steenajack (post: 1393652) wrote:Hmmm......A book I don't like?............
http://i623.photobucket.com/albums/tt315/megnificentest/twilight.jpg
http://tengossip.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/twilight-graphic-novel.jpg
http://www.msnden.org/twilightlive.org/images/twilight/twilight-movie-poster.jpg
:rant::rant::rant::rant::rant::rant::rant::rant::rant::rant:
(no offense to any Twi-lovers)
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1393695) wrote:Anything by Bertrand Russell. While I appreciate authors like Nietzsche and Camus (who are very atheist, however I appreciate their angst in their reasons) but Bertrand is just a jerk and an elitist who thinks he's got everything figured out. His book "Why I Am Not a Christian" is just... dumb and annoying, lol. There are far too many other authors who can make stronger cases than Russell.
And for some reason I did not like A Wrinkle in Time. Granted I read this in elementary school, so I need to read it again to make another opinion.
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1393727) wrote:Watership Down.
Nate (post: 1393749) wrote:I once read a third-rate biography of Copernicus that I found at the bus station.
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
ShiroiHikari wrote:I hate pretty much anything by Chuck Palahniuk that isn't Fight Club.
While I got some enjoyment out of Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy, the final volume, The Amber Spyglass was pretty poor. If you're writing fiction, you should be, you know, [b]subtle /B] in getting across your ideas.
makachop, Steinbeck loved to write depressing stuff. Take it from someone who's read quite a few of his books.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1393756) wrote:Really? How come? I only ask why because I've been looking into reading it lately. XD
As for my own list:
The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrisson (OMG)
Election by Tom Perrotta
Great Expectations by Charles Dickens (his writing style just strikes me as SO dry. XD)
The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane
Across Five Aprils by Irene Hunt
Those seem to be the only ones I read that left an impression. XD They were all books for high school, except for the first two, which were college (no high schooler should EVER have to read those books XDD).
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1393984) wrote:I didn't know the name of what we watched, though, and I got hardcore into Redwall a few years later. Most of the redwall books at that time had the review tagline "In the tradition of Watership Down!" so I thought, hey! More Anthropomorphic Knights in Shining Armor! And then I picked it up and went through the whole thing aaaalll over again.
Yeah, it's probably a really good book. I just think I've been led to a bias against it.
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