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A community of people who love to read, collect, swap, mooch, talk about, sell, touch, smell, look at,...more »

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  • cecille

    "What's the first sentence in the book you're reading?" Part 3

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    Prostitutes have no heart; actors have no morals.
    - "Farewell to my Concubine" by Lilian Lee

    cecille started this discussion 3 years ago (edited). ( reply | permalink )

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  • anikins
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    "These people were dying of old age. That's it." --Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell

    (it's actually the epigraph to the Intro. the actual first sentence is boring :) )

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sumthinblue.com
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    "I am writing this because it is the truth"- The Last Time I Saw Mother by Arlene Chai

    An international novel (1996) written by a Filipina, about a family of Filipina women and the secrets they keep

    It's another review copy, I wouldn't have picked it up on my own. But it's interesting enough, I'm a few chapters in and I feel like I'm privy to neighborhood gossip. Very telenovela, very Mano Po. Haha.

    In fairness it's gotten good reviews:

    Arlene J. Chai, a Filipino-Chinese-Australian burst into the literary scene in 1996 with the critically acclaimed The Last Time I Saw Mother which became an alternate selection of The Literary Guild.

    Here's what they say about Ms. Chai and The Last Time I Saw Mother

    "A remarkable first novel filled with family secrets and the intersection of personal and world histories, told through four mesmerizing voices." - Amy Tan

    "An often lyrical and always tough-minded debut ... Provides rare insights into three cultures - Spanish, Chinese, and Filipino - that coexist in the Philippines." - The New York Times Book Review

    [A] wise, beautifully written first novel ... introduc[ing] a culture not often written about in Western literature ... Reading each chapter is like having a conversation with a close friend." - Chicago Tribune

    "A sensitive ... portrait of a family of Filipina women who, by common consent, have long kept a secret ... The novel illuminates much modern Philippine history." - The Boston Globe

    Her next novel, Eating Fire and Drinking Water, is also set in the Philippines with Pinoy characters.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 3 replies
    • Francesca 

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      blooey,

      I had read both books by Chai and I love The Last Time I Saw Mother better.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Haha I don't think I'll read the other book naman. I like The Last Time I Saw Mother, it's growing on me. Maybe it's appealing to my usi nature haha.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Finished Last Time na... I didnt expect to like it but i did :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Francesca (edited)

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    In between changing diapers full of poo-poo and tidying up the house,
    Getting frustrated seeing all the books around me and not being able to read them,
    I have decided to find a schedule to read:

    The Mother Trip: Hip Mama's Guide to Staying Sane in the Chaos of Motherhood by Ariel Gore

    First sentence: "We have children because mothering is good for the soul."

    From Amazon:

    In this collection of essays--some lasting one page, some stretching to five--Gore deftly spotlights the messy corners of motherhood: sleeplessness, depression, weird pregnancy dreams, the restless hunger for creativity, and the passionate love of children. This is comforting turf, especially for mothers who have felt patronized and bored by the numerous advice-laden mothering manuals on the market. Gore mixes straight talk with dreamier musings, using sensual details and thoughtful subtext to illuminate the spirituality of motherhood.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "Gwenda was eight years old, but she was not afraid of the dark."
    World Without End by Ken Follett

    Im still halfway with the book, it is very thick (1,014 pages). It is beautifully written, ive enjoyed Pillars of the Earth and this sequel too. It is interesting how the characters tried to outwit each other, how religion, politics and business intermingled in the medieval times to the point that it is blurred.
    Well, ive to plow thru several pages before i rest my eyes..

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria
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    "The knife had a handle of polished black bone, and a blade finer and sharper than any razor."
    The Graveyard Book, Neil Gaiman

    This is the first Gaiman book I am reading, and I am enjoying it so much! Already in Chapter 4 :-)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
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    • Sumthinblue.com
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      I just finished this last week... I don't normally dig Gaiman but I loved this one :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Francesca (edited)

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      I'm not into Gaiman like most people friends I know...

      Is he interesting enough?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Ivan Girl I'm not into Gaiman also but i liked this

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      You will enjoy this one, IvanGirl :-)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Roel A
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    MATANDA NA NG MABILANGGO SI MANG SELO.

    From the short story "Bilanggo"by my Idol Wilfredo P.Virtusio.Part of an anthology of short stories from the book "Sigwa."

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria
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    "Joel Spolsky is changing the world."

    Tribes We Need You to Lead Us, Seth Godin

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 4 replies
    • islandhopper
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      I'm a Seth Godin fan, though I've only read one of his books. Is this one nice? Are you putting it up for mooching :) ?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      Hi IHop, this one is good reading for me :-)
      And a keeper, sorry

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • islandhopper
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      no problem. i should start collecting his stuff. of course, i never ever find him in booksale. did you buy this full price?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      yes, I saw it at Fully Booked and grabbed it hehehe
      Very interesting reading :-)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "In the fall of 1995, after resigning from my last academic post, I decided to indulge myself and fulfill a dream."

    Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books by Azar Nafisi

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Ejia
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    The North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Agency promised to fly from Mercy to the other side of Lake Superior at three o'clock.

    - Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23
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    "Almost everyone thought the man and the boy were father and son."

