Bookworms Come Here!

  • Pick your own adventure books are meant to be read more than once and they often involve fantasy settings if thats what you're into. I've always loved Cassandra Clare's books and I highly recommend them!

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  • Image result for The Lunar Chronicles

    This series is really dark but has some parts that make you latch on an be unable to stop reading.


    Image result for The Mortal Instruments

    This series is never ending and I feel we all started reading this series in middle school.

    Image result for The Iron Fey SeriesShe is one of my favorite asian writers and I definitely love her intricacies in a lot of her paragraphs.

    Micah Forever

    Benny's Smoll Bean


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  • I think the books that changed me the most in life are the ones I dont want to read ever again. Because they are mostly too heavy for a reread.

    For example Norwegian Wood. I hate this book. I love this book. I can never forget it, but I also never plan to read it ever again because it absolutely shattered me. I will never regret reading it though m kind of a paradox.

    • Official Post
    1. The Name of the Wind
    2. The Wise Man's Fear
    3. The Slow Regard of Silent Things

    The Odyssey

    The Iliad

    The Aeneid


    Firebrand

    Circe

    Le Morte D'Arthur

    The Mists of Avalon
    Aesop's Fables


    Galapagos


    The Idiot

    American Gods

    1. Ender's Game
    2. Speaker of the Dead

    The Blade Itself

    • The Hobbit
    • The Fellowship of the Ring
    • The Two Towers
    • The Return of the King

    Sir Gawain and the Green Knight

    The Lady or the Tiger

    The Necklace


    The Glass Bead Game

    Watership Down

    Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH



    The Dark is Rising (Series)

    The Mistborn Trilogy (S)

    A Discovery of Witches (S)

    Ready Player One (S)

    The Girl with All The Gifts (S)

    I, Robot (S)

    Sherlock Holmes (S)

    The Dragonriders of Pern (S)

    Dragonlance: Dragons of Autumn Twilight (S)


    Alamut


    The Alchemist


    Most anything by Ray Bradbury, Anne McCaffrey, Stephen King, and Chuck Palahniuk (Fight Club dude)

  • I have a bunch of my favorite books separated for me to read again but i always procrastinate to do so because usually i don't like rereading and the reason is very simple: i always think that i could be using the opportunity to be reading something new. It's the same reason i rarely watch the same movie/show again. Sure there are plenty exceptions but for the most part I just read my favorite parts. One book that I surely reread several times was Fanny by Erica Jong. I also LOVE the ones that are like movies, like Sidney Sheldon's, And Then Were None, The Castle of Otranto, Body Snatchers, Maske:Thaery, A Kiss Before Dying etc. I imagine an actual movie when I read these so I love picking the cast, the set, etc. in a different way every time. Lmao

    narcissistic, my god i love it

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    Edited once, last by catzi ().

  • I haven't read as much as I would like to in the past few years however I'm always looking for books in the New Weird genre.


    A few that I have already read:


    House of Leaves - Mark Z. Danielewski

    Perdido Street Station - China Mieville

    Annihilation - Jeff Vandermeer

    City of Saints and Madmen - Jeff Vandermeer

    This Book is Full of Spiders - David Wong

    John Dies at the End - David Wong


    Aside from that I like Neil Gaiman's work. American Gods is up there in my list of favorites of all time. Neverwhere and Stardust is somewhere there in the lower wrung. Good Omens as well. Sandman was a revelation. Edgy teen me ate it up.


    I actually liked the Dunk and Egg self-contained short stories more than the actual mainline A Song of Ice and Fire books since it skirted the amount of lore I have to keep in mind.


    Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a classic.


    Read through most of the Dark Tower series but at this point, it's probably to better to re-read everything from the start since I have forgotten most of the details.


    I started reading Delta Green: Extraordinary Renditions back in August last year and I still have to finish it. It's collection of mishmash of Lovecraftian stories and modern conspiracy theories.


    Would a bibliophile guild make sense?

  • The last book I read was The Nine Hundred about a group of women who survived Auschwitz with one of the survivors recalling their experiences. It was moving and I cried several times throughout. What those women and everyone in the camps endured during those atrocities should never ever be forgiven.

  • The Dune books. I read Dune but can't get into the succeeding books. The world he created was obviously a product of its time. There's an obvious hippie-ness to it and Herbert's fascination with Eastern mysticism can be found all over the book which I found myself disconnected.

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