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GenuineRisk 12-15-2013 06:03 PM

Ten Books that Affected You
 
One of the new games going around Facebook is listing ten books that affected you (no particular order). Don't have to be deep, just ten books that meant something to you for one reason or another. Thought it could be fun here. I'll put up my FB list:

Black Beauty- Anna Sewell
The Last Unicorn- Peter S Beagle
Perfume- Patrick Suskind
D'Aulaires Book of Greek Myths- Ingri D'aulaire
The New Jim Crow- Michelle Alexander
Little Women- Louisa May Alcott
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy- Douglas Adams
When Abortion Was a Crime- Leslie J Reagan
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry- Mildred D Taylor
The House of Mirth- Edith Wharton

Of course, there are oodles more, but honorable mentions to Dean Koontz's Phantoms, which is not a good book, but scared the bejesus out of my 12-year-old self, and Gone With the Wind, which has not affected my worldview or anything, but which I think I read about 50 times between ages 19-35.

Arletta 12-16-2013 07:49 PM

Well I can name one that I know affected me...

Fifty Shades of Grey :D

GenuineRisk 12-16-2013 10:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arletta (Post 957353)
Well I can name one that I know affected me...

Fifty Shades of Grey :D

Heh.

I still remember the first romance novels I ever read (given to me by my grandmother when I was 11 or 12): "This Cherished Dream" and "Domina."

dellinger63 12-17-2013 10:09 AM

Probably more telling than a Rorschach Test ;)

Helter Skelter - Vincent Bugliosi
For the Love of Mike - Mike Royko
Jaws
The Exorcist - William Blatley
Dracula - Bram Stoker
All The President's Men - Bernstein and Woodward
The Executioner's Song - Norman Mailer
Full Moon -The Rock n Roll Life of Keith Moon - Dougal Butler
The Hot House - Life Inside Leavenworth Prison - Pete Earley
The Enforcer - The Tony Spilotro Story - William Roemer

Honorable Mention - Beyer on Speed - Andrew Beyer

bigrun 12-17-2013 11:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dellinger63 (Post 957400)
Probably more telling than a Rorschach Test ;)

Helter Skelter - Vincent Bugliosi
For the Love of Mike - Mike Royko
Jaws
The Exorcist - William Blatley
Dracula - Bram Stoker
All The President's Men - Bernstein and Woodward
The Executioner's Song - Norman Mailer
Full Moon -The Rock n Roll Life of Keith Moon - Dougal Butler
The Hot House - Life Inside Leavenworth Prison - Pete Earley
The Enforcer - The Tony Spilotro Story - William Roemer

Honorable Mention - Beyer on Speed - Andrew Beyer


Those above and..

The Day of the Jackal - Frederick Forsyth - my all time fav book
The Odessa File - "
The Dogs of War - "

The Hunt for Red October -Tom Clancy
Patriot Games - "
Clear and Present Danger - "

Movies were made on all three Clancy books and were very good imo..

As you can see i am big fan of political thrillers..

GPK 12-17-2013 11:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigrun (Post 957412)
Those above and..

The Day of the Jackal - Frederick Forsyth - my all time fav book
The Odessa File - "
The Dogs of War - "

The Hunt for Red October -Tom Clancy
Patriot Games - "
Clear and Present Danger - "

Movies were made on all three Clancy books and were very good imo..

As you can see i am big fan of political thrillers..

Have you picked up Command Authority yet? I just bought it on my Nook yesterday and looking forward to it. I tried reading Against All Enemies last week, but put it away after a 100 pages or so. I just couldn't get into it without the usual cast of characters.
The next book on my list is The Bully Pulpit.

bigrun 12-17-2013 11:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GPK (Post 957418)
Have you picked up Command Authority yet? I just bought it on my Nook yesterday and looking forward to it. I tried reading Against All Enemies last week, but put it away after a 100 pages or so. I just couldn't get into it without the usual cast of characters.
The next book on my list is The Bully Pulpit.

No but i'll look into it...haven't read any new books bout 3-4 years since my last eye surgery..review of this one sounds good...last book i read was The Da Vinci Code which i loved..read half of Angels & Demons but never finished..
btw, how was your weather up there...just some cold rain down south here.

GPK 12-17-2013 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigrun (Post 957422)
No but i'll look into it...haven't read any new books bout 3-4 years since my last eye surgery..review of this one sounds good...last book i read was The Da Vinci Code which i loved..read half of Angels & Demons but never finished..
btw, how was your weather up there...just some cold rain down south here.

