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calling all bookworms....

Halley, that reminds me of this book I meant to bring home from my mother's the last time I was there. It looks good.
And it looks like one you might like.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Joan

pope-joan3.jpg


The legend :
John Anglicus, born at Mainz, was Pope for two years, seven months and four days, and died in Rome, after which there was a vacancy in the Papacy of one month. It is claimed that this John was a woman, who as a girl had been led to Athens dressed in the clothes of a man by a certain lover of hers. There she became proficient in a diversity of branches of knowledge, until she had no equal, and afterward in Rome, she taught the liberal arts and had great masters among her students and audience. A high opinion of her life and learning arose in the city, and she was chosen for Pope. While Pope, however, she became pregnant by her companion. Through ignorance of the exact time when the birth was expected, she was delivered of a child while in procession from St Peter's to the Lateran, in a lane once named Via Sacra (the sacred way) but now known as the "shunned street" between the Colisseum and St Clement's church. After her death, it is said she was buried in that same place. The Lord Pope always turns aside from the street and it is believed by many that this is done because of abhorrence of the event. Nor is she placed on the list of the Holy Pontiffs, both because of her female sex and on account of the foulness of the matter (Martin of Opava, Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum).
 
ugh. i watched Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows in the theatre 2 nights ago, and there was a preview for ... some movie... can't remmeber. it was obviously by the director of Twilight, and it had to do with Warewolves. so, no thanks lol

the Vampire thing is definitely sickening me now haha.

i have asked my boyfriend for a Sony eReader for Christmas, so hopefully he follows through!

i have a giant list of book si wanna read, though unfortunately i'm on a non-reading spree right now too. the last book i finished was When You Are Engulfed in Flames by David Sedaris. i loved it! i'm currently reading Eat, Pray, Love (i'm not sure why though)

it's totally not my style but it's somehow comforting at the same time. haven't picked it up in days, though. next on my list is another by Chuck Palahniuk, "Haunted"
I just wanted to say I have an ereader(well mine broke and sony wont fix it) and unless you like classics they dont have a lot of newer books.
 
Eric, I'm not sure but I might have that. I have a good couple hundred, if not a thousand, books. I'll have to go through them. If I don't have it then I'm going to get it because it does look very interesting! Thanks for the recommendation!
 
I love my Kindle but haven't tried any of the other e-readers out there. Some of the big publishers are being nasty over the ebooks, so sometimes there are various issues with books produced by them. However, the indie market is really taking off with the advent of ebooks & there are some great indie authors out there with very reasonably priced books.
 
I'm late to the thread but I just finished The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman, and it was a great book. I can't wait to read the sequel. I meant to read this book back when the movie came out, I remember people saying how much the movie sucked compared to the book.
I've also been reading these books by Erin Hunter, the "Warriors series" - about clans of cats. Kinda cool if you like talking animals books like the Brian Jacques Redwall series and Watership Down.
I've been considering getting one of those e-readers but I'm worried if it might be kind of hard to get used to it.
 
I'm late to the thread but I just finished The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman, and it was a great book. I can't wait to read the sequel. I meant to read this book back when the movie came out, I remember people saying how much the movie sucked compared to the book.
I've also been reading these books by Erin Hunter, the "Warriors series" - about clans of cats. Kinda cool if you like talking animals books like the Brian Jacques Redwall series and Watership Down.
I've been considering getting one of those e-readers but I'm worried if it might be kind of hard to get used to it.

Every single book mentioned is on my list of favorites :p

Right now I am re-reading the Chronicles of Narnia in chronological order, not publishing order. I am on Prince Caspian right now. After I finish those I think it would be neat to re-read His Dark Materials, since they are written from opposing backgrounds (Narnia from a Christian background, His Dark Materials from an atheist background).
 
I just finished Harvest Hunting by Yasmine Galenorn and now I'm reading Lost Symbol by Dan Brown. I was going to get a Kindle for Christmas but we pass books back and forth. Hubby thought the kindle looked hard to read.
 
