Wuthering Heights,Jane Eyre and The Mists of Avalon. Also everything by Mary Stewart.
2007-09-02 07:35:13
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Radetzky March by Joseph Roth.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radetzky_March_%28novel%29
2007-09-02 05:22:33
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answer #2
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answered by feelflows 7
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a million. Lord of the Flies by using William Golding the image of Dorian gray by using Oscar Wilde great expectancies by using Charles Dickens Animal Farm by using George Orwell Alice's journey's In Wonderland / in the process the finding Glass And What Alice stumbled on There by using Lewis Carroll 2. My everyday author is often changing, merely like my everyday books. suitable now my everyday could could desire to be Neil Gaiman. He writes and tells thoughts so brilliantly. he's so unique and inventive. 3. i admire a sort, yet there some that i'm extra interested in than others. form: myth, extraordinarily the fairytale sort, is maximum truthfully my everyday. The belongings you many times see in Gaiman's books and Golding's The Princess Bride. something magical, like Harry Potter, i admire. term: undecided if i also have a call right here. i assume I rather like older settings because of the fact i admire historic previous lots, yet something's great. cutting-edge settings are great too. i'm no longer too fond of futuristic settings somewhat, nevertheless there are some novels like that that i've got cherished, eg The Supernaturalist by using Eoin Colfer. subject matter: this is in all probability the toughest for me to reply to. in many circumstances i'm into the common stable as against evil ingredient, i assume. i actually like books with deeper meaning too, like the totalitarianism in Lord of the Flies and 1984, or issues like the witch looking / Communism in the Crucible.
2016-12-12 16:02:09
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Gone With the Wind
2007-09-02 05:19:36
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answer #4
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answered by sue-sue 7
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Jules Verne. I read most of his adventure stories when I was a kid, and I still try to read "A Journey to the Center of the Earth" at least once a year.
Not really a novel, but I love reading Ambrose Bierce's "The Devil's Dictionary".
2007-09-02 05:22:58
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answer #5
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answered by Tut Uncommon 7
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I do Love Dumas. But Sherlock Holmes is my Favorite.
Sprinkle in a little Poe and I am purely tickled.
2007-09-02 05:21:48
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answer #6
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answered by nutsfornouveau 6
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To Kill a Mockingbird by Miss Harper Lee
2007-09-02 07:40:27
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answer #7
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answered by diannegoodwin@sbcglobal.net 7
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If no one else mentions "Alice in Wonderland" or "A Christmas Carol", I should get the ten". The annotated Alice "
is particularly interesting, with all the literary and psychological explanatory footnotes> Bravo!
2007-09-02 07:33:43
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answer #8
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answered by Monsieur Recital Vinyliste 6
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love count of monte christo! try call of the wild by jack london, david copperfield by charles dickens, treasure island by robert louis stevenson, and a study in scarlett and the hound of the baskervilles by conan doyle and anything by edgar allan poe.
for modern classics I recommend the eagle has landed by ken follett and the hitchhiker's series by douglas adams and everything by hunter thompson.
2007-09-02 05:22:17
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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The Brothers Karamazov, by Dostoevsky and some of the other famous Russian writers like Tolstoy are fascinating too for their in-depth views of the human condition.
2007-09-02 05:33:38
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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