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<blockquote data-quote="Number 6" data-source="post: 66028" data-attributes="member: 562"><p>Hmmm.....I can name several favourites, but even that will leave many out. So, off the top of my head:</p><p>Novels:</p><p>Les Miserables, Victor Hugo- Just brilliant in every possible sense. It's something like 1600 pages in the paperback version, and I was still sad to have it end. </p><p></p><p>To Kill a Mockingbird- People talk about wanting to write the great American novel. Harper Lee already did. Anyone who wants how much I admire that novel can ask my daughter, Scout.</p><p></p><p>The Fountainhead-Yes, it's overdone. But it's still a brilliant defense of the individual mind.</p><p></p><p>The last two are novels I come back to every couple of years.</p><p></p><p>Edit: I agree with the observation that Travels with Charlie is brilliant and worth many re-reads.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Number 6, post: 66028, member: 562"] Hmmm.....I can name several favourites, but even that will leave many out. So, off the top of my head: Novels: Les Miserables, Victor Hugo- Just brilliant in every possible sense. It's something like 1600 pages in the paperback version, and I was still sad to have it end. To Kill a Mockingbird- People talk about wanting to write the great American novel. Harper Lee already did. Anyone who wants how much I admire that novel can ask my daughter, Scout. The Fountainhead-Yes, it's overdone. But it's still a brilliant defense of the individual mind. The last two are novels I come back to every couple of years. Edit: I agree with the observation that Travels with Charlie is brilliant and worth many re-reads. [/QUOTE]
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