What books do you plan on reading next on your "to-read" list?
(To keep this list current, once a book has reached 1000+ votes it will be removed)
(To keep this list current, once a book has reached 1000+ votes it will be removed)
Mischa
294 books
11 friends
11 friends
Δx Δp ≥ ½ ħ
6814 books
1072 friends
1072 friends
Katherine
1485 books
22 friends
22 friends
Vi
232 books
1 friend
1 friend
Jessica
1358 books
352 friends
352 friends
Otis
1619 books
2014 friends
2014 friends
Michael
708 books
286 friends
286 friends
Elizabeth
2237 books
1247 friends
1247 friends
More voters…
Comments Showing 1-50 of 744 (744 new)
message 1:
by
Michael
(new)
Jun 03, 2009 10:09AM

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Yes it is. I am ready breaking dawn now. I can't put the book down. I mean WOW.

i think its because girls love daydreaming that "their edward" (who i personally don't like because he has no personality) will come, someone really hot who saves them always and lets them live forever. (not that i'm against dreaming of love, but this is just ridiculously shallow)
basically, really shallow anti-feminist dreamers love it. and there seems to be a h*ll of a lot of those.






In the past we have read "Tortilla Curtain" by T. C. Boyle--Water for Elephants--Sara Gruen--Whistling Season by Ivan Diog. This is our 7th year. I have been enrolled each year.

Thank you,
V. Michael Santoro


that is incorrect you can add as many as you wish, the option should be in the upper right hand corner of the page.

Rosemary wrote: "Beyond Ugly this book is really wonderful coz it starts ov really sad nd then itz so great at der end. i lyk it coz it really won'tz u 2 read more nd itz a true life story."



Best writer ever? Everyone is entitled to their own opinions but I think that's an outrageous statement!



So teenagers flock to it, and publishers know this and flood the market with it (because teens respond well to that). They don't yet seek out great works, but it at least keeps reading a part of their daily lives. Perhaps some of those enticed into reading it will move on to books with a higher pedigree someday. At the very least they may have a better vocabulary than most teens.
And yes, I've read Twilight. It was a little shallow, and borrowed a lot of ideas. It was also entertaining enough that I did not regret spending the time reading it.



I hope maybe one day I can publish It."
Oh, I'm writing a book too. As far as I can tell I haven't copied any ideas for the plot...I'm no where near done with it but...still.


Bringing Vincent Home by Madeleine Mysko,
The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova.
Both are very well-written, both are debut novels and both were hard to put down.

That's what I did for two of mine.



As for the whole Twilight thing: everyone reads for his/her own reasons. It's the reading part that's important.
Happy summer somewhere. It certainly doesn't feel it in New England.


Faith,
frankcreed.com

We bring her up because so many people are raving about her and we are sorely disappointed at how the state of good literary appreciation has dwindled. Since so many are raving about inferior literature, we feel we have to be the voices of reason.