Maybe some type of reviews/little opinions will be added too, but for now, just a list of what we have been reading.
Leslie:
Thich Nhat Hanh 'no death, no fear' ~ inspiring
Jon Krakauer 'Into the Wild' ~ intriguing
John Steinbeck 'Tortilla Flat' ~ enlightening
Dougal Dixson 'The Practical Geologist' ~ educational
Roald Dahl 'Boy' ~ amusing
John Steinbeck 'Cannery Row' ~ awkward
John Steinbeck 'The Red Pony' ~ sad
John Steinbeck 'Of Mice and Men' ~ more sadness
John Steinbeck 'The Moon is Down' ~ actually kind of funny
John Steinbeck 'The Pearl' ~ even more sadness
William Shakespeare 'Henry IV'
William Shakespeare 'Much Ado About Nothing'
William Shakespeare 'Hamlet'
Barbara Kingsolver 'Homeland and Other Stories' ~ nice easy reading after a bunch of Shakespeare
Benjamin Hoff 'The Te of Piglet' ~ a nice perspective
Daniel Quinn 'The Story of B' ~ much to contemplate
Barbara Kingsolver 'Flight Behavior' ~ makes me feel better about Southerners
Vladimir Nabokov 'Lolita' ~ I don't know enough about literary stuff to feel anything besides creeped out
Daniel Quinn 'My Ishmael' ~ more to contemplate
Margaret Atwood 'The Robber Bride' ~ interesting, not dystopic, more entertaining
Bill Bryson 'A Walk in the Woods' ~ surprisingly educational
Amy Tan 'The Bonesetters Daughter' (currently working on)
Rudy:
John Grisham 'A Time to Kill'
Jon Krakauer 'Into the Wild'
Thich Nhat Hanh 'no death, no fear'
E.L. James 'Fifty Shades of Grey'
Daniel Quinn 'My Ishmael'
Benjamin Hoff 'The Te of Piglet'
John Steinbeck 'Cannery Row'
John Steinbeck 'The Red Pony'
John Steinbeck 'Of Mice and Men'
John Steinbeck 'The Moon is Down'
John Steinbeck 'The Pearl'
David Lagercrantz 'The Girl in the Spider's Web'
Vladimir Nabokov 'Lolita'
Michael Crichton 'State of Fear' (currently working on)
Some physics textbook (currently working on)
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