"Flight of the Nighthawks" was a load of pish. The most disappointing Feist book to date :(
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"Flight of the Nighthawks" was a load of pish. The most disappointing Feist book to date :(
i have read a great book called "victim". its about Marilyn Monroe. its very interesting. highly recomended
Just started reading a book called Judas Pig by Horace Silver
Jacob's Room - Vagina Woolf
Somebody kill me now.
State of Fear - the latest of Michael Crichton
The Metamorphosis - Franz Kafka
Sadly- the Davinci code.
My girlfriend kept going on and on about it so I decided to give it a shot.
Not that bad, not that great.
I put a book cover on it so people won't be able to tell what it is.
That's right- I'm ashamed to be reading it.
Seriously, its fiction. Get over it. It says fiction. Sure it has a fact page cause there are secret socities.
The Wheel of time series... Currently on the 4th book.
Just finished reading "A brief history of time", really good book I can't believe I put it off until recently.
Started reading Splinter Cell: Checkmate last night, so far it's a really good book, very catchy.
This week I'll be mostly reading:
Jorge Luis Borges - The Garden of Forking Paths
Donald Barthelme - The Indian Uprising
Margaret Atwood - Happy Endings
Burning Chrome - William Gibson
This is the "coolest" book I have read for my uni course. It has the short story that 1995 sci-fi flick Johnny Mnemonic was based on, the film is almost universally slated but I love it.
The Reality Dysfunction: Emergence & Expansion - Peter F. Hamilton
Scif-fi. I've really liked Hamilton's other works; they all fall into the 'space opera' category. There's always several separate storylines going on in the books. I'd really recommend reading Pandora's Star & Judas Unchained if you enjoy sci-fi books.
Siegfried Sassoon The Making Of A War Poet by Jean Moorcroft Wilson and Seventy Two Virgins by Boris Johnson.
Brief History of Time.
God damn why did I wait so long
Tolkien - unfinished tales.
fuck fuckity-fuck-fuck fuck :wacko:
Jeremy Clarkson - And Another Thing Vol.2
Its very good.
Paul Auster, City of Glass
David L. Robins ""The End Of War"
Alexander Solzhenitsyn - "Gulag Archipelag"
The Game by Neil Strauss
The Metro.
Stranger in a Strange Land - Robert A. Heinlein
Mario Vargas LLosa - La Ciudad Y los Perros
Ben Bova - Saturn
Beyond Good and Evil by Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche
Don DeLillo, White Noise
btw Paul Auster's City of Glass is one of the best stories I have read in a long time, truly inspiring.
Adams, Richard - Watership Down
Alan Brinkley's The Unfinished Nation - A Concise History of the American People
Errrr...
The Kite Runner
Roald Dahl - Danny the Champion of the World
Entheogens and the Futrue of Religions
William Golding - Lord of the Flies
Dearly Devoted Dexter by Jeff Lindsay having just finished Darkly Dreaming Dexter. They're not very well written but good fun nevertheless, he does use the alliteration device way too much.
The World According To Karl Pilkington.
I'm not even sure if it's called that, but it's genious anyway.
Peace Not Apartheid - Jimmy Carter
The Way Of Wyrd-Brian Bates. (Tales of an Anglo-Saxon Sorcerer)
Not a new book by any means (1983/84)
but most definately an enjoyable read, imo. This will be at least my 3rd/4th reading i think.
The History of the Habsburg Empire
this book focuses on the lands, peoples and cultures ruled by the Habsburgs, as well as the family itself
Kane and Abel by Jeffrey Archer. It's my 2nd time reading the book :)
i just finished reading spiderman comic series.