I've been googling those Kindles, even if I will have to wait for my tax return before I can get one. The new ones, Kindle 3G wifi sound really cool from the reviews I have been reading. I might have to start a thread about them in chit chat to see if anyone likes their e-readers LOL
 
I've been googling those Kindles, even if I will have to wait for my tax return before I can get one. The new ones, Kindle 3G wifi sound really cool from the reviews I have been reading. I might have to start a thread about them in chit chat to see if anyone likes their e-readers LOL

I settled for an Anroid phone so can download Kindle from apps. haven't used it yet. I read a couple chapters on my daughters phone not to bad, but I do think I am back on Kindle kick.
 
Last few in approximately retro order :


The Amber Spyglass (Philip Pullman)
The Way We Live Now (Anthony Trollope)
The Subtle Knife (Philip Pullman)
In Search of Lost Time/Time Regained (Marcel Proust)
---vol. VI
---vol. V
---vol. IV
---vol. III
---vol. II
---vol. I
The Golden Compass (Philip Pullman)

Eric, how could you read the Golden Compass and then read ANYTHING ELSE besides the Amber Spyglass immediately after?!!

Once I'm in the retiring room I'm in it until the end. No turning back until all the specters have faded.

Anyway....
Have you read any other Pullman? Even though I'm obsessed with the his Dark Materials series, and I know Pullman has others, I haven't given them a chance yet. Suggestions?

Right now, Dante Alighieri's Inferno. It's been sitting on my shelf for four or five years.

:dgrin: Same here. That's one that I've read once (in hrm.. 12th grade?) and then forever it has sat on my shelf. In a prime spot though! I'm always meaning to read it again, somehow that hasn't happened yet since that original reading! I have skimmed certain sections for artistic inspiration though ;)

I'm late to the thread but I just finished The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman, and it was a great book. I can't wait to read the sequel. I meant to read this book back when the movie came out, I remember people saying how much the movie sucked compared to the book.
I've also been reading these books by Erin Hunter, the "Warriors series" - about clans of cats. Kinda cool if you like talking animals books like the Brian Jacques Redwall series and Watership Down.
I've been considering getting one of those e-readers but I'm worried if it might be kind of hard to get used to it.

Oh Jen!! Yay! I think the best place to get copies of The Subtle Knife and Amber Spyglass are at Smith family books. They have used copies that are not only cheap but nicely worn in. I now have original art versions of the first two books, the Amber Spyglass is the only one left that I still want to find a copy of.
Honestly, the only reason I watched the movie was because I wanted to see Iorek Byrnison in action. The book can't even come close to the depth that the books achieve. I think it's because they tried to make the movie for kids, and the material that they would need to make the movie accurate would be hard to fit into a PG rating. I'd read the whole series when I saw the movie, and the ending was just so bad. It baffled me because it left no room for any sequels.. they totally changed the book around. I suppose that was a GOOD thing though, sometimes it's painful to watch movies of your favorite books.

As far as kindle goes... I just don't think I could get into it. YES I do realize that I read electronically all the time.. for homework, and for example, on this forum. Nothing beats curling up with a good book though..
 
I'm currently struggling thru "The Hitchikers Guide to the Universe"...my wife got me a hardbound edition with the 4 novels and a story....it's a bit much on the brain tho...
 
I'm writing a few novels, does that count as reading? One is under the working title Halcyon's Cross it's a fantasy but I'm working on keeping it unique (if at all possible). I'm trying not to read anything of the genre so not to eat other's magic. My dragon story was put on ice when I found out that dragons were no longer in and I'm rewriting it again for the forth time. My dark fairytale is taking forever to finish, the characters keep stalling (they're not sure whom to side with). I was also illustrating all of these to get more of a feel for the worlds, but my two year old likes to rework my drawings. Maybe someday something will be polished enough for rejection letters of my own :).
 
Every single book mentioned is on my list of favorites :p

Right now I am re-reading the Chronicles of Narnia in chronological order, not publishing order. I am on Prince Caspian right now. After I finish those I think it would be neat to re-read His Dark Materials, since they are written from opposing backgrounds (Narnia from a Christian background, His Dark Materials from an atheist background).

