Showing posts with label Clockwork Orange. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clockwork Orange. Show all posts

Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten "Older" Books You Don't Want People To Forget About.

I'm warning you now; I may exceed have exceeded 10 on this list...
I've always, always been a reader. Typical "excellent work" stickers and move up a class behaviour in school, but the reason I've always loved books so much is because of my mum. She'd read to my brother and I aloud every night when we were little and she's the type who always has a book on the go, and growing up I fell into the same patters. When I fist started branching out from kids or YA fiction at about 10 or 11 the first books my mum put into my hands were from authors like Dickens, Austen and the Brontë's, and I've never looked away from the "classics" since. These books have survived the test of time for a reason, here are some of my favourites. 

1) Wuthering Heights - Emily Brontë - My favourite love story of all time. Desperate, haunting and absolutely fantastic.

2) Pride & Prejudice - Jane Austen - I've written a review on this book which you can read here.

3) Jane Eyre - Charlotte Brontë - I think I like Jane's character more than I like the books itself, and that seems to be the case with quite a lot of people, She's very...real, and she's the constant underdog.

4) Tess Of The D'urbervilles - Thomas Hardy - Poor Tess, I feel so terrible for her every time I read this. A book which shows you haw far women's rights have come and makes you truly understand the terrible stigmas put on girls in those times.

5) 1984 - George Orwell - I wrote a review on this book a few weeks ago, which you can read here. One of the most important books I feel I'll ever read, makes you so aware.

6) Little Women - Louisa May Alcott - I love the characters in story, and my favourites are the obvious; Jo and Beth, such a lovely, heart-warming tale about family and again women's rights, I love that Jo won't take no for an answer and is determined to write.

7) The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald - Again, I've written a review on this recently which you can read here

8) A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess - A book I still find difficult to read, even after a few times. Ultra Violence and Human Nature. Viddy Well, Little Brother. 

9) On The Road - Jack Kerouac - Again...haha, I have written a review of this which you can read here.

10) Junky - William Burroughs - In the same wild times of On The Road, such an exciting and well written (considering!) book, not for the less mature audience.

11) Little Birds - Anais Nin - Definitely not for the less mature audience. I adore Nin, I think her writing is fabulous, but lets leave it at that

12) Howl - Allan Ginsberg - I think this must be included, one of my absolute favourite poems of all time, I'm with you in Rockland.

13) Tropic Of Cancer - Henry Miller - I'll leave this one vague for the same reasons as Little Birds.  

14) Fiesta - Earnest Hemingway - Hemingway had to be on this list, I wasn't sure which to put down but Fiesta is a favourite of mine. Wonderful, vibrant, exciting, and home to one of my favourite females in literature, Brett Ashley. 

I'm looking forward to seeing every one else's top ten!


Saturday

Autumn Wishlist

The leaves are slowly browning and beginning to fall, Starbucks have begun serving spice pumpkin latte's, and the nights are creeping in...that means only one thing - Autumn! Autumn and Winter are my favourite seasons, they hold all of my favourite things; Halloween, Christmas, Birthdays, Snow, Hats, Gloves...Oh the list is endless! Here's a few things I'm excited about buying/wishing for this season.
1) A Clockwork Orange Fleece Jumper - Out Of Print Clothing. 2) Chuck Palahniuk - Invisible Monsters Remix. 3) Italo Calvino - If On A Winter's Night A Travleller. 4) Will Christopher Baer - Godspeed. 5) George R.R. Martin's Tales Of Duck & Egg.

Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is run by The Broke and the Bookish. This weeks question is;


Top Ten Books That Make You Think (About The World, People, Life, etc.) 

I think this is quite a difficult question to narrow down into 10 as in my opinion that what most books do; they make us think and they change opinions, so I've tried to narrow it down into books that had (to me) a really strong message that made an impact. (In no particular order).

1) Fight Club - Chuck Palahniuk. "The things you own, end up owning you". Just how materialistic are we?

2) Into The Wild - Jon Krakauer. There really is nothing stopping us from just picking up one day and going out to find beauty or purpose or meaning in the world, it does't have to be novelised.

3) 127 Hours - Aron Ralston. See above. The instinct to survive can make you do incredible things.

4) Survivor - Chuck Palahniuk. The way you look does not define who you are.

5) Fiesta - Earnest Hemingway. Love is not a fairytale, but "Isn't it pretty to think so."

6) 1984 - George Orwell. We are all under others control.

7) A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess. Violence is everywhere. It is senseless and consuming.

8) The Road - Cormac McCarthy. Love will always exist, even in the absence of all else. It can be a strength and a weakness, but what would we rather have? A loved one to share in despair? Or the ability to survive longer, alone.

9) Hey Nostradamus! - Douglas Coupland. "God is Nowhere. God is Now Here."

10) Tess of the D'Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy. Women's rights have really come such a long way in the 120 or so years that this book was published.


What books changed the way you think? 


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