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Does anybody read for fun anymore?

edited December 2007 in General
I used to read a lot when I was younger, especially throughout high school but it seems like ever since I came to university, there's no more time for recreational reading. To counter act that, I take english classes every other semester so it gives me a chance to read and discuss different kinds of literature. Anyone else into discussing literature on this board? Shakespeare, Orwell, Thatcher, Atwood, anything goes

Comments

  • edited December 2007
    Yeah I agree, ever since I started university I've hardly had any time to read books that I want to read. Though two weeks ago I decided to read and finish two books which I had wanted to do for a long time, coupled with the fact that I wasn't going to do any of my school readings anyway...

    so I finished 'The Fountainhead' by Ayn Rand and 'Gulag: A history' by Anne Applebaum.
    I highly recommend Gulag, I couldn't put it down for three days straight!! the book describes the harsh conditions of forced labour workers in the soviet era (from lenin to stalin and finally its fall from power in 1991). many of the accounts described in the book were just horrifying and I personally believe it is a must-read in order to understand the complicated political, social, and economical issues in modern Russia.

    any books on your "want-to-read" list?
  • edited December 2007
    No, and that would be the reason that I never read for fun, because I can never find a book I want to read. I've wandered through book stores for hours but nothing really appeals to me. Occasionally something will, so I buy it, try and read it but it gets so boring to read almost right away to the point that I will be reading but not paying attention.
  • edited December 2007
    Gulag sounds right up my alley, Meesh. I'm taking an English called British Literature after 1945 with T.Kehler (awesome prof btw) and it's all about the Bolshevik revolution which brought Lenin into power. The main character, Rubashov, is a political prisoner who is forced to confess to crimes he didn't commit, like what actually happened at the show trials in 1941 in Russia. It's a very good book that gets you an inside look at the psychology of a communist revolutionary who struggles to accept his individuality after being betrayed by the party which he has served faithfully his whole life. I would definitely reccomend reading it

    Gulag is now on my want to read list :) as is Machiavelli - The Art of War and The Essays of Warren Buffet
  • edited December 2007
    I read a lot. Mostly non-fiction, but some fiction.
  • edited December 2007
    i read some economic books from time to time

    i like the last one i read, more sex is safer sex :)

    and i read a bunch of technical analysis /stock books, dunno if those count heh
  • edited December 2007
    I have periods where I'll read a lot for fun, and then there'll be other times when I won't pick up a book for quite some time. Kind of annoying like that. :(
  • edited December 2007
    =( I haven't read since high school, though I want to.
    Unless it's those books they make you read in English105, like Sophocles... which didn't appeal to me at all.
  • edited December 2007
    I'm a minor in English, so it keeps me reading.

    The book im on now (which i should have finished two weeks ago!) is "White Teeth"....i like it but its very long and somewhat boring in some parts.
  • edited December 2007
    imelting: ever read freakonomics?

    I'm reading George Orwell's 1984 right now. I'm sure some of you guys are familiar with it, because the last time I read it was in high school. The second time around, I'm getting a lot out of it and have learned a significant amount about politics, socialism, and totalitarianism. What do you guys think was Orwell's intention in writing it?
  • edited December 2007
    ^ hehe freakonomics, that book was good. subject matter is waaaaaay more interesting than what we learn in economics at school :( haha funniest part of the book is when the author starts talking about names that parents give to their children. "orangello and lemonjello"

    and when i was reading Gulag i kept thinking about how much 1984 resembled Soviet society. then i did some research on Google and apparently George Orwell did base much of his fictional dystopian society on Stalin's Soviet Union. more reason for you to read Gulag right after :P

    i'm finishing up Atonement right now. I read it when it first came out but that was too long ago and since i really want to watch the movie, i want to be able to see if the adaptation lives up to the book.
  • edited December 2007
    yea freakonomics was one of my favs!
  • edited December 2007
    I used to read a lot when I was younger, like back in elementary school. Then I started to read less and less as I got older, but still read stuff from time to time. Now, with school and all, it's hard to find time to read what I WANT to read..on top of the required reading for school..

    I believe 1984 was written shortly after the second world war and I think Orwell wrote it for a lot of reasons. Especially because it being written right after World War II and right into the Cold War, he probably intended it as a "warning" that if societies and attitudes didn't change, the world would gradually become like the dystopia portrayed in 1984. He probably tried to reflect what would happen if the leaders of the Communist nations would continue their rule: loss of individual freedoms, loss of free speech, brain-washing, etc. many of which were already happening in the Communist nations at the time of Orwell's writing.

    I've always wanted to read the classics. Ranging from the ancient Latin and Greek works to more modern-day, contemporary classics. Basically books like Les Miserables, 1984, Catcher in the Rye.. some I've already read.
  • edited December 2007
    ^I agree, i would LOVE to read those books too! I read the Great Gatsby and its one of my favorite books.

    You should read The Illiad and The Odyssey. Both are very good Greek classics.
  • edited December 2007
    ^just read those for my hum class this year.. =)
  • edited December 2007
    Did you like them?

    I found The Iliad to be quite gruesome in some sections, but other than that, i really liked those books.

    There are so many books i want to read, but alas, not enough time :( Busy busy busy.

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