Level -> RE: Books you'd recommend and why (7/23/2007 4:32:42 PM)
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ORIGINAL: RosaB I'd be here forever listing or even trying to remember many of my best reads, so I'll just name a couple of my favorite books of past and a couple I've recently read that I would recommend Over the past week Fiction Please don't come back from the moon - by Dean Bakopoulos. Non-fiction The Glass Castle - by, Jeannette Walls This book if read should quiet anyone that is a consant whiner about how bad their life is. Brother if you thought you had it ruff growing up. Some books from the past . Non-fiction Angela's Ashes - Frank McCourt, This book was heart renching, funny, a page turner. I love Mr McCourt's writing style Fiction: The Stranger by Albert Camus The main character had me feeling very uncomfortable, but his sort of a moral personality is what kept me intrigued, nothing typical about this story. Nothing sappy or redeeming here but much to make one think when it comes to humanity, morality. Some may even think about their, knee jerk reactions to the behaviors of others that don't coincide with what one thinks is appropriate in a given situation. The Reader, by Bernhard Schlink. Its got sex, abuse, Nazis major moral dilimas. I recommended it to my therapist years ago, she loved it. [sm=lol.gif] I Know This Much Is True - by Wally Lamb I read this almost ten years ago one of a few books I've read twice, even at its nearly 900 page count. It was a hard read at first, I went throug soooo many emotions when trying to get through the first few chapters, but it was worth it. Well that's my list, I've read so many more good books, just can't think of them right now. I tend to be reading at least two books a week and I was really thrilled that after not finding much worth reading lately, I did pick up the two lasted books mentioned at the top of this posting. [:)] Hello Rosa [;)] I have a collection of Camus' essays, Resistance, Rebellion, and Death; he was a talented man. Lamb was one of Oprah's first Book Club authors, I believe, she deserves a tip o' the hat for inspiring many to read.
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