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What kind of book is it? Is it the story, the plot, the author's style of writing, all of the above, or something else that makes this book your absolute favorite?

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2006-09-29 01:14:41 · 17 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

17 answers

Secret Doors, by Cindy Lincoln. :) hahaha I wrote it. But, seriously, there are so many books I love, mostly non-fiction. The bible for guidance, autobiographies, biographies, SOME self-help and psychology books.... anything by Maya Angelou.... hard to pick a favorite. I love to read.

2006-09-29 01:32:01 · answer #1 · answered by curious 3 · 0 0

My absolute sought after e book is A Clockwork Orange through Anthony Burgess different e book that i truly love are: All Quiet on the Western the front through Erich Maria Remarque A Prayer For Owen Meany through John Irving loved through Toni Morrison A Room With A View through E.M Forster and then there have been None through Agatha Christie The previous guy And the sea through Ernest Hemingway i'm prepared on the classics

2016-12-06 09:02:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Depending on the day of the week and my mood its between pride and prejudice by jane austen, the lord of the rings trilogy by jrr tolkien and the green mile by stephen king. I love p&p 4 the fact its a good old fashiond love story, beautifully written and happy. LOTR because i love the complete fantasy of it. Ur in a completly different world great 4 escapism and the green mile is a totally orginal concept mixin supernatural, complex stories and the horror of death row. Read all of the books before the films came out and except for pride and prejudice (god awful film) they do actually do the books justice x

2006-09-29 01:36:44 · answer #3 · answered by bamba_982 3 · 1 0

Magic Men by W. Korol Selley. It's SciFi and it's got a lot of characters, which I like. There's no magic wands or wizards. The magic is of the mind. It's different. The book came out, I think 2 years ago, but it was written in the early '80's.

2006-09-29 14:51:02 · answer #4 · answered by Call Me Babs 5 · 0 0

Hemingway's The Old Man and The Sea. I have read this so many times, the struggle against the fish is wonderful and fighting off the sharks, his love of baseball and the young boys devotion. What a wonderful story. The story never gets old you enjoy it as if it were the first time you read it.

2006-09-29 04:20:41 · answer #5 · answered by desert_kats 4 · 0 0

Stranger in a Strange Land
Is science fiction novel by Robert A. Heinlein published in 1961. It tells the story of Valentine Michael Smith, a human raised by Martians on Mars, as he returns to Earth in early adulthood. The novel explores his interaction with (and eventual transformation of) Earth culture.

2006-09-29 01:33:13 · answer #6 · answered by guido_961 4 · 1 0

The devil in the White city. Its the true story of what went on during the construction of the Chicago world's fair in 1893 and the serial killer that took advantage of the situation during the same time period.

2006-09-29 06:29:55 · answer #7 · answered by Fire_God_69 5 · 0 0

Timeline by Michael Crichton. It had incredible descriptions that sucked me right into the world and the characters were believable and interesting. And then, of course, the plot was wonderful and I could hardly put it down.

2006-09-29 09:02:26 · answer #8 · answered by Literary Lass 2 · 0 0

The Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovich. They're very funny mysteries.

2006-09-29 02:10:35 · answer #9 · answered by Chris F 6 · 0 0

River's End by Nora Roberts

When Olivia was four years old, she woke from sleep one night and went to look for her mother after playing for a moment with her mommy's bottles of perfume and lotions, Olivia went downstairs. She had heard the beautiful music playing on the stereo, and she went to find it, figuring she might find her mother there, as well. What she saw from the staircase would haunt her dreams for years to come.

Her mother lay on the living room floor, drenched in blood. Blood stained the floor and the walls and the furniture. It also drenched and stained Olivia's father's clothing as he bent over the still form of his estranged wife.

In many ways, Olivia's childhood ended that night. She would lose both her mother and her father, going to live with her grandparents at their rustic resort retreat in the Pacific Northwest, River's End. Protected by the love of her family and nurtured by the natural beauty of the forest and the mountains, Olivia is able to grow up out of the spotlight of the press. But she grows up isolated from her peers because of her history, and the fact that no one ever mentions her mother. As she matures, the holes in her heart beg to be filled.

Frank Brady, the detective on her mother's case, never forgot the little girl who helped close his case. Neither did his son, Noah, who was eight at the time. Frank and Noah cross Olivia's path from time to time as she grows into young adulthood, and Noah finds it increasingly difficult to get her out of his mind.

Noah and Olivia fall in love and the shocking truth about who killed her celebrity mother is revealed. This book is so well written it left me with chills..

2006-09-29 02:56:54 · answer #10 · answered by Desert Rose 2 · 0 0

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