seriousfizz wrote: » I finished Crime And Punishment by Dostoyevsky yesterday, not sure what I can say! It's a classic for a reason :cool: Going back and forth between different philosophic texts until I buy another Dostoyevsky novel A lot of yis seem to be reading/have read Catcher In The Rye? My mate is reading it at the moment, not sure wether I should ask for a lend of it in the future or not :pac:
Skinback wrote: » It's a must-read.
Skinback wrote: » I gave up on At Swim Two Birds....found it turgid
Deleted User wrote: » "El Camino" - can't remember the author's name. Well, I'm trying to read it - it's in Spanish!
Deleted User wrote: » Another one I got recently: Hacking - the art of exploitation. Very interesting so far. (disclaimer: it's far from what it sounds like, and doesn't endorse anything illegal. It's available from Eason, like. :P)
Fad wrote: » Was going to buy this soon, but I discover we (As UCD students) have free access to an online copy of it
Pygmalion wrote: » Explain? I would like access to a free (legal) online copy of it, is it just a UCD thing?
Fad wrote: » UCD thing seemingly. If you search the catalogue, you find it. Only as an online resource, click on it, it'll eventually prompt you to input you log in info, and then there's the book. DCU could well have similar access, I dunno.
Fad wrote: » Was going to buy this soon, but I discover we (As UCD students) have free access to an online copy of it, which is almost as good!
Arcade Panda wrote: » My dad just did that! He only got back on Sunday night...had the time of his life. I'll probably do it aswell at some stage. It's supposed to be amazing, bit of an adventure:)
Deleted User wrote: » Really!? Eh.... woops. Could've saved myself a lot of money there.
Pygmalion wrote: » Don't worry, you can just give it to me tbh.
Jackobyte wrote: » Finished John Grisham's The Appeal yesterday. Really enjoyed it. I asked for my library to order me Catcher in the Rye about 2 months ago and they still haven't got it in. I'm pretty sure they are censoring my reading. The last book I ordered from them was American Psycho so there is a good chance they fear that I may become a sociopath! :P When I ordered American Psycho, the woman in the library was like, "I don't think that would be suitable for your age group." Then, when I ordered Catcher in the Rye, she was like, "That book deals with strong issues. I wouldn't recommend it to someone your age to be honest". Both times I told her to order it anyway and the look she gave me was priceless:D
phlegms wrote: » In fairness, American Psycho is fooking disgusting. I would really struggle to recommend it to anyone tbh..
Aoibheann wrote: » I actually really enjoyed American Psycho - the somewhat gratuitous violence aside. I'm a fan of Easton Ellis' style of writing though, I really enjoyed The Rules of Attraction. It's definitely worth a read, and less shocking than American Psycho so it eases you into things!
DKZ wrote: » I finished "The Kite Runner" this week - what a fantastic book, definately one of my favourites. I might try tackle "War & Peace" after my exams. I started reading it last year but it defeated me by Book II.
Insect Overlord wrote: » It's fascinating as a thought-experiment, if nothing else.