Most important books you've read
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ChiOCat
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Most important books you've read
What books have really impacted your outlook on life, how you view things? The ones that stay with you for years. Fiction and non-fiction.
"We are all vulnerable, and all fallible, with mortality our only certainty..." - Dr Kenneth Bock
- NrthFce
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Re: Most important books you've read
The Eagle has Landed - Jack Higgins
The Long Walk - Slavomir Rawicz
Into Thin Air - Jon Krakauer
Point of Impact - Stephen Hunter
Flags of our Fathers - James Bradley
The Long Walk - Slavomir Rawicz
Into Thin Air - Jon Krakauer
Point of Impact - Stephen Hunter
Flags of our Fathers - James Bradley
MSU Alumni!


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ChiOCat
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Re: Most important books you've read
Radical Forgiveness - Colin Tipping
Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand
The Devils Advocate and The Listener - Taylor Caldwell
Atlas Shrugged - Ayn Rand
The Devils Advocate and The Listener - Taylor Caldwell
"We are all vulnerable, and all fallible, with mortality our only certainty..." - Dr Kenneth Bock
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TeacherCat
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Re: Most important books you've read
NrthFce wrote: The Long Walk - Slavomir Rawicz
This is an awesome book. I recommend all read it.
Banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies. -Thomas Jefferson
- MashTun
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Re: Most important books you've read
Biographies of American Presidents : George Washington to George Bush - David Whitney
I wouldn't say "changed my outlook on life", but served to remind me each of those who served as our presidents are fallible human beings. As we all are.
The Age of Sacred Terror: Radical Islam's war against America - Daniel Benjamin & Steven Simon
Very good book on understanding where those like Bin Landen derive the views they hold and how we failed to recognize the extent of their intentions. Authors are past directors of the NSA.
I wouldn't say "changed my outlook on life", but served to remind me each of those who served as our presidents are fallible human beings. As we all are.
The Age of Sacred Terror: Radical Islam's war against America - Daniel Benjamin & Steven Simon
Very good book on understanding where those like Bin Landen derive the views they hold and how we failed to recognize the extent of their intentions. Authors are past directors of the NSA.
"Without question, the greatest invention in the history of mankind is beer. Oh, I grant you that the wheel was also a fine invention, but the wheel does not go nearly as well with pizza." - Dave Barry
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- tampa_griz
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Re: Most important books you've read
The best book I've read recently is Tony Dungy's "Quiet Strength".
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Billings Cat
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Re: Most important books you've read
The short story collections of Sherman Alexie (Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven, The Toughest Indian in the World, Ten Little Indians)—Sherman Alexie—everything Alexie does is great, but these collections resonate with me even though I couldn't be further from a Spokane Indian. That is Alexie's gift.
Sleepers—Lorenzo Carcaterra—whether the book is totally true or not ignores that this was one hell of a book
The Poetry of Robert Frost: Unabridged—Robert Frost—even if you don’t like poetry, it’s hard to not enjoy Frost
The Old Man and the Sea—Ernest Hemingway—as I’ve grown older its meaning has changed for me. For a novella so simple and sparse, it still so evocative
The Outsiders—S.E. Hinton—the characters still stick with me since I read it as a teenager
The World According to Garp—John Irving—amazing characters, weird happenings, but so much heart at its core.
The Albany Cycle books (Legs, Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game, Ironweed)—William Kennedy—Ironweed garners the most attention, but the trilogy is simply great literature.
The Portable Jack Kerouac—Jack Kerouac—my copy is dog eared from reading it over and over again. When Kerouac was good, he was great.
Into Thin Air – John Krakaeur—shows just how precious life can be
Isaac’s Storm: A Man, A Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History—Erik Larson—taking literally hundreds of bits of information and weaving them into a taut true thriller which shows that no age is the exclusive domain of man’s arrogance and also compassion
To Kill A Mockingbird—Harper Lee—because courage is not always so obvious. Hard to believe that this is the only novel Lee ever wrote, and when she was asked why she said, "There wasn't anything left for me to say."
Hombre—Elmore Leonard—I think it’s the greatest western novel ever written and like all westerns it's more than just about cowboys and Indians
A River Runs Through It and Other Stories—Norman Maclean—because I have a brother and it is some of the most beautiful writing I’ve ever read
Complete Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe—Edgar Allen Poe—pure Poe!
Slaughterhouse-Five—Kurt Vonnegut—still so very unconventional after all these years…and so it goes.
Sleepers—Lorenzo Carcaterra—whether the book is totally true or not ignores that this was one hell of a book
The Poetry of Robert Frost: Unabridged—Robert Frost—even if you don’t like poetry, it’s hard to not enjoy Frost
The Old Man and the Sea—Ernest Hemingway—as I’ve grown older its meaning has changed for me. For a novella so simple and sparse, it still so evocative
The Outsiders—S.E. Hinton—the characters still stick with me since I read it as a teenager
The World According to Garp—John Irving—amazing characters, weird happenings, but so much heart at its core.