We got a tiny bit of ice 2 weekends ago, but nothing like the 2nd ice age they were calling for. Just cold rain this past weekend.

GenuineRisk 12-17-2013 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dellinger63 (Post 957400)
Probably more telling than a Rorschach Test ;)

Helter Skelter - Vincent Bugliosi
For the Love of Mike - Mike Royko
Jaws
The Exorcist - William Blatley
Dracula - Bram Stoker
All The President's Men - Bernstein and Woodward
The Executioner's Song - Norman Mailer
Full Moon -The Rock n Roll Life of Keith Moon - Dougal Butler
The Hot House - Life Inside Leavenworth Prison - Pete Earley
The Enforcer - The Tony Spilotro Story - William Roemer

Honorable Mention - Beyer on Speed - Andrew Beyer

Very good list! I do think "Jaws" and "The Exorcist" are two of the few books where the movie ended up being better. Come to think of it, I just reread "Dracula" last Christmas.

I read "Helter Skelter" in 9th grade, I think. Very readable- made me a sucker for true crime books (or true-ish, I guess).

dellinger63 12-17-2013 06:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GenuineRisk (Post 957448)

I read "Helter Skelter" in 9th grade, I think. Very readable- made me a sucker for true crime books (or true-ish, I guess).

Read Catch 22 again and it didn't stand up to my HS remembrances.

Speaking of HS books, The Good Earth may deserve another try, when I'm in hospice. ;)

docicu3 12-18-2013 06:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dellinger63 (Post 957468)
Read Catch 22 again and it didn't stand up to my HS remembrances.

Speaking of HS books, The Good Earth may deserve another try, when I'm in hospice. ;)

Do you think kids read less or more these days because of the development of the internet Del? I'm voting for less because nothing is read cover to cover...

Books That Changed My Life....

1) Tale of Two Cities
2) World According to Garp...
3) Cats Cradle and all the KV similar works
4) Cried The Beloved Country
5) Animal Farm
6) Fear and Loathing in Las Vagas
7) Les Miserables
8) Even Cowgirls Get The Blues......Thumbs Up!!
9) One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
10) Deadzone

Danzig 12-18-2013 07:23 AM

harold and the purple crayon
where the wild things are
green eggs and ham
horton hatches an egg
the little engine that could
mike mulligan and his steamshovel
the little red hen
misty of chincoteague
justin morgan had a horse
king of the wind

Kasept 12-18-2013 07:47 AM

Darkness at Noon (Koestler)
The Painted Bird (Kosinski)
The Jungle (Sinclair)
The Rise of David Levinsky (Cahan)
Things Fall Apart (Achebe)
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (Richler)
The Tin Drum (Grass)
All Quiet on the Western Front (Remarche)
To Kill a Mockingbird (Lee)
Invisible Man (Ellison)

Short Story: The Secret Sharer (Conrad)

dellinger63 12-18-2013 08:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by docicu3 (Post 957521)
Do you think kids read less or more these days because of the development of the internet Del? I'm voting for less because nothing is read cover to cover...


Outside of the Harry Potter series I would have to agree with you as far as books go. They do however seem to read their phones constantly.

GenuineRisk 12-18-2013 08:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by docicu3 (Post 957521)
Do you think kids read less or more these days because of the development of the internet Del? I'm voting for less because nothing is read cover to cover...

Books That Changed My Life....

1) Tale of Two Cities
2) World According to Garp...
3) Cats Cradle and all the KV similar works
4) Cried The Beloved Country
5) Animal Farm
6) Fear and Loathing in Las Vagas
7) Les Miserables
8) Even Cowgirls Get The Blues......Thumbs Up!!
9) One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest
10) Deadzone

First of all, I love The Dead Zone. First Stephen King I read that made me cry.

Second, I think kids are reading today, just we're more out of the loop on what they read. Unless it's a big thing, like the Harry Potter novels were. My nieces are voracious readers; they spend holiday visits with the family curled up with their Nooks. I just don't know what they're reading, although their mom keeps a pretty close eye on them, so I suspect it's parent-approved material. As opposed to when I grew up, and my grandparents' attic contained every pulp bestseller from about 1935 to 1975, or so it seemed, and the less the grownups saw us, the happier they were. I think I got most of my sex education from Jacqueline Susann.

