I decided I'd do her Read Fifty Books in a Year Challenge foor my current
mission101 and frankly, so far I'm not doing very well having only read 11 terrific books, when I should have read around 20 or so terrific books to meet my goal by November 1, 2016. Hurumph :(
Still,what's read is read.
1_The Aspirin Age: 1919 to 1941 Edited by Isabel Leighton_short
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I too have read The Hobbit and the Fellowship trilogy. I read The Hobbit in 1948 or 49, when I was about 10 or 11, and liked it but was not swept away. No doubt a lot went over my head. Then, about ten years later, I read the trilogy and only really enjoyed the first book. The next two books bored and appalled me; I did not 'get' them.
Around 2000, just before the movies started coming out, my Dunnett group did an on-line reread, and this time I got them. However, the timing was off. I could appreciate the scholarship and brilliance behind them, but in my 60s I was not swept away into the sort of obsession I'm capable of.
I've also read, several times but not recently, The Left Hand of Darkness and (I think) everything by Neal Stephenson except Anathem. Oh yes, and I read Neverwhere but should read it again as I can't recall much about it ( ... )
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I am so glad we have so much overlap. I also was just a little sad because I am dominated by sci-fi/ fantasy whilst, it seems to me, you're a bit more of a mystery gal. Correct me if I misspeak. For me the Tolkein books were first encountered in my mid-teens and struck home immediately and, apparently, forever. Of the rest, all will probably, no will definately, be reread again. I once thought rereading was a waste, so many books, so little time, but not anymore. So much more is understood the second time around.
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Stephenson is something of an acquired taste. FanSee
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