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USE THIS AS A PLACE TO COMMENT YOUR FAVORITE BOOKS ….GO
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Anonymous 2d

House of leaves or Mistborn

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Anonymous 2d

Watership Down, The Past is Red, Invisible life of Addie LaRue, Anxious People

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Anonymous 2d

Return of the King, Ranger’s Apprentice, or The Way of Kings

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Anonymous 2d

Fiction: Flowers for Algernon Dubliners by James Joyce The Castle by Franz Kafka The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides Cat’s Cradle by Vonnegut Collected Fictions by Borges

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Anonymous 1d

Priory of the Orange Tree by Samantha Shannon

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Anonymous 1d

Golden Son or Words of Radiance

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Anonymous 2d

The Great Gatsby and 1984

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Anonymous 2d

The Lies of Locke Lamora, the licanius trilogy, elantris

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Anonymous 2d

Persuasion by Jane Austen

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Anonymous 2d

Non-fiction: A World Lit Only by Fire Anything by Oliver Sacks The Hero with a Thousand Faces by Campbell Essays by Montaigne Meditations by Marcus Aurelius Consider the Lobster by David Foster Wallace Human All Too Human by Nietzsche

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Anonymous 7h

BUTCHER AND BLACK BIRD

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Anonymous replying to -> #4 2d

Watership Down is a great, amazingly written book.

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Anonymous replying to -> #1 2d

When I first read The Great Gatsby I had no idea wtf that book was about or if anything really happened. Re-read it, slowly, on my own again a year later and was blown away by all of the symbolism in the story and how much it relates to the typical American’s life by describing what the American dream really looks like and how we go back in our own pasts to attain it

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Anonymous replying to -> #6 2d

Rangers apprentice brings me back! I used to love those, maybe I can still find them around somewhere

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Anonymous replying to -> #7 2d

It’s why I started archery! The depictions of fighting and skills are actually really pretty close to real life, I LIVED off them until I got actual instruction. Now I shoot barebow and recurve, speed shooting and competitive, and learned a lot of Ranger-y skills as my entire archery club had read the books. Genuinely life changing book for me lol

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Anonymous replying to -> #8 2d

I’m reading this this summer, in about a month or so! I got a nice free copy from my local library and can’t wait to start this.

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Anonymous replying to -> #8 2d

Sir Walter Elliot, of Kellynch-hall, in Somersetshire, was a man who, for his own amusement, never took up any book but the Baronetage; there he found occupation for an idle hour, and consolation in a distressed one…

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Anonymous replying to -> #10 21h

Ooooooo good ones

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