Tell us what you're reading and what you think of it!
I just finished Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. God, it was depressing. :cry:
I'm gonna read The Ghost next, possibly alongside The Eye of the World.
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Tell us what you're reading and what you think of it!
I just finished Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. God, it was depressing. :cry:
I'm gonna read The Ghost next, possibly alongside The Eye of the World.
Theokhoth
Of Mice and Men is a very sad book :(.. It brought me to tears the first time I ever read it. Currently I'm re-reading Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
[QUOTE="Theokhoth"]
Tell us what you're reading and what you think of it!
I just finished Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. God, it was depressing. :cry:
I'm gonna read The Ghost next, possibly alongside The Eye of the World.
MystikFollower
Of Mice and Men is a very sad book :(.. It brought me to tears the first time I ever read it. Currently I'm re-reading Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.
Ah, my second favorite book.Rereading The Rainmaker by John Grisham. I read it about a decade ago, Never really looked at insurance companies the same way again.
[QUOTE="LZ71"]I didn't find Of Mice and Men to be that depressing, honestly. A great book regardless. As for me, I'm reading To Kill A Mockingbird for school. Nothing on my own as of right now.TheokhothTKAM is amazing. I always wondered why Harper Lee was pretty much a one-book person. She did a few magazine pieces after Mockingbird, but that was all.
I had to read Of Mice and Men for my English GCSE. I think Im currently on Thief of Time, by Pratchett (as usual)Big_Bad_SadI love Thief of Time. I love all of Terry's books but Thief of Time make me cry so it has some powerful juju in it :P have you read it before? Are you reading them through in order? i just finished re-reading the Harry Potter books for this year, and I think I might do the DW series again now, I got Unseen Academics for Christmas and have resisted temptation to read it so far, might be good to read the others first. For 'work' I am reading Twenties Girl by Sophie Kinsella. The concept is rather interesting but the writing is a little vapid for my tastes if I'm honest. It's a best seller though and something else to draw on when people request holiday reading. I won't pass absolute judgement til I finish it tonight.
[QUOTE="fastesttruck"]Dune. Very slow going and I'm having a hard time getting finished with it TheokhothHehe, that'll do that to ya.Its safe to say I won't be reading the 2nd book in the Dune set
[QUOTE="Big_Bad_Sad"]I had to read Of Mice and Men for my English GCSE. I think Im currently on Thief of Time, by Pratchett (as usual)MissLibrarianI love Thief of Time. I love all of Terry's books but Thief of Time make me cry so it has some powerful juju in it :P have you read it before? Are you reading them through in order? First time Im reading it. Im reading them in order. I think The Colour of Magic and Guards Guards are the only books I have read more than once so far.
It, its pretty good. Also i was reading Of Mice and Men at my schools library, i need to finish that as well.
Finished "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" last week and plan to start reading "The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966" tonight.SaintLeonidasI was looking at Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter just the other day at Borders. Is it pretty good?
[QUOTE="MissLibrarian"][QUOTE="Big_Bad_Sad"]I had to read Of Mice and Men for my English GCSE. I think Im currently on Thief of Time, by Pratchett (as usual)Big_Bad_SadI love Thief of Time. I love all of Terry's books but Thief of Time make me cry so it has some powerful juju in it :P have you read it before? Are you reading them through in order? First time Im reading it. Im reading them in order. I think The Colour of Magic and Guards Guards are the only books I have read more than once so far. Aw man so you still have Night Watch to go? That's my favourite. It is a masterpiece. Actually a legitimate literary masterpiece of the 20th Century. I wish I could read it for the first time again. It's never a chore reading them over again though.
Has anyone here read House of Leaves? It was recommended to me by my English teacher, but I'm not too sure about it.LZ71One of these days I intend to pick it up, but I haven't gotten that far yet. I do know of it, though.
Same. It comes pretty highly recommended by a couple of my friends.
