Leon Tolstoy
7) Metamorphosis by Franz Kalfka
8) The entire Lord of the Rings Trilogy and the Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein
9) All of the Clive Cussler Novels just for entertainment
10) The Bicycling Guide to Complete Bicycle Maintenance & Repair for Road & Mountain Bikes by Todd Downs

Just for a diversion, I love to read Calvin & Hobbs collections. I am also almost finished with a book called The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova which may well be added to this list.

No way! I collect Calvin and Hobbes books!
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Old 03-11.-2007, 12:09 PM   #7
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cycler6n
No way! I collect Calvin and Hobbes books!
Yep, my favorite is Scientific Progress Goes Boink! I was crushed when Bill Waterson decided to discontinue the comic strip. I have four different collections but I am sort of saving for the entire works in one hardbound edition. It is as thick as Webster's Unabridged Dictionary and costs $399.00.
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Old 03-11.-2007, 01:53 PM   #8
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

I read a book called Mr Popper's Penguins in about year four, and since then I have read loads of stuff from Chaucer onwards, and I still think Mr Popper is the greatest.
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Old 03-11.-2007, 09:39 PM   #9
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

John Steinbeck...Grapes of Wrath being my favorite
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Old 04-11.-2007, 05:28 AM   #10
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by kdelong
Yep, my favorite is Scientific Progress Goes Boink! I was crushed when Bill Waterson decided to discontinue the comic strip. I have four different collections but I am sort of saving for the entire works in one hardbound edition. It is as thick as Webster's Unabridged Dictionary and costs $399.00.

Really? that much? I could have sworn it was only $150.
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Old 04-11.-2007, 06:03 AM   #11
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by janiejones
I read a book called Mr Popper's Penguins in about year four, and since then I have read loads of stuff from Chaucer onwards, and I still think Mr Popper is the greatest.
You have the patience to read Chaucer????? Did you actually understand what you had read???? Or was it an abridged version.
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Old 04-11.-2007, 06:05 AM   #12
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cycler6n
Really? that much? I could have sworn it was only $150.
I am pretty sure that it was close to $400 when I saw it. I would have paid $150 for it in a heartbeat.
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Old 04-11.-2007, 01:03 PM   #13
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Quote:
Originally Posted by kdelong
You have the patience to read Chaucer????? Did you actually understand what you had read???? Or was it an abridged version.
Yeah, I did Chaucer at uni, but I always had the modern English version right next to the "old" English - I would always sit the "old" one on top for my lecturer to see. But actually there is some good stuff in there - pretty raunchy!!!!
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Old 04-11.-2007, 07:57 PM   #14
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Anything by Bernard Cornwell
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Old 05-11.-2007, 01:12 AM   #15
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Default Re: Your favourite book/lierature.

Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein. My senior English term paper was comparing the Martian religion to Transcendentalism by Thoreau and Emerson.

Most anything by Shakespeare, Dickens, Steinbeck, or Twain.

The Hornblower novels and The Good Shepard by C. S. Forester.

Expecting Someone Taller and anything else by Tom Holt (I just finished Valhalla).

Animal Farm, 1984, Fahrenheit 451, etc.

The Hitchhiker's Guide series.

I am trying to start the books by Robert Rankin, but I have misplaced the first book in the Brentford Trilogy, so I guess I will spend today cleaning my house instead.
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