The book that inspired you - If this is a man - Primo Levi Concentration camp survivor
The book that you loved as a child - The Wizard of Oz. read it over and over again
The book that you would take with you to a desert island Shoeless Joe Jackson come to Iowa - WP Kinsella
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Dickens. Couldn't get into him when told to read it at School and really think I should go back and give him another try
The book that inspired you... The Alchemist - Paolo Coelho
The book that you loved as a child... The Upstairs Room - Johanna Reiss
The book that you would take with you to a desert island... His Dark Materials Trilogy (The Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass) - Phillip Pullman
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should... The Sookie Stackhouse Novels - Charlaine Harris
The book that inspired you... Various essays by George Orwell. I was a bit obssessed with Orwell as a teenager. Essays like "Politics and the English Language" have shaped the way I think.
The book that you loved as a child... Danny, Champion of the World by Roald Dahl.
The book that you would take with you to a desert island... Vanity Fair - William Thakeray. Coudl be something entirely different tomorrow.
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should... Don Quixote - Cervantes
The book that you loved as a child Adrian Moles/ Anything by Enid Blyton
The book that you would take with you to a desert island The Mosquito Coast (mainly for survival tips and again to remind me why Id gone there).
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should Che by Paul Anderson. Massive book that's sat on my shelf for about ten years after i bought it Oxfam. Get about a 1/4 of the way through and put it down as too immense. Motor Cycle diaries ruined it too after finding out the protaganist dies at the end it has spoiled it (joke)
The book that inspired you ,The book that you loved as a child, The book that you would take with you to a desert island - The same book The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint Exupery
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Shakespere - couldn't stand him but feel I should have tried harder
[cite]Posted By: lancashire lad[/cite]
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Shakespere - couldn't stand him but feel I should have tried harder
[cite]Posted By: Henry Irving[/cite]Dickens. Couldn't get into him when told to read it at School and really think I should go back and give him another try
Try 'Our Mutual Friend' ... long but excellent book with London as the predominant backdrop
The book that inspired you: Secret Seven - Enid Blyton
The book that you loved as a child: Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
The book that you would take with you to a desert island: War and Peace - Tolstoy
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should: See previous answer, just read Anna Karenina so a step in the right direction.
The book that inspired you
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh (got me into scag)
The book that you loved as a child
Lord of the Rings JRR Tolkien
The book that you would take with you to a desert island
American Tabloid James Ellroy
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should
Fly Fishing JR Hartley
[cite]Posted By: RodneyCharltonTrotta[/cite]The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you shouldChe by Paul Anderson. Massive book that's sat on my shelf for about ten years after i bought it Oxfam. Get about a 1/4 of the way through and put it down as too immense. Motor Cycle diaries ruined it too after finding out the protaganist dies at the end it has spoiled it (joke)
Puts me in mind of my experience with the bible. The priest was busy explaining that I should read it, but hanging behind the altar is the biggest plot spoiler in history. No way am I ploughing through 2000 pages of preachy nonsense only to find out that the romans nail beardy onto a cross. It's as bad as the cover of the Planet of the Apes DVD (a picture of Charlton Heston kneeling in front of the statue of liberty). Crazy fiddler.
"I love this book! Ursula strips off her logical, left-brained, hypnotherapists cloak to reveal some
deeply personal insights into how moon magic and psychic skills have become a part of her life."
Would love to join in this thread, but sadly i don't remember ever reading a book as a child other than a football annual, and since then its only really been the occassional sporting autobiography. I reckon the number of fiction books i've read fully in my life is less than five.
Have never really understand where other than on holiday, anyone gets the time to read a book. Train maybe, but then when do you read a newspaper ??
[cite]Posted By: AFKABartram[/cite]Would love to join in this thread, but sadly i don't remember ever reading a book as a child other than a football annual, and since then its only really been the occassional sporting autobiography. I reckon the number of fiction books i've read fully in my life is less than five.
Have never really understand where other than on holiday, anyone gets the time to read a book. Train maybe, but then when do you read a newspaper ??
Strange really, as i enjoy writing !
You went to grammar school. you must have had to read a book then.
We may have been meant to read it, which is different to actually reading it !
Actually don't think we ever had to read a book in full in English, just extracts etc. Only one i can ever remember reading in school was bits from a book to do with racism in old America. EDIT, bit of google searching tells me it was To Kill A Mockingbird
Johnboy may well correct me and say we were churning through a book every week, but i can't remember any.
