#165346 - Fri Mar 28 2003 11:54 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Participant
Registered: Thu Mar 06 2003
Posts: 37
Loc: Tennessee, USA
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Just about everything I had to read in school. Sometimes I felt forced but now am glad I did. I nearly choked when the teacher gave us a very short amount of time to read "Look Homeward, Angel" i had to read about 100 pages a day to finish it. To this day this is my all time favorite book.
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#165347 - Fri Mar 28 2003 01:23 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Forum Champion
Registered: Thu Feb 08 2001
Posts: 5985
Loc: Ottawa Ontario Canada
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The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay. I was a little daunted at first at the size of the thing, but it's SO good!
I'd recommend picking up the sequel, Tandia as well.
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Chan fhiach cuirm gun a comhradh. A feast is no use without good talk.
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#165348 - Fri Mar 28 2003 05:33 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Mainstay
Registered: Thu Jan 30 2003
Posts: 901
Loc: Israel
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Balzac's "Le Pere Goriot". Parts of it were boring as hell, but I had tears in my eyes at the end.
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"Talk is cheap, arms are not"- Victor Davis Hanson
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#165349 - Sun Mar 30 2003 01:18 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Enthusiast
Registered: Sun Aug 11 2002
Posts: 230
Loc: Riverside Chicago Illinois USA
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I agree skylarb, "As I Lay Dying" was assigned to me in college and it started me on a lifelong love of Faulkner - I've now read everything he's written.
Another "forced" book that I loved was "Song of Solomon" by Toni Morrison. As with Faulkner, I've read all of her work too.
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"Patterns are set in one place and time, to be followed to the end of all years to come". (Andre Norton)
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#165350 - Sun Mar 30 2003 07:40 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Forum Champion
Registered: Mon Apr 22 2002
Posts: 5007
Loc: Western Australia
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Shakespeare.
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Don't say "I can't" ... say " I haven't learned how, yet." (Reg Bolton)
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#165352 - Mon Mar 31 2003 04:18 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Mainstay
Registered: Thu Jan 30 2003
Posts: 901
Loc: Israel
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I actually tried to read some of his other stuff after that, but I didn't enjoy it and I gave up.
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"Talk is cheap, arms are not"- Victor Davis Hanson
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#165353 - Thu Apr 03 2003 04:54 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Enthusiast
Registered: Tue Feb 19 2002
Posts: 261
Loc: Scottish Highlands
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This is one of the best books I've ever read and the film was marvellous. Didn't like the sequel as much -it lacked the humanity and the Power of One. Glad to meet a fellow affficiando!
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#165355 - Fri Apr 04 2003 12:57 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Forum Adept
Registered: Thu Feb 21 2002
Posts: 117
Loc: Canada
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The Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison - easily one of the best books ever written.
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There are two things I always forget, they are . . . there are three things I always forget . . .
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#165358 - Sat Apr 05 2003 07:16 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Moderator
Registered: Wed Oct 17 2001
Posts: 8479
Loc: Hastings Sussex England UK
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I enjoyed Skylarb's quiz on "Books I Was Forced To Read". If I remember correctly, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness was one of them. This was one of our set books at school along with Youth. I seem to recall that most of us found both of them a drag. I haven't actually re-read it since those days, but I often wonder if I ought to give Conrad another chance.
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Dilige et quod vis fac
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#165359 - Sun Apr 06 2003 12:41 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Mainstay
Registered: Thu Jan 30 2003
Posts: 631
Loc: Virginia USA
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I read Childhood's End on my own, and though I am not generally a sci-fi fan, I appreciated this very much. But I think I misunderstood it! I took it as a tragedy; a pro-individuality and anti-socialist type tale; but now that I have read more about Clark and his spirtuality and general beliefs, I think I mistook the book entirely, and the result is actually supposed to be good.
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"Why don’t you write books people can read?"
- Nora Joyce, to her husband James
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#165361 - Tue Apr 15 2003 03:56 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Forum Adept
Registered: Wed Aug 07 2002
Posts: 183
Loc: Germany
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- "Angela's Ashes" by Frank McCourt - I had to read it in school and I absolutely loved it. - "To Kill A Mockingbird" by Harper Lee - I also did that in school - "The Deep End Of The Ocean" by... what's her name? Jacqueline something...  My best friend's mother gave it to me for a long train ride, and I was so fascinated by it I just couldn't stop reading. I nearly missed to get out of the train!
