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Thread: The 5th Month of 2005? How many books have your read thus far?

  1. #1
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    The 5th Month of 2005? How many books have your read thus far?

    So how many? I'll do another one of these towards the end of summer. This doesn't include school textbooks.

    Here's what I have finished so far:

    Narrative of the Life of Fredrick Douglas
    Up From Slavery
    The Da Vinci Code
    Catcher in The Rye
    The War of The Worlds
    The Communist Manfesto

    I'm so far behind as I have about 20 other books on my shelf dying to be read. College wasn't very good to me this semester, but I hope to read the same number of books over the summer break (I'm only taking 2 summer classes this year).

    Currently reading:
    The Iliad
    Don Quixote
    Catch 22
    No man should die without first reading the world's greatest literature.

  2. #2
    in a blue moon amuse's Avatar
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    what will you study this summer? thx for the catcher in the rye tip.
    shh!!!
    the air and water have been here a long time, and they are telling stories.

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    Quote Originally Posted by amuse
    what will you study this summer? thx for the catcher in the rye tip.
    Simple stuff for a nice break from all the accounting: Earth Science & Business Writing
    No man should die without first reading the world's greatest literature.

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    Books I have read thus far (the ones I can remember):
    Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
    One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
    The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio
    All Of Us by Raymond Carver
    Art and Physics by Leonard Shlain
    The Black Sheep by Honoré de Balzac
    Howards End by E.M. Forster
    Silas Marner by George Eliot
    Orlando by Virginia Woolf
    The Crucible by Arthur Miller
    Lord of the Flies (for the second time) by William Golding
    A Christmas Carol (for the second or third time) by Charles Dickens.

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    Drama Queen Koa's Avatar
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    Curious mono, One day of Ivan Denisovich is the last book I read

    Before that...I finished Doctor Zhivago which I had started like 6 months before, then I read Le silence de la Mer by Vercours, The picture of Dorian Gray, Pushkin's The Captain's Daughter... i dont remember anything more but I think there were another one or two... I don't read really much lately I admit, a lot of my free time is swallowed in the internet addiction and I often forbid myself to read anything entertaining in 'school' times to avoid distraction cos I'm distracted enough by myself...
    dead on the inside, i've got nothing to prove
    keep me alive and give me something to lose

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    Drama Queen Koa's Avatar
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    Oh yes I also read a short novel by Tolstoy called Cadzhi Murat, and other 2 very short stories by the same Tolstoy.
    dead on the inside, i've got nothing to prove
    keep me alive and give me something to lose

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    in a blue moon amuse's Avatar
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    not read much...

    Tales From the Tower of London
    The Bread Givers
    Coming of Age in Mississippi
    Flood Stage and Rising
    David Walker's Appeal
    The Life Story of the Mexican Immigrant
    the majority of 3 of Nancy Friday's works

    also tackled half of Souls of Black Folk (though it bested me, and i slunk away, defeated by its glorious prose as i oft am by Shakespeare), more of W&P, most of Youth Ask a Modern Prophet About Life, Love, and God, and reread parts of the ever wonderful The Killer Angels.
    shh!!!
    the air and water have been here a long time, and they are telling stories.

  8. #8
    Registered User Lector's Avatar
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    Enders Game
    For Whom the Bell Tolls
    The Testament
    The Once and Future King
    Martian Chronicle
    Mere Christianity
    1984
    Gates of Fire
    Watership Down
    War of the Worlds
    Frankenstein
    And I just started Clancy's Without Remorse

  9. #9
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    Oh yeah, and lets not forget Fight Club, which I just read again

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    I have already read 37 books this year! And I'll spare u from reading the list!

  11. #11
    in a blue moon amuse's Avatar
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    lucky you!
    any really fantastic stuff you want to share?
    shh!!!
    the air and water have been here a long time, and they are telling stories.

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    Oh, I forgot to include a few more:
    Metamorphoses by Ovid
    Critique of Judgment by Immanuel Kant
    To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
    And a book of collected short stories by numerous authors, like D.H. Lawrence, Mark Twain, Ambrose Bierce, Ursula le Guin, Isaac Bashevis, Zora Neale Hurston, Mary Oliver, and Shirley Jackson, among many others.

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    somewhere else Helga's Avatar
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    Ok, this is what I remember

    Hamlet - by Shakespeare (the second time)
    Dr.Zhivago- Pushkin
    Death can be Beautiful- short stories by many authors collected by Alfred Hitchcock
    Veronica decides to die- Paulo Coelho
    The Virgin Suicides- Jeffrey Eugenides
    The Old man and the ocean- Ernest Hemingway
    Ulyssus- Homer
    Mr. Universe-Icelandic author
    A few Star Trek Books
    something more I can't remember
    I hope death is joyful, and I hope I'll never return -Frida Khalo

    If I seem insensitive to what you are going through, understand it's the way I am- Mr. Spock

    Personally, I think that the unique and supreme delight lies in the certainty of doing 'evil'–and men and women know from birth that all pleasure lies in evil. - Baudelaire

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    I can't think of much...

    E.M. Forster's "A Passage to India"
    Robert Graves' "The Siege and Fall of Troy" (currently reading a collection of his short stories)
    Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy"
    MacKinlay Kantor's "Andersonville"
    John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men" and "The Pearl", Ford Madox Ford's "The Good Soldier", James Baldwin's "Go Tell it on the Mountain" might have been this year, same with Hermann Hesse's "Siddhartha" but that was probably still last year... Poopers.

    Me and dates, we no go so good together.

  15. #15
    Expert Waffler Snukes's Avatar
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    Inkheart - Cornelia Funke
    Welcome to the Monkey House - Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
    Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas - Tom Robbins
    Subterranean - James Rollins
    Outlander - Diana Gabaldon
    No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency - Alexander McCall Smith
    Tears of the Giraffe - Alexander McCall Smith
    The Sensuous Woman - "J" (hehe)
    Brave New World - Huxley
    Peplum - Nathalie Athomb
    Stranger in a Strange Land - Robert Heinlin
    Well of Lost Plots - Jasper Fforde

    Currently reading Notre Dame de Paris by Victor Hugo, which is about the most ambitious thing I've read all year. The more ridiculous my academic reading list, the fluffier my personal reading list tends to get...
    100,000 lemmings can't be wrong. ~heard from a friend
    Life is the first gift, love is the second, understanding the third. ~ Marge Piercy
    Earth's crammed with heaven, and every common bush afire with God;
    but only he who sees takes of his shoes. ~Elizabeth Barrett Browning

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