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15 Feb 2006, 09:54 PM
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#1
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BigSoccer Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Glendale, Arizona
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What's your favorite book?
Now that I've gotten to learn a bit about all of you by your music, what you do for a living, and what you eat! time to learn wher your heads are at!
My favorite book of all time is the Catcher in the Rye, but I swear i'm not a Psycho.
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15 Feb 2006, 10:45 PM
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#2
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BigSoccer Member+
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Camano Island WA
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Re: What's your favorite book?
Jeez, I've read so many books over the years and they all become favourites for a while. One book stands out though, I even found it on a super sale and bought 6 copies for kids on my soccer team.(The ones that read that is  ) It's an excellent bildungsroman. Now it's their Fav. I'd recomend it to all kids, whatever their ages. I read it some time in my 50's..
"The Power of One" Brice Courtenay. 1989.
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16 Feb 2006, 09:09 AM
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#3
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BigSoccer Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2004
Supporter: Liverpool FC
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Re: What's your favorite book?
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Originally Posted by usscouse
Jeez, I've read so many books over the years and they all become favourites for a while. One book stands out though, I even found it on a super sale and bought 6 copies for kids on my soccer team.(The ones that read that is  ) It's an excellent bildungsroman. Now it's their Fav. I'd recomend it to all kids, whatever their ages. I read it some time in my 50's..
"The Power of One" Brice Courtenay. 1989.
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If that is what I am thinking of [white child raised in South African apartheid climate] then I've watched that movie more than a few times.
Off the top of my head...
Books I've read [and liked] in the past two months...
Madame Bovary Gustave Flaubert [Excellent]
Soul on Ice Eldridge Cleaver [Ok]
Fever Pitch Nick Hornby [Good]
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16 Feb 2006, 09:56 AM
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#4
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BigSoccer Member
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Malaysia
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Re: What's your favorite book?
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Originally Posted by Liv'poolFaninAZ
Now that I've gotten to learn a bit about all of you by your music, what you do for a living, and what you eat! time to learn wher your heads are at!
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insidious psychological profiling!
Can we have more than one favourite?
Non SF
The Prophet - Khalil Gibran ( read)
Illusions (Adventures of a reluctant messiah) - Richard Bach
The Tao of Pooh - Benjamin Hoff
SF
Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
Excession - Iain M Banks
Earth - David Brin ( sample)
Incidentally, anyone on http://www.bookcrossing.com/ ?
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16 Feb 2006, 12:22 PM
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#5
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IFeelthePheelingIforgot
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Silver/Echo - L.A.
Supporter: Liverpool FC
Foe: Manchester United FC
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Re: What's your favorite book?
My favorite book that I've read in the last year has been American Tabloid by James Ellroy. It's the first in an historical fiction trilogy (the second being The Cold Six-Thousand and the third as of yet unreleased) about the American political underbelly of the late fifties through early seventies. Tabloid starts in 1958 and ends the day before the JFK assassination and Six-Thousand starts on the day of the assassination.
It's an incredibly engaging book. Ellroy (who wrote L.A. Confidential among many others) is a hawk for research, and it is a very complex, multi-layered novel.
I highly reccomend it to everyone, although it is the essence of a hard-boild crime novel. Some of it is incredibly graphic, disturbing, and very dark. It is really incredible though and a pretty quick read, despite being 750 pages or so.
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16 Feb 2006, 01:02 PM
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#6
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BigSoccer Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Chicago
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Re: What's your favorite book?
Alright here's the MUST READ list according to Ghazi if you're looking to laugh till you piss your pants.
Catch 22- Funniest book ever written. Period.
A Confederacy of Dunces - i laughed so hard while reading this that more than a dozen random people in various airports and planes asked me what the hell i was reading. (Interesting, the author committed suicide having never been published. His mom found the script, got it published and it won a friggin Pulitzer. How weird is that?)
Thank you for Smoking - hysterical book by Christoper Buckley who was George Bush Sr's chief speech writer, and is the son of William F Buckley. his personal politics aside, Buckley rips on everyone and everything, just like we do. This book is about a PR person for the Tobacco industry and his troubles with his life, his career choice and some hilarious situations he gets himself in (like being on Oprah opposite a kid dying of cancer).
