Welcome, all! :)
Welcome to the forum, LC_Lancer! Am glad you are content with your career choice. :)
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so hello to all Believers IN Christ:;)
Welcome,welcome!This is where the competition of life commenced!
Hello, everybody
I am new member of the forum. I am basically a laid back person, but I like to read and write.:)
Hello all new members and welcome to the forums! :)
Hello and welcome to the forum everybody!!! :wave:
Hello everyone. This is my first post. I'm not generally a "forum person" but after watching the movie The Jane Austen Book Club, I decided it might be fun to have some people to discuss books (among other things) with. Sorry for ending that sentence with a preposition - I know there must be some English teachers lurking around here who just are vehemently furrowing their brows right about now. The movie wasn't that great and I'm not a Jane Austen zealot but I do love to read and I am a bit of a bibliophile (yes, I obsess over the actual books themselves, not just the content) so I figured - why not join a literature forum?
P.S. I'm moving to New York City in about a month and I can't wait to start making my way through the countless number of second-hand bookshops there. Anyone from NYC have any recommendations on where to go?
Hi! I am a new member and am so happy to have finally joined the literature network! After my senior year of high school, I am planning on going on to college to become an English teacher. I LOVE literature.
Since this is a literature website and since it was asked, I will tell some of my favorite authors, though it is so hard to choose a few. I love John Steinbeck, Sinclair Lewis, Herman Melville, basically any early twentieth or late eighteenth century American author. I also have read some of Charles Dickens and Daniel Defoe and really enjoyed them. I must admit, I am not as well read as I hope to be, but I am getting there.
If you have any suggestions, I would love to hear from you! Thanks!
Sarida :)
Hi everyone,
I, too, am new to this whole liturature/thread thing. I was an English major in college and now that I'm not in school, I miss all the conversations on literature. I'm finally getting back to one of my first loves: reading and writing. I wanted to be an author when I was in second grade and I still do, but I need to find focus and not be afraid to get out there with my writing. ,
Right now I'm enjoying social comedies like E.M. Forster's A Room with a View and Austen's Pride and Prejudice. I'm looking forward to having some good chats about all sorts of books. :)
A big fat HELLO to all the newbies! :D
46 going on 86 (health issues).........married (more than once --- sigh)....... mother to six kids, 3 of whom we adopted 2 years ago..... "used to be" a lot of things I ain't any more (Christian, lawyer, philosophy grad student, optimist, pessimist) but still one thing I've been forever: an addict of the printed page. Love great lit but will settle for the back of a cereal box if necessary.
Hi, I'm just going to look around to see what you all get up to and hope to make friends and stuff,I hope you are all having a nice day.:)
Hi everyone. So this isn't actually my first post, at least not tonight, but I thought I'd come by to say hi. I originally joined to use the site in conjunction with my class. We use it for class discussion on books, but I really love literature so I'm glad I joined. Can't wait to post some more about great literature.
Hi ! I am a law student second year and i love writting.Mostly i write short stories with Gothic influence and a mix of dark romance and mystery.Music inspires me most of the time.I'm really glad that i joined this forum.I also like reading,gooing for long walks,listening music and visiting ancinet places.That's all i have too say for now.I hope I'm going to have a nice time around here.
Welcome aboard, Luna777.
Just, hello everybody!
Hi -- I'm a newbie. There, I said it. Now that that's out of the way, I just discovered the forum and I'm excited to find a place to talk with others of similar interests. My Bachelor of Arts degree is in English Lit, and my favorite period was the Romantic. Big fan of Byron, also Shelly & Keats, as well as Mary Shelly, who wrote 'Frankenstein' after a nigh of ghost stories. The original purpose of the story was a meditation on what it is to be human, but it makes a very good scary story, as well.
About me. I have been around a lot. Born in North Carolina, I was raised in Houton, Texas, and consider myself a Texan. Military at seventeen, stationed at the big US Navy Submarine Base, New London, Connecticut, then with the US Air Force in France, Italy, the Florida panhandle, Washington state and finally, Vietnam. My military job was photojournalist, so my experience in Vietnam was quite different from most. I was good at what I did, and after a few months, my boss knew I had no fear of going out to tricky places and situations to find and develop a story, so he let me operate pretty much on my own. I got into some very nasty situations, but I always knew I could get out on the next helicopter, which gave me more bravery than was smart. After eighteen months, tho, I didn't even get a hangnail. It's all a matter of luck, and mine has always been good. Although I was enlisted, everybody wanted to be friends with the newspaper guy, in hopes of getting their name in the paper. I did a lot of flying (right seat, for those of you who know) and wore a flight suit with no rank insignia but my air crew member wings, and was usually entertained in the Officer's Club with the pilots I flew with.
