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I have to read five books for Summer Reading for school. I'm going to read The Catcher in the Rye, The Lord of the Flies, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Fahrenheit 451, and Dune.Cube_of_MooN
I really liked The Catcher in the Rye, but a lot of people seem to hate it.
i need to read the Magician's Nephew by Lois Loury and The Tenth Man by Graham GreeneBauers-TwinWait... Isn't that a C.S. Lewis book?
[QUOTE="Cube_of_MooN"]I have to read five books for Summer Reading for school. I'm going to read The Catcher in the Rye, The Lord of the Flies, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Fahrenheit 451, and Dune.Aquat1cF1sh
I really liked The Catcher in the Rye, but a lot of people seem to hate it.
I've already read it, but my AP teacher said we could reread two books we already read in the past. That is one of them. I liked it, which is why I'm reading it again.Summer Reading? I've never been assigned summer reading in all 12 of my years at school. However, I have had a lot of teachers tell me to stop reading and focus on my work...
I've assigned my own summer reading this summer. I'm going to try to read more classics, such as Flatworld, 1984, maybe some stuff by Charles Dickens, One Flew over the Cukoo's Nest, East of Eden, The Illiad. I've also heard good things about Apocalypse Now, and Lord of the Flies, as well as Wuthering Heights.
I have to read Crime and Punishment...Etheral_Filcher
Savor every moment, that book is incredible! I guess I have to read my Molecular Biology textbook for my summer class, but other than that I'm still working on Atlas Shrugged (I've been reading it forever, I need to finish it).
I'm currently reading The Odyssesy for Classics next year. Not bad at all.
I've got a lot of reading to do but it's worth getting well prepared in summer before you get sucked into hectic term-time.
don't have to read anything...but I'm reading "The Picture of Dorian Gray".
It's fantastic if a little corrupting: this painter paints a life like image of Dorian, who then wishes that the painting would grow old whilst he would stay forever young. Another gentleman, Lord Henry, corrupts Dorian's soul and tells him to use his beauty and status to commit every act, regardless of morals, to experience the experience itself. The portrait grows old and evil, symbolic of his soul, whilst Dorian stays fine...physically at least.
It's great, I'd suggest it :)
[QUOTE="Etheral_Filcher"]I have to read Crime and Punishment...Atheos-Arkhaios
Savor every moment, that book is incredible! I guess I have to read my Molecular Biology textbook for my summer class, but other than that I'm still working on Atlas Shrugged (I've been reading it forever, I need to finish it).
Atlas Shrugged is epic. Have you read the Fountainhead? I enjoyed that too.
don't have to read anything...but I'm reading "The Picture of Dorian Gray".
It's fantastic if a little corrupting: this painter paints a life like image of Dorian, who then wishes that the painting would grow old whilst he would stay forever young. Another gentleman, Lord Henry, corrupts Dorian's soul and tells him to use his beauty and status to commit every act, regardless of morals, to experience the experience itself. The portrait grows old and evil, symbolic of his soul, whilst Dorian stays fine...physically at least.
It's great, I'd suggest it :)
hdhdhdhasajkalk
Sounds a tad faustian.
don't have to read anything...but I'm reading "The Picture of Dorian Gray".
It's fantastic if a little corrupting: this painter paints a life like image of Dorian, who then wishes that the painting would grow old whilst he would stay forever young. Another gentleman, Lord Henry, corrupts Dorian's soul and tells him to use his beauty and status to commit every act, regardless of morals, to experience the experience itself. The portrait grows old and evil, symbolic of his soul, whilst Dorian stays fine...physically at least.
It's great, I'd suggest it :)
hdhdhdhasajkalk
Going to have to add that to my list of classics... in fact, I should probably read most of the books for the characters from League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. I've already read The Invisible Man, and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
I have to read A World Lit Only By Fire by somebody Manchester for European History and A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemmingway.rockon1215
I liked A Farewell to Arms.
[QUOTE="rockon1215"]I have to read A World Lit Only By Fire by somebody Manchester for European History and A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemmingway.Etheral_Filcher
I liked A Farewell to Arms.
cool, though I probably won't like it as much as I should since I'll be cramming my summer reading into the last week of summer ;)[QUOTE="rockon1215"]I have to read A World Lit Only By Fire by somebody Manchester for European History and A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemmingway.Etheral_Filcher
I liked A Farewell to Arms.
