Classics Without All the Class discussion
Book Suggestions
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Books that you just have to read! (That may not be classics)
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I believe so. I hope you enjoy it! I must have "pushed" this book on so many people! Please keep me posted on your thoughts!


It was FREE on my Kindle app and wouldn't have read it otherwise. But, it was a pleasant surprise. The above is my review of it on the CWAtC blog!



Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
Game Change: Obama and the Clintons, McCain and Palin, and the Race of a Lifetime

A couple I have been recommending are The Kappillan of Malta by Nicholas Monsarrat..."
I'll have to check it out. Malta is one of the places my husband and I went on our honeymoon. We were so surprised by it -- and didn't really want to leave!




I read lots of books that I highly enjoy and recommend to others, but the one that absolutely blew me out of the water, is the best book I've read in several years and is in my top 5 of all time, is Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption. It was so incredible, and if it were a work of fiction instead of a thoroughly researched biography, I would blast it for being so outrageously unrealistic for all of those things to have happened to just one person. I listened to it on audio and while most books of that length take me several days to get through on audio, I blew through this one in under two days. The story was so riveting I could not stop. Highly recommended to anyone, whether you love history or adventure stories or biographies or just reading a book at all.

Pride & Prejudice is enchanting. There's no other way to describe it. It's sweet and I love reading Mr. Darcy and Lizzie get over their pride and prejudice. I love how Jane Austen shows her characters feelings and describes them.
The A Song Of Ice And Fire series leaves you craving more and more. There are so many plot twists that it's not uncommon to end up throwing your book at the wall. It's really well written and also very compelling. I've lost count at how many times I've ended up re reading a paragraph a thousand times, wide-eyed, unsure if I really read that or not.

The Great Gatsby
Fahrenheit 451
A Thousand Splendid Suns
1984
Any Sherlock Holmes story.

Pride & Prejudi..."
It's true. Pride and Prejudice is a beautiful story. Jane Austen is a lovely writer. A Song of Ice and Fire is also a terrific saga. I've just started to read it and it is amazing.
Jessica wrote: "The Fault in Our Stars and Looking for Alaska are two of the best books I have read lately..."
The Fault in Our Starts is one of the most beautiful and heartbreaking stories I have read in a while. It totally exceeded my expectations. It made me laugh for hours, cry, shout and smile a lot, and you identify completely with the characters. I really recommend it.

http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/5311
Also, A House Boat on the Styx, by John Kendrick Bangs, also available on Gutenberg
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2618
On a more serious note, many of the short stories of Somerset Maugham, particularly his South Sea stories, are very enjoyable. Try his story titled, I believe, "The Book Bag." But be warned, some of them are a bit depressing.





Oh so true, I had still read very little when I read that book and it hit me, It was so different than anything else I had read. I'm not even sure that I liked the story- I still don't know the answer to that question but it stayed with me because of how unique it was...

You might also like The Heaven Tree Trilogy by Edith Pargeter. Originally published in the early 1960's.


I read The Buddha in the Attic earlier this year and absolutely loved it. Many people object to the incantatory style of writing but that is what made the book for me.

I read [book:The Buddha in the Attic|10464..."
I completely agree. I was thrown at first since it's not a common style, but it definitely made the story even more empathetic and heartbreaking. I want to read Otsuka's other book about the interment camps as well.


A lot of people make the mistake of thinking that Jane Austen’s novels are romances; but in fact, the romance is a little bit beside the point. They are social comedies—mocking the silly behavior and vanities of the characters—and, on the serious side, they examine a person’s ethical responsibility to herself and to society.
So they’re more humorous than Wuthering Heights and more about one’s place in the world and relationships with others. There are plot twists, but not a lot of exciting events or adventures. If you like beautiful language, Jane Austen writes some of the most perfect sentences ever, in my view.
You might also enjoy Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey, which is about a younger heroine (about seventeen years old) and her struggles with a lot of misunderstandings and manipulative people.

Another one of my personal favorite books is "The Long Secret" by Louise Fitzhugh. It's a sequel to "Harriet the Spy", but mainly revolves around Harriet's friend Beth Ellen Hansen. I love how this book is so subtle but also has so much emotion packed into it.
I also love the Macdonald Hall series by Gordon Korman, about Bruno and Boots, two troublemaking young boys. This series is definitely light reading, but they are hilarious, cheerful, and so much fun to read!


I read Hardy's "Tess of the D'Urbervilles" a couple of years ago. I found it kind of depressing at times, but it had some good moments and a good plot twist at the end.


Other great reads: The Book Thief and Eye of The Needle.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Invention of Wings (other topics)Wuthering Heights (other topics)
Pride and Prejudice (other topics)
The Buddha in the Attic (other topics)
The Buddha in the Attic (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Mikhail Bulgakov (other topics)Ken Bruen (other topics)
Ayn Rand (other topics)
Sherrilyn Kenyon (other topics)
Kinley MacGregor (other topics)
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It is beautifully written. I laughed, I cried, and I felt the characters emotions. One of my favorites, if couldn't already tell. :)