After the military, I began college right away, finishing my BA in English in three years, then spending another semester to convert a minor in Art to a major, and finished a BFA at three and a half years, total. My art specialty was photography, and in my first semester of taking a photography class, when my professor found I was the only one who knew how to use the darkroom equipment, he left the class to me, and I taught it for a year as a teaching assistant. That was my senior year. In my junior year, i was a teaching assistant in what we called Dumbell English, a class for those who were accepted to the University, but pretty much lacked the ability to write a simple, declarative sentence in English, or, presumably, in any other language, as well.
Graduating, I tried to find a job in Journalism, but was completely unable to, despite my experience. I drifted around for a while, even worked in a convenience store, midnight shift, in Key West. Three years out of college, though, I got a good job with a major corporation, Dun & Bradstreet. I'm sure most of you have never heard of them and that's fine, but they are a Fortune 200 company. After a year with them, I was selected as a Management Candidate, and after two years altogether, was promoted to District Manager in Minnepolis, Minnesota. Eighteen months there, and I was transferred to Los Angeles, California. I met and married my wife in Minnesota, and we lived in LA for the next sixteen years. She began doing well with her company, and we were transferred to New Jersey for three years, Norfolk, Virginia (about my favorite place to live) for only one year, Hartford, Connecticut for seven l o n g years, and since April, we have lived in Phoenix, Arizona.
Well, I love to fly, although i have never taken lessons or gotten a license, many of the pilots I flew with in the service gave me tips, and let me fly the aircraft on my own for a while. I have been taught to do aerobatics (trick flying) in some of what were then the hottest aircraft in the world.
I still love photography, altho with the digital age, everything is different. Well, the basics of framing a picture and what makes a good one are the same, but the process is totally different, and it doesn't matter that I know how to use the darkroom now. I can't yet afford Photoshop, so I'm kinda stuck. I have figured a work-around, but I won't go into all that here.
I guess that's it. On a personal note, I have been married to my lovely wife for 28 years tomorrow, and this was the best of three marriages I've had. I'm anxious to make friends and correspond with whomever might be interested. Back to literature for a moment, in modern stuff I love Steven King. I was entrhralled for years by his 'Gunslinger' series, and also Gore Vidal. Currently on my nightstand are 'The Portable Faulkner,' a Penguin Classics collection of his works, 'The best Poems of the English Language,' which I dip into for one or two whenever the mood hits me, 'Salt, A World History,' about a spice which I overuse, and I find it fascinating. Deep breath. "Lady MacBeth,' a fictional history of the woman at the evil heart of one of Shakespeare's finest (well, weren't they all?), 'Into Thick Air' an account of a man who bicycled to the lowest point on six continents. That's Death Valley in the US at 282 feet below sea level, and the shore of the Dead Sea in the Middle East, at l,350 feet below, the lowest place on earth. I am ashamed to admit it, but I am not sure what country that's in, and I haven't gotten to that section in the book yet to learn. Last but not least, 'The Cactus Eaters,' an account of a couple who hiked the Pacific Coast Trail from Mexico to Canada. I am reading all of these, and pick one as the spirit strikes me.
That's it. Now you can say you know me.
But wait, there's more . . .
Reply to cute little car. As to your concern over sentences ending with prepositions, Winsoton Churchill was called on that in a news conference during the war. He quickly reponded that he "didn't care for criticism on that level, that it was the sort of thing up with which he would not put." Good come back, huh? To the best of my knowledge, he didn't copyright that phrase, so be sure to use it to any critics you might encounter.
Bye.
Thanks, Symphony
From looking around on this page, I see I need a better user name and a much better avatar. Work, work . . .
To be continued . . .
Hey there! I'm Ryan and this would be my first post on what seems to be a beautifully-made forum about a thing I love; literature. Thus, the name, right. Well anyway, I love to write and I kind of like to read.(only on a good day) I'm a big Vonnegut fan. I like his style and his books are hilariously demented. So, let's clap it up for KV. See you guys on my next post.
It seems only right that my first post be in the introductory thread, so here it is. I'll be seeing you all around. :)
Greetings my new anonymous online community. Thank you for the warm welcome. I stumbled upon this site while doing a bit of informal research for a unit I am teaching later in the year. This is my third year teaching seventh grade English at an early college secondary school in Flushing, Queens, NY. We have a partnership with Queens College, a city university located in the community. Our goal is to give students who normally wouldn't attend college the opportunity to succeed in academia. By the time my students graduate twelfth grade, they will have had the potential to earn 60 college credits. We look to take struggling students, special education students, the first generation that speaks English in their family, and accelerate them so that they take their first college course in ninth grade. We are currently in our fourth year of existence, so the school is sixth grade through ninth; we add a grade each year. I write all my own curriculum and have almost full autonomy in my classroom.