Danzig 12-18-2013 11:03 AM

i think some are still reading. my kids are all big readers.

as for my list...i hope no one thought i was making a joke. instilling the love of reading early into a child pretty much guarantees a life long love. kids who read have a better vocabulary, reading actually grows brain cells.

i doubt i'd have the book collection i have now, were it not for books on my list.

i could have listed war and peace, eugene onegin, to kill a mockingbird, the pickwick papers, huck finn, etc...but i'd have never bought and read those were it not for experiencing the joy of reading harolds adventures with his crayon. i still like to watch modern marvels, and i love to see how machines are built, how they work-thank to mike mulligan for that. green eggs and ham-perfect example of not knocking something til you tried it. justin morgan--success can come from the humblest beginnings....and what lesson is better learned than 'i think i can'?

GenuineRisk 12-18-2013 01:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 957543)
i think some are still reading. my kids are all big readers.

as for my list...i hope no one thought i was making a joke. instilling the love of reading early into a child pretty much guarantees a life long love. kids who read have a better vocabulary, reading actually grows brain cells.

i doubt i'd have the book collection i have now, were it not for books on my list.

i could have listed war and peace, eugene onegin, to kill a mockingbird, the pickwick papers, huck finn, etc...but i'd have never bought and read those were it not for experiencing the joy of reading harolds adventures with his crayon. i still like to watch modern marvels, and i love to see how machines are built, how they work-thank to mike mulligan for that. green eggs and ham-perfect example of not knocking something til you tried it. justin morgan--success can come from the humblest beginnings....and what lesson is better learned than 'i think i can'?

I thought your list was great. Some of my best memories of childhood are my dad reading me Horton Hatches an Egg: "I meant what I said and I said what I meant. And an elephant's faithful one hundred percent!". And I still have my copy of Misty of Chincoteague from when I was a child. I read most everything Marguerite Henry wrote and have a photo somewhere of me standing next to Stormy, who was still alive when I visited the island.

Danzig 12-18-2013 01:23 PM

i was lucky enough to see stormy a couple times. hell, i even bought 'misty's twilight' however many years ago, about one of her grand or great granddaughters. i still have misty, stormy, sea star, king of the wind...and maybe brighty on my bookshelf at home.
love the story of sham and agba! hell, i wanted to get into adventures like that. it's why i'm jealous of my oldest sons job, he's working on barge boats up and down the mississippi! i wanted to be huck finn, or alec ramsey, or pippi longstocking (she lived with no adults, just her, her horse and a monkey-what a life!!), and part of me still does. :D

bigrun 12-18-2013 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by docicu3 (Post 957521)
Do you think kids read less or more these days because of the development of the internet Del? I'm voting for less because nothing is read cover to cover...

Books That Changed My Life....

1) Tale of Two Cities
2) World According to Garp...
3) Cats Cradle and all the KV similar works
4) Cried The Beloved Country
5) Animal Farm
6) Fear and Loathing in Las Vagas..Hunter S. Thompson-gonzo:D
7) Les Miserables
8) Even Cowgirls Get The Blues......Thumbs Up!!
9) One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest..great movie also
10) Deadzone

:tro:

bigrun 12-18-2013 03:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kasept (Post 957524)
Darkness at Noon (Koestler)
The Painted Bird (Kosinski)
The Jungle (Sinclair)
The Rise of David Levinsky (Cahan)
Things Fall Apart (Achebe)
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (Richler)
The Tin Drum (Grass)
All Quiet on the Western Front (Remarche)
To Kill a Mockingbird (Lee)
Invisible Man (Ellison)

Short Story: The Secret Sharer (Conrad)


Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch..Great book and loved the movie, watched it at least 5 times over the years..one of the best courtroom scenes ever...movie was Robert Duvall's film debut.

Danzig 12-18-2013 03:59 PM

yep, boo radley. fabulous book, fantastic movie. peck was awesome. i could relate to scout finch, i detested being a girl. just glad that thankfully i was born in a later era, and could wear pants. good lord, how can one ride a bike and make jumps if one is in a dress?


and the line from dill 'i'm little, but i'm old'. lol great, great book.

also saw 'all quiet on the western front' on steve's list. fantastic book.

bigrun 12-19-2013 12:37 PM

2nd book i ever read was I, the jury..someone tossed it on my bunk way back..couldn't put it down and later at a used bookstore bought up most all of his works...

Mickey Spillane: I, The Jury; Vengeance Is Mine: The Big Kill; My Gun Is Quick,Kiss Me, Deadly.

