C
Casanova
Guest
The Life of Pi - Yann Martel was a nice read. Love a book that has you thinking!
When it comes to books I'd recommend, my list is boring as I am a lover of literature, so I tend to re-read books which I've read as a teen at school.
Lord of The Flies - William Golding is definitely up there in my favorite books of all time. It was symbolic, haunting, and scariest of all - the truth. It's a complex allegorical novel which uses the setting of a group of lost, innocent young men to explain human nature, civilization and the breakdown of society - the end of truth, authority and peace.
Nineteen-Eighty-Four - George Orwell which I am sure most of you guys would've read is also another fave of mine. I've read this at least 4 times, and the more I read it the more I appreciate it. It's one of those books that shows, in an extreme sense, the devastating effects power can have on mankind - abuse of all the negative traits of man, especially fear, for the sake of absolute control.
I've made a vow that this winter period I'd be reading all the classics which I never had the opportunity of reading, so I'm almost finished with Les Miserables, and then going to read War and Peace (Yes, you heard me).
Not sure if you picked up my trend, but most of my books are political-based :blushing: I'm also a horror fanatic, so most books by Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Thomas Harris, etc are up my alley! LOL!
PS. I've got A Thousand Splendid Suns on my bookshelf, but never managed reading it as I keep putting it off. Maybe I should give it a try when am done with this book :thinking:
When it comes to books I'd recommend, my list is boring as I am a lover of literature, so I tend to re-read books which I've read as a teen at school.
Lord of The Flies - William Golding is definitely up there in my favorite books of all time. It was symbolic, haunting, and scariest of all - the truth. It's a complex allegorical novel which uses the setting of a group of lost, innocent young men to explain human nature, civilization and the breakdown of society - the end of truth, authority and peace.
Nineteen-Eighty-Four - George Orwell which I am sure most of you guys would've read is also another fave of mine. I've read this at least 4 times, and the more I read it the more I appreciate it. It's one of those books that shows, in an extreme sense, the devastating effects power can have on mankind - abuse of all the negative traits of man, especially fear, for the sake of absolute control.
I've made a vow that this winter period I'd be reading all the classics which I never had the opportunity of reading, so I'm almost finished with Les Miserables, and then going to read War and Peace (Yes, you heard me).
Not sure if you picked up my trend, but most of my books are political-based :blushing: I'm also a horror fanatic, so most books by Stephen King, Dean Koontz, Thomas Harris, etc are up my alley! LOL!
PS. I've got A Thousand Splendid Suns on my bookshelf, but never managed reading it as I keep putting it off. Maybe I should give it a try when am done with this book :thinking:
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