The internet is a great idea for seed ideas. After coming across a lesson on the Rock N' Roll Hall of Fame's website comparing Robert Frost's poem "Mending Wall" and Pink Floyd's The Wall, I developed that unit to include a number of original ideas. The last addition was Jean-Paul Sartre's short story, "The Wall". Now that I will be teaching the unit for a third time, I want to continue to expand the unit. This is where I take this post to another thread because I need some suggestions.
Take it slow,
Barry
This is my first posting - I love books and reading - especially poetry. I don't know how active I will be but I wanted to get started.
Hi!
I'm new, reaching here from reading first SF, then more general reading after discovering Women's Press at a book sale. My favorite writers so far include P K Dick, Disch, le Guin, Russ, Maltzberg, Piercy, Dreher, Atwood, Winton, Amos and Firth.
The last two don't write books, as far as I know; Tori Amos makes music and David Firth makes Flash animations. Both are great sources of intricately-crafted original content, which to me is what "literature" is all about :-)
Most of what I read, was written since the 1950s... it's seldom I've read older works by choice; exceptions have been Olive Shriener and Virginia Woolf.
A huge greetings to all We covet that you could spend more time on the forum.Many thanks.
Hello everyone! I stumbled across this website while searching for a specific book that I've yet to find...but no matter; I haven't had a chance to look around much but I do enjoy literature, both reading and writing it, so this seems like a good place to be!
My name is Martin White I am the author of Living the Simple Life and Simple Life Poety. I am also the publisher of Poetic Monthly Magazine.
I enjoy joining forums and reading others poetry.
Hello everyone,
I just registered and enjoyed reading all these messages.
My name is Athanase, I am greek, I live in Athens, I am Electronics Engineer graduated from the Ecole Polytechnique of Lausanne, Switzerland. I shall very much like to find someone among you speaking french.
Hello All! I'm looking foreward to browsing all these 'great read' ideas.
A big hello to all.
My name is Erliza L. Matacot, from Philippines. To be honest, I'm an English teacher in one of the private schools in our city. I love literature very much and I am so happy that I saw this site.
Hi!
I am destiny's Child....
I aspire to own a book store.....
Currently working on the plan for that....
Hoping to get lots and lots of support from everyone out here.....
Welcome to LitNet Destiny's child.
Hi everyone, I'm new here. I'm a literature student and an aspiring writer, can't wait to discuss literature with everyone here!
My name is hbrent. I have a Ph.D. in medieval drama, but that is not the point. The point is that all of a sudden in life I have grandchildren, and I am trying to help their parents and teachers get them to read. As part of that project, I am reading some of the books I intend send to them. Early this mornining, suffering from early-onset geriatric insomnia, I awoke at 4 am to finish Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth. The book is a little advanced for my grandson, who is just starting fourth grade, but I look forward to his reading it in about two years. I am now off to find a copy of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
Welcome to the Forum, HBrent! :)
I have been reading some children's books recently too and am rather enjoying revisiting all these old favorites.
I think Verne's books might be suitable for early teens.
My nephews and I are trying to follow this list: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main...dsbooks119.xml
We made a deal that they should complete the list by the time they are 15 (will give them book vouchers if they do). It is rather good and ideal that the list is divided into 3 stages.
My name's Robin, I am a recent mature graduate of Bath Spa University having earned a 2/1 in Psychology and English (Combined BA (Hons)). My favourite modules were Shakespeare, Gothic, Literary Theory and Poetry. I also really like Dickens.
Hi Everyone, Chanced upon the site whilst reading about one of my favourite authors, Henry James. It will be interesting reading the thoughts and opinions of others with regards to good quality lit.
Laters!
Mhairi:thumbs_up
I'm sure you would love Suzanne Collins' novels.
Hello
Hello everyone! I have become interested in 19th century french literature starting with The Three Musketeers, Count of Monte Cristo and Les Miserables. I look forward to discussing the printed word.
Hi, I'm Subby. I haven't been around to show my lovely blue eyes and friendly teeth in the forum for quite sometime. So I thought I drop by and leave some bites :D
hi everyone (I must apologise for my english first). I hope you enjoy reading. I generally don' t, except for some existential novels such us The Stranger/Outsider (by Camus) or The Castle (by Kafka). Is there anyone who shares the same passion?