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Thread: what is on your 2008 reading list?

  1. #16
    Labyrinthine THX-1138's Avatar
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    [QUOTE=thelastmelon;507360]


    A Million Little Pieces - James Frey

    good luck with that i am stuck with his other book (my friend Leonard) which is badly written

  2. #17
    Registered User thelastmelon's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by THX-1138 View Post
    A Million Little Pieces - James Frey

    good luck with that i am stuck with his other book (my friend Leonard) which is badly written
    Have you read A Million Little Pieces as well? I've heard it's a good book,
    but have had it at home for a long time and not read it. I think it's worth a try at least.

  3. #18
    I read between the lions! Topekachu's Avatar
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    I heard that the Twilight series (or whatever it's called) by Stephenie Meyer is good...so I might read those.
    Also, George Orwell's 1984 and the rest of Stephen King's Dark Tower series. And The PK Man...and I haven't read the rest of the Among the Hidden books yet! Yeah...I have a long list, but these are the ones I remember.

  4. #19
    Ditsy Pixie Niamh's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by papayahed View Post
    The long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul - Douglas Adams
    Hey, let me know if its any good! I've wanted to read that for a while but havent gotten around to.

    Also this year i will definitely read terry pratchett, i say it every year but still havent!
    "Come away O human child!To the waters of the wild, With a faery hand in hand, For the worlds more full of weeping than you can understand."
    W.B.Yeats

    "If it looks like a Dwarf and smells like a Dwarf, then it's probably a Dwarf (or a latrine wearing dungarees)"
    Artemins Fowl and the Lost Colony by Eoin Colfer


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  5. #20
    If grace is an ocean... grace86's Avatar
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    For some reason I have been frantically trying to make a list! But I think primarily I should get to the books that are on my bookshelf (some have been crying at me for years now).

    So my list:

    Sons and Lovers (currently started) - D.H. Lawrence
    Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    The Rainbow - D.H. Lawrence
    Lady Chatterly's Lover - D.H. Lawrence (is it obvious I am trying to catch up?)
    She and Allan - H.R. Haggard (I've started but stopped)
    The Count of Monte Cristo - Dumas (wanted to read it last summer)

    Shakespeare: maybe two or three of his comedies. Too many tragedies lately!

    Walden - Thoreau
    The Inferno - Dante
    Paradise Lost - Milton (with this one I am being optimistic - I cannot read this by myself so I need to find a buddy)

    There are a lot more on my shelves but as long as I get these done I will feel like I have accomplished a lot. I also wanted to participate in at least four book club readings (I am setting a goal at least)...still trying to see if I can do January's.

    This summer I want to devote to one author and read multiple works by that one author...either Thomas Hardy or Willa Cather (I got hooked Janine!). And lastly, I am trying to locate some good forensic anthropology books to read up on, there is a lack of classes for now that I can take on the subject so I was told to pick up a book on it.
    "So heaven meets earth like a sloppy wet kiss, and my heart turns violently inside of my chest, I don't have time to maintain these regrets, when I think about, the way....He loves us..."


    http://youtube.com/watch?v=5xXowT4eJjY

  6. #21
    Registered User Tosca's Avatar
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    Going by pages is awesome! It is fun to see the numbers get bigger and bigger with every book you read!
    "Let us learn from the past to profit by the present, and from the present to live better in the future." -William Wordsworth

    "It is never too late to be what you might have been." -George Eliot

    Currently Reading: "Jude the Obscure" by Thomas Hardy

  7. #22
    Beautant Lily Adams's Avatar
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    I would love to get my hands on those rarer HG Wells books that I can never find. First Men in the Moon and Mind at the End of Its Tether. I have a whole shelf of books just waiting to read, though.

    I'd really like to read Lolita, too. I wanna see the Kubrick movie badly. Reminds me of the Oingo Boingo song...too little too little TOO LITTLE!!!!!!!!


    Tomorrow always holds the promise of something new and exciting. I am the Jetsons meet the Flintstones.

  8. #23
    Procrastinator General *Classic*Charm*'s Avatar
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    The Master and Margarita- Bulgakov
    Crime and Punishment- Dostoyevski
    The Brothers Karamazov- Dostoyevski
    Anna Karenina- Tolstoy
    War and Peace- Tolstoy
    Lolita- Nabokov

    It's the year of the Russian authors for me...can you tell?
    I'm weary with right-angles, abbreviated daylight,
    Waiting for a winter to be done.
    Why do I still see you in every mirrored window,
    In all that I could never overcome?

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by *Classic*Charm* View Post
    The Master and Margarita- Bulgakov
    Crime and Punishment- Dostoyevski
    The Brothers Karamazov- Dostoyevski
    Anna Karenina- Tolstoy
    War and Peace- Tolstoy
    Lolita- Nabokov

    It's the year of the Russian authors for me...can you tell?
    I was just about to ask you if you planned on making this a year of all Russian writers, and then I saw your note at the bottom!!

