Anonymous wrote:I'm going to have to get to the library this weekend to check out Owen Meany after all the praise on here. (although I got through maybe a third of Hotel New Hampshire and put it down and have never had the desire to pick it back up. It's in the house somewhere)
It's hard to choose a favorite, but I'm going with All the King's Men by Robert Penn Warren. Some of the most beautiful sentences you'll ever read and a gripping tale (it helps, especially, if you've any experience living in the South)
Anonymous wrote:High school curriculum developers should take note that many of the classics remain life long favorites -- and be sure to continue teaching those! I wonder if any posters were men, and if the same question were asked to a group of DC area dads, whether the answers would be very different. I am curious about this because my husband seems to have a deaf ear for fiction, and besides the obvious choices (To Kill a Mockingbird, Separate Peace, Lord of the Flies, Old Man and the Sea), I am finding it hard to recommend books that will get me teenaged sons as excited about literature as I became at their age. Any dads want to chime in? Ah, maybe I will start a spin off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a mystery fiend so I tend to love series
Anne Perry WWI series that starts with No Graves Yet. I came out during the beginning of the invasion of Iraq and raised many issues about individual and state morality, role of the press and how to dissent.
I read one that I enjoyed, and mentioned it to my mother, who then filled me in on her background. My mom loves mysteries but wouldn't buy Perry's novels because she didn't want to give money to a murderer. Kind of sucked the fun out of her books for me after that.
Anonymous wrote:Less Than Zero. Aw c'mon, no Rielle Hunter fans?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a mystery fiend so I tend to love series
Anne Perry WWI series that starts with No Graves Yet. I came out during the beginning of the invasion of Iraq and raised many issues about individual and state morality, role of the press and how to dissent.
I read one that I enjoyed, and mentioned it to my mother, who then filled me in on her background. My mom loves mysteries but wouldn't buy Perry's novels because she didn't want to give money to a murderer. Kind of sucked the fun out of her books for me after that.