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flashleg8 wrote:Just finished reading "Catcher in the Rye" by J. D. Salinger. Maybe some of you read it at school - but I just got round to it. I would highly recommend it. Can't praise it highly enough.
Machiavelli wrote:flashleg8 wrote:Just finished reading "Catcher in the Rye" by J. D. Salinger. Maybe some of you read it at school - but I just got round to it. I would highly recommend it. Can't praise it highly enough.
I just read that book (for school). It was to goddam depressing and Holden was to goddam angsty. Goddam.
flashleg8 wrote:Machiavelli wrote:flashleg8 wrote:Just finished reading "Catcher in the Rye" by J. D. Salinger. Maybe some of you read it at school - but I just got round to it. I would highly recommend it. Can't praise it highly enough.
I just read that book (for school). It was to goddam depressing and Holden was to goddam angsty. Goddam.
It’s certainly a bit depressing but I think he captures teenage angst beautifully. I read somewhere that they tried to ban this in US schools due to all the sex (pretty tame) and profanity (also pretty tame for modern standards), but that’s probably just the hard-liners as usual.
hecter wrote:I thought I'd leave a suggestion of my own after reading all this. Lewis Carols books and poems are good for a light read. He wrote Alice in Wonderland. It's actually really good, so don't dismiss it because it's been Disneyfied.
pitbull 993 wrote:flashleg8 wrote:Machiavelli wrote:flashleg8 wrote:Just finished reading "Catcher in the Rye" by J. D. Salinger. Maybe some of you read it at school - but I just got round to it. I would highly recommend it. Can't praise it highly enough.
I just read that book (for school). It was to goddam depressing and Holden was to goddam angsty. Goddam.
It’s certainly a bit depressing but I think he captures teenage angst beautifully. I read somewhere that they tried to ban this in US schools due to all the sex (pretty tame) and profanity (also pretty tame for modern standards), but that’s probably just the hard-liners as usual.
That kills me
Hehehe
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
flashleg8 wrote:Maybe some of you read it at school - but I just got round to it.
Guiscard wrote:Just finished A Passage to India by Forster and Burmese Days by Orwell as part of a module on colonial India between the wars. Can definitely rate both. Orwell is pretty good anyway, to be honest. 1984 is a staple, but the non-fiction Homage to Catalonia, about his time in the Spanish civil war, and Down and Out in Paris and London are both engrossing and insightful. Down and Out actually takes my best ever book title. Of Mice and Men by Steinbeck is also one of my favourites, as is To Kill a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee.
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
qwert wrote:Can i ask you something?What is porpose for you to open these Political topic in ConquerClub? Why you mix politic with Risk? Why you not open topic like HOT AND SEXY,or something like that.
pitbull 993 wrote:flashleg8 wrote:Machiavelli wrote:flashleg8 wrote:Just finished reading "Catcher in the Rye" by J. D. Salinger. Maybe some of you read it at school - but I just got round to it. I would highly recommend it. Can't praise it highly enough.
I just read that book (for school). It was to goddam depressing and Holden was to goddam angsty. Goddam.
It’s certainly a bit depressing but I think he captures teenage angst beautifully. I read somewhere that they tried to ban this in US schools due to all the sex (pretty tame) and profanity (also pretty tame for modern standards), but that’s probably just the hard-liners as usual.
That kills me
Hehehe
btownmeggy wrote:When people ask me for a book suggestion, I always say the same:
Ficciones by Jorge Luis Borges
The original Spanish makes you understand what literary genius means, but there are many good translations, too.
Frigidus wrote:but now that it's become relatively popular it's suffered the usual downturn in coolness.
btownmeggy wrote:I think Catcher in the Rye is generally a much more attractive book to men than to women. I first read it as a post-adolescent (woman), and really hated it. That is to say, I hate it. My partner first read it as an angsty, teenaged boy and loved it and loves it still.
But I really love lots of other Salinger! Seven Stories is phenomenal and "A Perfect Day for Bananafish" rocks my world big time.
EDIT: Oh, and qee, it's funny what you say about Borges, as I rather agree, even though he was an impassioned atheist and, apparently, a great believer in chaos and nothingness. However, he was a philosopher as much as a poet, and metaphysics and mysticism hold much in common.
Frigidus wrote:but now that it's become relatively popular it's suffered the usual downturn in coolness.
hecter wrote:An author I like is Anne Rice, but she isn't for everybody. I would recomend reading one of her books though, so you know if you like her or not.
Frigidus wrote:but now that it's become relatively popular it's suffered the usual downturn in coolness.
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