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Author Topic: What is the best book you have ever read?  (Read 8031 times)
AndrewT
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« Reply #60 on: February 20, 2007, 02:51:29 PM »

No Harold Robbins fans?

It's just pornographic muzak, really.
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marcro
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« Reply #61 on: February 20, 2007, 02:58:09 PM »

No Harold Robbins fans?

It's just pornographic muzak, really.

aha - I knew that there would be a reader lurking somewhere, lol.
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booder
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« Reply #62 on: February 20, 2007, 03:56:13 PM »

So he's Welsh then!

Any sharper and you'd cut yourself!

There are decent people from Wales - as well as Bertrand Russell, there's Scott Quinnell, Billy Boston, Jim Sullivan, Ian Rush, and Blonde's own Dewi!

Some Welshmen though...




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« Reply #63 on: February 20, 2007, 04:37:23 PM »

Kama Sutra

Did you read it thoroughly or just give it a quick flick?


lmfao
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charmaine
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« Reply #64 on: February 20, 2007, 05:06:57 PM »

Just coming to the end of Stepen King's  , Cell

Excellent reading one that i dont want to put down , reminds me alot of the  stand Huh?

Must admit worrying using the mobile phone now lol
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« Reply #65 on: February 20, 2007, 07:51:40 PM »

Good evening,

I thought I'd dip my toe in with this thread: some good reads I've had :-

The kingdom of the wicked - Anthony Burgess
Tommy - Richard Holmes
The soul of a new machine - Tracey Kidder
Enemy coast ahead - Guy Gibson
LIbra - Don DeLillo
All the Presidents' men - Woodward and Bernstein
Watch my back - Geoff Thompson
Money - Martin Amis
One flew over the cuckoo's nest - Ken Kesey
Catch-22 - Joseph Heller
Godel, Escher, Bach - Douglas Hofstadter
Collected Poems - Philip Larkin
Citizens - Simon Schama
Bell's eye - Steve Bell
Lempriere's dictionary - Lawrence Norfolk
Red dragon - Thomas Harris

I steer clear of Waugh, McEwan, Greene and Dostoyevsky, miserabilist sods to a man.

(whew, that wasn't so daunting after all...)


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RED-DOG
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« Reply #66 on: February 20, 2007, 07:58:17 PM »

Welcome Yellow

Regards

Red.
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« Reply #67 on: February 20, 2007, 08:23:04 PM »

Fermat's Last Theorem - was that the Pythagoras Puzzle?
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« Reply #68 on: February 20, 2007, 08:42:37 PM »

Some of my favourite's all the usuals im afraid


Lord of the rings - tolkien (take it that no longer cool to like the greatest piece of fiction any longer)
1984 -  orwell
Wasp Factory & Espadair street - Iain Banks (not Iain M Banks he's a knob)
To kill a mockingbird - harper lee (loved it from school)
Hitch hikers guide to the galaxy -  Douglas Adams
Fear and loathing - hunter s thompson
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Claw75
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« Reply #69 on: February 20, 2007, 08:45:09 PM »

One (or three) that's not been mentioned yet that I really enjoyed were the 'His Dark Materials' trilogy by Philip Pullman
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kinboshi
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« Reply #70 on: February 20, 2007, 08:46:50 PM »

Fermat's Last Theorem - was that the Pythagoras Puzzle?

xn + yn = zn
has no integer solutions for x, y and z when n > 2

So I guess it's could be known as that.
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Jon MW
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« Reply #71 on: February 20, 2007, 08:48:28 PM »

Fermat's Last Theorem - was that the Pythagoras Puzzle?

No it was Fermat's Cheesy

 scared


Sorry, I mean yes, sort of


Edit:  What Kinboshi said
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« Reply #72 on: February 20, 2007, 08:55:55 PM »

Fermat's Last Theorem - was that the Pythagoras Puzzle?

xn + yn = zn
has no integer solutions for x, y and z when n > 2

So I guess it's could be known as that.

Cheers Kin,

Think I've read this or seen a film on it maybe. I remember it being really interesting.
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BrumBilly
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« Reply #73 on: February 20, 2007, 09:17:45 PM »


Collected Poems - Philip Larkin


I steer clear of Waugh, McEwan, Greene and Dostoyevsky, miserabilist sods to a man.

(whew, that wasn't so daunting after all...)


Larkin wasn't exactly a glass half-full type character but he's one of my fav's too.

On my list would be: Colin Wilson's 'A Criminal History of Mankind'

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redimp
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« Reply #74 on: February 21, 2007, 12:41:13 AM »

Good evening,

I thought I'd dip my toe in with this thread: some good reads I've had :-

The kingdom of the wicked - Anthony Burgess
Tommy - Richard Holmes
The soul of a new machine - Tracey Kidder
Enemy coast ahead - Guy Gibson
LIbra - Don DeLillo
All the Presidents' men - Woodward and Bernstein
Watch my back - Geoff Thompson
Money - Martin Amis
One flew over the cuckoo's nest - Ken Kesey
Catch-22 - Joseph Heller
Godel, Escher, Bach - Douglas Hofstadter
Collected Poems - Philip Larkin
Citizens - Simon Schama
Bell's eye - Steve Bell
Lempriere's dictionary - Lawrence Norfolk
Red dragon - Thomas Harris

I steer clear of Waugh, McEwan, Greene and Dostoyevsky, miserabilist sods to a man.

(whew, that wasn't so daunting after all...)




Nice first post

 
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