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December 3rd, 2008
02:57 am - Book Meme! These are the top 106 books most often marked as "unread" by LibraryThing's users (as of 10/2/07). As usual, bold what you have read, italicize those you started but couldn't finish, and strike through what you couldn't stand. Add an asterisk to those you've read more than once. Underline those on your to-read list.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell Anna Karenina* Crime and Punishment* Catch-22 One Hundred Years of Solitude Wuthering Heights The Silmarillion Life of Pi : a novel The Name of the Rose* Don Quixote Moby Dick Ulysses* (Gotten through the whole thing once. Read various pieces multiple times) The Odyssey* Pride and Prejudice Jane Eyre A Tale of Two Cities The Brothers Karamazov* (only got partway through in Russian but read all in English) Guns, Germs, and Steel: the fates of human societies (Started it at my mother's house and left it there. Damn it!) War and Peace* (Part in Russian, twice in English. It's a good book, okay?) Vanity Fair (Finished this tonight after deciding suddenly "I must read this!" for no apparent reason last week.) The Time Traveler's Wife The Iliad* Emma The Blind Assassin The Kite Runner Mrs. Dalloway* Great Expectations American Gods* Atlas Shrugged (Proudly failed to get through it. Proudly.) Reading Lolita in Tehran : a memoir in books Memoirs of a Geisha Middlesex Quicksilver Wicked : the life and times of the wicked witch of the West The Canterbury Tales The Historian : a novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man* Love in the Time of Cholera Brave New World The Fountainhead (I went through a phase of picking up books by Ayn Rand, reading 20 pages, then throwing them at things. It was fun.) Foucault's Pendulum* Middlemarch Frankenstein* The Count of Monte Cristo* Dracula* A Clockwork Orange Anansi Boys* The Once and Future King* The Grapes of Wrath The Poisonwood Bible : a novel 1984* Angels & Demons The Inferno* The Satanic Verses* Sense and Sensibility The Picture of Dorian Gray* Mansfield Park One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest* To the Lighthouse Tess of the D'Urbervilles Oliver Twist Gulliver's Travels (I read the whole book I had, but I think it was an abridged kids' version) Les Misérables The Corrections The Amazing adventures of Kavalier and Clay The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (Read part at someone's house but never borrowed it.) Dune The Prince* The Sound and the Fury Angela's Ashes : A Memoir The God of Small Things A People's History of the United States : 1492-present Cryptonomicon Neverwhere* A Confederacy of Dunces A Short History of Nearly Everything Dubliners The Unbearable Lightness of Being Beloved* Slaughterhouse-Five* The Scarlet Letter Eats, Shoots & Leaves* The Mists of Avalon* Oryx and Crake : a novel Collapse : How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed Cloud Atlas The Confusion Lolita* Persuasion Northanger Abbey The Catcher in the Rye On the Road The Hunchback of Notre Dame Freakonomics : a Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance : an Inquiry into Values The Aeneid Watership Down* (first when I was six, for some reason. I think because I liked book about bunnies.) Gravity's Rainbow The Hobbit* White Teeth Treasure Island David Copperfield The Three Musketeers
The obvious and shameful dearth is Jane Austen. I read her too young at first, and didn't start again until recently. I promise all good people, I'm making up for lost time. The funny thing about the rest of it is that most of the ones I've read, I either read before high school (or early high school) or after college. Apparently my education left no time for reading classic works of literature. Current Mood: reading list! Current Music: The Butchies-"Make Yr Life"
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Comments:
I know what you mean. . . I did my most productive reading in middle school.
I went through a phase of picking up books by Ayn Rand, reading 20 pages, then throwing them at things. It was fun.
This makes it sound like it was your plan all along, like "I think I'll read 20 random pages of this book, and then throw it at that fire hydrant! Now I'll read 20 pages of this book, and throw it at that bush! What a great game!" Out of a sense of whimsy and chaos, not out of anger at Ayn Rand.
I think it does sound like a good game. It reminds me of when Red (the girl Asheesh introduced me to, who is awesome) found a book in a bush and walked around with it for a while and then put it in a mailbox. |
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