Help me get started on reading literature - Page 2
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HazMat
United States17077 Posts
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semantics
10040 Posts
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Disregard
China10252 Posts
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WAAA
New Zealand291 Posts
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Housemd
United States1407 Posts
Hatchet by Gary Paulsen To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee Nothing But The Truth Lyddie The Giver Number the Stars these are great novels (not much of high school level probably 8th grade, but still good none the less) | ||
godares79
9 Posts
Some other books you may want to consider (sci-fi heavy): Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep Dune Moby Dick (if you can make your way through it... I had trouble lol) Tau Zero by Poul Anderson (hard to find... it's hard sci fi, but doesn't get caught up in the science) Other books people have mentioned here are good too. | ||
rushz0rz
Canada5300 Posts
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NrG.Bamboo
United States2756 Posts
On May 14 2010 11:24 HazMat wrote: Lord of the flies is really good. Read it earlier in the year with my eight grade class. Right now we're reading To kill a mockingbird. I think it's overrated Funny, I thought LotF was overrated and mockingbird was definitely one of my favorites of all time. | ||
DragonDefonce
United States790 Posts
I recommend Huckleberry Finn or any Mark Twain books. | ||
hyst.eric.al
United States2332 Posts
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Fyrix
United States8 Posts
Interesting, short, and classic: Catcher in the Rye Animal Farm Huckleberry Finn The Giver The Lord of the Flies -- definitely recommend this one Frankenstein The Great Gatsby Red Badge of Courage A little harder (in terms of theme and reading difficulty): Catch-22 The Three Musketeers The Grapes of Wrath The Lord of the Rings Very difficult, but still great: Heart of Darkness Anything long and Russian For sci-fi Dune 2001: A Space Odyssey Neuromancer For Short Stories (there's a million greats) Raymond Carver, John Updike pretty easy to read. Chekhov is classic hope this helps ^^ | ||
{CC}StealthBlue
United States41117 Posts
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The_Voidless
United States184 Posts
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Kinky
United States4126 Posts
On May 14 2010 10:59 holy_war wrote: The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger +1 to this. Great book. | ||
SolHeiM
Sweden1264 Posts
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MercerX
United States32 Posts
harry potter, big bear's adventure, the big bad wolf, satanism for dummies, Redwall, tom clancey novels, the dictionary, romance novel | ||
University
United States263 Posts
Animal Farm, by George Orwell The Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde Pride and Prejudice, by Jane Austen Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck or The Count of Monte Cristo, by Alexandre Dumas And please, don't listen to anyone who tells who a classic isn't worth reading, or that it is "overrated." Every classic is worth reading. No classic is overrated. That's why they are classics. However, you just have to obey two simple rules when choosing a work from the classics for reading pleasure: 1) Is this book about concepts that I am interested in? This book deals with society, love, and the feminine individual. If I am interested in these concepts, then I should read this book. 2) Realize that to appreciate most classics, you need a heavy background knowledge in its historical, social, cultural, and anthropological context. The three I mentioned above are really accessible, however, and you should strive to find books that are open to you so that you don't have to do more research than reading. Reading something like the Iliad is a huge task. Greek works in general are going to be a huge problem without a lot of knowledge in the area. Likewise, reading Ovid's Metamorphoses will seem "boring" or like it is a "waste of time" unless you have a healthy education. BONUS BOOK: I just read this tonight and I can't not mention it: The Prophet, by Kahlil Gibrain I don't think it is really what you are looking for in terms of narrative, but it is a tiny read. | ||
jodogohoo
Canada2533 Posts
On May 14 2010 10:40 sgeng wrote: -->The Illiad and the Odyssey by Homer--You've probably been assigned to read this in middle/high school, but more than likely you read the abridged version. The unabridged version I believe is worth going back and rereading. I'm reading the Odyssey right now and its fucking crazy! its like a movie playing in the background with, fucking streaks of lightning tearing through the skies, accompanied by a symphony playing something like Carmina Burana | ||
caelym
United States6421 Posts
Some medium level authors would be jane austen (Pride and Prejudice, Emma) and Ian McEwan (Atonement, Saturday). harder level authors would be faulkner (as i lay dying, sound and fury), Virginia Wolfe (Mrs. Dalloway), and Dostoyevsky (Notes from Underground, Crime and Punishment) bonus: Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier, The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje. Cold Mountain is easy-medium. the english patient is medium-hard. Both are very exciting reads. And if you want some old literature, The Canterbury Tales by Chaucer is really good. EDIT: How can i forget? James Joyce! Dubliners is about medium. Ulysses is hard. | ||
Belgo
United States721 Posts
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