<p>Catch-22 so ironic and HILARIOUS
1984 scarrrrry
Brave New World
Farenheit 451 not too good but im into distopias
To Kill a Mockingbird WORST 1st Chapter in HISTORY
Lord of the Flies if you discuss it</p>
<p>You guys have an interesting definition of pleasure. (Les Miserables? Ayn Rand? Seriously?)</p>
<p>Stephen Colbert’s book is HILARIOUS, but only if you’re a liberal. Otherwise…</p>
<p>I’ll ditto Ender’s Game & sequels. </p>
<p>If you like mystery, Agatha Christie is the BEST. I suggest And Then There Were None or The ABC Murders, but almost all of them are great.</p>
<p>Somebody a while up said 1984, and I second (third? fourth? w/e) that one as well.</p>
<p>If you’re really looking for some time to kill, you can always pick up a Stephen King book. Trashy? Perhaps. Fun? Absolutely. The Shining was fantasticaly scary if you’re looking for specific suggestions.</p>
<p>Also, you can always pick up a childhood book you haven’t read in a few years. Mary Poppins and James and the Giant Peach still retain all of their pre-adolescent glory.</p>
<p>AndJaneAusten<em>hides</em></p>
<p>i agree with what most people have said.
ummm someone mentioned stephen kings the dark tower series which i find amazing… it took me two years to actually read all of them. but they’re pretty enjoyable.
vonnegut’s amazing. slaugherhouse of course. i loooove it.
enders game. also amazing. i’ve read it so many times. speaker for the dead is good too.
the his dark materials trilogy.
ayn rand is good. i’ve read all her fiction. and it was pretty enjoyable at the time…
the kite runner, i just read and it was really good too
Candide by voltaire is pretty funny.. and only takes a few hours to read.
catch 22 is hilarious.
middlesex is awesome! as are alot of oprahs book club books… guilty pleasure maybe..</p>
<p>i like alot of books…
ooh hemingway is good and easy to read</p>
<p>does anyone else read nonfiction for pleasure? like science books and stuff? no?</p>
<p>…maybe i’m just weird.</p>
<p>my current reading list:</p>
<p>The Ancestor’s Tale, Richard Dawkins
The Future of Life, E.O.Wilson
Charlie Wilson’s War, George Crile
All the President’s Men, Berstein + Woodward</p>