frodo Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 Originally posted by ooana:Anyone ever read Johnathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach? Surprised I haven't seen anyone list that yet.Great bookSomething to give you hope when you are FURead one more book by Bach-good but could not compareTry T.Goodkind Wizard's first rule and sequels.First 3 books are unbelivable,then goes down someAlso have you read Song of Kali and Carion comfort from Simmons-exelent horors Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ooana Posted December 6 Author Report Share Posted December 6 I personally haven't yet read any of Simmon's horrors but they're on my "to read" list. Heard only great things about them.I'm suddenly tempted to do a group B&N outting. <laughs> yes yes...total dork, I know ;-)-Oo------------------"When the soul wishes to experience something, she throws an image of the experience out before her, and enters into her own image." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
quanto_magnus Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 Originally posted by ooana: Based on what you seem to like you'd really enjoy Simons I think. Check out Hollowman as well as the Hyperion series.And George RR Martin is fantastic! Such a great pair of books!-OoI will have to look into those authors...Another one I forgot to mention:Ann Rice -- I've read just about everything she has written... Even some of the assumed name books (Ann Rampling) ------------------Hugha.k.a. ibhugh, Bryan Adamsemail: ibhugh@yahoo.comaolim: hugesk8r Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
frodo Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 [i'm suddenly tempted to do a group B&N outting. <laughs> yes yes...total dork, I know ;-)Excuse my ignorance but what is B&N(fresh from the airplane immigrant)And horrors from Simmons ARE SCARY Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ooana Posted December 6 Author Report Share Posted December 6 Originally posted by frodo:[i'm suddenly tempted to do a group B&N outting. <laughs> yes yes...total dork, I know ;-)Excuse my ignorance but what is B&N(fresh from the airplane immigrant)And horrors from Simmons ARE SCARY Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bungee Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 Originally posted by quanto_magnus: I will have to look into those authors...Another one I forgot to mention:Ann Rice -- I've read just about everything she has written... Even some of the assumed name books (Ann Rampling) I read 'Vampire' by Anne Rice. Pretty cool book then I went out rented every Vampire movie I could find. Pretty intense. The movie starring Tom Cruise was OK.------------------Sticks and Stones may break my bones..but..words..can't..hurt..meeeee...so there Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
frodo Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 Originally posted by ooana: B&N= Barnes and Noble. Eeeeeevil store. Eeeeevil. Sucks you in and you never get out. Almost as sick and wrong as Kozmo which will send you a book in an hour. I think they're out to get me and my wallet. ;-)You got it rightI actualy spend more $$$$$ on books than on partyingBarnes&Noble aaaaargh once you get in there is no going out.If You want to have B&N outing I would bemore than happy.I mean it is time to see some of you ppl without candy and during day time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ms_lulu Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 All time favourite books:- George Orwell, "1984" (scariest book ever)- Susan Douglas, "Where the Girls Are" (women in mass media critique done with tons of humour)- John Lanchester, "The Debt to Pleasure" (an harmonious marriage of food and death) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djmikedr Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 "The Media of Mass Communication" 5th edby John Vivianisbn 0-205-28739-5Its a text book, but dam! it reads great, and honestly folks, I dont read, and I liked this book!------------------Use email DJmikeDR@aol.comPM way too slow! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bungee Posted December 6 Report Share Posted December 6 Originally posted by ooana:While I'm new to this board many of you seem like a very interesting bunch of people...Was thinking it might be fun to hear what kind of books you all enjoy reading and get some recommendations going. Any genre!I'll set the stage so to speak:"Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Gilman is a short but amazing read.Anything by Dan SimmonsPillars of the Earth by Ken Follet (incredible epic)More to come if folks want in ;-)Speaking of Ken Follet..he was one of my favorite authors when I was in Bronx Science..I read 'Eye of the needle' & 'Where eagles land' not sure if I got the titles right but..he is an awesome writer..Saw a coupla moveis based on his novels but somehow they never do the books justice. ------------------Sticks and Stones may break my bones..but..words..can't..hurt..meeeee...so there Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
djmikedr Posted December 7 Report Share Posted December 7 bump------------------Use email DJmikeDR@aol.comPM way too slow! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rudeboyyouth Posted December 7 Report Share Posted December 7 Dostoevsky, Douglas, Hawthorne, Emerson, Swinburne, Dumaurier, Tennyson, Wilde, Shakespeare, Pater, Doyle, Goethe, Baudelaire, Dickens, Moliere, Narayan,Franklin, Kafka, Dr. Michael Steinman, and Borges are my favorites.My favorite books would have to be:The Idiot (Dostoevsky)Richard II and III (shakespeare)The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (Franklin)Frank O'Connor at work (Steinman)The Andy Warhol Diaries (Warhol)The Daughter of Time (Josephine Tey) Shakespeare: Invention of the Human (Bloom)and many many more. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