    Salem's Lot by Stephen King

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Wiggletoes
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    Under the shadows of the green bamboo, the young bhikkhu, Svasti, sat cross-legged, concentrating on his breath.

    Old Path White Clouds by Thich Nhat Hanh

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria

    libreria (edited)

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    "Every so often, there are moments that define a generation."

    Change We Can Believe In: Barack Obama's Plan to Renew America's Promise

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • annapi
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    "There are many ghosts in the city of Lyon."
    The Body in the Vestibule by Katherine Hall Page, a cozy mystery series that I am trying for the first time.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 5 replies
    • fantaghiro23
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      Hi, annapi.:) Haven't read a cozy mystery since I left off Agatha Christie's Miss Marple. How do you find this series? And what's a good cozy series to try?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • annapi
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      I am not a fanatic with cozies, most of them are too fluffy for me. I can't stand Laura Child, for example, and the food-themed ones leave me cold. But I love Carolyn Hart's Death on Demand series, and even better her Henrie O. Another one I was surprised to find enjoyable is Jill Churchill's Jane Jeffrey series. And of course there is Charlaine Harris's Aurora Teagarden and Lily Bard series. Lily Bard is darker, though.

      So far this Faith Fairchild series of Katherine Page's is okay, I really loved the mouth-watering descriptions of French food. I have to read more of the series to judge it though. The one I finished just a few days ago (review is in PBT) is Sacred Cows by Karen Olson, that one was really good. And I loved David Crossman's The Dead of Winter - he has an octogenarian for a detective.

      My favorites are historical cozies, particularly Margaret Frazer's Sister Frevisse series, Peter Tremayne's Sister Fidelma, and Ellis Peters's Brother Cadfael.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      [hands raised] what does cozy series mean, please?

      thanks, teacher ;-)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23

      fantaghiro23 (edited)

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      A cozy mystery is one where usually an ordinary person gets involved in solving a crime and, by it's name, it's cozy because there's no blood, gore, nor much violence. I guess a familiar example would be Murder She Wrote.

      But don't take my word for it.:) Here's what wikipedia has to say:

      "Cozy mysteries" began in the late 20th century as a reinvention of the Golden Age whodunnit; these novels generally shy away from violence and suspense and frequently feature female amateur detectives. Modern cozy mysteries are frequently, though not necessarily in either case, humorous and thematic (culinary mystery, animal mystery, quilting mystery, etc.).

      Annapi: Thanks, by the way! I think the most accessible to me now would be Charlaine Harris. That is, after I get done with her vampire novels. I think i'll try out Lily Bard.:)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      Thanks, fantaghiro :-) accepted friend request na rin, thanks also for adding me

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sumthinblue.com
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    "The Tales of Beedle the Bard is a collection of stories written for young wizards and witches"

    -The Tales of Beedle the Bard by JK Rowling, fresh from the Powerbooks Midnight Release :)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 5 replies
    • Marie
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      Gosh, pumila ka talaga ng midnight no? Can I ask how much did you pay for it?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      P570++ (10% off). But cheaper at National P545 lang, kaya lang wala silang midnight release :D

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      waaaa sana ako rin makabili nang collectors edition waa

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Pinag-iisipan ko pa yung $100 na amazon collector's edition

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      Wahaha ganun ba good luck doon waaaa

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23
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    "Nine months Landsman's been flopping at the Hotel Zamenhof without any of his fellow residents managing to get themselves murdered."

    The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael Chabon

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria
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    Will tugged at his mother's hand and said, "Come on, come on...."

    The Subtle Knife, Philip Pullman

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • a.k.a. SHY
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    "I'm thinking of asking the servants to wax my change before placing it in the Chinese tank I keep on my dresser."

    Naked, by David Sedaris

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper
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    I'm not cray about Florence except for the pig museum. - Take Big Bites by Linda Ellerbee

    Through the open window the air-steeped outdoors passed into his room, quietly enveloping him, stealing into his very thought. - Dead Stars by Paz Marquez Benitez, first story in Fourteen Love Stories, edited by Jose Dalisay Jr. and Angelo R. Lacuesta.

    Corde, who led the life of an executive in America - wasn't a college dean a kind of executive? - found himself six of seven thousand miles from his base, in Bucharest, in winter, shut up in an old-fashioned apartment. - The Dean's December by Saul Bellow

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria

    libreria (edited)

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    "In a valley shaded with rhododendrons, close to the snow line, where a stream milky with melt-water splashed and where doves and linnets flew among the immense pines, lay a cave, half-hidden by the crag above and the stiff heavy leaves that clustered below."

    The Amber Spyglass, Philip Pullman

    "A flock of nuns crossed the road, their crisp wimples fluttering about their heads like the wings of large sea birds."

    The Eight, Katherine Neville

    [revisiting THE EIGHT In preparation for reading THE FIRE]

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sumthinblue.com
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    "Jose Rizal was my father's uncle, my grandmother's brother, and the beloved grand-uncle we children called Lolo Jose."

    Lolo Jose: An INtimate and Illustrated Portrait of Jose Rizal
    It's the 2nd edition of a book on Rizal that used to be out of print, written by Narcisa Rizal's granddaughter (Rizal's grandniece) Asuncion Lopez-Bantug.

