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Fun Stuff => ENJOY => Topic started by: Ally on 11 Jun 2007, 17:38

Title: Summer Reading List
Post by: Ally on 11 Jun 2007, 17:38
I am making massive summer to do lists so that I don't let my summer run out without doing all of the things I stayed up at night this school year telling myself that I would do. This is Part 1 of my Summer Plan.

I suggest you do the same.

I will edit this post to contain a short review with a rating of how much I enjoyed a book once I've finished - you can do this too but maybe you don't want to? I don't know.

FOR SCHOOL:

Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe [required]
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain [required]
On the Road by Jack Kerouac [on a list] (I started this and lost the book and never finished it)
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry [on a list] (I started this last summer but school came before I could finish)
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz by Mordecai Richler [on a list]
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner [on a list]

Last year's required reading was The Life of Pi and Cat's Cradle, both of which were perfect summer books. I only have to read one of the books on the list but I might as well read all of the ones I've been meaning to read.

FOR ALLY:

A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers
White Oleander by Janet Fitch
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn by Henry Miller
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson
Paradise Lost by John Milton
The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by JK Rowling (I plan to read it, so I might as well list it)
The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
The Neverending Story by Michael Ende (again) (I love this book)

This list will expand until my summer officially starts on the 21st.

This is your chance to read all of those things you've always told yourself you would! Next school year is going to be hectic so I'm making the most out of my summer. I'm nailing a ton of the classics and a few things that people keep suggesting. I jacked a lot of these from Jenny's list and made her recommend me more.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Inlander on 11 Jun 2007, 17:57
Well, I don't have a seasonal reading list. However I have a reading project which I'm currently being very slack about. Having been raised in a completely secular household, I thought it was about time that I started trying to get to grips with this whole "religion" thing, to try and understand the world a little better. To that end, I set out to read the major texts in what I deemed to be the most significant global religions: Christianity, Islam, Judaism, Buddhism, and Hinduism. (My brother recently suggested I add Confucianism, which I think is a good idea).

However at the moment I'm pretty much stalled at the starting grid: the Bible is not an easy read. In fact it's an incredibly tedious read. And it's 1800 pages long! So far I've almost made it to the end of Leviticus. (I'm reading the King James version, for historical reasons.)
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Johnny C on 11 Jun 2007, 19:11
I'm going to try and read more books by Michael Chabon and Jonathan Lethem. I need to read some more Mordecai Richler, re-acquaint myself with Tolstoy, finish reading Steinbeck's works, go through a couple of novels that a friend of mine lent me and go through the new Palhaniuk.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: SilentJ on 11 Jun 2007, 19:14
Ally-

The new HP book sounds promising, I, too am awairing its release eagerly.

Catch-22, or what I read of it, was just a great read.  Very entertaining.

However, Pride and Prejudice was one of the worst books I have ever read.  It is second worst, only being not-quite-so-bad as Wuthering Heights was.  Good Lord that book was terrible.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Storm Rider on 11 Jun 2007, 19:15
Catch-22 is one of my favorite books of ever. So good.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Inlander on 11 Jun 2007, 19:43
However, Pride and Prejudice was one of the worst books I have ever read.

To offer a countering opinion: Pride and Prejudice is sublime, and Jane Austen is wonderful.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: St. Ides on 11 Jun 2007, 21:09
Heh...
I remember reading Lolita in the summer between my freshman and sophmore years of high school.
It wasn't until the third read-through that I actually finished it, and I actually had to run down to the library to check out a copy of the abridged edition just to get half of the damn references. I loved it.
Nabokov is a brilliant author, if you can stomach him.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Ben yayayayayayayay on 11 Jun 2007, 21:12
However, Pride and Prejudice was one of the worst books I have ever read.

To offer a countering opinion: Pride and Prejudice is sublime, and Jane Austen is wonderful.

To add nothing, I haven't read this book.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Dimmukane on 11 Jun 2007, 21:31
Providing I find the time for it, the entire Cthulu Mythos, Conan Saga, and all of Norse Mythology.  And reread Good Omens, find the other three Halo novels, and the new HP.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: KharBevNor on 11 Jun 2007, 21:39
However, Pride and Prejudice was one of the worst books I have ever read.

To offer a countering opinion: Pride and Prejudice is sublime, and Jane Austen is wonderful.

