m reading JULIUS Ceaser
got done with MACBETH
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m reading JULIUS Ceaser
got done with MACBETH
what did u think of Macbeth? :shock: ....Quote:
Originally Posted by Wibha
for me, it was scary... :shaking: ...
it was ok and it didn't scare me as it was for my ENGLISH CLASS :( but DAMN boringgggggggggggggggggggggggg......
julius is much better....
julius is better for sure...but never studied that play in school...Quote:
Originally Posted by Wibha
i studied MacBeth :shaking:...then, i did not like it, especially seeing the movie version :oops: ...too scary!
now i'm over it :P :lol: ...
:omg: Macbeth ... v v scary... :frightened: i watchd the movie too... :cry:Quote:
Originally Posted by Sinthiya
Finished reading: The history of life - Nicole Krauss
Reading: Until I find You - John Irving :)
Finished reading: Until I find You. Worth reading
Reading: My name is red - Orhan Pamuk :)
Finished reading : Henry IV - Damn borrrrrriiiinnnnnggggg
"Vendor of Sweets" - R.K.Narayan
TOO GOOD...........He's written what happens in the true world :thumbsup:
Finished reading: The color of red - Orhan Pamuk
Reading: Shalimar the clown - Salman Rushdie
"Naughtiest girl in School" By Enid Blyton
damn goooooooooodddddddd :redjump:
Finished reading: Shalimar the clown- Salman Rushdie
My Best Friend's Girl by Dorothy Koomson
After going separate ways, two friends would reunite temporarily only when one of them is dying and wants the other to take care of her child who was conceived through a one night stand with the latter's fiance.
Charlaine Harris' Stookie Stackhouse vampire series, where the shapeshifters, warewolves, vampires and other mythical beings come to alive
Sidney Sheldon's Are you afraid of the dark? :clap:
Well hopefully this is not a biased recommendation but lately I have been reading a slew of Douglas Coupland novels...I have a class that is based on his works...yet this is the very first class where I am sailing through the readings...because it's so well written and manages to each and everytime cause me to have that delightful recognition of quirky cultural references and phenoms...anyways so far my favourite has been "Generation X", "All Families are Psychotic" and "Hey Nostradamus!"
I'm currently reading Graham Greene's "Heart of the Matter." I used to like him a lot when I was younger, but I've hardly read anything by him since I finished college. I started this many months back, but put it down for some reason. I'm quite enjoying it now that I've restarted reading it.
i read da play "She stoops to Conquer"
a nice comedy
Finished "Heart of the matter"
Now about to start reading "The Shadow of the Wind" by Carlos Ruiz Zafón. I had got half-way through it earlier in Norwegian, but I'm starting from the beginning with an English translation.
annaQuote:
Originally Posted by podalangai
jeg leste den på norsk i fjor tror meg :)
very good book :)
Finished "The Shadow of the Wind". The English translation is much better than the Norwegian one. :)
Coming up next: "The Cloven Viscount" by Italo Calvino, to be followed by the other books in the trilogy.
Role of Thunder, Hear My Cry....!
I'm actually crying my eyes out i just finished reading the end of the book :cry2:
To Kill a Mockingbird! ITS AN AMAZING BOOK! :shock:
Ahh..yes! I remember being Deeply effected by the book days after I finished it in 8th Grade. :) It is! :thumbsup:
Bitten and Smitten by Richard Owen
Reading "A prayer for Owen Meany" by John Irving.
So far, good :)
Momo, by Michael Ende :)
Just finished:
"In the blood" by Don Donaldson
"The Undomestic Goddess" by Sophie Kinsella
Started reading "The Christmas Train" by David Baldacci
"Tiger Claw" - Shauna Singh Baldwin
"The Brick Lane"- Monica Ali
"Guns, Germs and Steel" - Jared Diamond
Just finished "The Christmas Train" by David Baldacci and "Next" by Michael Crichton.
how psychic are you :D
Happaadiyo.....at last finished reading :)Quote:
Originally Posted by crazy
A very very very very .....touchy book :(
John Irving :notworthy:
All You Need Is Love and Some Faith :yes:
Just finished the series by Robin Sharma of "The Monk Who sold his Ferrari " fame. All the books are interesting and quite practical and relevant to our conditions but the best is "Who will cry when you die?"
have taken up reading novels again
Have read a humourous if not randy book about A britisher's stint in Paris: The title quite outrageously reads "The Year in Merde" (Merde = excrement) by Stephen Clarke
As always I'm a avid reader of Indian authors of english have a whopper of a book to delightedly breeze through: "Sacred Games" by Vikram Chandra....have high expectations for this book
on the list of hopeful reads:
the new BADAMI book: Can You Hear the Nightbird Call?
and maybe this new buzz around Afghani author, Khaled Hosseini will be checked out: kite runner, a thousand splendid suns.
...just started reading The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho...and i'm so sorry that i had not read this book long back...
simply astounding to read - simple yet powerful words...almost done...:)
Am actually a bit prejudiced against this breed, but I hear this guy is pretty good. Do let us know how it goes.Quote:
Originally Posted by Querida
Can anyone who has read God of Small Things assist me in understanding that book?
I have become a fan of Amy Tan, by the way, having read her The Kitchen God's Wife.
My latest read, Confessions of an Old Boy-The Dato' Hamid Adventures by Kam Raslan. Simply hilarious.
Read that book ...last summer :?Quote:
Originally Posted by Madh@va
To be honest, I didnt get that very last part of that novel :oops:
Neither did a group of us.Quote:
Originally Posted by crazy
Of the lot, I made the most progress-read upto 3/4 of the book (while following the story). One dedicated member read it twice only to have herself confused even further. :roll:
maybe i should re-read it :) or ask the one who recommended this novel :?
I got back my book from a colleague and decided to visit the remaining 1/4 of the book. Miracle of miracles, I got what she wanted to say. Sadly, her style of writing and prose (purple prose??) was just too much to handle in the beginning. As an afterthought, perhaps it was her style that got her the Booker prize afterall. :) I guess one must let her style grow on you at its own pace. It is definitely not one of those books which could be read fast. If you do, then the story will be lost.Quote:
Originally Posted by crazy
So what do I think of God of Small Things now: Good!
AR akka: I read too fast, I guess.... :oops:
Finished reading : The children of men by P.D. James