Question:
summer reading?
2006-07-12 20:36:03 UTC
i'm 17 and i'm looking for some good books that i might be able to get into this summer. Nothing too intensely deep or anything, but definitely entertaining and it's gotta be a page turner. I've read dan brown and enjoyed it, the harry potter books are good, and golden compass, subtle knife and amber spyglass were good too.

any suggestions? i'm open to a lot of different genres.
Sixteen answers:
Namooni
2006-07-12 21:48:03 UTC
Death by ...... series. authored by j.d. rod

spider-wick series authored by t. diterlizzi and h. black

tourist trap authored by Charles Ogden

dear America series publisher scholastic inc.

my America series publisher scholastic inc.

red-wall series by Brian Jacques

anything by Anne McCaffery(my personal fav.)
Angels live amoung us
2006-07-13 12:54:50 UTC
You might like Inkheart and Inkspell, or the Septimus Heap series (Magyk and Flyte are out right now). I liked that one. Um... There is Mary Higgins Clark if you like weird mysteries. She is a really favored writer. Shadow Children series (Starts with Among the Hidden) By Margaret Peterson Haddix. She writes good books too. Have you read the Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants? A lot of people like those. Here are the ones I can think of of the top of my head. I hope I helped you.
LP
2006-07-13 06:01:15 UTC
Good in Bed by Jeniffer Weiner (not as lewd as the title may sound) and Running with Scissors by Augusten Burroughs (currently making the movie) are both good books for a mature 17 year old. I think you will find both entertaining and insightful. Running with Scissors is a true story of a pre-teen through young adult years of a guy with a mother that suffers from mental illness, an absentee father, an insane psychiatrist and his unconventional family, a pedophile "friend" and first gay experience...it's crazy witty, sad, and unpredictable. I think you'd really enjoy both books.
CarloS
2006-07-13 03:58:24 UTC
Here are just a few suggestions for your pleasure: Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King. The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger and Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes. All of these books will provide great reading material for you. This may sound sappy, but my favorite quote from Hearts is: " It was the kiss by which all the others of his life would be judged....and found wanting" Keep reading all you can, your knowledge will soar to new heights and you will be entertained at the same time!!!
Seinfeld
2006-07-19 21:21:47 UTC
I'm 18, so hopefully these books could be interesting for you. I loved them, very entertaining.



My favorite book, that is quite entertaining is 'Temple of Gold' by William Goldman.



Anyhting from the author Chuck Palahniuk.



Perks of being a Wallflower. (I read it last year when I was 17, it made me enjoy my last year of being a "kid"), Virgin Suicides, the Catcher in the Rye, Goodbye Columbus, and Stop Pretending (a story in the form of many poems)



That's just a few, try them!
Andielion
2006-07-13 05:18:34 UTC
I love books, I could go on and on about this. But I won't. I just finished Christoper Rice's A Density of Souls. Amazing. Nothing like his mothers stuff. This book makes you feel for and against all the character's. Each with their own personality and story. I highly recommend it. Let me know if you want some more, I would love to share any knowledge about books.
floydthefish
2006-07-13 03:42:17 UTC
Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky



The Street by Ann Petry



The House on Mango Street by Susan Cisneros



Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach
delta8888
2006-07-13 04:01:20 UTC
Presumed Innocent by Scott Turow, Clockers by Richard Price,

Barbarians at the Gate, author easily found, Stranger in a Strange Land by Heinlein, Void Moon by Michael Connelly,Night Bird by Ed Dee, Cold Hit by Linda Fairstein, if you like any of these, get back to me, I have more.
brains
2006-07-13 03:41:10 UTC
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
Em
2006-07-18 18:03:54 UTC
Sue Grafton writes compelling Kinsey Millhone Mysteries.



Start with "A is for Alibi."
laney_po
2006-07-13 03:43:12 UTC
I love Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. And I also recommend the Uglies trilogy by Scott Westerfeld.
Allison
2006-07-13 03:47:58 UTC
Prep by Curtis Shettenfield
MBC
2006-07-13 03:52:48 UTC
Try Mark Twain's classics
Kat
2006-07-13 03:55:26 UTC
"Sex, murder and a double latte"; "Passion, betrayal and killer highlights" - by Kyra Davis will help to survive:

"Crime and punishment" by F. Dostoevsky

"Secret Doctrine" by E.Blavatsky

"The Forsyte Saga" by J. Galsworthy



If you appreciate British humor, try "Three men in a boat, nothing to say about dog" by Jerome K. Jerome.
2006-07-13 17:27:38 UTC
Dresden file book series by Jim Butcher.There are 8 books in the series beginning with stormfront.It narrates the story of Harry Dresden,chicago's only professional wizard who works as a detective.He stands between the general population who is ignorant about the supernatural world and the monsters - vampires,werewolves,fallen angels,fey.He is aided by Bob,a talking skull.Karrin Murphy-a police officer and Thomas-a white court vampire.



