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I don?t re-read books (except for Winnie the Pooh), but here are some that I?ve enjoyed and remembered, in no particular order.


Brothers Karamazov - Dostoyevsky,

Love in the time of Cholera ? Garcia Marquez

Vanity Fair ? Thackery

Catch 22 ? Heller

Jonathan Livingston Seagull - Bach

Winnie-the-Pooh ? A A Milne

Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas - Thompson

Wise Children ? Carter

The Hitchhikers? Guides (all of them) - Adams

Neuromancer ? William Gibson

1984 ? Orwell

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep ? Dick

In Cold Blood ? Capote

Tess ? Thomas Hardy

Great Gatsby ? Fitzgerald

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory or anything else ? Dahl

Oscar and Lucinda ? Carey

The House of the Spirits - Allende

The Innocent ? McEwan

The Stand ? King

The Little Price ? that French guy

Enduring Love - McEwan

Catch 22 - Heller

Ragged Trousered Philanthropists - Tressel

The Spy That Came In From the Cold - Le Carre

High Fidelity - Hornby

Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenace - Prisig

Catcher in the Rye - Salinger

Brideshead Revisited - Waugh

Wild Swans - Jung

The Goalkeeper's Revenge & Other Stories - Naughton

The Machine Gunners - Westall


Of course, all of these (with the exception of WIld Swans) is fiction. I'd like to know people's non-fiction habits as well. I love historical and political accounts. The best I've read recently being Anthony Beevor's two books about Stalingrad and Berlin during WWII. Amazing.

I'm enjoying his book as well James. Taking it slow and find it fascinating. I think he's fair - Thatcher was a visionary in the long view, though her vision wasn't shared. I personally think she did the right things but the wrong way, but that's not the topic of this thread. So as a book I think it's fair and not politically slanted.


For some odd reason, I also picked up Ian Smith's autobiography. It's been recently re-printed with a forward saying 'with all that is happening in Zimbabwe, it's worth revisiting Ian Smith's views to see if maybe he was right on some things'. He's a bit of a one-theme poney, but indeed did make some sense. But reading his views of being abandoned by the world (and the UK) are especially interesting when reading Marr's take on what was happening back in the UK.


Neither a favourite book though.

Agree James. Though liberals tend to be harder on their own. Just look at today's Labour Party!


To be fair, any party in power inevitably implodes due to the fragile centrists/far left/right coalition they must court to win.


Anyway, maybe Marr is liberal and thus harder on his own. Human nature.

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