    Last published in 1988, the book is a biography of Rizal as culled from family lore and personal anecdotes, now updated by Vibal foundation with the most comprehensive photo album of Rizal, with more than 300 historical photos and reproductions, the complete bibliography of his works and a genealogical chart of his family.

    I started reading after I got home from the launch, it's very well written, I've downed twelve chapters in one sitting tonight...

    Too bad I got a softcover (although I'm not really complaining -- it's beautiful!), the hardcover collector's edition has the cd-rom Codex Rizal with the full text of Rizal's novels and selected works, Rizal biographies (Retana, Craig, Palma, Kalaw), and hundreds of photos and illustrations....

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 11 replies
    • libreria
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      hey blooey, is this available in bookstores already? pang-regalo ko... sa sarili hahaha

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com

      Sumthinblue.com (edited)

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      It should be out soon, especially with Rizal day coming up. Will ask the foundation staff tomorrow.

      Can I just say, ang ganda nya! Nakakatuwang basahin, very interesting, especially the anecdotes you'll never find in other Rizal biographies. And it's in full color too!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • GnP

      GnP 

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      How much for the softcover? Hardcover?

      Looks like Czar might be interested in that too.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • czar

      czar (edited)

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      I want! I want! Bloo, please get me a hardcover if possible, please! Pay you on saturday. Thanks. =)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      I'm not sure where it's sold.... Will ask ha. Will get back to you.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      You went to the launch, Bloo? How was it? Was thinking of going sana.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Hehe I think I grew old by association, I think you can just count the people who were not senior citizens. I couldn't take pictures because I was overwhelmed by the cloying scent of various old-lady perfumes.

      The launch itself was okay, the film on Rizal's family was well-made, and they had a mini-exhibit of Rizal busts and coins... The people who were supposed to speak, e.g. Ambeth Ocampo, didn't make it on time though, I'd have loved to listen to his reaction to this new Rizal biography.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      Vibal pala ang pubisher. Will ask how much :-)
      Thanks, Blooey.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Available in bookstores na daw. P1000 hardcover and P700 softcover. Although you'll probably get it cheaper directly from Vibal...

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie
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      Sino pa ang bibili? Baka may discount if we buy more copies...?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • annapi
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      I'd love to get a copy of this! Maybe I can get my mom to look for it for me.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sumthinblue.com
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    Meanwhile, here's a wiki entry on the book:
    http://en.wikipilipinas.org/index.php?title=Lolo_Jos%C3%A9:_An_Intimate_and_Illustrated_Portrait_of_Jos%C3%A9_Rizal

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • GnP

    GnP 

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    "The amber light came on."

    BLINDNESS by Jose Saramago

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
    • Rise
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      Blindness is part of my TBR before the year ends. Along with The Road by Cormac McCarthy. So much for the holiday season. Hehe.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • czar

    czar (edited)

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    First paragraph of the Preface:

    "I present this book for what it is worth. It is a fruit filled with bitter ash, like those colocynths which sprout in the most arid deserts: rather than quench your thirst, they scorch your mouth even more, yet against their backdrop of golden sand they are not without a certain beauty."

    ~ André Gide, The Immoralist

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    Dimitri asked: "Do you know we're being followed, Mr. Stanford?"

    -Morning Noon and Night by Danielle Steel

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria
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    "It was a dark and stormy night."

    A Wrinkle in Time, Madeleine L'Engle

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 3 replies
    • GnP

      GnP 

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      Great book, libreria. One of my fave Y.A. books of all time. If you love that book you may want to check the other books in the series such as: "Swiftly Tilting Planet" and "A Wind in the Door".

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • libreria
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      Hi GnP, I got all of them hehehe
      Hope to meet you soon :-)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • annapi
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      One of my all-time favorites and read several times over the years!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "Here is Edward bear, coming downstairs now, bump, bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind Christopher Robin."

    -Winnie-The-Pooh by A.A. Milne

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends

    KwesiFriends (edited)

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    "It was 7 minutes after midnight."

    -The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 2 replies
  • maydayeve
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    "I still remember the day my father took me to the Cemetery of Forgotten Books for the first time."

    The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 2 replies
  • fantaghiro23
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    "It was November."

    The Thirteenth Tale by Dianne Setterfield

    I admit, it's not much of a first line. But I'm hoping the tale will get better with the telling. Reading it because a lot of people say it's good, including Cecille.:)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
  • Ejia

    Ejia (edited)

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    "When your master or lady call a servant by name, if that servant be not in the way, none of you are to answer, for then there will be no end of your drudgery, and masters themselves allow that if a servant comes when he is called it is sufficient."

    DIrections to Servants, Jonathan Swift

    It's essentially a manual for misbehaviour for manservants. It is HILARIOUS.

    The second sentence is even better: "When you have done a fault, be always pert and insolent, and behave yourself as if yours were the injured person; this will immediately put your master or lady off their mettle."

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria

    libreria (edited)

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    "The hunger strike began two hours east of Paris."

    The 39 Clues, Book Two: One False Note by Gordon Korman

    and

    "Late in the nineteenth century powerful economic and social forces at work finally led to the outbreak of the first nationalist revolution and the birth of the first republic in Asia."

