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generalkala

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About generalkala

  • Birthday 08/04/1989

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  1. Mine is about 70/30 for fiction and non-fiction respectively. All my non-fiction is based around the same topics too - Elizabeth I, the Tudors, Oscar Wilde or the development of literature. My fiction is a much wider mix!
  2. I refuse to read the 'I was abused as a child and now I want to make some money off it' books as well. I just don't understand why someone would want to write a book of it. I usually stubbornly avoid chick lit. I'll read it if it's a little different to the millions of titles out there, but otherwise I don't bother.
  3. Oh, good thread idea. My pet peeve is when a character is described using a reflection. Eg - 'Hanna looked in the mirror. A blue-eyed, blonde-haired girl of about medium height stared back.' You know what I mean.
  4. What a brilliant idea! So different from the usual challenges. I've learnt a lot from this thread too.
  5. I can give up on it eventually, but it takes an effort! If it's not what I expected or I just don't like it, I will always finish it. If I absolutely detest it, then I'll give up.
  6. You're probably right about it being the publisher, but it doesn't make it less annoying for me! Thing is, I can't leave a part of a book unread. I have to read the full thing - interviews, forewords and all. I do quite like the author interviews though.
  7. Am I the only one it annoys when authors add a section in the back of their book that comprises possible questions for book clubs to discuss? I just read The Reader by Bernhard Schlink. I really enjoyed it, but it just seems like writing their own questions is a form of arrogance, like assuming their book is so good that every book club in the world will want to discuss it. Argh.
  8. I'm a 15 year old German boy who's sleeping with an older woman who helped him when he was ill. I'm really curious about some of the above books now!
  9. It depends on the book. If it's an amazing book that I'm loving, I can whip through it in about half a day. If it's not that good, probably a few days. It also depends how much Uni work I have to get through too!
  10. I have no idea who I am! All I know is that I'm a 15 year old girl who talks to a little stick thing called Pick. I'm only three pages in, so excuse the identity crisis
  11. The Kaiser nodded. 'That must be the epitome of your Waffen SS culture, what you all aspire to. It is the kind of action that wrests victory from the impossible and the effect on the morale of your enemies spreads wider than any individual action.' The Kaiser's Last Kiss - Alan Judd
  12. 1 Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen 2 The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien 3 Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte 4 Harry Potter series - JK Rowling 5 To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee 6 The Bible - 7 Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte 8 1984 - George Orwell 9 His Dark Materials - Philip Pullman 10 Great Expectations - Charles Dickens 11 Little Women - Louisa M Alcott 12 Tess of the D
  13. Hmm. This is on my Wishlist but after reading all the scathing comments here, I think I might borrow a copy from someone instead of buying it. To be perfectly honest, I never even knew what it was about, I just thought I should read it. Ack. Oh well, if I don't like it, I don't have to finish it
  14. I've read it. Not to deter you or anything, but I wasn't overly fond of it. I mean, it's readable and whatnot, it's just not one of my favoured classics. I just found that the plot jumped all over the place and I hated every single one of the characters.
  15. I go randomly, unless I'm reading a series. Then I go through the series in order, as I have to read them all in one go. I'd go crazy if I read them oldest first - I find that the longer I leave them, the more they lose their appeal!
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