i actually
just finished reading
the stranger by albert campus about two hours ago
MonkeyCatcher said:
Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. I /loved/ the whole idea of the novel - very clever and at times extremely humerous. I particularly liked the idea of conditioning, and all the reactions that came along with it, such as the reaction to the word 'mother'. Brilliant stuff. Definately a novel that ets you thinking.
And just a query to those who have read it - would this be considered a Utopian or a Distopian novel? Would it change depending on weither or not you thought their sacrifices were worth the world they created?
i'm interested in reading
brave new world. my sister read it in high school
Pearl said:
Me & Emma by Elizabeth Flock. I personally loved it, but near the end you could tell what was going to happen from a mile away.
hm i hate it when endings are like that. i like surprises
Maya said:
East of Eden by John Steinbeck.
I wish it lasted for ever. Really. You simply don't want it to end.
hm i considered buying it at one point. i decided to take a break at the time.. i just got through american literature that semester and
grapes or wrath drained me
phil_t said:
Lord of the Flies by William Golding.
Dark, disturbing and all too realistic, this was a terrific book that I had put off reading for far too long. I wouldnt say I actually 'enjoyed' the book, but it is certainly thought-provoking.
Phil
i read it for school in 9th grade. i agree with your opinion. it was an easy read compared to Les Miserables, but it was very thought-provoking. one of those books that i still think about a couple of years later.
Allison said:
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. I loved reading this book! So far it's my favorite of the first three. I plan to read Goblet of Fire soon, but I just started reading Left Behind after I finished POA. I've never read any of the books in the Left Behind series, so this will be my first.
Thanks Ions - I will do that. I'll have to do the same for the Left Behind series.
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was definatly awesome. i loved it a lot the first 2-3 times i read it. i think i liked it even better the 2nd time. i was probably older and read slower. i dont remember if i even remembered the ending. nonetheless, it's a great book. it has enough darkness and innocence so it balances out. the last three books are just really dark. even though i still didn't read HP6, i heard its dark.
Maya said:
Les Miserables by Victor Hugo.
Darn, didn't know I was reading the abridged edition...
i read the shorter version for high school in 9th grade. it was the first book they smacked us with. it was nice to get the hard book over with, but i think we were to young. i liked the context itself, but sometimes it was to difficult to follow. i'd read sparknotes and realize that i completely missed something important. there was some chapters that were a good read, but the whole barricade section just completely lost me.
Harry Gamblor said:
Yesterday i finished **** Machine by Charles Bukwoski.
Many of the short stories were pretty good, some were even great. Sometimes it gets a little repetitive, but most of the time the stories are fun to read. Some stories are quite unusual and weren't actually what i expected from Bukwoski, but it was a positive suprise.
All in all i would say it's a good, easy, entertaining and fun to read.
**** Machine? i'd pick it up from the title alone..
Rigana said:
'Grapes of Wrath' by John Steinbeck, depressing but very impressive.
'Death on the Nile' by Agatha Christie. I guess I'll never make it and find the solution before Hercule Poirot solves the mystery.
'The Character of Rain' by Amelié Nothomb. Interesting point of view, told by a child of the age 3, but I like some of her other books better.
i read
Grapes of Wrath for school last semester. long. depressing, yes. but long. it didn't help that i'd have to make a deadline. i did laugh/snort out loud a few times.. but i didn't enjoy reading about the grandfather scratching his nuts or whatnot.. the whole messege/concept behind it was very good though