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God Bless you Mr. Rosewater - Vonnegut
The Master and Margarita - Bulgakov
Dead Souls - Gogol
The Great Gatsby - Fitzgerald
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Garcia Marquez
The Dialogues - Plato
The Dark is Rising - Susan Cooper
Dune - Herbert
Meditations on First Philosophy - DesCartes
The Social Contract - Rousseau

2006-12-28 07:41:15 · answer #1 · answered by erinn_la_fey 2 · 0 0

Star Girl- Jerry Spinelli
Milkweed- Jerry Spinelli
Devils Arithmatic- Jane Yolen
October Sky- Homer Hickman
Great Expectations- Charles Dickens
Just Listen- Sarah Dessen
Dreamland- Sarah Dessen
This Lullaby- Sarah Dessen
A Child Called IT- Dave Pelzer
Fat Stupid Ugly- Debrah Constance as told to J.I. Kleinberg Foreword by Penny Marshall

2006-12-28 09:39:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Do I have to pick just ten? Okay, I'll try:

To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
Wiseblood by Flannary O'Connor
The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
White Oleander by Janet Fitch
Angela's Ashes by Frank McCort
Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
She's Come Undone by Wally Lamb
I Know This Much is True by Wally Lamb
The Joy Luck Club by Amy Tan

There are so many more...dystopian novels like "A Handmaid's Tale" by Margaret Atwood, the Romantics like Hawthorne. I recommend ANYTHING by Hawthorne, specifically "The Blithedale Romance." The "Lord of the Rings" and "Harry Potter" series are wonderful reads. "Waterland" by Graham Swift is an amazing book. "Farenheit 451" by Ray Bradbury and how could I forget "The Count of Monte Cristo" by Alexander Dumas...one of my all time favorites. I could go on and on...okay, I'll stop now.

2006-12-28 09:36:10 · answer #3 · answered by imhalf_the_sourgirl_iused_tobe 5 · 1 0

The wheel of time series - Robert Jordan
Ender's Game - Orson Scott Card
Memnoch the Devil - Anne Rice
Incarnations of Immortality Series - Piers Anthony
The Stand - Stephen King
Lord of the Flies - William Golding
A Separate Peace - John Knowles
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Series - Douglas Adams
The Myth Series (1st book is "Another Fine Myth") - Robert Asprin
Let Freedom Ring - Shawn Hannity

2006-12-28 08:27:32 · answer #4 · answered by Rorshach4u 3 · 1 0

Catcher in the Rye
Harry Potter Series
Anything by Jane Austen: Particurly Persuasion
A Lesson Before Dying
Water for Elephants
Wicked
Lovely Bones
Anything by David Sedaris: Particulary Me Talk Pretty One Day
Things They Left Behind
Night

2006-12-28 07:37:56 · answer #5 · answered by mushykins 3 · 0 0

How Far Can You Go?
Changing Places
Small World
Nice Work
Therapy
All the above are by David Lodge.

Call for the Dead, by John LeCarre'

Raise Hight the Roofbeam Carpenter & Seymour: An Introduction, by J. D. Salinger

Little Green Men, by Christopher Buckley

Dubliners, by James Joyce

The Third Man, by Graham Greene

2006-12-28 09:12:08 · answer #6 · answered by Ace Librarian 7 · 1 0

Foucault's Pendulum
Tropic of Cancer
The Crying of Lot 49
Slaughterhouse Five
The Fountainhead
The Autobiography of Malcolm X
The Caveman's Valentine
July's People
Things Fall Apart
Worse Than Watergate

2006-12-28 07:33:30 · answer #7 · answered by mullah robertson 4 · 1 0

My answer has have been given to be "The in no way ending tale area a million." palms down the terrific youngster's tale, for many motives, which includes: a million) the basis of time being a fluid, manipulatable creation of the strategies is in basic terms the start, yet wow what an front. technological awareness now knows for specific the only consistent is the fee of light, so consequently time isn't linear & that old coaching would desire to quit for mankind to go forward. 2) the basis of area being massive previous comprehension supplies babies a glimpse of ways there are some issues previous length. 3) maximum critically, and maximum expressed theory in the tale, is that your mind's eye has no limits, no hindrances, and no rules. the youngster's action picture replaced into my regularly occurring as a youthful baby in the late 80s. The e book, through Ende, is in my precise 10 favourites as an person, besides the actuality that i does no longer propose it to youthful babies with the aid of three very progressed strategies. 4) The empowerment concepts portrayed in the tale, like dealing with hindrances in existence, utilising violence in basic terms in self defence, in no way assuming the worst, and not in any respect quit on a dedication, regardless the possibilities. 5) settle for the possibility there is something approximately this or them which you do no longer comprehend, the understanding of that would replace each thing. to totally draw close this theory, watch a action picture called "12 offended men", between the 1st significant production movies EVER created. In childspeak ... think of a exhausted sloth, loss of life in the snow from the chilly. A woolly huge comes alongside and poos on the sloth and walks away. Later, because of the fact the sloth is attempting to get out of the poo, a tiger comes alongside and lifts him out, then urinates on him, drys him off in the snow, and eats him. the ethical of the tale is that no longer anybody that poos on you is an enemy, and not anybody that gets you out, & cleans you up is a chum. in no way ending tale portrays in basic terms about all those elementary strategies and extra, in a blinding exhibit of the the Wolf's Cave, The Swamps of unhappiness, and all of the attractiveness and ask your self of the Ivory Tower, the Princess, Falcor the flying dogs & the trick ending. I additionally believe the solutions presented through person "Lord Voldemort", from comparable reviews, albeit diverse age

2016-12-15 09:56:32 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Oh the Places You'll Go... Dr. Seuss
Harry Potter series...JK Rowling
Da Vinci Code...Dan Brown
Pride and Prejudice...Jane Austen
Shopaholic series...Sophie Kinsella
Joy Luck Club...Amy Tan
The Notebook...Nicholas Sparks
The Five People You Meet in Heaven...Mitch Albom
The Devil Wears Prada...Lauren Weisberger
The Lord of the Rings...JRR Tolkien

2006-12-28 07:45:05 · answer #9 · answered by Chloe 4 · 1 0

Philippa by Bertrice Small
The House by Danielle Steel
Left Behind by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
H.R.H. by Danielle Steel
Love Comes Softly by Janette Oke

2006-12-28 10:36:30 · answer #10 · answered by bookworm_382 5 · 0 0

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