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i've been reading a lot durring the summer and i just wanted to know if you guys had any good books to suggest? I'd suggest Meg Cabot books. She's a really good author.

2006-08-28 19:18:29 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Other - Entertainment

8 answers

There are a lot of good ones out there. The best one I've found was King Fortis the Brave by LaMontagne and Snyder. It's about a pair of twins that are pulled into a magical land where they find themselves caught in the middle of a battle for control of the realm. The boy twin, Rodney, is mistaken for King Fortis, an Arthur-like figure that is to someday return in the time of the land's greatest need. It's really a great book full of humor and adventure. I recommend it to my students all the time and have had students that really hate to read come back and tell me how much they love it.

2006-08-31 01:25:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Nevada Barr is a great mystery writer. A friend of mine has read all of her books. She loaned me the one that was set in Yosemite National Park, "High Country", where I grew up. It was an edge of your seat, don't want to put the book down experience. Of course I could picture everything she was writing about because I'd been all over the park. But, I think the experience would still be almost a gripping even if I wasn't familiar with the location. You can probably get them at your local library or you can go to Alibris on line, directly to her page of books, at: www.alibris.com/search/search.cfm. Let me know if you read any of them and how you like them at marti1owl@yahoo.com

2006-08-29 02:41:57 · answer #2 · answered by Marti1owl 3 · 0 0

The Dark Silent by *insert Author here*

It's based on some findings of a few scientists at the University of Washington, and is REALLY good!

Non-Stop Action from the first page! *Not kidding*

Large info-dump at the end, but that's ok! ^-^ :D

Also, if you like Jurrassic Park *Jurassic?* then read the book Raptor Red, it's about the migration of a Raptor and her sister. Or something like that, it goes into their minds, and what not. Really good :D

2006-08-29 02:23:15 · answer #3 · answered by himinaru 2 · 0 0

Johnathan livingstone the sea gull by Sir Richard Bach

Story of my experiments with truth - M K Gandhi

Seizure - Robin Cook

Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown

2006-08-29 02:24:47 · answer #4 · answered by Vishy 2 · 0 0

Sophies World. Jostein Gaarder]

It's tempting to get all warm and gloopy over this well-intentioned response by a Norwegian writer and former philosophy teacher to the New Age "pornography" he fears may replace the Western philosophical canon. Sophie's World has rapidly become an international literary phenom. A genre-crossing European best-seller (file under fiction, philosophy, and young adulthood) with nearly a million copies sold to date, Jostein Gaarder's novel, at 400 pages, is a concise, clearly written corrective to philosophic obscurantism.

The foil for Gaarder's pedagogic fantasy is Sophie Amundsen, a spunky 14-year-old whose philosophic journey begins when a pair of timeless ontological posers--"Who are you?" and "Where does the world come from?"

--appear mysteriously in her mailbox. A follow-up envelope containing typewritten pages titled "What Is Philosophy?" (11) orient her on a correspondence course in the history of philosophy that eventually turns into a Socratic tutorial. Sophie's enthusiasm shocks her mother, who attributes her newfound interest in the mysteries of life to the influence of drugs.

Nothing could be further from the truth (at least until the Kierkegaard chapter, when things do get a trifle psychedelic). Although Sophie's tutor, Alberto Knox, grounds the philosopher's project in maintaining a sense of wonder, his disquisition is clean and sober indeed. What keeps the novel moving are the tricks Gaarder plays with what we used to call the old r. and i.--reality and illusion. Sophie begins receiving postcards addressed from a United Nations observer in Lebanon to his own 15-year-old daughter, Hilde. As Sophie gradually becomes aware of her existence within a book (within a book (within a book)), the philosophical question gradually take on an existential tinge, embracing problems of determinacy and free will. While not nearly as highfalutin as such would-be popularizers as Umberto Eco, Susan Sontag, or Stephen Hawkins, it's loads of fun in a cool, Scandinavian Alice-in-Wonderland fashion.

The book is for children of all ages, remember, so don't expect detailed synopses of the world's major philosophers, systems, or contexts. The risks Gaarder takes in the interests of simplicity and clarity definitely pay off, however. These include the translation of nearly all technical terms, the omission of the hundreds of titles that would otherwise clutter the book, and his emphasis on the echoing persistence of philosophical themes from the pre-Socratics (whose modernism is conveyed elegantly) to the existentialists Gaarder nutshells right before dropping a few gee-whiz notions about ecophilosophy and how star gazing constitutes a cosmic journey into the past ("Yes, we too are stardust" (392), croons Alberto).

Sophie's World is a model of classic pedagogical technique packaged in most tasteful modernism. From the Socratic dialogues up to and including Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari's ultimate collaboration (the perfect companion volume, their What Is Philosophy? tastefully packages chaos as classicism), philosophy has been intertwined with friendship, sharing, and equality. While on the one hand Sophie (and Hilde and every kid who receives this book as the gift of a concerned adult) serves as the willing receptacle of Alberto's wisdom (perform your own deconstruction here), Gaarder has her question frequently the absence of women in philosophy. The only women thinkers accorded a paragraph or two here are beheaded French revolutionary Olympe de Gouges and Simone de Beauvoir. Sophie, nevertheless, seems more than willing to, well, man the barricades in their name.

Ongoing advertisements for environmental activism and world federalism via the United the Nations add to the novel's liberal agenda--which is about where my enthusiasm ends. Gaarder's well-measured conciliatory tone masks the rhetorical (and physical) violence philosophic discourse has generated over the past few thousand years, so don't expect to find Foucault, Deleuze/Guattari, or Derrida--even Heidegger and Nietzsche earn s little as a paragraph each. As noted above, Gaarder holds no truck with the outlaw alternatives sold under the New Age and mysticism rubrics. "The difference between real philosophy and these books," grumps Alberto, "is more or less the same as the difference between real love and pornography" (357). Do we detect an old-fashioned moralist in this dismissal? Gaarder, having stripped down the canon's arguments to their leanest Western cuts, thereby ignoring Muslim or pagan can't or won't see philosophy's manfully conceptualized recourses to faith, transcendence, and immanence as actually forming much of the spiritual bedrock for crystal worship or ufology.

At worst, Gaarder's book is a philosophical Ikea, whose clean lines and slick marketing offer a one-size-fits-all coziness masking the bitter ideological rivalries and utter radicalism characterizes so much of the field's history. On the other hand, any Sophie's World reader inspired to further investigation will collide with all that soon enough, which suggests an even more provocative sequel.

2006-08-29 02:24:44 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"The Time Traveler's Wife", "My Sister's Keeper", Anything by Kurt Vonegut, Tom Robbins or John Irving.

2006-08-29 02:21:43 · answer #6 · answered by dontcallmeheidi 2 · 0 0

the giver by lois lowry

2006-08-29 03:36:37 · answer #7 · answered by yawmee 3 · 0 0

* Cinderella
* Tarzan
* Sinbad
* Pokimon
* Snow white
................ ;-)

2006-08-29 02:50:40 · answer #8 · answered by Simply.......Khaled 2 · 0 0

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