I think that both series are pretty cool.

I recent finished the Percy Jackson series, and then started reading one of Rick Riordan's newest novels "The Lost Hero" in this series he is bringing back some characters from the Percy Jackson, but he is adding in the Roman aspects of all of the gods. I also plan on getting "The Red Pyramid" that is also written by Riordan.
 
As far as e-readers go, the Kindle is great for someone who reads a lot of books. It pretty much does one thing really well, with not a lot of extras. It is pretty intuitive and after a few minutes, everyone that's used mine, can forget that it's a device and just get lost in the reading.
My four favorite things about it is 1, the large amount of books it can carry, that is especially good for traveling.
2, the Text-To-Speech is great for me, I use it a lot to read books and make jewelry at the same time.
3, the interfaced dictionary is awesome, can be reading along, come to a word you don't know and just put the curser in front of it and the definition comes up at the bottom of the screen.
4, being able to change the font size. I don't use it too much but it would be great for someone with poor eyesight, as large print printed books can be difficult to come by.
I still read paperback and hardback books but I wouldn't give up my Kindle. Anyway, sorry for the slightly off topic post! But if anyone who is thinking about getting a Kindle and has a question about it, you can feel free to PM me.
 
I'm reading Temple of the Winds from The Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind. My bf got me hooked on the series and the books in this series are the first books I willingly choose to read lol.
 
I tend to read in spurts. I'll devour a bunch of books, then run out of material and go weeks without reading a book.
I read mostly Sci fi and fantasy, along with King type horror, novels...anything to entertain. I read the Twilight series when I was sick and basically lying on the couch. Took me 3 days.
Right now I'm reading Forge of Heaven by C.J. Cherryh. I've liked all of her books. Another favorite author for Sci-fi is Anne McCaffrey. I've loved her Pern series since HS and now i've even read the Harper Hall trilogy to my daughter. She loved it too.
And yes, I admit I liked the Twilight series, though the first and the last books were my favorite, and I think a well written 5th book would be better yet. I do like "vampire" books. I read the Anne Rice books which were pretty good, though I thought they were weaker after Queen of the Damned.
I have to say that one of the best vampire books I've read was a book called Lillith's Dream by Whitley Strieber. I don't want to spoil it, because it was very good, but I'll just say that if I had to classify it, I would call it Sci-Fi.
As to Sci Fi, I recently "discovered" a writer named Robert Charles Wilson. Spin was excellent, and other books by him that I read were also very good.
I could go on, but I won't. My dad was a big reader, and I grew up in a house with a lot of books. He also liked Sci Fi and Fantasy, along with history, philosophy and science. I'd say about 30% of his books were fiction. Mostly Sci-Fi and fantasy, with a bunch of novels too. His library was about 5000 books, so I always had something that I hadn't read, though by the time I graduated HS I had read all of the fiction. It's not as easy to find stuff to read now.
 
I'm trying to decide if I want to read Push Not The River by James Conroyd Martin or Beatrice and Virgil by Yann Martel next. I liked Life Of Pi by Yann Martel and can't wait for the movie to come out in the next couple years (forget when). I'm also waiting to figure out where I put book 8 of The Drifting Classroom because I finally got the entire series and want to read it all the way through. I can't just start it because I'll read the series in a day. Yay Manga!
 
Someone gave me Life Of Pi by Yann Martel a few days ago. I haven't started it yet but am glad to get another good vote on it.
 
I'm currently reading "The Annotated Chronicles" by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman. The geniuses who started the "Dragonlance" books. It is by far and away the best book I've ever read. If you enjoyed "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy, you will love this book.

Oh yeah, I'm also playing Dragon Age to no end. Notice a pattern? haha
 
@Tavia: It really is a good book. It's one of my favorites, along with Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman and Please Stop Laughing At Me by Jodie Blanco. Then again, there are so many on my list of favorites...
 
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