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View Full Version : Best Reads of 2008



Scheherazade
03-09-2009, 03:43 PM
Please vote for the you liked best in 2008.

Niamh
03-09-2009, 04:12 PM
Voted! :D

eyemaker
03-09-2009, 11:31 PM
Done! :)

jhonerliz
03-11-2009, 10:41 AM
Also done!

sofia82
03-11-2009, 02:05 PM
I did not share in the readings of 2008 but I read some of them let me see: Odyssey,The Sea, Master and Margarita and I loved Margarita

alestar89
03-11-2009, 02:38 PM
I'm slightly ashamed I did not read any in the list... :S

Wilde woman
03-11-2009, 05:45 PM
Done! Though I've only read 4 of the books. :(

godzila
07-06-2009, 03:30 AM
I am very impress with your post because it have nice details about 2008 books. I like to tell you about four books which i read & bought from online stores as well. I was very impressed with online services of books which help a lot to read and buy books. I like reading e-books too.

Four books i read:
The Odyssey bought from Amazon
Master and Margarita bought from Amazon
The Road bought from Amazon
The Sea bought from Infibeam

It was really nice reading this book.

MarkC
12-16-2009, 05:45 AM
I have read only two of them and out of them I gave my votes....:)

Jozanny
12-16-2009, 07:57 PM
If these were texts done in the forum book club, I have little option but to pick The Road, oddly enough. I did read the Eco title, but that was years ago, not here, and it is perhaps unfair to pit my Italian sensibilities against McCarthy's western minimalism.....zzzzzz

andrewparkin
07-09-2010, 07:20 AM
in my opinion best reads in 2008 is Master and Margarita.It is a complex sprawl of a novel, definitely, and a structuralist's dream. The nifty central conceit is that in addition to the devil-comes-to-town story, there is a second narrative strand jogging through the novel. It is framed as the work of the eponymous Master, and is the story of one Pontius Pilate. Yes, that Pilate. What is special about this telling of the story, however, is that as much as the Moscow strand is exuberantly fantastic, Pilate's story is strictly realistic, strictly human. And the inversion is even more specific than that: Plenty of biblical events make a distorted appearance in the contemporary story, and far that is typical of 1930s Moscow - the intrigue, the double-dealing - is displaced in to the Pilate chapters. Both strands, however, happen on the same timeline, over an Easter weekend.