Hunter's moon,Moon's web are novels written by Cathy Clamp and C.T. Adams about a werewolf Tony Giodone who is an assassin-for-hire by profession.It is written from Tony's first person POV (point of view).Tony meets his new client, one Suzi Quentin. She wanted someone offed. Well, this is child's play to our boy...um...wolf...Tony. Only she knocks him for a loop when she tells him the name of the person she wants killed - herself!So begins the story.



Dragonjousters series(joust,alta,sanctuary) by Mercedes Lackey.The setting is ancient Egypt.Hunger, anger, and hatred are constants for young Vetch, rendered a brutally mistreated and overworked serf by the Tian conquest of his homeland. But everything improves when a Tian jouster requisitions Vetch to become the first serf ever to be a dragon boy. His training is intense, and his duty clear-cut: to tend his jouster, Ari, and his dragon, Kashet. He discovers that, because Ari himself had hatched Kashet, the dragon is different from others that have been captured live in the wild and must be drugged to be made tractable. Vetch finds he really likes and understands dragons, and soon he becomes the best dragon boy of all. He still harbors anger, however, toward the Tian invasion. Could he, perhaps, hatch a dragon, and then escape to help his people?



Scaramouche by Rafael Sabatini.When his best friend, a young clergyman, is killed in a mockery of a duel by an arrogant noble, just to quiet his eloquent expressions of democratic ideals, Andre-Louis Moreau vows revenge. From that point, through meteoric careers as a consummate actor and scenario writer, then as a fencing master, and finally a politician, the brilliant Moreau keeps thwarting the aims of the aristocratic Marquis de la Tour d'Azyr. However, the nobleman causes pain to Moreau as well, and the time must come when the two will meet to settle their enmity once and for all. You are not likely to guess how their confrontation finally turns out. Set against the backdrop of the French Revolution, this swashbuckling novel is exciting throughout, and it presents one of the most dashing heroes in fiction, a man who can fight equally well with his mind, his mouth, his pen, and his sword, a man who stirs up events wherever he goes.



The Vivero letter by Desmond Bagley.Jeremy Wheale's well-ordered life is torn apart when his brother is murdered by a mob hit man, whose bait was a family heirloom - a sixteenth-century gold tray. The trail takes Wheale from Devon to Mexico and the wild tropical rain forests of Yucatan. In dense jungle, he helps two archaeologists locate the rest of a fabled hoard of gold - treasure from Uaxuanoc, the centuries-old lost city of the Mayas. But his brother's enemies are on Wheale's trail, and with them are the Chicleros, a vicious band of convict mercenaries.



Landslide by Desmond Bagley.Bob Boyd wakes up in a hospital with no memory,the only surviver of an accident.He was burned badly all over and needed extensive plastic surgery which was payed by a mysterious sponser.He is told that he's a geology student with a bad history.However Bob recovers and gets on with his life.Hired by the powerful Matterson Corporation to survey land before they build a great new dam, he begins to uncover the shaky foundations of the Matterson family and becomes a fly in their ointment.His accident and the Matterson family have more in common than he thought.





Bourne Identity by Robert Ludlum.Forget the movie.The book is the real article."The Bourne identity" is the story of a man without a past, rescued from the Mediterranean Sea by some fishermen. He is very ill, and his body has suffered the impact of many bullets. The man is taken by the fishermen to a doctor in a nearby island, who helps him to recover physically and mentally. Our protagonist doesn't remember who he is, but with the help of the doctor he finds some clues he doesn't like too much. He only knows for certain some things, for instance that his face has been altered by plastic surgery, that he knows a lot about firearms and that he carried on him a microfilm that contains the code to an account of four million dollars.



In the Swiss bank where the account is he also finds a name: Jason Bourne. But... is he Jason Bourne?. He cannot remember, and if it were for quite a few people, he won't. From the moment he leaves the island onwards, our man without a past will be followed, and attacked. He doesn't understand why, but he reacts in order to stay alive. Add to this already interesting mixture a woman he takes as a hostage, Marie, a number of assasins (including the most famous assassin in the world, Carlos), and the possibility that he is, as a matter of fact, also an assassin, and you will understand why this book is so good. The main character will be hunted all throughout the book not only by the "bad guys", but also by the "good" ones (mainly agents from the USA Government). You won't be able to stop reading this book, and you will find yourself asking aloud to nobody in particular "who on earth is this man?" and "what started this whole mess"?.

Warning:A character gets raped.



Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote the Mars novels and the tarzan novels.There are 11 novels in the mars series beginning with 'a princess of mars'.Captain John Carter of the Confederate Army is whisked to Mars and discovers a dying world of dry ocean beds where giant four-armed barbarians rule, of crumbling cities home to an advanced but decaying civilization, a world of strange beasts and savage combat, a world where love, honor and loyalty become the stuff of adventure. The later books are about his son Carthoris,daughter Tara etc.John carter is a recurring character in all these books as martians live for 1000 years.



You can get free e-books by edgar rice burroughs,O.Henry and rafael sabatini from Project Gutenberg.
landslide
2006-07-13 08:46:53 UTC
"The Lord of the Rings" by Tolkien


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