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16 Feb 2006, 01:08 PM
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#7
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BigSoccer Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Chicago
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Re: What's your favorite book?
My favorite author, other than Poe, is Chuck Palahniuk, author of Fight Club.
I hate what Fight Club has become to hundreds of thousands of testosterone injected and intellectually stunted people all over the world, but the irony is that Palahniuk actually made this book as a criticism of such people. . of course they'd probably never understand this.
The book, like many of his other books, deals with the struggle of the modern man to find his place, meaning and worth in this society. With no Great War to define us, few nuclear families to raise us, and a barrage of advertising that tells us that our worth is tied to a label, how the fcuk do we rediscover what our essence is.
The book is written in a very swift minimalist style, and yet Palahniuk manages to pack single sentences or phrases with more punch than other writers can squeeze in a chapter. Some scenes will have you talking about them years later.
If you have two hours, read this book and forget what the FIght Club "scene" has become. This book is brilliant.
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16 Feb 2006, 01:15 PM
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#8
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BigSoccer Moderator
Join Date: Jan 2004
Supporter: Liverpool FC
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Re: What's your favorite book?
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Originally Posted by ghazi
My favorite author, other than Poe, is Chuck Palahniuk, author of Fight Club.
I hate what Fight Club has become to hundreds of thousands of testosterone injected and intellectually stunted people all over the world, but the irony is that Palahniuk actually made this book as a criticism of such people. . of course they'd probably never understand this.
The book, like many of his other books, deals with the struggle of the modern man to find his place, meaning and worth in this society. With no Great War to define us, few nuclear families to raise us, and a barrage of advertising that tells us that our worth is tied to a label, how the fcuk do we rediscover what our essence is.
The book is written in a very swift minimalist style, and yet Palahniuk manages to pack single sentences or phrases with more punch than other writers can squeeze in a chapter. Some scenes will have you talking about them years later.
If you have two hours, read this book and forget what the FIght Club "scene" has become. This book is brilliant.
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You sold me. Good post.
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16 Feb 2006, 01:49 PM
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#9
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BigSoccer Member+
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Camano Island WA
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Re: What's your favorite book?
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Originally Posted by kold_77_krush
If that is what I am thinking of [white child raised in South African apartheid climate] then I've watched that movie more than a few times.
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This is the one. I tried watching the movie after reading the book and gave up. Apartheid isn't the issue and the story line was so changed.
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Off the top of my head...
Books I've read [and liked] in the past two months...
Madame Bovary Gustave Flaubert [Excellent]
Soul on Ice Eldridge Cleaver [Ok]
Fever Pitch Nick Hornby [Good]
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Fever Pitch was a good one.
"High Fidelity" is another of his I like. I even liked the (Hollywood) movie (yes me!) The set was changed to the US but the storyline was well done and the cast exceptional. With John Cusack,Tim Robbins, and Jack Black
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16 Feb 2006, 01:56 PM
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#10
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BigSoccer Member+
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Camano Island WA
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Re: What's your favorite book?
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Originally Posted by ghazi
My favorite author, other than Poe, is Chuck Palahniuk, author of Fight Club.
I hate what Fight Club has become to hundreds of thousands of testosterone injected and intellectually stunted people all over the world, but the irony is that Palahniuk actually made this book as a criticism of such people. . of course they'd probably never understand this.
The book, like many of his other books, deals with the struggle of the modern man to find his place, meaning and worth in this society. With no Great War to define us, few nuclear families to raise us, and a barrage of advertising that tells us that our worth is tied to a label, how the fcuk do we rediscover what our essence is.
The book is written in a very swift minimalist style, and yet Palahniuk manages to pack single sentences or phrases with more punch than other writers can squeeze in a chapter. Some scenes will have you talking about them years later.
If you have two hours, read this book and forget what the FIght Club "scene" has become. This book is brilliant.
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Ya sold me also! I wouldn't go near the movie because of just seeing trailers everywhere. (Punks punch 'em up)
"I can order from the library on line" he said, showing off!
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