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Book Readers

Butterfly wings

1st Level Red Feather
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Sep 28, 2005
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What do you like to read when it's time for you to sit down with a book in your hand?

I like reading horror books (About vampires haunted places etc)

I read more fiction then non-fiction.
 
i am a bookworm. i will read anything as long as it is well written. i have read the classics, english literature, english history in particular tudor england, the american civil war , biographies, and dont laugh but for relaxation and when i want to read something and not concentrate but just to relieve stress, i read my collection of nancy drew mysteries. lol and i will re read peter pan, alice in wonderland, the wizard of oz (which is nothing like the movie).

and what makes a true reader i believe is reading a book several times, i find that its like visiting an old friend and i usually will find something when re reading the book that i somehow missed the first time around.

and of course lately i enjoy reading the various stories on this forum, as well as the bdsm library.

isabeau
 
I read mostly fantasy but also some sci-fi (I need to read more of that) and a bit of horror, too, although in that last genre the only authors I have read are Stephen King (obviously) and Richard Laymon.

I love reading. I start to feel empty if I don't get some new books every couple of weeks.
 
I read all kinds of books, but the chief categories that I like are science fiction, history, baseball, mystery, and bridge.
 
I mostly read horror. Horror novels, horror short stories and anthologies, etc. Whether it be blood and gore, supernatural, monsters, whatever. But I'm also an Agatha Christie addict, and I love humor, true crime, and true mystery too.

Some of my favorite authors are Agatha Christie (of course), Dean Koontz, John Saul, Stephen King, Ramsey Cambell, Peter Straub, Edgar Allen Poe, Poppy Z. Brite, Ray Bradbury, Erma Bombeck and Jeff Foxworthy to name a few...lol

Mimi 😉
 
I read a wide variety of stuff, but I love mystery/thriller/suspense fiction, and also crime fiction.

Ali32

PS Butterfly wings - Have you read 'The Historian'?
 
Well when i acually do read. I will read mostly horror and anything abaout cars! Mimi you are a goober. Jeff foxworthy is a redneck comic.
 
I love romance and murder mysteries..i love Sue Grafton, Janet Evanovich, Carly Phillips and Rachel Gibson, but I will read almost anything that has to do with romance or murder mysteries
 
Science fiction.action books,military-fiction and non-fiction
 
😛 😛 😛 @ Dweebis!!

I KNOW that you dink, and it's one of the reasons why his books are hilarious!

Don't make me spank your siggie. :devil2:
 
Right now i'm just starting to read THE RESORT by Bentley Little

And next book i might start to read is Vampire kisses by Ellen Schreiber
(It's a teenager book) but it seems to be a good one from what i have heard about it.
 
Butterfly wings said:
No i haven't ali i'm sorry. I have heard of it though.

What is the book about?

It's about dracula...quite an unsual book but very good.
 
ali32 said:
It's about dracula...quite an unsual book but very good.

I read about it on Barnes & Noble website. It sounds like a very good read. I think i'm going to have to pick it up sometime.

What did you think of it ali? what would you rate it?
 
Mimi Thank you for the new signatures. I really like them. I am just waiting for the Blue collar Comedy tour to come around here.
 
I really want to read Stephen King's new book Cell. It's about zombies so you can't go wrong there.






The cell phone users in Stephen King's tale of horror are plagued by problems much bigger than poor reception, costly roaming charges, or dropped calls: Some unspeakably malevolent force has turned them into raging, bloodthirsty zombies!

It's a sunny afternoon in Boston, and as far as Clayton Riddell is concerned, life couldn't be any better. The Maine-based artist has just inked a lucrative contract for his first graphic novel. But in an instant, his life -- and human civilization -- is turned upside down by an event known as the Pulse, a brain-zapping burst of energy that turns the millions of people with cell phones pressed against the sides of their heads into mindless killing machines. Those lucky enough not to be using a cell phone at the time are spared from the gruesome transformation but must somehow survive the nightmarish aftereffects: cars crashing, planes falling from the sky, hungry gangs of zombies, etc.