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If at first you don't succeed, hide all evidence that you tried
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#165362 - Thu Apr 17 2003 09:10 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Mainstay
Registered: Thu Sep 05 2002
Posts: 527
Loc: Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA
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Two books instantly come to mind:
"Heart of Darkness" by Joseph Conrad & Mary Shelly's "Frankenstein", the latter of which has become a favorite of mine. "Frankenstein" seems to be especially appropriate today in leiu of cloning--who take responsiblity for actions that can have major repurcussions.
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'Where is human nature so weak as in the bookstore?---Henry Ward Beecher
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#165363 - Wed May 21 2003 01:35 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Multiloquent
Registered: Fri Nov 23 2001
Posts: 3082
Loc:
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My GCE (15 year old examination texts) were George Orwells "Animal Farm" and Shakespeare's "Twelth Night" - I think I might have enjoyed reading them as stories but hated having to disect the sententences to get the meaning - looking back and with the knowledge I've since gained, I'm sure the authors didn't intend for the absolute meaning of each word to be taken for granted or interpreted - they had a message they wanted to convey to the masses. I was certainly put off from reading/watching more of the works by Shakespeare for being co-erced into seeing my teachers "Deeper meanings" in the words and not just accepting them as entertainment.
Many years on, I can know see the deeper meanings of both works but the experience of being forced to examine two texts for the purpose of passing an examination was not conducive to me being drawn into the literary circle. (I much preferred the novels of Ian Fleming in the 1950's and 60's)
Yes I'm glad to have an insight into the two texts- It's made me look at other novels/books in a different way - two chapters into a book I know wether I'm interested or not (and I read two chapters in about 10 minutes!)
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#165364 - Tue Jun 10 2003 06:17 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Mainstay
Registered: Thu May 22 2003
Posts: 608
Loc: Kentucky YSA
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Fosse, if I'm correct about the title, Animal Farm was a fairly funny and enjoyable book. By the title, Heart of Darkness sounds interesting. Maybe.
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#165365 - Tue Jul 01 2003 06:45 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Forum Adept
Registered: Tue Jun 24 2003
Posts: 115
Loc: Ithaca New York USA
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The View From The Cherry Tree
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#165366 - Tue Jul 01 2003 08:13 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Enthusiast
Registered: Sun Jun 23 2002
Posts: 370
Loc: Buffalo New York USA
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I just finished "Invisible Man" yesterday. It was on my forced summer reading list this year. Sorry, but I hated it. I got absolutely nothing out of it and struggled to stay awake. I forced myself to read 50-100 pages a day just so I could finish it. My school seems obsessed with racial books and books with communism in them, both of which "Invisible Man" was. There have been books I enjoyed, though. "To Kill a Mocking Bird" was the first one I thought of when I saw this title. Another racially themed book, but I just loved it and often read ahead of my class. "Animal Farm" was another one. I was fascinated with all the stuff with the Russian Revolution. There was a book in middle school we read, it was very short, and about a girl who plants a garden for her tenant building and a lot happens as a result. I just remembered the name, "Seedfolks."
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#165367 - Tue Jul 01 2003 08:14 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Multiloquent
Registered: Mon Jun 04 2001
Posts: 3313
Loc: Los Angeles California USA
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- Heart of Darkness - Grapes of Wrath - Beloved - Nam
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#165368 - Thu Aug 14 2003 11:56 AM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Mainstay
Registered: Thu Jan 30 2003
Posts: 901
Loc: Israel
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Just bringing this up, since it relates to some of the recent posts in the "Worst Book Ever" thread.
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"Talk is cheap, arms are not"- Victor Davis Hanson
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#165369 - Thu Aug 14 2003 02:58 PM
Re: Books you were glad you were forced to read
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Multiloquent
Registered: Fri Nov 23 2001
Posts: 3082
Loc:
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Ethan, Animal Farm is "so I'm told" a book about Communism and the struggle of the common folk against the oppressive rule of others. I didn't find it in the least funny then and looking back, with hindsight, it can be interpreted as the rise and fall of dictatorships.
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