Comments
The book that you loved as a child - The Wizard of Oz. read it over and over again
The book that you would take with you to a desert island Shoeless Joe Jackson come to Iowa - WP Kinsella
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Dickens. Couldn't get into him when told to read it at School and really think I should go back and give him another try
The book that you loved as a child... The Upstairs Room - Johanna Reiss
The book that you would take with you to a desert island... His Dark Materials Trilogy (The Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife and The Amber Spyglass) - Phillip Pullman
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should... The Sookie Stackhouse Novels - Charlaine Harris
The book that you loved as a child... Danny, Champion of the World by Roald Dahl.
The book that you would take with you to a desert island... Vanity Fair - William Thakeray. Coudl be something entirely different tomorrow.
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should... Don Quixote - Cervantes
The book that you loved as a child Adrian Moles/ Anything by Enid Blyton
The book that you would take with you to a desert island The Mosquito Coast (mainly for survival tips and again to remind me why Id gone there).
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should Che by Paul Anderson. Massive book that's sat on my shelf for about ten years after i bought it Oxfam. Get about a 1/4 of the way through and put it down as too immense. Motor Cycle diaries ruined it too after finding out the protaganist dies at the end it has spoiled it (joke)
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint Exupery
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Shakespere - couldn't stand him but feel I should have tried harder
He had a fit sister.
The book that you loved as a child - 'The Lord of the Rings' - Tolkien
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - 'Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit' - Wodehouse or 'The Complete Sherlock Holmes' - Conan-Doyle
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - The Bible
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - 'Close to the Edge; My Autobiography' - Jim Davidson
The book that you loved as a child Stig of the dump and Davy Jones Locker
The book that you would take with you to a desert island Pillars of the earth
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should Mein Kampf
The book that you loved as a child - None - I read comics (Beano and The Victor) and the sports section of the Daily Express.
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - To Kill a Mocking Bird - Harper Lee
The book that you loved as a child: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe - CS Lewis
The book that you would take with you to a desert island: SAS survival hanbook or something similar
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should: 1984
"Teach yourself to read" - a self-help primer for the illiterate
"Holiday romances and how to avoid them" - perfect for relaxation on the beach
"How to escape from a desert island" - if you could only take one book along ...
The book that you loved as a child - The Borrowers series
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - Harry Potter, so I could burn it to cook my fish on!
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Lord of the Rings
The book that you loved as a child - The Lord of the Rings / The Hobbit - Tolkien
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - The Drifters - James Michener
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Midnights's Children - Salman Rushdie
Try 'Our Mutual Friend' ... long but excellent book with London as the predominant backdrop
The book that you loved as a child - The Rats - James Herbert (read it over and over, crapped myself when I was 11, love Herbert)
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - Clapton - Eric Clapton or Life - Keith Richards -(Probably Keef)
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - The Bible - God (I should do, but probably wont)
Book that loved as a child - the Lone Pine series of adventure books by Malcolm Saville
Book to a desert island - one that tells me how to identify poisonous plants and catch fish.
Book that have never got round to reading but think I should - Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust
The book that you loved as a child - Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust
Blimey we have some cultured Charlton Fans on this board
The book that you loved as a child - The Lord of the Rings - Tolkien
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - Finnegan's Wake - James Joyce
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - A Dance to the Music of Time - Anthony Powell
The book that you loved as a child: Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
The book that you would take with you to a desert island: War and Peace - Tolstoy
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should: See previous answer, just read Anna Karenina so a step in the right direction.
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh (got me into scag)
The book that you loved as a child
Lord of the Rings JRR Tolkien
The book that you would take with you to a desert island
American Tabloid James Ellroy
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should
Fly Fishing JR Hartley
The book that you loved as a child - any Dr Seuss - It's how I learned to read!
The book that you would take with you to a desert island - Treasure Island!
The book that you've never got round to reading that you think you should - The Greatest Show on Earth - Richard Dawkins. FACT ;-)
The book I manage PR for!... shameless plug... OUT TODAY!
"I love this book! Ursula strips off her logical, left-brained, hypnotherapists cloak to reveal some
deeply personal insights into how moon magic and psychic skills have become a part of her life."
Sorry, but I'm out
Have never really understand where other than on holiday, anyone gets the time to read a book. Train maybe, but then when do you read a newspaper ??
Strange really, as i enjoy writing !
You went to grammar school. you must have had to read a book then.
Actually don't think we ever had to read a book in full in English, just extracts etc. Only one i can ever remember reading in school was bits from a book to do with racism in old America. EDIT, bit of google searching tells me it was To Kill A Mockingbird
Johnboy may well correct me and say we were churning through a book every week, but i can't remember any.