To Kill A Mockingbird
2006-07-26 16:39:43
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answer #1
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answered by ♪ ♫ ☮ NYbron ☮ ♪ ♫ 6
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Grapes Of Wrath, by Steinbeck, followed closely by Heller's Catch-22, and For Whom The Bell Tolls, by Hemingway.
2006-07-26 16:39:36
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answer #2
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answered by taishar68 2
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that is a toss up between Scarlet Letter and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The Scarlet Letter is a Romance (study: no longer a romantic novel)is determined throughout our particularly darkish and paradoxical puritanical beginnings in this us of a, and explores challenge concerns of pedantic religiosity, love, shame, and redemption, in severe diction which at cases sounds very nearly Shakespearean. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is written in extra conversational language, it is, in Southern dialect, and it examines what replaced into possibly our us of a's maximum regrettable organization: slavery. what's thrilling is this exam is seen by the attitude of a small boy who, for the added ideal area of the e book, would not even understand purely how evil slavery, because it is been round him all his existence.
2016-10-15 06:16:01
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach
2006-07-26 16:58:29
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answer #4
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answered by booklover 1
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Harper Lee - To Kill A Mockingbird.
The ONLY American novel worth reading and Ms. Lee`s ONLY published book
2006-07-26 16:42:26
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck
2006-07-26 16:39:25
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answer #6
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answered by steveed 3
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It's a tie "The Grapes of Wrath" Steinbeck; and "The Great Gatsby" Fitzgerald: Both defined generations.
2006-07-26 17:29:58
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answer #7
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answered by Ereshkigal 3
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According to a recent New York Times article it's Beloved by Toni Morrison and I have difficulty disagreeing with that.
2006-07-26 16:41:47
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answer #8
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answered by Allison 3
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The Good Earth by Pearl Buck.
2006-07-26 20:53:16
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answer #9
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answered by phoenixheat 6
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I love Harper Lee, Kerouac, and Steinbeck, however....
I have to say Gone With the Wind. It has everything in it. Action, romance, history, good people, bad people, dialects, humor....
This book took Mitchell ten years to research.
And it's a good yarn, to boot.
2006-07-26 17:32:27
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answer #10
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answered by boogiewunker 3
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