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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Monika
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Sep 06, 2008 09:21AM

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I worked for 4 years in a neuro operating room. When I read Saturday I read the list of operations that the main character had to perform, I was hoping it would be in the course of a week. Most of the operations would take on average 6 hours to perform without complications.
Wouldn't want him operating on me at the end of the week he'd be exhausted.

i actually left the time traveler's wife on a greyhound bus, so i never got to finish it. it was a library book too! i had to pay $25. :(





Also, I loved Eat, Pray, Love. I thoroughly enjoyed reading about her journey.


I loved this book! And I'm proud to say that I discovered it before Oprah did... he he he. I came across it randomly and I just loved going through all her adventures in the different countries and accompany her on her journey of self-discovery. I would reread this again and again. I've learned that this book has different meanings for everyone, and Elizabeth Gilbert seems to have written the book especially for you.
Enjoy the reread!

Just finished "Count of Monte Cristo" today... Long and difficult read (mainly because of the volume of characters and sub-plots rather than language) it also was not at "adventurous" as I had ecxpected. Oh well. On to re-reading "Frankenstein" because I can't recall if I ever finished it before.



Silas Marner. I really did like it. I can't wait to read more of Eliot's works. She is a great writer.
not on the list but The Book Thief. It should be on the list! It's amazing!

I would say they do as part of making the diagnosis, sometimes the experiences you've had also gives you a kind of sixth sense. I've had patients who the warning bells go off about. You try to look at people as a whole, that being said I do the same with people I've just met and I know medical staff and nurses who do the same. It's not something you can turn off. I also complain when medical programmes get it wrong, really annoys my family.



I love the way that Greene is able to write such biting philosophical asides without sacrificing anything in the way of story. Scratch that. The philosophy isn't an aside from anything, it forms the crux of the story. Because we care about these characters and their pain we are able to more accurately feel the burden these thoughts place upon them. Attaching a very real face to questions that have plagued humanity from day one allows the reader to more fully understand the frustration and despair that come with wrestling with the inevitable paradoxes of every day life. It is these same paradoxes which define us as a species; the ability to make a promise to an entity we are unsure even exists and then actively work toward subverting that promise while still remaining faithful to it. If there's a more fitting description of humankind then I don't know it.

Next,Sin in the Second City--anyone read it?










Also finished Lives of girls and women, also very enjoyable, at turns sad and happy tale of a girl growing up in the 30's and 40's.





I'm not sure I would recommend this book to anyone who is not a Faulkner fan already, but I enjoyed it very much. It takes you into the dregs of society in the south, and most of the characters are just barely tolerable, if at all; but they are certainly interesting! And so are their stories.
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