(But Wuthering Heights is better)
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Will on 12 Jun 2007, 08:58
Ally, Unbearable Lightness Of Being is an absolutely wonderful book. Just to forewarn you if you aren't already aware of this, the first chapter or so deals pretty heavily with discussing Nietzsche and his philosophies as they relate to the story that Kundera wrote, and it can be kind of dry at spots. Just don't let that cause your interest to wane, because the story really is quite a treat.

On the subject of Nietzsche, I've had a copy of "The Birth Of Tragedy" in my library for about a year or so and never got around to reading it. I'm going to try to force myself to have the discipline to go through that.

Partial List (to be added to later):

"Heavy" reading
The Birth Of Tragedy - Friedrich Nietzsche
Discipline & Punish: The Birth Of the Prison - Michel Foucalt
The One-Dimensional Man - Herbert Marcuse

"Light" reading
You Shall Know Our Velocity - David Eggers
Rant - Chuck Palahniuk
Dirty Job - Christopher Moore
The Dead MC Scrolls - Saul Williams
plus any other books of poetry that I can find that will inspire me.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: mberan42 on 12 Jun 2007, 09:11
I agree with Will on The Unbearable Lightness of Being. On your list, Ally, I've read A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, The Metamorphosis and Love in the Time of Cholera and loved all three (for completely separate reasons). Metamophosis is difficult to read, and I was required to read it for a university class, but it was fantastic.

I also don't have a seasonal list, but what I have right now:
It's Not News, it's FARK - How Mass Media Tries to Pass Off Crap As News by Drew Curtis
The Assault on Reason by Al Gore
Earth in the Balance by Al Gore

That's about it. Nothing is coming out anytime soon that I have to pick up.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Johnny C on 12 Jun 2007, 09:45
Oh right, I still need to read my copy of Plato's Republic the whole way through.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Scandanavian War Machine on 12 Jun 2007, 10:00
my list thus far is this:

God Bless You, Dr. Kevorkian by Kurt Vonnegut
new Harry Potter book
Battle Royale by Koushan Takami (sp?)

so far that's it, i think. but there will be more as i discover them.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Will on 12 Jun 2007, 10:27
Matt, when you get around to reading Drew's book, can you let me know how it is? I'm kind of curious about it...
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Mnementh on 12 Jun 2007, 11:52
No seasonal reading list, I just read things as they come to me.  En queue right now:

Dreadnought: Britain, Germany, and The Coming of the Great War by Robert K. Massie
If Upon A Winter's Night Traveler... by Italo Calvino
Underworld by Don Delillo
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: ThePQ4 on 12 Jun 2007, 13:23
My only goal this summer to is re-read the entire Harry Potter series. Before July 21st. ...I should probably get started. It will take me a least a week to muddle my way through the fourth. Ack.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: TheFuriousWombat on 12 Jun 2007, 14:16
My own personal list of books I want to read this summer is as follows:

100 Years of Solitude- Gabriel Garcia Marquez
The Unbearble Lightness of Being- Milan Kundera
The new Harry Potter (obviously)
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay- Michael Chabon
1984- George Orwell
Special Topics in Calamity Physics- Marisha Pessl
The Name of the Rose- Umberto Eco
Thus Spoke Zarathustra- Nietzsche

Yeah, I'd figure I'd go for some light reading this summer. I think I'll be able to get through them all.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Ally on 12 Jun 2007, 14:31
Oh, I read Special Topics in Calamity Physics last summer. It is pretty good until the end which really disappointed me. Cute read, though.

I have such awesome plansss. I hope I can get through most of these books. I didn't read too much last summer (it was mostly what I consider trashy reading, but if I tell you what I consider trashy reading you'll make fun of me because most people consider it normal reading) but the summer before I read like 30 books. We'll see!
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Joseph on 12 Jun 2007, 17:03
Ally, that's an excellent list, I have to say.  I'll chime in with Inlander here, and say that Pride And Prejudice is fantastic.  The rest of the list is pretty much all stuff I've found good or been meaning to read myself.

I've yet to sort out a real reading list for myself yet, but I plan on reading a bunch more Alice Munro, John Updike, Nicholson Baker, Tolstoy, and Nabokov.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Scytale on 12 Jun 2007, 19:37

The Name of the Rose- Umberto Eco
Thus Spoke Zarathustra- Nietzsche


Both of those books are excellent choices.

My Last Exam is Friday heading back to see my parents over the weekend I plan on pinching my Sisters copy of Utopia I'll read that over the weekend beyond that I've got a few books of chess puzzles and things I'll probably read.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: SilentJ on 12 Jun 2007, 20:31
I've got many a book to read this summer.