g-money Posted December 7 Report Share Posted December 7 I'm reading "Brave New World" by Aldous Huxley now and its reminding me of "The Matrix." And to think that this book was written in 1930-something. I've enjoyed reading a few Hemingway books ("For Whom the Bell Tolls") and I really enjoyed and highly recommend "A Man in Full" by Tom Wolfe.<<<PEACE>>> ------------------"Everything is sweetened by Risk." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
flowwme Posted December 7 Report Share Posted December 7 ONe more here from Brooklyn------------------Put the CD in... The Music will do the rest.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
flowwme Posted December 7 Report Share Posted December 7 PLayboy has some pretty good articles...------------------Put the CD in... The Music will do the rest.. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
quanto_magnus Posted December 7 Report Share Posted December 7 Originally posted by bungee: I read 'Vampire' by Anne Rice. Pretty cool book then I went out rented every Vampire movie I could find. Pretty intense. The movie starring Tom Cruise was OK.Yeah, the movie was ok. They book "Interview with a Vampire" is much better. Actually all of her Vampire books are really good (IMO). Also her Witching Hour series is good too. ------------------Hugha.k.a. ibhugh, Bryan Adamsemail: ibhugh@yahoo.comaolim: hugesk8r Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ooana Posted December 7 Author Report Share Posted December 7 Heh, along with our ice skating trip, I think an outting to Barnes and Noble is in order ;-)------------------"When the soul wishes to experience something, she throws an image of the experience out before her, and enters into her own image."---"You have wings! Why don't I have wings?!"---"Cause you're a boy, silly." Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
frodo Posted December 10 Report Share Posted December 10 entusiastic BUMP Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
orchid21 Posted December 10 Report Share Posted December 10 1.The professor and the madman by simon winchester ( it's about how Oxford English Dictionary was written) very interesting.2. Faust by Goethe3. The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand4. Rabbit Run, Rabbit redox... sequence by John Updike5. of course Harry Potter 6 and many many more.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
innuend0 Posted December 10 Report Share Posted December 10 You want to talk mind blowing? Go read Plato's Republic and you'll see notions of "the matrix".. thats a tad bit older than 1984! I suggest reading Timothy Leary's "Chaos and Cyberculture".------------------Condense thought into a vapor of nuance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aemoc Posted December 11 Report Share Posted December 11 If anyone's interested in history I'm reading a great book called "What If?" It's a collection of essays about how the world might be different if history was altered (i.e. what if the Persians had defeated the Greeks at Salamis, what if Hitler wasn't rejected from art school etc etc) Very cool.Also, "Time and Again" by Jack Finney and "Doomsday Book" by Connie Willis are wonderful novels about time travel. Really fascinating stuff. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jennEfer Posted December 11 Report Share Posted December 11 I wish I had time to read books. Instead i just draw and paint. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gambitx73 Posted December 11 Report Share Posted December 11 book worms..heheh i myself is one..i like Edgar Cayce books and of course the bible..yes the books mention by you guys are nice... How 'bout a world without thumbs...can'twait for that to come out..hehehe and there was this book i bought from B.N it was so good it was stolen from my house...now who the fuck steals books....it was in the isle of "culture" it was 'bout xtc the movement of it..almost like a documentry thing..but extremely well written...don't remember the name of the book didn't get a chance to read more than one chapter..shit was stolen...man oh well....and another one...CCNA study guide 2nc edition by todd lammle... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
innuend0 Posted December 11 Report Share Posted December 11 laughing my ass off.. a world without thumbs = twilo has the wonderful idea to cash in on someone else's brilliance------------------Condense thought into a vapor of nuance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ichi_gami Posted December 11 Report Share Posted December 11 Amazing. One person mentions Hemingway (GREAT work, if not the most uplifting of all time.) The Yellow Wall-Paper is such a deep work for a short story, so many levels it can be read and interpreted on.Steinbeck is a good read, as is Frost, poems and short works, but by far, one of my favorite authors would have to be Joyce Carol Oates. She is such an astounding writer in technique and allusion. Great work.Of course there are many others, from Grisham, to King, to Robin Cook for pulp reading. But lately, it seems all I get to is the NY Times and the Wall St. Journal. How boring.------------------Bilk, Robb, Pilfer, & SteeleInvesment Banking for The New MillenniumNew York, NY 10022 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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