What's the best school related book you have read

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mrhappy1489

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May 12, 2011
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denseWorm said:
Oh jeez, I dunno, Wide Sargasso Sea was pretty fantastic.
That depressing thing, well hey to each his own. On a slightly ironic point, the best book I read was Brave New World. It's still one of my favourite books, as sad as it is.
 

ManimalR

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Jan 3, 2011
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Of Mice and Men, fantastic book, but I can no longer stand the sight of it due to having read it at least 4 times in class and having done countless essays :(
 

SanguineScale

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Jun 8, 2011
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sethisjimmy said:
Surprised nobody mentioned Catcher in the Rye, that was the only book that really interested me all throughout highschool.
This, about a thousand times. Also, the Heart is a Lonely Hunter. I ate that novel up like Christmas.
 

goldenjester

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sinsfire said:
I think Childhood's End was mindblowing when I read it in high school.
I thought I was the only one who read that in high school! I got to take sci-fi as my junior year English course, and the teacher and I realized that I had read all of the books on the syllabus already, so he lent me his personal copy of Childhood's End. Great stuff.
 

Josufu

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In my senior year English class, the teacher allowed us to choose one book from a list on which to do a report. I chose The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I've never had enjoyed a book report so much. :-D
 

bl4ckh4wk64

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Jun 11, 2010
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Probably The Power of One by Bryce Courtenay. Absolutely brilliant novel that I highly recommend to almost everyone I've ever met. The only thing I didn't like was the end, but I did sort of see some artistic value in it. I just wish it ended a different way.
 

Plucky

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Jan 16, 2011
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I'm probably going to say either Holes or Kensuke's Kingdom, all i remember from the former was that some kid called Stanley Yelnats ended up with stolen trainers somehow and got sent into a children's detention center somewhere in the middle of a desert.

The latter was about a kid who somehow fell off a ship with his dog and ended up marooned on a deserted island, until he found a Japanese man who has been there since World War II, i cannot remember what happened in the middle, except the kid tried sending a message in a bottle but Kensuke caught him, though the kid and dog got rescued; Kensuke made the kid promise not to mention about his existence to anyone until something like 10-30 years. (despite the world changing, maybe the man just wanted to die on an island where he lived quite well, or something?)


I liked those books for some reason during primary school, possibly because the rate in which we read it felt engrossing and easily manageable, making you want to read even more next time on the next day.
 

Shadu

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Nov 10, 2010
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1984
Fahrenheit 451
Animal Farm
Lord of the Flies

(Pretty much any book I read that I liked enough to buy later, which is very little considering how much I had to read for class in school)
 

sb666

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My school always picks the worst possible texts for English, There always about children losing their innocence, with titles that sound like they were made for self help books. We once worked on Animal Farm but our teachers made us work with the live action film.
To Kill A Mockingbird was good though.
 

mrhappy1489

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denseWorm said:
mrhappy1489 said:
That depressing thing, well hey to each his own. On a slightly ironic point, the best book I read was Brave New World. It's still one of my favourite books, as sad as it is.
Oh *smirk* dytopian future novels, why don't we all go complain about how the governments of today were predicted in 1984.

Not being serious, lah, you didn't ask for that diss :p so sorry, but that's what I always used to think about 1984 and BNW.

I actually really enjoyed Gulliver's Travels, the satire was awesome, I should have said that from the off.
Pfft Guliver's Travels were did you pick that up, the toilet store. In all honesty Gulliver's Travels was pretty good, had to read it for one of my electives, though it saddens me to say that Pride and Prejudice was probably my favourite that I read for the course.
 

SlaveNumber23

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Aug 9, 2011
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A Fine Balance was really good, we did that for year 12 English. While technically not a book, Othello (Shakespeare) is amazing too.
 

Vault101

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Sep 26, 2010
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I dont think Ive ever had to read a decent book for school

all the "school related" classics like animal farm, 1984 , to kill a mockingbird and farenheit I sought out and read in my own time

To Kill a Mocking Bird was a great vook...I thouroughly enjoyed it
 

Yopaz

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Jun 3, 2009
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Biology - Brooker.

Yeah, that's the we use in 3 different subjects at my university and it's brilliant.

If it has to be something outside of text books (and I assume we're not supposed to mention things we got to pick for ourselves, but in that case 1984 which I wrote a paper on last year of high school) then it's a Norwegian crime novel about a bank robbery that turned ugly. It was written by Fredrik Skagen (published in 1995), but I don't know the English name for it.
 

Zantos

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Jan 5, 2011
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For a GCSE exam we had to read a collection of short stories written by Edgar Allan Poe. I still read them from time to time some 8 years later, so I guess that wins by default.
 

Kentr_Wrolfsong

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Aug 22, 2011
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Gotta be Wuthering Heights. I really expected to hate it after loathing Jane Eyre, but it wound up being so damn atmospheric I couldn't help but love it.