Bio_Spark
From what I've looked at of the book, it looks like a psychological mind**** - very interesting looking stuff indeed.
[QUOTE="Bio_Spark"]
Same. It comes pretty highly recommended by a couple of my friends.
jalexbrown
From what I've looked at of the book, it looks like a psychological mind**** - very interesting looking stuff indeed.
That's precisely the reason why I wanted to check it out, however, I don't want to waste money.[QUOTE="SaintLeonidas"]Finished "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" last week and plan to start reading "The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966" tonight.jalexbrownI was looking at Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter just the other day at Borders. Is it pretty good? Incredibly fun read, takes such a serious biographical approach that you almost believe it :P
[QUOTE="jalexbrown"][QUOTE="SaintLeonidas"]Finished "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" last week and plan to start reading "The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966" tonight.SaintLeonidasI was looking at Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter just the other day at Borders. Is it pretty good? Incredibly fun read, takes such a serious biographical approach that you almost believe it :P I've heard that, other than the obvious creative liberties, it's historically accurate. That makes me even more interested in reading it. I've also heard that they've already planned making a movie based on it.
I'm just beginning Finnegans Wake by James Joyce. Is anyone familiar with this highly-experimental piece of fiction?
[QUOTE="SaintLeonidas"]Finished "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" last week and plan to start reading "The Long Gray Line: The American Journey of West Point's Class of 1966" tonight.jalexbrownI was looking at Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter just the other day at Borders. Is it pretty good?
I just finished "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" also. Very good read. If there is any doubt look up the trailer on youtube. I would post a link but I am at work and don't have access. Just starting on "World War Z" Not sure how I feel yet.
Has anyone here read House of Leaves? It was recommended to me by my English teacher, but I'm not too sure about it.LZ71
I loved it. I've read Stephen King, H.P. Lovecraft, a bit of Edgar Allen Poe, and House of Leaves is the only book that's ever creeped me out. Definitely worth a read.
Right now I'm reading three books.
Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card-Interesting read and Card definately knows how to keep you interested.
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency by Douglas Adams-I'm still waiting for this book to pick up, unlike The Hitchikers Guide for the Galaxy which was excellent from the get go.
The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang-Depressing and horrifying, yet compelling. There are pictures in the middle which are pure nightmare fuel and one of them was particularly gruesome and I can still perfectly metally picture that image which just makes the whole thing worse.
Of Mice and Men is an amazing book :cry: good choice.. I'm currently reading short stories from Stephen King.. great stuff..Tell us what you're reading and what you think of it!
I just finished Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. God, it was depressing. :cry:
I'm gonna read The Ghost next, possibly alongside The Eye of the World.
Theokhoth
I just started reading Xenocide by Orson Scott Card. 3rd book in the Ender series. So far, it is good. I am only about 80 pages in, but I expect I will like it since I liked Ender's Game and Speaker for the Dead.
Anyone else read it and have thoughts on it though? After I am done that, I am hoping to read I, Robot, I am Legend, Dune, or Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. Not sure which yet.
One of my mates told me about Night Watch. Im looking forward to it. I love the Watch.Big_Bad_SadMe too. Vimes is, like, the ultimate man! :P You get to learn so much about him and the history of Ankh-Morpork etc. As I said Night Watch is a masterpiece. I hope in 20 years time they are teaching it in schools as great British literature. Terry deserves it. His writing, especially after the first 20 or so books, is genius.
ESV study Bible. It has cross references, notes, maps, introductions and much more. It's taught me some cool things; I now know that "Isaac" means "he laughs" in hebrew. That's ironic because when Abraham was told that his wife would give birth to a child at the ripe age of 90, he laughed hysterically. Rainbows are a symbol of the covenant that Noah made. There's also a possibility that Ham had sex with his father, Noah. It says that Noah was passed out while naked and Ham "dishonored" him.
I finished up the A Song of Ice and Fire series the other day and I started The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss. Its great so far. I'm not sure what to read next.
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