  10. #25
    Lost in the Fog PabloQ's Avatar
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    The Road to Dos Passos

    In 2007, I embarked to read American authors of the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a lead up to reading the USA trilogy by John Dos Passos. As I got interested in the realism to modernism movement, novels keep showing up on the shelf in front of it. So here's how it looks at this moment:
    Pudd'nhead Wilson -- Mark Twain
    The House of Mirth and The Age of Innocence - Edith Wharton
    Maggie: a Girl of the Streets - Stephen Crane
    McTeague and The Octopus -- Frank Norris
    King Coal -- Upton Sinclair
    Sister Carrie -- Theodore Drieser
    Main Street and Babbitt -- Sinclair Lewis
    Daisy Miller and Washington Square -- Henry James
    This Side of Paradise and The Beautiful and the Damned -- Scott Fitzgerald

    and finally Dos Passos.
    Reserving the right to shuffle the deck and possibly add to the list based on whether a particular author catches my fancy and I want more before I move on (which may very well happen with Mark Twain).
    No damn cat, no damn cradle - Newt Honniker

  11. #26
    Registered User aeroport's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by grace86 View Post
    But I think primarily I should get to the books that are on my bookshelf (some have been crying at me for years now).
    Likewise!

    Paradise Lost - Milton (with this one I am being optimistic - I cannot read this by myself so I need to find a buddy)
    I'll be reading this as well in Milton class.
    L'Amant - Marguerite Duras (for Fr. class)
    Finish The Ambassadors (within the week hopefully) - James
    The Wings of the Dove - James
    What Maisie Knew - James
    The Rise of Silas Lapham - William Dean Howells
    The House of the Seven Gables - Hawthorne
    The Blithedale Romance - Hawthorne
    The Marble Faun - Hawthorne
    Hawthorne - James's critical study
    Zuckerman Bound, The Anatomy Lesson, and The Prague Orgy - Philip Roth
    Me Talk Pretty One Day - David Sedaris
    The Age of Innocence - Edith Wharton

  12. #27
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    I recently started a literature binge and I would like to maintain the momentum, so the following list does seem overzealous! Given the seasonal intersessions and summer vacation, I think I can accomplish it.

    1. Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
    2. We by Yevgeny Zamyatin
    3. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
    4. The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
    5. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
    6. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
    7. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
    8. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
    9. The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand
    10. The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    11. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    12. The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
    13. Les Miserables by Victory Hugo
    14. Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervates Saavadera
    15. Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
    16. Ulysses by James Joyce
    17. Man Without Qualities by Robert Musil
    18. The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann
    19. In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust

    Most of these books were recommended in the thread I created about long novels. And I am impressionable for any nearly all recommendations that anyone gives, so I decided why not?

  13. #28
    Beautant Lily Adams's Avatar
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    Oooh, and The Metamorphosis by Kafka and 2001: A Space Odyessey. Loved the movie, now I wanna read the book.

    I checked out Lolita today.


    Tomorrow always holds the promise of something new and exciting. I am the Jetsons meet the Flintstones.

  14. #29
    Papel-CRAZE! Tersely's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Topekachu View Post
    I heard that the Twilight series (or whatever it's called) by Stephenie Meyer is good...so I might read those.
    That my friend is an excellent series. They are already making a movie about it and the series is only a couple of years old.
    Anyways.. I have a nice little green tub full to the rim of books and to control my finances, have made an agreement with myself to not buy a -single- book until I read everything in that tub. Just to name a few...
    (currently into the gothic literature) so that includes Mysteries of Udolpho, Melmoth the Wanderer, Uncle Silas, Castle of Otranto, The Monk, and The Vampyre.
    Two huge novels.. Les Miserables (second reading unabridged...first was abridged) and The Tale of Genji.
    For fun... a couple of Stephen Kings.

  15. #30
    Lost in the Fog PabloQ's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamesian View Post
    Likewise!


    I'll be reading this as well in Milton class.
    L'Amant - Marguerite Duras (for Fr. class)
    Finish The Ambassadors (within the week hopefully) - James
    The Wings of the Dove - James
    What Maisie Knew - James
    The Rise of Silas Lapham - William Dean Howells
    The House of the Seven Gables - Hawthorne
    The Blithedale Romance - Hawthorne
    The Marble Faun - Hawthorne
    Hawthorne - James's critical study
    Zuckerman Bound, The Anatomy Lesson, and The Prague Orgy - Philip Roth
    Me Talk Pretty One Day - David Sedaris
    The Age of Innocence - Edith Wharton
    I just finished The Ambassadors and really enjoyed it. If you plan to walk straight into The Wings of the Dove, I'd be interested in your reaction, especially if it's the first time. I found it maddening and I've figured out why, but I'm interested in other's reaction to it.
    I really enjoyed The Rise of Silas Lapham as well.
    No damn cat, no damn cradle - Newt Honniker

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