Posted by arren18 on 11.14.2007, 12:28 PM: Oh yes, Catcher in the Rye is good. I just wrote an essay on it the other day.
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Posted by Kazegami on 11.14.2007, 12:46 PM:
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Posted by Orphic Okapi on 11.14.2007, 06:02 PM: The first book is fantastic, the second is fairly mediocre, and the last is barely readable. Which is a pity, too, because it all starts off so swimmingly.
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Posted by harmony-of-mar on 11.14.2007, 10:21 PM: omg bloodruby star of doom,you chose candice for your avatar?
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Posted by Mush on 11.14.2007, 10:27 PM:
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Posted by harmony-of-mar on 11.14.2007, 10:30 PM: explain.
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Posted by harmony-of-mar on 11.14.2007, 10:35 PM: i shall look for it.
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Posted by Orphic Okapi on 11.14.2007, 11:05 PM: "Fifth Business" is still the greatest book ever written, in case anyone was wondering.
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Posted by Orphic Okapi on 11.15.2007, 08:56 AM: Robertson Davies.
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Posted by arren18 on 11.15.2007, 12:07 PM:
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Posted by Saddletank on 11.15.2007, 04:15 PM: I'm terrible with books. I read a lot during school but the only classics were the ones I had to read. I read a lot of H G Wells when I was a child and Jules Verne and these two authors styles (Wells especially) strongly influenced my own writing. As I got older I read most of Tolkein's works, a lot of sci-fi (short stories mostly) and tons of Stephen King.
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Posted by T.C. on 11.15.2007, 06:38 PM:
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Posted by Saddletank on 11.15.2007, 07:33 PM: Yep, and Asimov and Kurt Vonnegut, and A E Van Vogt, Aldiss, Heinlein and the rest. All the good sc-fi was written pre-1970s IMHO.
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Posted by fenkashi on 11.15.2007, 07:56 PM: Ooh books! I read way too much so I usually end up remembering books by the general storyline. But let's see...Tale of Two Cities, yes amazing ending. No questions there. Also love Kurt Vonnegut with all that slapstick humour. I liked Slaughterhouse-five better than Cat's Cradle. The Picture of Dorian Gray was great as well...hm, oh and Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf.
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