Donate SIGN UP

Books

Avatar Image
naomi24 | 17:37 Fri 11th Jul 2008 | Religion & Spirituality
20 Answers
I've been given book tokens to the value of �50. Any recommendations on how I should spend them would be gratefully received.

(I've got Richard Dawkins God Delusion, bibles in several 'flavours', and the koran).

Thank you.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 20rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
Do you want any reading for fun in there or are you only going for the deep and meaningfuls? (I have suggestions for the former but not the latter).
-- answer removed --
Catcher In The Rye. Then tell me what hidden meaning you found. Also its a short read so I expect your synopsis by sunday evening at the latest. Now get going, chop chop. Times a wasting.
Donate them to your local primary school.
Or exchange them in the off license.
Question Author
Wiz. Thanks.

China, reading for fun of course. Something like the God Delusion would fit the bill very well. :o)

flobadob, read it. Not my style.

Theland, very funny.
For diversity in the same kind of theme of religious perspectives two are a must.

Kahlil Gibran's "The Prophet" which is probably best described as a Humanist bible though it is much more.

Richard Bach's "Illusions" is in a genre of its own. It is both profound and entertaining.
Butcher Boy - Patrick McCabe
Sophies World - Can't remember author
The Lovely Bones - Sebold
What a Carve Up - Jonathan Coe
An Instance of the Fingerpost - Iain Pears
One Fine Day in the Middle of the Night - Christopher Brookmyre (it's just very funny)
Frankenstein - Mary Shelley
The Shakespeare Secret - J.L. Carrell
The Interpretation of Murder - Jed Rubenfeld
Foucault's Pendulam - Umberto Echo
Metamorphasis - Kafka
Trial - Kafka
Whit - Ian Banks
The Wasp Factory - Ian Banks
Waiting for Godot - Samuel Becket
We Need to Talk about Kevin - Lionel Shiver
Perfume - Patrick Suskind (terrible film, good book)
The Alchemist - Paulo Coelho
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
The Handmaids Tale - Can't remember author
Lord of the Flys - William Golding
Animal Farm - George Orwell
Memoires of a Geisha - Can't remember author

There's a few from my iRead thingy on FB that I really enjoyed but I'm sure you've read some of them. (The ones with gory titles are not actually gory! Well actually Butcher Boy is a tiny bit in places but it's not the primary motivation).




Oh... And I forgot Beloved.
Question Author
Thanks everyone.

China, I have read several of those, but thank you. ('Geisha' has been sitting on my shelf for ages waiting to be read!).

Have you read 'The Shadow of the Wind'? By a Spanish man - can't recall his name at the moment. Also The Kite Runner, Brick Lane, and The Bookseller of Kabul. All very good.

....... but I digress.

Chakka recommended a book a few months ago which I intended to pick up to keep me entertained on a few long flights I was taking. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to get it, so if you're around Chakka, and you can tell me again what it was, I'd be grateful. I'm not sure - it might have been another Richard Dawkins book.
the giant fun book of colouring in?
If you are after a good read but with some spiritual meaning may I suggest "FLUKE" by James Herbert.

To the best of my knowledge it is the ONLY book his has penned which is not a horror novel.

It is truly fantastic, all about reincarnation.

Is it a man who was once a dog or a dog who was once a man???

It is funny, sad, romantic, and utterly readworthy.

And with �50 you will have about �45 left to enjoy others!!!
Shadow of the Wind was by Carlos Ruiz Zafon and it is an excellent book.
I liked Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Question Author
Abdul, oh, I loved Fluke. Brilliant book.

Bensmum, I haven't heard of Love in the Time of Cholera, but I'll check it out. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it.

Now away from spiritual books........

If you like good Edwardian novels, written in beautiful English and again utterly un-put-a-downable, may I suggest "The Complete Richard Hannay" by John Buchan.

You may have seen or read The 39 Steps, but this book follows Hannay in his many post-Empire antics across the world in pursuit of British global interest.

The character building is perhaps only bettered by Conan-Doyle or Fleming before and after Buchan's time.
Anything written by Irvine Welsh
The Painted House by John Grisham - the last great American novel. Not his usual lawyer thingy, this is a truly memorable read. Beautiful book.
The Dead Heart by Douglas Kennedy - actually anything by him
The Hiram Key by (working from memory here) Knight and Lomax?
The Lost Years Of Jesus by Elizabeth Prophet - controversial
The Confessions of Aleister Crowley -autobiography - can be heavy though.

Yaay - typing on a German keyboard and finished ok- nothing is where it should be...
Question Author
Thanks everyone - and well done, Whicker!
ooooh - just thought of this. A great read by a man with clearly too much time on his hands.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Round-Ireland-Fridge-T ony-Hawks/dp/0091867770

Tony Hawks (no, not the skateboarder), who for a bet hitchhiked around Ireland pulling a small fridge with him, for a bet.
i remember him doing this, it was covered by a national radio show here every day. His writings are a great document of Irish life/

1 to 20 of 20rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Books

Answer Question >>