First book i remember reading was, of course,
The Catcher in the Rye .. J. D. Salinger

cal828 12-19-2013 06:56 PM

The Heart is a Lonely Hunter Carson McCullers
Ireland Frank Delaney
Galway Bay Mary Pat Kelly
A Thousand Splendid Suns Khaled Hosseini
Lonesome Dove Larry McMurtry
Aztec Gary Jennings
Pillars of the Earth Ken Follett
Centennial James A. Michenor
Lord of the Rings(trilogy) J.R.R. Tolkien
Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck

cal828 12-19-2013 07:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigrun (Post 957726)
2nd book i ever read was I, the jury..someone tossed it on my bunk way back..couldn't put it down and later at a used bookstore bought up most all of his works...

Mickey Spillane: I, The Jury; Vengeance Is Mine: The Big Kill; My Gun Is Quick,Kiss Me, Deadly.

First book i remember reading was, of course,
The Catcher in the Rye .. J. D. Salinger

You must have been an advanced reader. My first book was something about Dick and Jane and their dog Spot or maybe Go Dogs Go. I still like that one.:D

bigrun 12-19-2013 07:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957775)
The Heart is a Lonely Hunter Carson McCullers
Ireland Frank Delaney
Galway Bay Mary Pat Kelly
A Thousand Splendid Suns Khaled Hosseini
Lonesome Dove Larry McMurtry
Aztec Gary Jennings
Pillars of the Earth Ken Follett
Centennial James A. Michenor
Lord of the Rings(trilogy) J.R.R. Tolkien
Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck

Loved the tv mini series Lonesome Dove and the Return..great cast..:tro:
'You wanna poke'..:)

bigrun 12-19-2013 07:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957776)
You must have been an advanced reader. My first book was something about Dick and Jane and their dog Spot or maybe Go Dogs Go. I still like that one.:D

:D I meant real books...and most were used...didn't buy new books till after i read The Day of the Jackal then would check the best seller list and grab the ones by the best writers...

cal828 12-19-2013 08:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigrun (Post 957777)
Loved the tv mini series Lonesome Dove and the Return..great cast..:tro:
'You wanna poke'..:)

The line I liked the best in Lonesome Dove was by Robert Urich's character. I think the character's name was Jake. After Jake falls in with the desperados and then gets caught by his old friends the Texas Rangers and they decide to hang him, he says something like "if you've got to be hung, it nice to be hung by your friends."

hi_im_god 12-19-2013 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957779)
The line I liked the best in Lonesome Dove was by Robert Urich's character. I think the character's name was Jake. After Jake falls in with the desperados and then gets caught by his old friends the Texas Rangers and they decide to hang him, he says something like "if you've got to be hung, it nice to be hung by your friends."

i liked the line when call told august "you'd argue with a stump".

i remind myself of that line whenever i'm tempted to engage with dell or joey on politics.

bigrun 12-19-2013 08:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957779)
The line I liked the best in Lonesome Dove was by Robert Urich's character. I think the character's name was Jake. After Jake falls in with the desperados and then gets caught by his old friends the Texas Rangers and they decide to hang him, he says something like "if you've got to be hung, it nice to be hung by your friends."

Yeah, lot's good lines in the show...Ulrich died young, 55...good actor in films and tv shows...

cal828 12-19-2013 08:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigrun (Post 957777)
Loved the tv mini series Lonesome Dove and the Return..great cast..:tro:
'You wanna poke'..:)

The tv miniseries seems to have gone away. Pity. I liked a lot of them. Centennial was a miniseries and Rich Man Poor Man and Shogun and Roots. I used to look forward to all those.

On second thought, maybe they're still around, just gone to HBO, which I don't have.

cal828 12-19-2013 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hi_im_god (Post 957781)
i liked the line when call told august "you'd argue with a stump".

i remind myself of that line whenever i'm tempted to engage with dell or joey on politics.

:tro: Very wise!

