Saturday, September 9, 2006

Nagapattinam Church Railway Rout

OneBookMeme

I also was not re-emerged from the sea of \u200b\u200bPuglia, and already those parts of the Gulf of Tigullio spaminvitato since I was damn in Casper participate in a background of St. pseudocatena piscologic-literary, that is OneBookMeme .

I will not go in to explain what it is, because you already know everything you need when you click on will be found in the Genoese nickname above. Then proceed in the story, with the premise that, unfortunately, I read very little, the time for not jumping out almost ever ...

1 - A book that changed your life: Jonathan Livingston Seagull by Richard Bach. The freedom in your pocket. The more a child, and your imagination fly, I reread as an adult, and you understand to the bottom of what it means to feel free from everything and everyone. Essential reading, both simple and profound masterpiece, opens the mind like few other emotions.

2 - A book you've read more than once: Animal Farm, George Orwell's wonderful essay on human insignificance, written telling of sentient animals as agents of social issues that have little to do with the animal kingdom, it is indeed uniquely human. Of course, read and reread, and consumed, the aforementioned adventures of Jonathan Seagull.

3 - A book that you want with you on a desert island: anything specific, any collection of jokes, something to keep happy, humor barracks would be fine ... Looking back, the island is deserted desert? Ok, then something erotic, almost pornographic, type Emmanuelle, Emmanuelle Arsan. Read and believe. Less onanistic speaking, also an extensive collection of aphorisms of Oscar Wilde would be fine.

4 - A book that made you laugh: and here I have to reiterate what has been written by Casper, Three Men in a Boat JK Jerome is a wonderful and delicious portrait of how often the banal everyday life, though sometimes distinctly romanticized (if not completely reinvented from scratch), but especially when described with the right amount of cynical umorismo british , possa risultare assai più divertente della ricercata comicità volontaria.

5 - Un libro che ti ha fatto piangere: Se questo è un uomo , di Primo Levi, racconto della prigonia in un campo di concentramento nazista. Nulla da aggiungere.

6 - Un libro che vorresti aver scritto: Il codice Da Vinci , di Dan Brown. Chiariamo: il libro è quello che è, l'autore pure, e si vive benissimo senza averlo letto. Ma avete una mezza idea del giro di affari multimediale generato da tale mappazza?

7 - Un libro che non avresti mai scritto: Le confessioni di un italiano . Non I was like the Ippolito Nievo, has been being forced to read it for educational reasons, it was the fact that a kid does not understand certain things, but two balls ...

8 - A book you are reading: The head of the Italian , hilarious essay by Beppe Severgnini, complete tourist trip in the mind of the average. Clichés, contradictions, excesses, genius, spaghetti and mandolin ... As always, the author does not betray, engaging humor, from time to time you will also consider how certain behaviors typically national sock us with a brush at first.

9 - A book you'd want to read: But the Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? , Philip Dick, also known in Italy under the title The hunter of androids an issue now outdated. What will will keep some of you ... Since this book was one of the best science fiction film ever. A clue? " I've seen things you people would not believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion ... I watched c-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate ... All those moments will be lost in time like tears in rain .... It 's time to die. "

10 - Now pass the torch to five other people: I do not know if I arrive at five, well, hair ...



  • (mentioned by Casper. .. repetita iuvant , so hurry)

  • (at least the link is dead ...)




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