The Albany Cycle books (Legs, Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game, Ironweed)—William Kennedy—Ironweed garners the most attention, but the trilogy is simply great literature.
The Portable Jack Kerouac—Jack Kerouac—my copy is dog eared from reading it over and over again. When Kerouac was good, he was great.
Into Thin Air – John Krakaeur—shows just how precious life can be
Isaac’s Storm: A Man, A Time, and the Deadliest Hurricane in History—Erik Larson—taking literally hundreds of bits of information and weaving them into a taut true thriller which shows that no age is the exclusive domain of man’s arrogance and also compassion
To Kill A Mockingbird—Harper Lee—because courage is not always so obvious. Hard to believe that this is the only novel Lee ever wrote, and when she was asked why she said, "There wasn't anything left for me to say."
Hombre—Elmore Leonard—I think it’s the greatest western novel ever written and like all westerns it's more than just about cowboys and Indians
A River Runs Through It and Other Stories—Norman Maclean—because I have a brother and it is some of the most beautiful writing I’ve ever read
Complete Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe—Edgar Allen Poe—pure Poe!
Slaughterhouse-Five—Kurt Vonnegut—still so very unconventional after all these years…and so it goes.
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RMD
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- catamaran
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Re: Most important books you've read
ditto with For Whom the Bell TollsRMD wrote:I have to go with The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
and a more recent The Forgotten Man
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- ImagineSanta
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Re: Most important books you've read
The Bible.
I think you don't get it. Sleeping in until 6 won't get many people very far in life, especially if they want to play on Sunday.
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Re: Most important books you've read
Atlas Shrugged
To Kill a Mockingbird
The Great Gastby
1984
The Diary of Anne Frank
The Federalist Papers
The Bible
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
War as I Knew It
To Kill a Mockingbird
The Great Gastby
1984
The Diary of Anne Frank
The Federalist Papers
The Bible
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
War as I Knew It
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- nativecat
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Re: Most important books you've read
I just finished that onr myself, good read!tampa_griz wrote:The best book I've read recently is Tony Dungy's "Quiet Strength".
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GrizinWashington
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Re: Most important books you've read
Man, this is a great (and difficult question). I suppose off the top of my head I would say many of those already mentioned including:
The Bible
Grapes of Wrath
To Kill A Mockingbird
Any Hemingway
Into Thin Air
Then a few others that pop immediately to mind:
"A Pirate Looks at 50"; Jimmy Buffett
"Travels with Charley"; Steinbeck
"The Stand"; Stephen King
"Montana, An Uncommon Land", K. Ross Toole
"Marley and Me"; John Grogan
"Millionaire Next Door; Stanley and Danko
"A Rumor of War"; Philip Caputo
"Walking in Circles Before Lying Down", Merrile Marke
"The Worst Hard Time", Timothy Egan
"Winning Ugly"; Brad Gilbert
"Our Times, the Illustrated History of the 20th Century", Turner
"Baseball", Geoffry Ward and Ken Burns
"One Up on Wall Street", Peter Lynch
The Bible
Grapes of Wrath
To Kill A Mockingbird
Any Hemingway
Into Thin Air
Then a few others that pop immediately to mind:
"A Pirate Looks at 50"; Jimmy Buffett
"Travels with Charley"; Steinbeck
"The Stand"; Stephen King
"Montana, An Uncommon Land", K. Ross Toole
"Marley and Me"; John Grogan
"Millionaire Next Door; Stanley and Danko
"A Rumor of War"; Philip Caputo
"Walking in Circles Before Lying Down", Merrile Marke
"The Worst Hard Time", Timothy Egan
"Winning Ugly"; Brad Gilbert
"Our Times, the Illustrated History of the 20th Century", Turner
"Baseball", Geoffry Ward and Ken Burns
"One Up on Wall Street", Peter Lynch
We're all here 'cause we ain't all there.
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geogfather
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Re: Most important books you've read
God is not Great: How religion poisons everything. by Chris Hitchens
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ChiOCat
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Re: Most important books you've read
Yes, one I forgot to add!RMD wrote:I have to go with The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
"We are all vulnerable, and all fallible, with mortality our only certainty..." - Dr Kenneth Bock
- nevadacat
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Re: Most important books you've read
Yes, good book.catamaran wrote:and a more recent The Forgotten Man
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John K
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Re: Most important books you've read
"Into Thin Air" is a great book. And although I'm not sure that I would refer to it as "most important", one of the more entertaining books that I have ever read is "21 - Bringing Down The House".
- SaxCat
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Re: Most important books you've read
Das Kapital, Karl Marx
Les Miserables, Victor Hugo
Truman, David McCullough
and the most important book to me ever:
East of Eden, John Steinbeck
Les Miserables, Victor Hugo
Truman, David McCullough
and the most important book to me ever:
East of Eden, John Steinbeck
- grizatwork
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Re: Most important books you've read
A Prayer for Owen Meaney By John Irving.
It is one of those books that I intentially slowed down while reading it to savor it. Made me really contemplate my own faith.
It is one of those books that I intentially slowed down while reading it to savor it. Made me really contemplate my own faith.