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KLGoodBooks) Additions to the To Read list here much appreciated...
Books I want to read or am given to understand I should read:
- Don Quixote
- The Grass Crown (or whatever comes first in that series) (what comes first, anyway?)
- much Dickens
- To Say Nothing of the Dog (I think, I'll just wait until someone loans this to me)
- Sophie's World
- God Particle (the first page amused me)
- Faulkner
- The book on a ship captain where one of the characters is named Steven
- The Diary of Anne Frank
- Marx
- Locke
- Darwin
- St. Augustine
- Montagne
- Charles De Lint
- Pamela Dean
- Emma Bull (War of the Oaks, Freedom & Nessity)(which one do you start on?)
- War for the Oaks is a perfectly good starting place. (Or you could switch universes completely and start with Finder, but probably only if you already like Bordertown.)
- Sherwood Ring (wait, who is this by?)
- Pope, Perilous Gard (is that Gard or Guard?)
- The Dragon and the George
- ?Cold Mountain (or whatever that book was called)
- The Dancing Wu Li Masters by Gary Zukav
- Blind Man's Bluff (or something like that. supposedly the army details are incredibly accurate (as recommended by someone who was in the field for 20 years or the like). However I have a sinking feeling I have the wrong tittle and may never find the right book which makes me sad.)
- S by H (?)
- The Alchemist
- Into the Woods by the author of Into Thin Air
- more by the Author of Grasshopper Catcher (or whatever that was called which I've read or had read to) whatever his name was. (Never Cry 'Arp')
- Lipsmackin' Backpackin' by Tim & Christine Conners (actually a book of recipe's for Backpacking food, so is more as a recommendation of information rather than spare time reading)
- The Delany Sisters (don't remember what their book was called or even if I have their name right, but is more for me to rememeber)
- author: Estes. Books? maybe Eleanor?
- "Moffats, the alley" ?
- Lies My Teacher Told Me <-History you may not hear about in school. The atrocities or blunders the US has commited for one thing. (?)
- The Food Revolution by John Robbins <- One of my relatives tells me I should read it. I'm slightly skeptical. I wouldn't mind being more educated with regards to the abuses of the food industry, but if it starts being anything like a diet book I'm skipping sections.
- The Principles of Psychology by William James (1890)
- ScienceFictionBookList
- Star Wars books by Timothy Zahn
- Steven J. Gould
- Mankind????
- Disguised: A true story by Pat Moore
- Dragons Bane by B Hambly
- Artemis Fowl?
- The Rainmaker, The Pelican Brief, The Firm
- The Godfather
- The Silmarillion
- (?more?) Goethe, A Clockwork Orange
- Peter Duren's 'Theory of HP Spaces' (colloq)
- Jordan's Cours d' analyse (mention in MApol)
- Captain Blood by Rafael Sabatini (It's not a bloodbath; the main character's name is Peter Blood.)
- Italo Calvino
- Guns, Germs, and Steel
- Only Forward by Michael Marshall-Smith
- Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks
-
Adrian, what was the title of the one with many languages in it? I've forgotten already. :(
Mikel, what was the second author you recommended? On the weaknesses of security systems being human. Author started with an M.
The author was Kevin Mitnick. - Mikel
many more. additions much appreciated.
List for my purposes: Aeneid, Red Mars (405), Ovid's Metamorphosis, Clan of the Cave Bear, reGordel Escher Bach, Thurber, The Fountainhead, The Prince, Of Human Bondage, The Physics of Star Trek, Foucault's Pendulum by Umberto Eco, Sophia's World by Gaarder, (the last unicorn), The King of Elfland's Daughter by Lord Dunsany, Applied Cryptology, Steven Brust's Pheonix Guards
- Another Fine Myth by Robert Asprin
- Magic Kingdom for Sale by Terry Brooks
- Stardust by Neil Gaiman
- Of Pratchet's in particular: We Free Men & Hat Full of Sky. Somebody poke me if there's another one that come out on the Mac Mac Feegles.
- Dragons Milk
- David Edings
- Spell for Chameleaon by Piers Anthony
- Heir Apparent by Vivian Vande Velde
- Wizard's First Rule
- The Golden Compass ?by Pullman?. I don't understand why so many people are so in to this book. Entertaining. But not that high on my list. Probably because I had expectations that were too high.
- Beggers In Spain by Nancy Kress
- Pandora's Star by Peter Hamilton -- R rated, consider yourself warned. But compelling read, some interesting story. If you like it you probably want to order the sequal before you finish the first one - ends in the most impressive cliff hanger I've ever seen.
- The Horse Whisperer
- (the third volume of) Villette by Bro^nte
- Briar Rose by Jane Yollen
- Moll Flanders
- The Face on the Milk Carton
- Winds of Mars
- Alien Secrets
- Wolf by the Ears
- Katherine Peterson
- Julia Speaks her mind
- Witch Week by Diana Wynne Jones
- If
- Calvin&Hobbes, 9ChickweedLane?, ForBetterOrWorse?, Foxtrot, Mutts, ...
- (the first three pages or so of chapter 6 in Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray)
- Curious George
- Wizard stuck in a tree (title anyone?)
- All right, somebody call the fire department.
- Grooks IV by somebody-or-other
- The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead by Max Brooks
- Pride and Prescience, Suspense and Sensibility, North by Northanger by Carrie Bebris *so wrong! so very very wrong. but amusing. Why are there so very few happily married main characters in literature anyway?*
- Declaration of Independance
- Constitution
- A Simple Story, Adeline Mowbray
- Joseph Andrews by Fielding (I liked Adams)
- The Count of Monte Cristo
To look up websites for:
For me to look at:
picture books
- The Wizard's Apprentice
- the one with ground-
- The True story of the 3 little Pigs by Scieszka & Smith
- those books
-
- The Power of One by Bryce Courtney (hadn't realized it was a book. the movie was very good).
- I hadn't realized it was a movie.
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