Danzig 12-19-2013 08:56 PM

lonesome dove is a fabulous book, read it my senior year of high school. just fantastic.
also saw 'pillars of the earth' mentioned above. another i have on my shelf, have read it at least five times. just wonderful. i have the sequel, which is ok, but doesn't come close to the magic of pillars. some books are just perfect, and pillars is one of those.

i've been asked by many people if there was only one book i could have for the rest of my life, what would it be.

i'd have to say 'the pickwick papers' by charles dickens. if you haven't taken the time, read it. it's wonderful. it follows the adventures of four members of the pickwick club, people they meet on the way, stories entertwined throughout, told by various characters they encounter. it's got a bit of everything, mystery, romance, twist and turns, and lots of humor. i just love his work.

ok, honestly, i couldn't live with just one book. i go into the library tony and i built a couple years ago, and just look at all my books-my most prized possessions. i'm such a nerd.

bigrun 12-19-2013 09:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957783)
The tv miniseries seems to have gone away. Pity. I liked a lot of them. Centennial was a miniseries and Rich Man Poor Man and Shogun and Roots. I used to look forward to all those.

On second thought, maybe they're still around, just gone to HBO, which I don't have.

They may be on netflix, i'll have to check...year ago or so can't remember if it was USA or TnT, ran lonesome dove...i was upset when they hung Ulrich.:)

cal828 12-19-2013 09:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danzig (Post 957787)
lonesome dove is a fabulous book, read it my senior year of high school. just fantastic.
also saw 'pillars of the earth' mentioned above. another i have on my shelf, have read it at least five times. just wonderful. i have the sequel, which is ok, but doesn't come close to the magic of pillars. some books are just perfect, and pillars is one of those.

i've been asked by many people if there was only one book i could have for the rest of my life, what would it be.

i'd have to say 'the pickwick papers' by charles dickens. if you haven't taken the time, read it. it's wonderful. it follows the adventures of four members of the pickwick club, people they meet on the way, stories entertwined throughout, told by various characters they encounter. it's got a bit of everything, mystery, romance, twist and turns, and lots of humor. i just love his work.

ok, honestly, i couldn't live with just one book. i go into the library tony and i built a couple years ago, and just look at all my books-my most prized possessions. i'm such a nerd.

I've read four novels by Ken Follett. I loved "Pillars" also. Also enjoyed "Whiteout," "Hornet Flight," and "Night Over Water." Whenever, I am at the library and I can't find anything else, I go back to the Follett section and get one of his books. Still, several back there I haven't read.

cal828 12-19-2013 10:40 PM

Can't believe nobody on the horsey board mentioned Seabiscuit or Laura Hillenbrand's other book Unbroken(definitely not about horses, but none the less very good).

Danzig 12-20-2013 07:17 AM

seabiscuit is good, but not sure it'd make a top ten...unless it was top ten horse books.

GenuineRisk 12-20-2013 09:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957783)
The tv miniseries seems to have gone away. Pity. I liked a lot of them. Centennial was a miniseries and Rich Man Poor Man and Shogun and Roots. I used to look forward to all those.

On second thought, maybe they're still around, just gone to HBO, which I don't have.

I own a DVD copy of Centennial- my uncle and aunt gave it to me. Robert Conrad's atrocious French accent is one for the ages. And all the Indians look Italian. Oh, 1970's television. You truly will never come again.

My mom didn't let me stay up to watch any of the big miniseries from the 1970s/early 1980s, so I haven't seen them. Even Roots. :(

It is a television art form that seems to have faded- two-night things are now considered miniseries. And a full season of television can be 12 episodes, which was as long as Centennial was!

bigrun 12-20-2013 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GenuineRisk (Post 957821)
I own a DVD copy of Centennial- my uncle and aunt gave it to me. Robert Conrad's atrocious French accent is one for the ages. And all the Indians look Italian. Oh, 1970's television. You truly will never come again.

My mom didn't let me stay up to watch any of the big miniseries from the 1970s/early 1980s, so I haven't seen them. Even Roots. :(

It is a television art form that seems to have faded- two-night things are now considered miniseries. And a full season of television can be 12 episodes, which was as long as Centennial was!

Never missed an episode of 24...it's baaaaaaaaaaaaaaack:tro:

It's Official: '24' Returning to Fox as Event Series

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/liv...s-event-521653

bigrun 12-20-2013 12:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cal828 (Post 957795)
Can't believe nobody on the horsey board mentioned Seabiscuit or Laura Hillenbrand's other book Unbroken(definitely not about horses, but none the less very good).

How bout the horsey movie Let it Ride:tro:..watched that one couple times..was it a book?

hi_im_god 12-20-2013 01:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigrun (Post 957851)
How bout the horsey movie Let it Ride:tro:..watched that one couple times..was it a book?

it was a screenplay by nancy dowd who also wrote slap shot.

that's one hell of a comedy exacta.


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