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Books that helped you read
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Jamie wrote: "Bonnie wrote: "As a teen I loved reading RL Stine Fear Street Books and of course anything by Stephen King. Needless to say I hate horror novels now but I still love to read."did you ever read ..."
I did love Richie T books as well, and remember Christopher Pike.
Bonnie wrote: "As a teen I loved reading RL Stine Fear Street Books and of course anything by Stephen King. Needless to say I hate horror novels now but I still love to read."
did you ever read the Richie T. Cusick books? (if you read RL Stine they were along the same lines) I used to by those books like they were going out of style
What got me into reading were the Tony Hillerman books, go figure I ordered A Thief of Time when I was in Jr. High and I was hooked after that. Then of course the damn Twilight books came out and I've been on a vampire kick for most of this year
As a teen I loved reading RL Stine Fear Street Books and of course anything by Stephen King. Needless to say I hate horror novels now but I still love to read.
I always read, but there was a period in junior high where I wasn't to into it. The Great Gatsby & Catcher in the Rye changed that for me, and made me want to read everything.
We are all technically monkeys haha anyone see the Southpark about evolution? Mr. Garrison explains it very scientifically: "In the beginning, we were all fish. Okay? Swimming around in the water. And then one day a couple of fish had a retard baby, and the retard baby was different, so it got to live. So retard fish goes on to make more retard babies, and then one day, a retard baby fish crawled out of the ocean with its...mutant fish hands...and it had butt sex with a squirrel or something and made this retard frog-squirrel, and then that had a retard baby which was a monkey-fish-frog... And then this monkey-fish-frog had butt sex with that monkey, and that monkey had a mutant retard baby that screwed another monkey... and that made you! So there you go! You're the retarded offspring of five monkeys having butt sex with a fish-squirrel, congratulations!"
Monkeys freak me out. My friend told me about an article she read of a couple who raised a spider monkey but gave it to a rescue when they could no longer take care of it. They'd visit it periodically and one time the monkeys got out of their cages and attacked the couple. They both lived but the husband came away horrifically mutilated. I won't even go into details. Ever since then monkeys, I don't like no monkeys. Cartoon monkeys are still cool.
Larry wrote: "No big surprise there."My first thought exactly Larry - you may feel the need to be a little worried about that.
I envy those of you who said they've always loved reading. I hated reading as a kid. When I was about 15 a friend at school kept telling me I had to read V.C. Andrews. I picked up Garden of Shadows (didn't realize it was the fifth book in a series) and I was hooked on her. Since then I can't be without a book (17 years later).
I know I was an early reader, though no particular book titles stand out in my mind just now.
I used to visit the library every week and just walk through the books until I picked out six that looked good and read them. (A child's library card permitted only six books maximum.)
I would usually have them read by Wednesday and have to wait for Saturday to get six new books to read.
I always enjoyed mysteries and adventures stories; then at about age 11 I discovered science fiction and added that genre to the favorites.
I pretty much read everything--it has to be a really bad book if I do not finish it. As an older reader, I am more selective about what I read due to lack of free time. I sure love an extra day a week to no nothing but rad!
I remember reading The Boxcar Children as a kid, but I never read for pleasure until I was a young adult. I remember reading Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas when I was 19. I also read Clive Barker's Books of Blood and anything by Hubert Selby. That kept me on the fringe track.
its not that i want a dune convention, that was an example of how over popular some sci/fi and now a days anime gets, as compared to Dune.. i haven't heard of it until college.. my roommate popped in his Dune series dvds and i had to change myself after i watched them, so i started to read the books.. i wouldn't mind a set of all blue contacts though..
When you compare other sci-fi/fantasy novels, like the Lord of the Rings trilogy, or the collected works of Ray Bradbury and Isaac Asimov, then, yes, Dune is under-appreciated. Neither that novel, nor Frank Herbert, enjoy the high profile that Tolkien or Bradbury or Asimov's works have enjoyed.Seriously, David...would you want a Dune convention? I would imagine a gaggle of dorks dressed as one giant sandworm...and that makes me shudder.
maybe not in those ways, but you don't see Dune conventions, or at least i have never heard of one..
Dune is not greatly under appreciated. It won the Hugo and the Nebula and got very positive reviews from many major newspapers, it outsold any prior science fiction novel, appears on many best of lists, is cited as an influence by other authors, and is taught in lit classes.
Larry wrote, I read all of the James Bond books, too, I have to admit.The Fleming-penned novels, I presume?
His novels were all very good, and surprisingly well-written. There's an excellent section in On Her Majesty's Secret Service in which, without going into detail overload, Fleming describes Bond's penchant for the finer things in life, which contradicts his role as a government-sponsored assassin. It's a 3-4 paragraph section that reveals a lot about Bond's psyche, and it's very well written. Fleming was a vastly under-rated novelist.
ive seen the movie, and mini series (i think it was a miniseries, or another movie) and partially got through the first book so far.. and its my favorite science fiction, and im not too much for science fiction.. i like it way better then star trek or star wars.. though i do like the redemption theme of anakin/darth vader, Dune is greatly under-appreciated..
