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Favourite Book? Any Genre accepted!!

Started by fitzyfoop, December 08, 2014, 10:51:42 AM

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fitzyfoop

Hey all!! What are your favourite books?? I'll start and have to go with the masterpiece that is Sarah Mussi's "Siege". By a country mile the best book I've ever read. Impossible to explain, just read it. You'll find it in the YA section.
Happy Monday,
I wasn't in school,
Natty
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MadisonMN

Tough question. As far as fiction goes, it might have to be "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" series.

I have to add Neil deGrasse Tyson's "Space Chronicles" for my favorite nonfiction. I just love astronomy! :)
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phoenix666

im 15 and idk...i suck i havent come out to anyone irl....and idk....i made my skype when i was 12 and obessed with vampires okay please dont yell at me for the name...i cant change it....
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Jill F

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infinity

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FTMax

Quote from: MadisonMN on January 22, 2015, 03:08:31 PM
Tough question. As far as fiction goes, it might have to be "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" series.

Double votes for this.
T: 12/5/2014 | Top: 4/21/2015 | Hysto: 2/6/2016 | Meta: 3/21/2017

I don't come here anymore, so if you need to get in touch send an email: maxdoeswork AT protonmail.com
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Damara

My fav book is The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.. just a perfect chilling dystopian novel..
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Felix

That's a hard question. The one that made the biggest difference in my childhood would probably be A Wrinkle in Time or one of the Narnia books. When I was a teenager the most important book would be Phantoms in the Brain or the Sandman graphic novels.

As an adult, I have no idea. I love a lot of nonfiction stuff on particular topics. I love science fiction collections, but when I read longer works by award-winning authors I'm usually disappointed. Oliver Sacks is fun but he kinda goes off the rails sometimes. I used to enjoy Clive Barker or William Gibson but I don't now.

I think my favorite books now are all cookbooks or local history or zines, but there's not anything I like enough to read more than once.
everybody's house is haunted
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Alissa16

Tg on kindle I like both Tanya Allen and Kiren bishop very good reading but the later tends to favor  the years near adelences.
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MarissaJ

Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

The answer for the great question of life the universe and everything is......................  42.

The problem is we really didn't know what the question was.


Hugs
Marissa
I'm not really a boy, I just play one on TV.





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Tysilio

How can I possibly pick just one???

  • Fiction: English Passengers, by Matthew Kneale -- it's a comic novel about the Tasmanian genocide. (Yes, really.)
  • Non-fiction: Culture and Imperialism, by Edward Said, and Blind Faith, by Carmen Callil.
  • For pure fun: any of the Flashman series by George McDonald Fraser, or the Aubrey/Maturin books by Patrick O'Brian.
  • From my childhood, and I still reread them: the Swallows and Amazons books by Arthur Ransome.
(And now anyone who knows me and reads this will know exactly who I am. Oh, well. )

Quote from: DamaraMy fav book is The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.. just a perfect chilling dystopian novel..

I can't say I "liked" it, exactly, but it's a superb book, the only thing of hers I've felt that way about -- I'm mostly not a fan of Atwood.

Rereading my choices, there's a hideously "British Empire" theme there. Oh, dear.
Never bring an umbrella to a coyote fight.
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Matt A

Well, there's no way I could choose one :P

Of Mice and Men is a great book in general, To Kill A Mockingbird has a gret point and beautifully written, if it counts I have an anthology of Shakespeare's sonnets, which is wow :)

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DriftingCrow

I absolutely love A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith. I could read it over and over again.
ਮਨਿ ਜੀਤੈ ਜਗੁ ਜੀਤੁ
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Jayne

Just one? Are you kidding? Can't be done.

For Sci-fi it's War of the Worlds, I also love Steps of the sun where a billionaire buys a space ship to hunt for safe uranium to save the world from rapidly diminishing fuel sources, he ends up staying on a planet all alone like an outer space hermit.

For fantasy/comedy it has to be Monstrous Regiment by Terry Pratchett, a girl joins the army to search for her missing brother, the catch? No girls allowed. I think all trans people should find this book side splitting, I know I did.
I'll give you a taster to whet your appetite:

(To set the scene, Polly is trying to walk like a man)
Let's see, now....arms out from the body as though holding a couple of bags of flour.... Check. Shoulders swaying as though elbowing her way through a crowd....check. Hands slightly bunched and making rhythmical circular motions as though turning two independent handles attached to the waist...check. Legs moving forward loosely and ape like...check...
It worked fine for a few yards until she got something wrong and the resultant muscular confusion somersaulted her into a holly bush. After that, she gave up.

As Pratchett says "it's all in the socks"
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gennee

I'm a big fan of Jack Kerouac. My favorite novel is Dharma Bums.
:)
Be who you are.
Make a difference by being a difference.   :)

Blog: www.difecta.blogspot.com
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Alissa16

I am ccurrently reading into lands forbidden which is the 2nd in Warren Thomas's Elfmaid trilogy..Pretty good swords, wizards,
Sorceress's.
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jeni


  • the Lord of the Rings books (J.R.R. Tolkien)
  • Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
  • One Hundred Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez)
  • Cat's Cradle, Slapstick, Slaughterhouse Five (Kurt Vonnegut)
-=< Jennifer >=-

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orangepeel

I really like Jane Eyre. I'm a super sucker for romancey things
'Cause donut
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Gabrielle_22

Just one? Impossible. But at the top of my list (for now) would be:

Andrea Levy - Small Island
Keri Hulme - The Bone People
Gabriel Garcia Marquez - One Hundred Years of Solitude
Machado de Assis - The Posthumous Memoirs of Bras Cubas
V. S. Naipaul (though I loathe him as a human being) - A House for Mr Biswas
"The time will come / when, with elation / you will greet yourself arriving / at your own door, in your own mirror / and each will smile at the other's welcome, / and say, sit here. Eat. / You will love again the stranger who was your self./ Give wine. Give bread. Give back your heart / to itself, to the stranger who has loved you / all your life, whom you ignored" - Walcott, "Love after Love"
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Pica Pica

Fiction - Probably Tom Jones by Henry Fielding, he has such a deft control of tone and understatement.
Non-Fiction - Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton, it's a dense rambling book you could probably read for the rest of your life and find new things in.
Poetry - Jubilate Agno by Christopher Smart, for much the same reason as the Burton.
Essays - Rambler by Samuel Johnson, nothing calms me better.
'For the circle may be squared with rising and swelling.' Kit Smart
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