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14 answers

The late great planet earth , by Hal Holbrook, and Helter Skelter, and Yes

2006-11-16 04:07:43 · answer #1 · answered by Sean 5 · 1 0

Swiss Family Robinson was the first proper book I read all the way through on my own. It inspired me to be a writer, I knew that I wanted to be able to create my own islands and worlds where weird and wonderful things happened.

2006-11-16 04:12:10 · answer #2 · answered by Clare E 2 · 2 0

One of the first books I read at a reasonable age was by Aleister Crowley

"Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The Law" indeed.

2006-11-16 04:11:09 · answer #3 · answered by Warlock Fiend 4 · 1 0

Noddy Goes To Westminster
Alice Threw The Looking Glass (she was very upset)

2006-11-16 07:14:15 · answer #4 · answered by waycyber 6 · 0 0

I read very little as a child. I came from a family who did'nt value books and literature, but I'm making up for it in my adult years. I'm now into reading children's classics such as "alice in wonderland", "The Chronicles of Narnia", "Winnie The Pooh" and others. They all inspire me.

2006-11-16 05:58:24 · answer #5 · answered by Rosie C 3 · 0 0

Billy Bunter.
Just William.
The Secret Seven.

No.

2006-11-16 04:09:06 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The Denny Laine Guitar Book. Did it inspire me? No. But he did sign it for me 20 years later when I became his keyboard player!

2006-11-16 04:16:39 · answer #7 · answered by Musicol 4 · 2 0

Yea, between bible readings (before and after) I owned a Ghita (too boring), Harvard Classics (too boring), the way of Zen by Watts (read parts of it), then I read everything there is to read on psychology and psychiatry, the alternative culture (Ram Das, Leary, Koolaide Acid Test, etc.), New Age, futurism (Tofler, et al) I finished my undergraduate studies on my own (virtually every Barns and Nobel extract I could find), Eintstein, Sagan, did a lot of research on women, did a lot of reasearch on cinema and TV, loved all of Iaasac Asmov's non-fiction (can't stand his fiction, the Foundation bored me to tears), Frank Herbert, Erica Jong, Tolkein, Orwell, Huxley.

2006-11-16 04:14:02 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

The Bible says to try the spirits and see what they say. You don't have to
take a chance on some psychic who might not care about you personally.
Just go to your local library or book store.
I've read lots of channeling. Alleged to come from Higher Intelligences.
By thier own admission, they are not perfect. They just exist at a level higher than ours. They have their own interests and points of view. So don't accept everything they say as Gospel.
OKAY!

2006-11-16 04:12:09 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Lord of the Flies
Candide
The Cantebury Tales
Dante's Inferno
Kafka
Shakespeare
Poe
Dickens

They inspired much in my imagination and sparked an interest in writing.

2006-11-16 04:12:32 · answer #10 · answered by PaganPoetess 5 · 2 1

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