I'm starting with a re-read of the Halo series,
then all of the HP books by July 21st,
and then, in no particular order:

Catch-22 (never finished)
probably re-reading Youth in Revolt and Revolting Youth (both are freakin' brilliant)
finish Slaughterhouse Five
read these Dickens novels I got for Christmas (ToTC, ACC, etc.)
maybe re-read the Alex Rider series if the mood strikes
probably re-read LoTR since I haven't in a while

and, just maybe, re-read some Dan Brown because it's funny to read.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: imapiratearg on 12 Jun 2007, 21:48
I have to read the first five chapters of this big ass book called Sarum.  For my British Lit. class.

I'm in the middle of reading Stephen King's The Tommyknockers, and a book called Drawing Down the Moon, which is an overview of Paganism and Wicca and a couple others, Druidism i think being one, and their histories, the histories of their movements and such.  It's pretty interesting.  Huge book though.

And everybody should read Christopher Moore books.  I bought You Suck!: A Vampire Romance for my girlfriend on her birthday.  She loved it.  I read some of it.  It's pretty great.  Apparently it's the sequel to Bloodsucking Fiends.  So she won't let me read any further.

I'm starting with a re-read of the Halo series

Ghosts of Onyx was awesome!  I almost cried at the end.  If I had a choice between reading the books and playing the games.  I'd choose the books hands down.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: celticgeek on 12 Jun 2007, 21:58
Drawing Down The Moon is a pretty thorough and accurate history of the various pagan groups in America.

Worth the 600 plus pages.

Blessed be!
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: imapiratearg on 12 Jun 2007, 22:09
^.^  It's a heavy read for me.  I haven't picked it up in a long time.  I kind of feel bad for doing so.  Not to mention, it's an overdue library book, that apparently wasn't recorded.  So I got a free book.  I also go the Pagan Book of Days for free from my library as well, since they didn't give me anything about them.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Misereatur on 13 Jun 2007, 05:36
My list:

I have a lot of books to read. I'm currently reading two at once.[/list]
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Joseph on 13 Jun 2007, 11:50
I just finished rereading Naked Lunch.  That is one insane book, but I absolutely loved it; as much as one can love a journey into nigh-indecipherable madness.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Will on 13 Jun 2007, 15:33
Mis: I am almost finished with Black Coffee Blues. I'd say it's probably some of my favorite work by Rollins. By all means, read it first, but if you'd like a copy of the audiobook version, let me know and I can arrange for you to have it.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: tomselleck69 on 13 Jun 2007, 15:50
(all reading is for personal enjoyment/edification, done through audiobooks while drawing, walking and driving)

READ:
The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
The Stranger
On the Road
The Great Gatsby

READING:
The Brothers Karamazov

TO READ:
Les Miserables
and a bunch more so long as bittorrent is never outlawed by the government
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: jimbunny on 13 Jun 2007, 16:44
I'm reading Inversions right now, and I think I just might continue on an Iain Banks trajectory for the near future.

I might also re-read all of William Gibson's books...kind of a summer tradition. Just finished Count Zero.

I also just finished Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson. Good airplane reading, overall not such a great book. Someone get this guy an editor worth their salt, stat. Snow Crash remains good, but...his particular brand of humor wears thin after page 800...
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: SilentJ on 13 Jun 2007, 17:18
Oh, I just remembered.

I've heard alot about this Bored of the Rings book, so I'm gonna check that out as well.

Has anybody read this?  Thoughts?
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Ally on 13 Jun 2007, 17:33
Guys life is too short to reread books unless they are REALLY REALLY GOOD.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Joseph on 13 Jun 2007, 20:18
So, I just returned from a used bookstore with my mother, where we spent a fair sum, and between that excursion and some things from the shelves at home, I have my summer reading.  Here's a selection:

Matin Amis - Time's Arrow/Visiting Mrs. Navokov and Other Excursions
Ann Patchett - Bel Canto
Ian McEwan - Atonement/Enduring Love
Franz Kafka - The Trial
Joastein Gaarder - Sophie's World
V.S. Naipaul - The Enigma Of Arrival
Marilynne Robinson - Gilead
Philip Roth - American Pastoral/Our Gang
Don DeLillo - White Noise
John Kennedy Toole - The Neon Bible
James McBride - The Color Of Water
Pat Barker - Regeneration/The Eye In The Door/The Ghost Road
Dostoevsky - Crime And Punishment
Nicholson Baker - The Size Of Thoughts
Vladimir Nabokov - Pale Fire/Pnin
John Updike - Bech: A Book
Zadie Smith - White Teeth
Alice Munro - Something I've Been Meaning To Tell You
Halldor Laxness - Independent People
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Scytale on 14 Jun 2007, 03:02


I've heard alot about this Bored of the Rings book, so I'm gonna check that out as well.

