That's kind of funny. I'm curious about what he would say, in light of Dr. D., but I'm with MaryLupin; fight the power!
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I was raised catholic, and my mother is very catholic, and so he insists on being rude and ignorant and tryng to disprove the whole Catholic belief system. He can believe whatever he wants, but it's really unnessessary (wow I can't spell) for him to try to shove his view down our throats. He especially loves the whole creation vs. evolution. He quotes what Dawkins says about Darwin. I told him to actaully read Darwin, as I have, and then we'd talk.
The worst part is: he never actaully bothers to ask what I believe. My views have long since strayed form traditional catholic beliefs but he's so busy trying to prove me wrong, that he's no longer aware that I don't care. I just bugs me that he does it to my mom.
I just recently purchased War & Peace by Leo Tolstoy.
Why not? I think it can be a) for studying Latin or b) just for fun. I've read Harry Potter -books in Swedish, even though my mother tongue is Finnish and the original Harry Potter language is English. (Of course I've read them in English and Finnish, too)
My reasons were a) to learn Swedish better and b) to see how different translations vary from each other and the original text, and that was just for fun :)
I guess I am not following the book market as closely as probably I should. In any event, I was browsing the new novels in the English language section of a book store in Malmö today, and all of sudden a new book by Don DeLillo was staring me in the face! The title is Falling Man, and, being a fan of DeLillo's past novels, I immediately bought it, and just placed it firmly at the top of my "to read" pile.
You know I had a rather brutal father. He was an emotional bully and my mother tolerated it. But what is true is that they were in the weird-relationship together. They both caused the pain we all suffered, and until I learnt to speak calmly to both my mother and father (I studied books to give me the poise, words and arguments), and only speak when I could clearly and succinctly say what I experienced as a true and accurate rendition of the world, I learnt to simply watch them fall around each other getting some kind of weird satisfaction from all the pain they both produced. Once I achieved some distance and a calm voice, what I discovered is that both my mother and father were delightfully silly human beings. And then, there was no more pain. In between those two states I became one heck of well read woman.
The last book I bought was Quo Vadis by Henryk Sieniewicz. Apparently it's a very good historical fiction, but I haven't been able to read it yet.
confederacy of dunces. good stuff. think i'm getting murphy, by beckett, today.
Oh I don't remember. ;) I try not to buy books anymore (can't afford :() and so rely on the library or Bookmooch.com for my literary needs. The last book I actually bought was in May, The Good Guy by Dean Koontz. It was worth it!
Animal Farm by George Orwell
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
I bought these books yesterday...
I just got: Avalon High by Meg Cabot
The Misadventures of Benjamin Bartholomew Piff: volume 2 by Jason Lethcoe
Naruto: Volumes 1 and 11 by Masashi Kishimoto
Prom Dates from Hell by Rosemary Clement-Moore
Ptolemy's Gate by Jonathan Stroud (3rd in the Bartimaeus trilogy)
and Maximum Ride: Saving the World and other extreme sports (3 in the maximun ride series) by James Patterson.
I just bought a bunch of books:
Crime and Punishment - Dostoevsky
Notes from Underground, The Double, and Other Stories - Dostoevsky
The House of the Dead and Poor Folk - Dostoevsky
Selected Stories - Anton Chekhov
Fathers and Sons - Ivan Turgenev
Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy
Essential Thinkers: Descartes (Discourse on Method, Meditations on the First Philosophy, The Principles of Philosophy) - Descartes
The Hunchback of Notre Dame - Victor Hugo
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Oscar Wilde: Collected Works (The Picture of Dorian Gray, The Canterville Ghost, The Importance of Being Earnest, An Ideal Husband, The Ballod of Reading Gaol, De Profundis, and more)
All for $50!