Ghost of D3D
Banned
As I mentioned in another book-related thread of mine in this particular forum, I had recently picked up again on reading. This has become a kind of understatement as I have really been voraciously gobbling up books over the past 3 months or so (the end of a relationship helped and has to be credited as the catalyst for resumption of this rather good habit I dumped about 6-7 years back; no reason to watch TV or go to the movies anymore since there isn't anyone to do these with!).
I had a library of about 60+ books (all kinds, as long as they are books and not magazines) collected over a period of probably (can't really be sure when I bought/read my first book) 15 years and the past 3 months or so had seen this collection grow by 10 (I've read the first third of that 10th/last). I mention this history so that you guys will more or less understand where I stand (in relation to the question I'm asking below) when it comes to how "well read and informed" I am (4 books a year on average, dsicounting the past 3 months of course, hardly qualifies me as being "well read", I know, but the list below shows a sixth of all the books I have ever read that immediately springs to mind when it comes to "remembering books that I have read",... I'm sure you know what I mean).
The following are the books I rate as my Top Ten and they are in no particular order of importance or rating (surely this really isn't possible). Again, this Top Ten of mine is quite easy for me because I based it on the 60-odd books I bought/own; certainly this can't be as easy for folks with many more books in their collection. Thus :
1984 - George Orwell
The Bourne Ultimatum - Robert Ludlum
The Da Vinci Code (yes!) - Dan Brown
To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee
Father and Son - Larry Brown
Blindsighted - Karin Slaughter
Jurassic Park (yes!.. read this before the film came out) - Michael Crichton
The Stand - Stephen King
The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
Gandhi On Non-Violence - Mohandas Gandhi
I am sure someone will mention the Bible (should it be The Bible?) but, with the exception of the last (which has quite a number of "fictional" elements to it, actually), I'm talking about fiction.
Not that I think the Bible is or isn't fiction (please, let's not raise hell over this statement of mine; I'm Buddhist).
[edit] And yes, I have/finished LOTR a long time before any mention of its movie, and no, it's not one of the greatest read I have had.
Do you think it's possible for some of you to list your Top Ten (as well as the number of books in your collection, to lend a certain relevance) ? No description should be needed as I/we can just check out the reviews.
I had a library of about 60+ books (all kinds, as long as they are books and not magazines) collected over a period of probably (can't really be sure when I bought/read my first book) 15 years and the past 3 months or so had seen this collection grow by 10 (I've read the first third of that 10th/last). I mention this history so that you guys will more or less understand where I stand (in relation to the question I'm asking below) when it comes to how "well read and informed" I am (4 books a year on average, dsicounting the past 3 months of course, hardly qualifies me as being "well read", I know, but the list below shows a sixth of all the books I have ever read that immediately springs to mind when it comes to "remembering books that I have read",... I'm sure you know what I mean).
The following are the books I rate as my Top Ten and they are in no particular order of importance or rating (surely this really isn't possible). Again, this Top Ten of mine is quite easy for me because I based it on the 60-odd books I bought/own; certainly this can't be as easy for folks with many more books in their collection. Thus :
1984 - George Orwell
The Bourne Ultimatum - Robert Ludlum
The Da Vinci Code (yes!) - Dan Brown
To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee
Father and Son - Larry Brown
Blindsighted - Karin Slaughter
Jurassic Park (yes!.. read this before the film came out) - Michael Crichton
The Stand - Stephen King
The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald
Gandhi On Non-Violence - Mohandas Gandhi
I am sure someone will mention the Bible (should it be The Bible?) but, with the exception of the last (which has quite a number of "fictional" elements to it, actually), I'm talking about fiction.
Not that I think the Bible is or isn't fiction (please, let's not raise hell over this statement of mine; I'm Buddhist).
[edit] And yes, I have/finished LOTR a long time before any mention of its movie, and no, it's not one of the greatest read I have had.
Do you think it's possible for some of you to list your Top Ten (as well as the number of books in your collection, to lend a certain relevance) ? No description should be needed as I/we can just check out the reviews.
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