Has anybody read this?  Thoughts?

I read that years ago it was pretty amusing, but I was a lot younger when I read it. It's pretty much what it sounds like a parody of Lord of the Rings. All that really stands out now is they re-named Tom Bombadil Tom Benzo-drill and he was basically a hippy always ranting on about Methadone (or Methadinny as he called it) I found it pretty amusing as a kid.  I think if I read it today it would just give me the shits.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Misereatur on 14 Jun 2007, 05:08
I just finished rereading Naked Lunch.  That is one insane book, but I absolutely loved it; as much as one can love a journey into nigh-indecipherable madness.

I started reading it earlier this year and stopped because I already had all of the insanity I could handle, and reading about talking ass holes was not what I needed. I started it again later on but stopped due to business.

if you'd like a copy of the audiobook version, let me know and I can arrange for you to have it.

That would be awsome. PM me?

Also
Joastein Gaarder - Sophie's World

I stopped reading that book when I hit page 150. It's a very interesting subject but I got really bored with the story line for some reason. I should to start reading it again.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: jimbunny on 14 Jun 2007, 10:47
Quote from: Miserateur
I stopped reading that book when I hit page 150. It's a very interesting subject but I got really bored with the story line for some reason. I should to start reading it again.

Pick up where you left off. The ending's pretty wild.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Cartilage Head on 14 Jun 2007, 11:09
 For school and Cory - Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Johnathan Safran Foer, and To Kill a Mockingbird by That Fella.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Tyler on 14 Jun 2007, 15:55
Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe [required]
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain [required]
On the Road by Jack Kerouac [on a list] (I started this and lost the book and never finished it)
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry [on a list] (I started this last summer but school came before I could finish)
The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz by Mordecai Richler [on a list]
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner [on a list]
A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers
White Oleander by Janet Fitch
Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
Tropic of Cancer and Tropic of Capricorn by Henry Miller
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas by Hunter S. Thompson
Paradise Lost by John Milton
The Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by JK Rowling (I plan to read it, so I might as well list it)
The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World by Haruki Murakami
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
One Hundred Years of Solitude and Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
High Fidelity by Nick Hornby
The Neverending Story by Michael Ende (again) (I love this book)

check.


I am so awesome.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Storm Rider on 14 Jun 2007, 17:06
I'm interested to hear how you managed to read a Harry Potter book that isn't available yet.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Tyler on 14 Jun 2007, 19:03
Not going to lie to you there. I really cannot explain it, however, my own ability to admit fault is overcome by my ego.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Will on 15 Jun 2007, 06:39
Storm, Tyler can read whatever the hell he wants to whenever the hell he wants to. It's because he has secret awesome powers hidden away inside his cheekpouch.

And because he's better than you.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: IronOxide on 15 Jun 2007, 14:55
1984 - George Orwell (For School)
Fundamentals of Musical Composition - A. Schoenberg (For Fun)

And the new Harry Potter book
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: RallyMonkey on 15 Jun 2007, 21:57
As I Lay Dying
The Contortionist's Handbook
Of Mice and Men
Huckleberry Finn (For school)
A book or two on screenwriting.

Then I am about halfway through The Complete Works of Chekhov, and Welcome to the Monkey House.

Plus... I have to memorize The Dangers of Tobacco (Chekhov) and the part of Master Page in Merry Wives of Windsor for theater next year.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: TheFuriousWombat on 16 Jun 2007, 15:23
Rally, As I LAy Dying is brilliant. I loved it.
I have to add 'On Natural Selection' by Darwin and 'The Metamorphosis' by Kafka to my list for school reading.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Liz on 16 Jun 2007, 20:26
Right now I'm in the middle of The Prestige, which is amazing.

A couple of days ago I checked out If On a Winter's Night a Traveler, A Case of Need, and The House of Leaves from my college's library. Two are from the reccomendations threads here, the other is because I loooove Michael Crichton books.