    Philippine Presidents 100 Years, Rosario Mendoza Cortez (ed.)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "The year began with lunch."
    A Year In Provence, Peter Mayle

    and

    "It was November."
    The Thirteenth Tale, Dianne Setterfield

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23
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    "The tired old carriage, pulled by two tired horses, rumbled onto the wharf, its creaky wheels bumpety-bumping on the uneven planks, waking Peter from his restless slumber."

    Peter and the Starcatchers by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson

    A young adult book that explores the backstory of how Peter Pan meets Captain Hook.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • GnP

    GnP 

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    "There were voices...and thunderings....and lightnings...and an earthquake"

    KINGDOM COME by Alex Ross and Mark Waid

    ...a graphic novel that I can quickly finish before the year ends.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "All living matter is divided into two main groups, the animal kingdom and the plant kingdom."

    -The Wonders of Nature

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23
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    "This is what I write to her: The clouds tonight embossed the sky. A dipping sun gilded and brazed each raveling edge as if the firmament were threaded through with precious filaments."

    March by Geraldine Brooks

    Figure I should finally finish reading this. It's the story of Mr. March, father of Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy of Little Women fame. Won the Pulitzer, but it had a slow start, so I put it down first.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 4 replies
    • KwesiFriends
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      I love the story of Little Women I think merong affair yata yung ama sa ibang babae.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie
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      Bwahahaha! Nice interpretation Kwesi! :-D

      Would like to tell you the story, kaya lang people accuse me of being such a spoiler so I'll just stop right there na lang. *mmpphhh*

      Fanta, I had came across March in Buy-the-Book, for like a million times na... the premise is quite intriguing (i.e. focus is on the elder March couple). The reason why I passed on that book, even with the intriguing plot, is that it also comes across as one of those melodramatic historical dramas, which definitely isn't one of the genres I'm trying to avoid.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Kwesi: Wala namang mention ng affair sa Little Women. Sa March...secret.:D

      Marie: So far, by page 66, there is drama, but wouldn't call it melodrama. It seems to be more of a character study, set against the backdrop of racism and slavery in the old American south. Don't see much yet of the interplay between husband and wife, as it is told through Mr. March's point of view. What's intersting, though, is the counterpoint of the letters to his wife against what March is really experiencing in the Civil War.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      Heheh sorry sa March nga pala wahahaha I wish I could read that book. Have fun reading fanta.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Rise
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    "In the last half of the nineteenth century, Alexander Agassiz, the smart, quiet son of the brilliant, famously talkative naturalist Louis Agassiz, entangled himself in an argument over the genesis of coral reefs that grew into one of the most heated and vital debates in science."

    -Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral, David Dobbs

    (a wishlisted book found in the NBS grand yearend sale)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "There was once a kindly old wizard who used his magic generously and wisely for the benefit of his neighbors"

    The Tales of Beedle The Bard by JK Rowling

    This is the first sentence of the first tale "The Wizard and The Hopping Pot"

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria

    libreria (edited)

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    "END GAME
    The only goal in chess is to prove your superiority over the other guy."

    The Fire, Katherine Neville

    Continues the saga of The Eight.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "Mr. and Mrs Potter, of number four, Privet Drive, were proud that they were perfect normal, thank you very much."

    -Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 4 replies
    • maydayeve
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      Good luck, Kwesi! I love all the 7 Harry Potters!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Kwesi, kung kelangan mo ng kausap tungkol sa Harry Potter, message mo lang ako! :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • a.k.a. SHY
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      another Potterhead! kwesi, paolo is a big fan of harry potter, too! i'm sure you two boys can have a nice discussion on HP. :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      Wahaha thanks guys sana nga...Still reading the dusty book hehehe

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • annapi
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    "I heard mailman approach my office door, half an hour earlier than usual."

    - Storm Front by Jim Butcher

    My first book for 2009!

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • a.k.a. SHY

    a.k.a. SHY (edited)

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    "Jail is not as bad as you might imagine."

    - One True Thing, by Anna Quindlen

    my first Anna Quindlen. still have 2 more of her books on my TBR.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • GnP

    GnP 

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    "There is no reason good can't triumph over evil, if only angels will get organized along the lines of the mafia."

    -Man without a Country by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Wiggletoes

    Wiggletoes (edited)

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    The 21st Century will overturn many of our basic assumptions about economic life.

    Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded Planet
    Jeffrey D. Sachs


    In the shade of the house, in the sunshine on the river banks by the boats, in the shade of the sallow wood and the fig tree, Siddharta, the handsome Brahmin's son grew up with his friend Govinda.

    Siddharta
    Hermann Hesse

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • cecille
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    A single line of blood trickles down the pale underside of her arm, a red seam on a white sleeve.
    - "Labyrinth" by Kate Mosse

    My first book for the FFP Reading Diversity Challenge, but don't think I'll be able to finish it before I go on duty on Monday. :P

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
    • libreria
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      Ooooh, another book I enjoyed so much. Have fun, Dra Cecille :-)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23

    fantaghiro23 (edited)

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    "Context is everything."

    Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem

    My first Lethem. Liking it so far. Good writing. Main character is a young man with Tourette's.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie
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    "'Sorry, mates, we can't serve your sort in here. We got rules, you know.'"

