Favorite Book.

Discussion in 'Random Thoughts' started by Flannelwearin'gal, Jul 10, 2009.

  1. Flannelwearin'gal

    Flannelwearin'gal .robert.johnson.fan.

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    What is your favorite book and why?

    Mine is Flipped. I loved it because it reminded me of some familiar situations.
     
  2. nesta

    nesta Banned

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    where's waldo?

    the yellow one
     
  3. Didymus Doppelgänger

    Didymus Doppelgänger Misfit Lover

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    Fiction- "Eragon" and "The Hobbit". Those books feed my soul.

    Non fiction- "The Book on the Taboo Against Who You Are" by Alan Watts. That book fixed my soul.
     
  4. Duck

    Duck quack. Lifetime Supporter

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    Probably Flaubert's Parrot by Julian Barnes for it's technical beauty, humor, poignancy and extremely well used symbolism, metaphor and creation of emotional atmosphere, and just sheer genius.
    Or Puttering About In a Small Land by Philip K Dick also for beauty, poignancy, symbolism and creation of emotional/human atmosphere, but also for it's extreme realism and humanity.
    These are the two books I find to be the best portrait of the human struggle.
     
  5. nesta

    nesta Banned

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    phillip k dick is so-so, but not bad. i will say that i thoroughly enjoyed "do androids dream of electric sheep?" and think it's a better book than blade runner is a movie.
     
  6. Piaf

    Piaf Senior Member

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    Crime and Punishment
    Master and Marguerite
    The Vizier's Elephant
     
  7. DonaSoledad

    DonaSoledad Senior Member

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    A Separate Reality- Carlos Castaneda
     
  8. Duck

    Duck quack. Lifetime Supporter

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    Ohh, non-fiction:
    60 Minutes Over Tokyo - what a great story of war and survival - paints so epicly so many truths about the nature of humans and war without any embellishment or extra push by the author.
    Read it at a school library, haven't found it since. I think I'm about to go to my old middle school and high school looking for it when school opens again.
     
  9. Duck

    Duck quack. Lifetime Supporter

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    I don't know which I prefer - Puttering About in a Small Land is one of his post-humously published non-sci-fi, which really, I find even better than his sci-fi. If you want to read great sci-fi by him, I suggest Maze of Death or The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch or even Dr. Bloodmoney.
     
  10. nesta

    nesta Banned

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    the three stigmata of palmer eldritch was okay, but i definitely preferred do androids dream of electric sheep

    i have some issues with him, but he's, if nothing else, and interesting character. batshit crazy.
     
  11. Duck

    Duck quack. Lifetime Supporter

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    Batshit crazy - how so?
     
  12. sarahrei

    sarahrei ~Lover~

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    Eat Pray Love.
     
  13. nesta

    nesta Banned

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  14. Duck

    Duck quack. Lifetime Supporter

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  15. goodvibes83

    goodvibes83 Senior Member

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    fahrenheit 451 and the series His Dark Materials (golden compss[northern lights]/the subtle knfie, and the amber sypglass) soo good!
     
  16. Gyro Gearloose

    Gyro Gearloose Senior Member

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    Hi,

    I thought about putting this on my Books2Read-List for some time now. Is it hard work to go through the book? In my opinion 'On the road' was an easy one, Goethe is mostly medium and Gottfried Benn is, uhm, advanced. How does Dostojewski relates (in terms of readability) to them?

    Regards
    Gyro
     
  17. hotwater

    hotwater Senior Member Lifetime Supporter

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    Dune by Frank Herbert
    Dune Messiah
    Children of Dune
    God Emperor of Dune
    Heretics of Dune
    Chapterhouse: Dune
    Dune: House Atreides by Brian Herbert (His Son)
    Dune: House Harkonnen
    Dune: House Corrino
    Dune: The Butlerian Jihad
    Dune: The Machine Crusade
    Dune: The Battle for Corrin
    Hunters of Dune
    Sandworms of Dune
    Paul of Dune

    The greatest sci-fi epic of all=time :cheers2:


    Hotwater
     
  18. BraveSirRubin

    BraveSirRubin Members

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    I have several favorite books and they are all above your reading level.

    I like Janja's list though.
     
  19. gorilla warfare

    gorilla warfare Member

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    Catch-22 by Joseph Heller is the most hilarious and well-written anything that i've ever experienced. I like most of his other books, and most of Kurt Vonnegut's stuff. Jeffrey Archer's First Among Equals is fucking amazing too. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is out of this world as well.
     
  20. Piaf

    Piaf Senior Member

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    I forgot to add Bible.
     
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