James Mustich's 1000 Books to Read Before You Die discussion
Which One of the Thousand Are You Reading Now?


Hello James, my curiosity is piq..."
Hello Kyle, I thought I was responding to a comment about reading Richard Dawkins's The Selfish Gene, but I can't seem to find what prompted me!

I'm glad you answered this, because I was wondering what you were referring to as well.
I was also glad the other readers talked about this--I'd always assumed that the book was looking at the gene or genes that made people selfish, not that the gene itself was selfish (or protective, is what it sounds like). Anyway--that book wasn't even on my radar before, but I'd pick it up now if I ran across it.

Are You There God, it's Me Margaret"
I read that book too. I thought it was very very good. I had never read it before because I was 11 when it was first published in 1970 and I was reading YA books by that time.

First I am finishing The Adventures of Roderich Random by Smollett. I checked this out of the library 2 weeks before the Dubliners, so I only have a week to finish it.


I'm glad you answered this, because I was wondering what you were referring to as well.
I was also glad the other readers..."
Thanks, Bryan — you're right. I meant it as response to Janet at message 15.

First I am finishing The Adventures of Roderich Random by Smollett. I checked this out of the library 2 we..."
Jane, you're in for a treat with Dubliners. Especially, the last story, "The Dead," which is as close to a perfect piece of prose as I know. If you read nothing else by Joyce, read that!

It'll stick with you, too, I bet.

I think you've got the idea for another good thread--'books that need to be in Volum..."
Yes -- that's a good idea. Actually, if you go to www.1000bookstoread.com, you can add True Grit—and anything else you like—to the extended list readers are building there. I think of it as the "afterlife" edition.

Agree with you Kyle. I regret I left Portis off my original list.

Well said, Shelley.

First I am finishing The Adventures of Roderich Random by Smollett. I checked this out of the..."
Thanks


Earlier this summer I read all the Harold and His Purple Crayon series to her. She loved it. She followed Harold's crayon with her finger as he was drawing things.






I agree with you. Portrait and Ulysses didn't appeal to me either.

I loved Skellig!

Now, I am on to The House of the Spirits. I do like this kind of book better than Sci-Fi and the "Horror/Thriller" books from October, but I am glad I challenged myself to go there.
I am also plowing through The Letters of Vincent Van Gogh leading up to my trip to the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in NINE days! It is a LONG book, but I am fascinated!
Happy Reading!



I wanted to try reading Verne in French, but I've heard elsewhere about the descriptions, and it's making me waffle. I can read pretty well if there is some action, but long bits of description generally uses a lot of vocabulary that I don't know. I may give it a try anyway, and see where I get.

I don't know - I figure all those lists are probably the same word whatever language you use.


I am now reading The Roots of Civilization by Marshack.
It is an oversized book so I find it too heavy to read in bed so I am also reading The Collected Ghost Stories of M. R. James.
I really like James' book. The stories are Victorian Ghost stories so while they allude to the ghosts, there isn't anything in them too gory or scary to let me sleep. I read a story a night.

I found the setting very interesting where nature took over and society was collapsing. I could imagine this actually happening with the way we treat the earth and how the ozone layer is depleting; however it probably wouldn't be so severe.

I found the setting very interesting where nature took over and society was collapsing. I could imagine this actually happening with the way we treat t..."
My favorite part was the trained alligators!

A good comical satire about the English University system in the 1950's.

A good comical satire about the English University system in the 1950's."
This one sounds really good. I am going to have to find it.

This is going to be a difficult but worthwhile book, I can see that already

I had seen the movie on Peter Pan when I was young but I never read the book before.
A true classic to read to your kids.

I learned so much of the Ice Age men from 'Homo erectus' to the Neanderthal Man which is just before modern man-'Homo sapiens.' Marshack does this through the use of microscopic analysis of many artifacts. He shows us that the 'Homo erectus' man was capable of complex 'time-factored' thought processes and had an advanced culture.
It was a slow read but that is because Marshack is so detailed in his analysis and walks you step-by-step to why he thinks his is correct.
Thank you James for putting it on your list. I would never had read it otherwise

I was looking for some DVDs to check out of the library and saw the Hunger game DVDs.
So I checked out both the books and the DVDs.
A very good distopian trilogy.

I learned so much of the Ice Age men from 'Homo erectus' to the Neanderthal Man which is just before modern man-'Homo ..."
I am so glad to know you read this, Jane, and that you found it so rewarding. I remember the profound effect it had on me when I first discovered it. It's an absolutely remarkable study. The story of its writing — Marshack was a freelance writer when he started doing this research — is astonishing in its own right.
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Are You There God, it's Me Margaret