    Room Full of Mirrors: A Biography of Jimi Hendrix by Charles R. Cross

    A read for both FFP and PBT challenges. It's an okay reading so far, but on a second thought, I shouldn't have read two biographies almost one after another (after Javier Marias' brutal, no-apologies style, it's a bit disconcerting to read Cross' carefully worded, neutral tone). And I'm still looking for my copy of TJHE's Are You Experienced. :P

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 3 replies
  • KwesiFriends
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    "Not for the first time, an argument had broken out over breakfast at number four, Privet Drive."

    -Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 6 replies
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Yihee book 2 na sya...

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      Hehehe oo nga hindi masyadong exciting and beginning nang book.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • czar
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      Ambilis ni Kwesi ah! Sa book 3, mamamatay si Hagrid.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      bad czar!!!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • czar
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      wahahahaha! joke lang kwesi. =)
      Hindi si Hagrid ang mamamatay, pero madami sila. =)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      Wahahah soon malalaman ko din hehehe....

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "Harry Potter was a highly unusual boy in many ways."

    -Harry Potter and the Prisoner Of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "The villagers of Little Hangleton still called it the "the Riddle House," even enough it had been many years since the Riddle family had lived here."

    -Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J.K. Rowling

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 2 replies
    • fantaghiro23
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      Wow. Book 4 ka na in a span of two weeks.:) So, it's safe to assume that you're a fan?:)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      Yes I love the way J.K delver the story kasi hehehe.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydiwayatangnawawala
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    the silent witnesses lie everywhere, passing from one form of matter to another, gradually becoming unrecognizable to their nearest and dearest. - GRAVE SIGHT by charlaine harris

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria

    libreria (edited)

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    "Mama Ramotswe had a detective agency in Africa, at the foot of Kgale Hill."

    The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency, Alexander McCall Smith

    Let's see how this goes...

    And so I decide to jump to the ending. Just not into this.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Rise
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    "Anyone living in the United States in the early 1990s and paying even a whisper of attention to the nightly news or a daily paper could be forgiven for having been scared out of his skin."

    -Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything, Steven D. Levitt & Stephen J. Dubner.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria
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    "It was a queer, sultry summer, the summer they electrocuted the Rosenbergs, and I didn't know what I was doing in New York."

    The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
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    • maydayeve
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      Triccie, how did you find The Bell Jar? It's in my TBR. Planning to read it this year.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • libreria

    libreria (edited)

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    "It's an impossible business, trying to squeeze Provence into a single volume."

    Provence A-Z, Peter Mayle

    Wanted to take a trip before diving into another work of fiction :-)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sumthinblue.com
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    "The artist is the creator of beautiful things" - The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 2 replies
    • cecille
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      I read this while in grade school and though I couldn't fully appreciate it then the ending stuck with me. Then I read Wilde's plays while in college and loved his wit. Planning to give "Dorian Gray" the reread it deserves (eventually :P).

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Haha it's taking me than I thought it would, sana matapos ko today.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • a.k.a. SHY
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    Prologue: "Compared to the Whiting mansion in town, the house Charles Beaumont Whiting built a decade after his return to Maine was modest".

    - from "Empire Falls" by Richard Russo

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "The hottest day of the summer so far was drawing to a close and a drowsy silence lay over the large, square houses of Privet Drive"

    -Harry Potter and the Order of Phoenix by J.K. Rowling

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Francesca 

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    "The decision to bomb the office of the radical Jew lawyer was reached with relative ease."

    - The Chamber by John Grisham

    re-reading J. Grisham's books...

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23

    fantaghiro23 (edited)

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    "The station wagons arrived at noon, a long shining line that coursed through the west campus."

    White Noise by Don DeLillo

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper
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    At 3 a.m. several flares rose into the night sky, flooding the bridgehead near Kustrin with brilliant red light. - Inside Hitler's Bunker, The Last Days of the Third Reich by Joachim Fest

    On the first day of school where I teach, the students all lined up in the yard according to grade. - The Pen Commandments, A Guide for the Beginning Writer by Steven Frank

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "A flock of nuns crossed the road, their crisp wimples fluttering about their heads like the wings of a large sea birds."

    The Eight by Katherine Neville

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie

    Marie (edited)

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    "What can you say about a twenty-five year old girl who died?"

    Love Story - Erich Segal (Sheesh, talk about having a spoiler! In the first sentence pa. :P)

    Printed out from an ebook. I refuse to shell out more than 500 pesos for a romance pocket book.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 11 replies
    • czar
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      PhP200+ lang.

      And I don't think the first sentence functions as a spoiler. In fact, this is where we will take off from in the discussion, so think about it everyone.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie

      Marie (edited)

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      Ah so the price at Fully Booked is double the usual price in other bookstores pala. Pero I still wouldn't buy a brand new copy. And sige, I'll think about that first line.

      Just remember boys and girls... Love means never having to say you are sorry. :-D

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Crappiest line ever.:P

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • czar
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      20+ million people don't think so.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      That's ok. Right or wrong never was dependent on the majority.:P

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Marie paemail din. Kasi antagal nung minooch ko. Tnx :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie
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      Sent it to you na Bloo!