I'll pick up this book I think
I have to read Of Mice And Men, My Antonia, and Brave New World.
Last summer, I had to read The Lovely Bones, The Lone Ranger And Tonto Fistfight In Heaven, and Pride & Prejudice.
Books I've read, so far, this summer, are The Tempest, by William Shakespeare; The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald; and The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Out of the three, I loved The Scarlet Letter. A very profound tale of a women tormented by committing adultery, while living in a Puritanic Salem, MA. Hawthorne masterly explores sin, forgiveness, and redemption through a fantastic plot and incredible metaphors and symbolisms.Author_JerryMeh, the Scarlet letter was just a drag IMO. It moved far too slowly and it seemed it took an entire chapter for five minutes to go by. To each his own, I guess.
Books I've read, so far, this summer, are The Tempest, by William Shakespeare; The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald; and The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Out of the three, I loved The Scarlet Letter. A very profound tale of a women tormented by committing adultery, while living in a Puritanic Salem, MA. Hawthorne masterly explores sin, forgiveness, and redemption through a fantastic plot and incredible metaphors and symbolisms.Author_Jerry
The general consensus seems to be that The Scarlet Letter is good; however, I thought it felt superfluous and dated. Perhaps that was because I had to read it in school, and nothing ever seems as good when you read it in the classroom.
Books I've read, so far, this summer, are The Tempest, by William Shakespeare; The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald; and The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Out of the three, I loved The Scarlet Letter. A very profound tale of a women tormented by committing adultery, while living in a Puritanic Salem, MA. Hawthorne masterly explores sin, forgiveness, and redemption through a fantastic plot and incredible metaphors and symbolisms.Author_Jerry
Gatsby was enjoyable
I have to read Of Mice And Men, My Antonia, and Brave New World.
Last summer, I had to read The Lovely Bones, The Lone Ranger And Tonto Fistfight In Heaven, and Pride & Prejudice.
bulletsword
Of Mice and Men is actually pretty entertaining.
1984 starts out slow, but is still an amazing bookI don't have to read anything over the summer for school...
BUT. This summer I've read: The Catcher in the Rye, Perfume, and a bunch of Poe.
I've also started to re-read Animal Farm and 1984 this summer and might read The Stand if I have time.
qubert27
[QUOTE="qubert27"]1984 starts out slow, but is still an amazing bookI don't have to read anything over the summer for school...
BUT. This summer I've read: The Catcher in the Rye, Perfume, and a bunch of Poe.
I've also started to re-read Animal Farm and 1984 this summer and might read The Stand if I have time.
rockon1215
Not really... It just kind of gives you information that comes back later in the book, which is really genius. Orwell was an amazing writer. And yeah, the most horrifying thing I've ever read probably.
[QUOTE="rockon1215"][QUOTE="qubert27"]1984 starts out slow, but is still an amazing bookI don't have to read anything over the summer for school...
BUT. This summer I've read: The Catcher in the Rye, Perfume, and a bunch of Poe.
I've also started to re-read Animal Farm and 1984 this summer and might read The Stand if I have time.
qubert27
Not really... It just kind of gives you information that comes back later in the book, which is really genius. Orwell was an amazing writer. And yeah, the most horrifying thing I've ever read probably.
yeah, Orwell was great[QUOTE="Author_Jerry"]Books I've read, so far, this summer, are The Tempest, by William Shakespeare; The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald; and The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. Out of the three, I loved The Scarlet Letter. A very profound tale of a women tormented by committing adultery, while living in a Puritanic Salem, MA. Hawthorne masterly explores sin, forgiveness, and redemption through a fantastic plot and incredible metaphors and symbolisms.hdhdhdhasajkalk
Gatsby was enjoyable
I was disappointed in Gatsby. (I'm not saying it's a bad book.) I was told it has great prose, but I found it mostly boring. That isn't to say there aren't moments of brilliance; I just don't think it's very interesting--story or prose.
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