Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion
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Which LIST book did you just finish?
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Ginny
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Aug 23, 2011 08:41PM

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(One of the best parts about the audio version is an interview with Vonnegut at the end, and then a segment with Vonnegut narrating the "backwards bomber movie" scene in the book that took my breath away.)


Really?? I couldn't keep reading that book, i'd agree it is a train wreck but after a while it just good annoying for me. Everyone says it's a classic but i just didn't get it.


Sorry to hear you have lost power, glad you are safe!! Happy reading!

The book was SO much better than the movie :)

One of my favorites from childhood :) Creepy but riveting :)

I'm a Hemingway fan, but I wasn't a fan of either of these.





Just finished Murder Must Advertise by Dorothy Sayers. It's a fun mystery novel and an interesting portrait of an advertising firm in Britain in the 20s. I enjoyed it, although I admit I am still wondering why this is considered to be something you must read before you die. I don't think anyone who misses this one will feel any regrets as they approach the pearly gates, but it was fun enough.
I also knocked some of the Edgar Allen Poe short stories off the list. I'm pretty sure he single-handedly invented the horror segment of genre-fiction. Not my thing, but fascinating to see it in its infancy.

Basically, a lot of the more modern, gritty, realistic and psychological mysteries we owe a great deal to Sayers, so Sayers gets her place on the list.

Still, this one was a really interesting look at an advertising office. I read the blurb in 1,001 Books, and it brought that up as well. Sayers was a copywriter for a while, apparently, and it shows - that aspect of the book was flawless.

Her characters, Peter and Harriet, were so well-drawn that I really missed them when I read the last book.

I so understand! There are no words.....I still miss them.

I read of Human Bondage and thought that was a lot better. Although, that was the first Maugham novel i read.

I'm a late-comer to the Austen fan club. I enjoy her more now than when I was young. For one thing, I don't think I had the patience earlier to fully appreciate the dialog.



1984, by George Orwell
The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
Both of them amazing reads!

1984, by George Orwell
The Color Purple, by Alice Walker
Both of them amazing reads!"
I'm reading another one of hers now, also on the list, Possessing the Secret of Joy. If you loved Purple, you'll also love this one :) I have NO idea how I ever missed growing up never reading 84, LOL, but it's going to be in the next bag of books I bring home from the library :)







I just finished this too! Absolutely loved it and can't wait to get to some more Forster soon, although next up in my TBR pile is Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

I read this one recently also. That type of humor doesn't wear well on me after the first few chapters, but there is also a film version of it I thought you might like to know about.

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