It's fitting that King dedicates Cell to Richard Matheson (author of 1954's mutant masterwork I Am Legend) and George Romero (director of the 1968 cult classic Night of the Living Dead) -- two pioneering giants in the "zombie" genre. This post-apocalyptic exploration of the dark side of humanity ("we came to rule the earth because we have always been the craziest, most murderous [expletive]s in the jungle") is chock-full of King's refreshingly sardonic commentary and wit. His newest, a cautionary tale of sorts, brings disturbing new meaning to the popular catchphrase "Can you hear me now?" Paul Goat Allen
 
Butterfly wings said:
I read about it on Barnes & Noble website. It sounds like a very good read. I think i'm going to have to pick it up sometime.

What did you think of it ali? what would you rate it?

I would give it 4 stars out of 5 🙂
 
Other than two ongoing fantasy series, I read almost completely non-fiction, especially regarding 20th century history, and current international relations. I also routinely read 2 or 3 books simultaneously.

Just finished:

The Fate of Africa-From the Hopes of Freedom, to the Heart of Despair: A History of 50 Years of Independence-Martin Meredith
Taliban: Militant Islam, Oil and Fundamentalism in Central Asia-Ahmed Rashid

Currently reading:

Scars of War, Wounds of Peace:The Israeli-Arab Tragedy-Shlomo Ben-Ami
The Anatomy of Fascism-Robert Paxton
 
Like Strider, I also read several books at once, anywhere from two to half a dozen. I guess I'm a voracious reader with a short attention span, probably instilled in me by too much television in my formative years. (Even when I read, the program has to change every half hour or so!) Or maybe it's just my instinctive way of coping with the oft-cited dillemma of "so many books, so little time."

Right now, I'm reading War and Peace in a new translation, a biography of Shakespeare by Michael Wood, Ovid's Metamorphoses, and a stack of classic Westerns by the likes of Max Brand, Will Henry and Zane Grey.

Like Isabeau, I re-read my favorites every ten years or so, some every year.
I have recently revisited The Lord of the Rings, Titus Groan/Gormenghast, The Illustrated Man, and The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress.

My favorite authors are Robertson Davies, Evelyn Waugh, Ray Bradbury, P.G. Wodehouse, Rex Stout, Mark Twain, G.K. Chesterton, John D. MacDonald, Charles Dickens, William Shakespeare, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Robert A. Heinlein, C.S. Lewis, Patrick O'Brian and George Macdonald Fraser. (I could post at length on each of these, but I'll restrain myself.)
 
Between school and a full-time job, I have precious little time anymore for full novels. This fact is apparently lost on my family, as I recieved a fantasy book and a gift certificate to Barnes & Noble for Christmas. I spent the certificate on two from George MacDonald Fraser's 'Flashman' series(like Ignatz, a big fan here). Dunno when I'll have a chance to actually read them. Possible this Summer. I've yet to be let down by his work. Ditto for John D. MacDonald's 'Travis McGee' series. Bradbury is sheer literary genius, too.

I still read constantly, it's just that now it's textbooks, with newspapers, magazines, websites, message boards, and currently a subscriber to Harper's Magazine.

Been awhile since I took on any Stephen King, but I too am excited about this new one. Like King, I hate the confounded things (he calls them 'digital leashes').
 
I mainly read murder mysteries and suspense thrillers. But, I also do some sci-fi, historical stuff and anything on Native Americans. I just finished re-reading one from way back when....Hanta Yo by Ruth Beebie Hill, about the Lakotah (Sioux) nation back when the white men first came along.

I'm not sure what is next....though I'm considering getting into the collection of Native American myths and legends that I have. I'll decide later on, I guess.

Ann
 
Ann ever hear the book entitled "i heard the owl call my name'" ?
its about native americans i think... and contains the myth about when you hear the owl calling your name you will die soon

isabeau
 
I've heard of the book, but not read it. There are other similar legends as well. Things vary from nation to nation depending on where they are and what's around them. But, there are lots of parallels.

Ann
 
I love non fiction....love stories...some of my favorite authors are Nicholas Sparks...Judy Blume and Danielle Steel, I'm mostly a summer reader while sitting on the beach. :Kiss1:
 
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