      I've finished reading this last night. And to be honest, it's an okay read. Kwesi, with his Daniel Steel sensibilities, would love it. :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Save Changes Cancel
      KwesiFriends removed this reply 3 years ago.
    • KwesiFriends
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      Wahaha ganun ba, can you send me a the ebook hehehe pa-try.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie
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      Sent it to you na Kwesi. :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • KwesiFriends
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      welcome ate.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie
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    "I keep having these conversations with Dad."

    Dragonhaven by Robin McKinley
    (Hmm, too many fantasies this month. Will switch to another genre for my next one.)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "As long ago as 1860 it was the proper thing to be born at home."

    -The Curious Case of Benjamin Button by F. Scott Fitzgerald

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Maladjusted Tree
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    "Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun."
    -The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "What can you say about a twenty-five year old girl who died?"

    -Love Story by Erich Segal

    Weird...

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "March unleashed a torrent rainfall after an abnormally dry winter."

    -The Shack by William P. Young

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
    • islandhopper
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      Wow, that was one of my fave reads for 2008.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fallenangel24

    fallenangel24 (edited)

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    "A few minutes past one o'clock in the morning, a hard rain fell without warning."
    - Dean Koontz's The Taking

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie
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    "Aleksi Kullio, the new conductor of the Philidelphia Philharmonic, strode onto the concert stage with quick, small steps, like a boy who hadn't learned to match his stride to the new length of his legs. "

    ~ The Dewey Decimal System of Love - Josephine Carr
    (hmm, I think I made a mistake in choosing this as my first chicklit... oh well *shrug*)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 6 replies
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Tsk tsk you shouldve gone with Sophie Kinsella

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie
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      Chose this because my copy of Confessions of a Shopaholic is in Valenzuela. I'll just speed read this then I'll immediately switch to Kinsella.

      If a book is a person, I imagine that my supposedly next one (local novel by Edilberto K. Tiempo) will be quite annoyed with the new arrangements. :P

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Haha. Becky Bloomwood (Shopaholic) takes time to get used to but she'll eventually grow on you. If you want a one-off Kinsella try Undomestic Goddess (my favorite) or Can You Keep A Secret? I have yet to read Remember Me?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Hey, aren't your Mary Baloghs also tagged chic lit?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Marie

      Marie (edited)

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      Are they? Let me check the definition of Chick lit in Wikipedia...

      Chick lit is a term used to denote genre fiction within women's fiction written for and marketed to young women, especially single, working women in their twenties and thirties. The genre sells well, with chick lit titles topping bestseller lists and the creation of imprints devoted entirely to chick lit. It generally deals with the issues of modern women humorously and lightheartedly.

      It has been described as a "safe substitute" for spending time on real romance, or other cultural demands on women, such as homemaking, finding Mr. Right, having thin waists and sexual fidelity.

      Although usually including romantic elements, women's fiction (including chick lit) is generally not considered a direct subcategory of the romance novel genre, because in women's fiction the heroine's relationship with her family or friends may be equally as important as her relationship with the hero.

      Chick lit features hip, stylish, career-driven female protagonists, usually in their twenties and thirties. The women featured in these novels may be obsessed with appearance or have a passion for shopping.

      The setting is generally urban and the plot usually follows the characters' love lives and struggles for professional success (often in the publishing, advertising, public relations, or fashion industry). The style is usually of an airy, irreverent tone and includes frank sexual themes. It frequently makes use of current slang and cliches.

      If I'd follow the above description, Mary Balogh regency romances would be out. I have mulled on those vampire/supernatural chick lit (e.g. Laurell K. Hamilton or Sherrilyn Kenyon fares) but I decided those would also be out.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Ah, you're right. I thought they were tagged chic lit, too, cause sometimes romances, even if they're not contemporary, are tagged chic lit.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "I thought about being dead"

    Inferno by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "At night I would lie in bed and watch the show, how bees squeezed through the cracks of my bedroom wall and flew circles around the room, making that propeller sound, a high-pitched zzzzzz that hummed along my skin."

    -The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "Sonja Vebrugge had no idea that this was going to be her last day on earth."

    -Are You Afraid of the Dark by Sidney Sheldon

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the Western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun."

    -The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 1 reply
    • Marie
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      This is a great read, Sabin! :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper

    islandhopper (edited)

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    In search for an opening for this narrative, a killer anecdote or a quotation pregnant with significance, I have been looking through the notebooks from the months in question. - The Muse Asylum by David Czuchlewski

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 3 replies
    • xxx

      xxx 

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      I love this book! I realize not many people may find it as enjoyable read as I did, but meeeh. :)

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • islandhopper
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      Chapter 3 and it seems interesting. I might have to drop it for a while though to read Feb's discussion book. I didn't realize the 14th is this weekend na.

      I love the cover.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Holy crap, you're right, Ihop. I totally forgot I'm still supposed to reread Love Story.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • fantaghiro23
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    "CLARE: It's hard being left behind."

    The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger

    Hanep sa pain and longing sa first line. Yup, I gave in and am reading this book. Will not put it down till I finish it, so Love Story will have to wait.