I've been blessed with an advanced reading capacity since I was in kindergarten. I was reading at a 3rd grade level before 1st grade. So I guess I was reading more "challenging" material - i.e. "young adult" books - before I split elementary school.I think the first book that really helped me read was Dune by Frank Herbert. For those of you who've never read Herbert's masterwork, the novel is very character-driven story, that shifts from 1st-to-3rd-person narrative on a dime. The storyline itself is somewhat complicated, which, for a 12-year-old, seemed like the most difficult thing to do, but I stuck with it. I've read Dune repeatedly since - on my last reading, I found it to possess way too many instances of "telling", not "showing" - and it remains one of my favorite novels ever.
One time, after an especially looooong day of swimming with my class (worked at a daycare summer program), I was fairly exhausted - NOT a good thing when reading several chapter of Ramona to a group of 6-7 year olds. They had the option of story time or napping in the back of the room where I could watch them. Anywhooo, the chapter - titled "I'm the baddest witch in the world!" Guess what happens when you start to nod off while reading a chapter about Ramona wearing a witch costume for Halloween and telling EVERYONE in her path that she's the "baddest witch in the world." Go on. Guess...
Yeah. I did it. I said exactly what was on my mind -
"I'm the baaaaaaddest BITCH in the world!"
...to a classroom full of 6-7 year olds (THAT woke me up).
I gave them 5 minutes to laugh their hearts out about Miss Heidi's mistake and then no more... They did. We moved on with the story. I was soooo worried that one would tattle on me, though. So I tattled on myself to the parents. They all seemed to think it was amusing.
Romana the Pest! I loved those books Heidi. :) I think I related to them a bit much, of course from an internal pov because I wasn't brave enough to actually do any of those naughty things myself. (At least not until I was older. hehehe)
thanks for the reminder Heidi! Sherlock Holmes is my childhood favorite! I always wanted to be like him (not physically) and invastigate murders! maybe someday i will do that as a lawyer.
Books that helped me read...wow, this is a tough one. I can't remember ever not wanting to read, unless it was something boring for class! Probably The Baby-sitter's Club books, or Nancy Drew. Definitely the Star Wars novels when I was in sixth grade. The Ramona books, Lurlene McDaniel, Dr. Seuss (One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish was the book I first read all by myself). Anything about disasters, natural or otherwise (I was kind of a morbid kid that way). Fantasy and SF...graphic novels and manga were my escape in HS. Childrens/YA novels for the past three or four years, since I want to be able to recommend books to my students that will make them want to read more, too!
Sally wrote: "He looks exactly like I thought he might:"
My first thought at seeing his picture was "He bears a close resemblance to Geoffrey Rush."
The books that started me reading were Carolyn Keene's Nancy Drew, Beverly Cleary's Ramona books, Judy Blume, and Astrid Lindgren's Pippi Longstocking.
When it was rainy out, my dad would light a fire in the fireplace and read a story from the collection of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes series.
To this day, The Hound of the Baskervilles brings that sensory memory surging forward in my mind and in turn foggy damp dark days remind me of The Hound of the Baskervilles.
Like Bun, I can't remember not reading. I know that I obsessively read Pokey Little Puppy and Peter Rabbit when I was 3/4. My aunt read them to me dozens of times and then told me if I wanted story-time I had to read to her. The comic series Elfquest also helped me love to read.
Everything by Alexandre Dumas,his books are my best memories. his Three musketeers!!!! And Everything by Jules Verne!!!!
And also everything by an Armenian historical-fiction writer Raffi. Another great writer for that age for me was Mayne Reid.
Another curious thing: I read and liked The Master and Margarita when I was 11 or 12! Right now I am rereading it, and I am just curious what could I possibly understand at that age of this great but adult book, that left such a fascinating impression on me?
I am trying to think of a time when I wasn't reading something and I'm just... coming up empty. I don't think there has been one. Wow. I've been reading something or other more or less continuously since I was six. Ha, that makes me grin.
i don't know about other people but for me it started around 1st or 2nd grade and lasted until high school when i first started with non fiction (i wanted to learn about stuff they weren't teaching in high school, such as philosophy and religion) then went into fiction as i said..
When are the years when kids traditionally fall off the reading wagon? I come from a family of giant honking book addicts so I don't have first hand knowledge of this phase.
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Books mentioned in this topic
A Wrinkle in Time (other topics)Zen in the Art of Writing (other topics)
Dandelion Wine (other topics)
Garden of Shadows (other topics)
Remember Me (other topics)








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