I have a huge, two page list of books recommended by you people that I want to read this summer. We shall see how far I get.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: fozmo on 16 Jun 2007, 21:18
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: RallyMonkey on 16 Jun 2007, 23:44
I really enjoyed The Prestige. Not really for the actual content of the book, but it just made me trust in Christopher Nolan's skills even more so that he was able to take a pretty good book, and then meld it into an amazing movie. The end though, I was disappointed by (In the book)

I'm really enjoying As I Lay Dying. Same with The Contortionists' Handbook.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Oli on 17 Jun 2007, 16:02
I don't have a list as such but books that I have recently bought and intend on reading at some point soon are:

The beach - Alex Garland(Which I am in the middle of)
The Acid House - Irvine Welsh
Whit and Song of Stone - Iain Banks
Catch-22 - Joseph Heller (This is a popular one)

Once I have finished them I will crack on with any other books I've picked up in charity shops (that is where I get most of my books. I only use amazon/a proper book shop if I have a specific book in mind)

I've been getting pretty lax with my reading lately. I go through spots of reading for hours a day and then not reading for days. It's very annoying.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Will on 18 Jun 2007, 06:31
House of Leaves [/b]

It's a fantastic book. Might I recommend that once you start this book, eliminate all other reading materials from your daily existence until you've finished. Trust me, House Of Leaves is an utter and absolute mindfuck of a book, and you have to try to keep track of a thousand things at once as it is...it gets too confusing when you're also trying to keep other information from other books straight in your head.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Liz on 18 Jun 2007, 16:59
Don't worry, I only read multiple books at once if I've read them before.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Mikagon on 19 Jun 2007, 11:38
Hmm...

How about Twilight by Stephanie Meyer? That's a damn good book although I have to say after I read and its sequel (New Moon) I tried reading other books but they weren't of the same quality as Twilight. So I ended up rereading them at least three times each before I was finally able to move on. They were damn good books.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: edgyswingsetacid on 19 Jun 2007, 20:13
so far, in the past week and a half or so, i've read the molloy trilogy by samuel beckett, lafcadio's adventures by andre gide, miss lonelyhearts and the day of the locust by nathanael west, and the tropic of cancer by henry miller. in the months to come i shall read, in no particular order, illuminations by rimbaud, the magic mountain by thomas mann, volume 4 of that marcel proust thing, 120 days of sodom by marquis de sade, the myth of sisyphus etc by camus, being and nothingness by sartre, and perhaps some goethe or gogol. i've also been meaning to read the brothers karamazov since that day that crime and punishment blew me away, but we'll see how it goes. pretty standard stuff, but i've gotta say, those nathanael west novels were fantastic.

fozmo, i hope you enjoy that hemingway. it destroyed me.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Lines on 20 Jun 2007, 10:42
Ally, I noticed you're going to read A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. When you do, please post what you think, because from other than an art history professor, everyone I know who's read it thought it was boring. This makes me curious, as I haven't read it.

I don't have a reading list yet, but I will once I finish making one up. It'll be full of all the things I really want to read and haven't yet, i.e. 1984, Dante's Inferno, and Slaughterhouse 5.

Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Scandanavian War Machine on 20 Jun 2007, 15:02
yes, Vonnegut ftw! everyone and their mom should read at least one Kurt Vonnegut book this summer! i've already read three; you guys need to get on the ball.
i don't know what it is, but Vonnegut is really good to read in the summer time.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Liz on 20 Jun 2007, 18:49
Today I finished The Prestige. I can't decide if I am in love with the ending or if I hate it completely, which is definately odd. Great book, weird ending. Now I've started with If On a Winter's Night a Traveler... Not sure about this one either, the author's tone is really not my style.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Flan on 22 Jun 2007, 04:54
Go Murakami! Hard Boiled Wonderland and the end of the World is great.
But if you are reading Kafka, I suggest In The Penal Settlement. Its a short story.
Then go read Murakami's Kafka of the Shore. It's good if you haven't read the Kafka story, but all that much better if you have.

And for something completely different, may I suggest Kate Atkinson's Behind the Scenes at the Museum? Post modern, yes, but interesting and entertaining.

And I fully back up the person who recomended On the Road by Jack Kerouac.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Felix_ on 23 Jun 2007, 12:48
I'm reading The Master And Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov right now.  :-D It's wonderful.
Title: Re: Summer Reading List
Post by: Johnny C on 23 Jun 2007, 15:13
If On a Winter's Night a Traveler... Not sure about this one either, the author's tone is really not my style.
Stick with this one all the way through, I can't recommend it enough.