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 6 replies
    • KwesiFriends
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      The same, you will enjoy the story. Have fun!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Get the tissues out!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • xxx

      xxx 

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      I need to read this soon para di mapag-iwanan. :)) After my 7-day challenge siguro. I think it's too heavy for me to read and absorb in just one day. =B

      And tissues? Blooey, do we really need rolls of them? Naku, I'm crybaby pa naman!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Yes tissues! I think I was sniffly already just reading the poem at the start of the book.

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Naku, alam ko na mangyayari! Sa page 80 pa lang nag-freak out na ko. Then I started skimming the dates. Didn't read any spoilers, but I think I can guess.

      Damn!

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    • islandhopper
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      this is on my wishlist. will anyone mooch it out?

      posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie

    Marie (edited)

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    "Ok, don't panic."
    ~Confessions of a Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella

    (I'm abandoning the chicklit I was reading till whenever. To complete the experience, I'll probably watch the movie when I returned next next week. Addendum: Not sure about the movie thing; I've just watched the trailer and it seems very different from the book. :P)

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "It was nearing midnight and the Prime Minister was sitting alone in his office, reading a long memo that was slipping through his brain without leaving the slightest trace of meaning behind."

    -Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince by J.K. Rowling

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 2 replies
  • Francesca 

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    "Eat and leave."

    ~Sushi For One by Camy Tang

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie
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    "Chief Inspector Chen Cao, of the Shanghai Police Bureau, found himself once again walking through the morning mist toward Bund Park."

    ~A Loyal Character Dancer by Qiu Xiaolong

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "I was pregnant with you when my mother died, but my condition was far from normal."

    -The Tale of Murasaki by Liza Dalby

    posted 3 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Francesca 

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    "As I was packaging what remained of the dead baby, the man I would kill was burning pavement north toward Charlotte."


    ~ Bare Bones by Kathy Reichs

    a book included in my Suspense/Thriller reading challenge 2009. ;)

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "There was a subdued feeling in the crowd in front of the great cathedral of Notre Dame that morning, an air of tense expectancy, as if people knew that this was not just another public humiliation of a criminal"

    The Last Templar by Michael Jecks

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper

    islandhopper (edited)

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    "No one ever gave me directions like this on a golf course before: 'Aim at either Microsoft or IBM." - The World is Flat by Thomas L. Friedman. -- been postponing starting this 566-page book, but it's a borrowed book that must be read and returned soon.

    "1801." - Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. I'm so embarrassed to say I've never read this.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 5 replies
    • czar
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      huy, i haven't read this din. after charlotte's jane eyre, i didn't have the energy to do another bronte.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • fantaghiro23
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      Wuthering Heights is very different from Jane Eyre. In Wuthering Heights, the characters are not nice at all. They're selfish and vindictive. That's why I like them better.:)

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Ejia
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      Oh I rather liked Jane Eyre. I would like to take a bat to the head of everyone in Wuthering Heights though, save probably Ellen Dean.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • islandhopper
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      I liked Jane Eyre too - the character and the book. I'm having a hard time starting with Wuthering Heights, couldn't get past the first ten pages. The nasty characters are depressing me. Will plod along and read the whole book though.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • maydayeve
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      IHop, how's Wuthering Heights? Di ko rin nabasa ito. Still a challenge.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "Sophie couldn't sleep."
    The BFG by Roald Dahl


    "The business meetings of the Science Fiction Writers of America only happen a couple of times a year, and don't last more than two or three hours when they do."
    Nebula Winners Fourteen edited by Frederik Pohl

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sumthinblue.com
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    I love the BFG!!!

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydiwayatangnawawala
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    Listen, Baby, you can't solve a puzzle when half the pieces are missing...

    - Jack Shepard, PI, ghost, whispers to Penelope McClure as she watches the movie by legendary femme fatale Hedda Geist at a Film Noir Festival, 1st chapter of THE GHOST AND THE FEMME FATALE by alice kimberly

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "Man," said Terl, "is an endangered species."
    Re-reading Battlefield Earth by L. Ron Hubbard with accompanying soundtrack.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Marie

    Marie (edited)

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    "All the way to the horizon in the last light, the sea was just degrees of gray, rolling and frothy on the surface."

    ~The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder

    It'll be my award-winning book read for the challenge (it's a Pulitzer Prize and American Book Award winner), and a good choice too imho.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Ejia
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    Polly cut off her hair in front of the mirror, feeling slightly guilty about not feeling guilty about doing so.

    Monstrous Regiment - Terry Prachett

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "The flash projected the outline of the hanged man onto the wall."

    THE CLUB DUMAS by Arturo Perez-Reverte

    This talks about sooo many old priceless books, it makes me realize how little i've read. So far, it is very exciting, i like the idea of a "book detective", i enjoyed how shrewed Perez-Reverte portrayed them.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 4 replies
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      I loved it Chloe!

      The movie Ninth Gate is based on this book, although I haven't seen it yet.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • maydayeve
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      Blooey, i loved it too, but the ending didnt quite tie up everything as i expected it. Still, it is a very splendid book about the "book world".

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com
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      Oo nga, I felt the ending was a cop out too... Parang, matapos kang pabasahin ng ganun kahaba, that's it?!? Haha, I've read another book by Reverte, I think he's fond of that ruse...

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • maydayeve
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      I've his The Flanders Panel and Captain Alatriste at my TBR. i hope both have an ending as spectacular as plot.

