I think i may i have read that..i forget the titles of them...owell
Havent read S is for Silence by Sue Grafton (but i have read the Q one!!) ...YET
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I think i may i have read that..i forget the titles of them...owell
Havent read S is for Silence by Sue Grafton (but i have read the Q one!!) ...YET
Since no one has answered Samantha's post, I will start again:
I haven't read Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco.
I haven't read Frank herbert - Dune although i have saw the movie and the mini seiris and played the computer games .. :eek2:
I have read "Foucault's Pendulum" by Umberto Eco.Quote:
Originally Posted by Scheherazade
I haven't read "Angels and Demons" by Dan Brown.
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@Weeping Willow: "Only someone who has read that particular book can reply!" ;)
oops... :blush:...
Angels and Demons is better than DaVinci, in my opinion, but it's still not all that wonderful, compared to a lot of other popular fiction. It's a good read, though. He manages to pull of a few good twists, but there are some things you can easily figure out before the end.
I haven't read Little Women by Louisa May Alcott.
I read Little Women a loooong time ago, and fondly recall it as one of my favorite childhood stories.
I have never read Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham (but I would love to someday!).
I've read One of Ours. . .I went on a Cather kick several years ago.
I haven't endured through Pride and Prejudice .
Oh, what a shame! I did! Enjoyed my first Austen and laughed my head off, certainly the second time and neevr looked back.
I haven't read the Divina Commedia/Divine Comedy by Dante (yet).
I kind of feel like playing this game, so I'll answer "partly". I've read the Inferno only. I really liked it.
I haven't read a single novel by Charles Dickens. I've tried a few times. . . but his characters just seem like talking manikins to me.
I've read "Of Human Bondage"- it's a brilliant read. It was a while ago now but I remember that it was an interesting perspective on male/female relationships.
I have read some of Dickens' books in English (Great Expectations, David Copperfield, Bleak House, A Tale of Two Cities and Pickwick Papers) and I find them mostly entertaining because of the caricatures they provide. Dickens shows a great sense of humour compared to some of his contemporaries (say, Bronte sisters or George Eliot).
I have not read The World According to Garp.
Bumpela