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • xxx

    xxx 

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    "Three A.M. Monday."

    You've Got Murder by Donna Andrews.

    I'm really very interested in cyber/tech mysteries. I think they're simply fascinating, never you mind that I can't understand half of the terminologies and jargons on them. :)) I'm thinking Katherine Neville's A Calculated Risk for my next book, after this.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "Rattisbon Anno Domini mense decembri mclv Cronicle of Baudolino of the fammily of Aulario"

    BAUDOLINO by Umberto Eco

    So far, it is making me laugh..

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "Storm-bruised clouds, heavy and lowering, dropped teeming rain into the howling March wind, slanting in from the northwest to batter the last winter's snow that clung to the stones of Redwall Abbey."

    The Bellmaker by Brian Jacques

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • cecille
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    "It really was a hell of a blast."

    ~ "Full Dark House" by Christopher Fowler

    Enjoying this first novel of a mystery series starring octogenarian detectives Bryant and May of the London Peculiar Crimes Unit...

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    show 3 replies
    • maydayeve
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      Cecille and others - This is an unrelated question, but dito ko na lang itanong :-)

      How do we make "bold fonts" here when we post?

      Thanks!

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • Sumthinblue.com

      Sumthinblue.com (edited)

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      Chloe, put [ b ] text you want to appear in bold + < / b > (delete the spaces, i put in the spaces so it wont register as an html tag)

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
    • maydayeve
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      Thanks Blooey!

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve

    maydayeve (edited)

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    "I might as well say, right from the jump: it was not my usual kind of job."

    PEOPLE OF THE BOOK by Geraldine Brooks

    It is a very interesting story, i like how different lives were weaved as part of history of the Sarajevo Haggadah. It says that a book is more than the sum of its materials. It is an artifact of the human mind and hand.

    "Haggadah" -is a book used only at home. From the Hebrew root word "ngd" meaning "to tell", and it comes from the biblical command that instructs parents to tell their children the story of the Exodus. - People of the Book, page 19.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "The cold passed reluctantly from the earth, and the retiring fogs revealed an army stretched out on the hills, resting"

    The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
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    • czar
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      yey! Crane is brutal, but he rocks! =)

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper
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    outlier [pronunciation code here] noun 1) something that is situated away from or classed differently from a main or related body 2) a statistical observation that is markedly different in value from the others of the sample

    -Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell, my new toilit (I am so polybooking!!)

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "The two men appeared out of nowhere, a few yards apart in the narrow, moonlight lane."

    -Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Wiggletoes
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    In June 2004, I was visiting London with my daughter Orly, and one evening we went to see the play Billy Elliot at a theater near Victoria Station.

    Hot, Flat and Crowded by Thomas L. Friedman

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "The Shreveport Vampire Bar would be opening late tonight."

    ALL TOGETHER DEAD by Charlaine Harris

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydiwayatangnawawala
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    Please tell me that's not going to be part of my birthday dinner this evening.

    - Gemma Doyle, staring into the hissing face of a cobra in Bombay, 21 June 1895 (A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray)

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
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    • teobesta
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      hey i accidentally saw this
      happy belated bday if it really was your bday!

      posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • Sabin Figaro III - mired in the Principia Discordia
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    "The full truth of this odd matter is what the world has long been looking for, and public curiosity is sure to welcome"

    The Master of Ballantrae by Robert Louis Stevenson

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper
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    In those long-ago days, I was very young and lived with my grandparents in a villa with white walls in the Calle Ocharan in Miraflores. - Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter byt Mario Vargas Llosa.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • cesrodriguez
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    "This so dull life, mingled with hate and annoyance and pity." -- John Fowles, The Journals Vol. 1

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "Some years ago there was in the city of York a society of magicians."
    Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell by Susanna Clarke

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper

    islandhopper (edited)

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    "The notice informed them that it was a temporary matter: for five days their electricity would be cut off for one hour, beginning at eight P.M.' - Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri (My Pulitzer award category for diversity challenge) But I doubt if I'll have time for fiction for the next few weeks.


    "The model struts towards the battery of cameras, profile held slightly aloft, walking with the curious avian gait that has evolved to flatter the lines of her dress." - Fashion Brands, Branding Style from Armani to Zara, 2nd edition byt Mark Tungate

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • KwesiFriends
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    "She was born Anidori-Kiladra Talianna Isilee, Crown Princess of Kildenree, and she did not open her eyes for three days."

    -The Goose Girl by Shannon Hale

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • islandhopper

    islandhopper (edited)

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    "On either side of a little promontory loaded with cafes and restaurants was a frisky but decorous sea, nothing like the real ocean that roared and rumbled outside the gape of the enclosing bay and barrier rocks known by everyone -- and it was even on the charts -- as Baxter's teeth." -The Grandmothers by Doris Lessing

    What a wordy sentence.

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
  • maydayeve
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    "It was luck at cards that started the trouble, and enlistment in mad invasion that seemed the way out of it."
    - Napoleon's Pyramids by William Dietrich

    "A month before his deadline, Eddie Carroll ripped open a manila envelope, and a magazine called The True North Literary Review slipped out into his hands." 20th Century Ghosts by Joe Hill

    posted 2 years ago. ( permalink )
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