<p>^Haha, sameish routine for me, I mostly can squeeze two books (if I’m lucky) and if I read quickly. I like B&N though, they do seem to have the comfiest chairs ever…at least compared to the Borders around here (ughh).</p>
<p>Storm from the Shadows. </p>
<p>God I love cheap Sci fi.</p>
<p>House of the Seven Gables - Nathaniel Hawthorne (actually sparknoting for my huge analysis paper)</p>
<p>One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest - Ken Kesey (for American Literature class)</p>
<p>I have a bunch of half-finished books sitting on my desk as well as another pile. I should read these but I’m too busy bemoaning that I ran out of JD Salinger books to read. Publish another one, goddam it!</p>
<p>I’m reading what I’m typing.</p>
<p>The Prince - Machiavelli
Remembering Babylon - David Malouf</p>
<p>I have a bunch of other books sitting around that I need to get to in addition to a couple more summer reading books. I’m hoping to get through a lot this summer though since this school year I have to read about twenty books (not of my choosing) for AP Lit.</p>
<p>I’m glad to know that I’m not the only one who reads whole books at bookstores. The last time I did that, I read Girl, Interrupted by Susana Kaysen. As of now, I’m working my way through Beloved, by Toni Morrison, which I borrowed from a classmate. Before that I read The Picture of Dorian Gray, by Oscar Wilde.</p>
<p>The Historian
Madame Secretary
Death Note
Dengeki Daisy (these last two are manga)</p>
<p>I always read a couple different things at once, I haven’t been able to read much at all lately because of school so Im looking forward to this summer to read a ton</p>
<p>I pick books out of a random pile my mom got at a yard sale (there are like a hundred)…</p>
<p>Currently I am reading “Survivor in Death” by Nora Roberts.</p>
<p>Whole family gets there necks slit while sleeping… creepy stuff, etc. Interesting though.</p>
<p>I haven’t read a book since The Picture of Dorian Grey in January.</p>
<p>I prefer film.</p>
<p>Ulysses right now. When I’m done, for school: Notes from a Small Island and Baron in the Trees.</p>
<p>To the person that’s reading On Writing: If you’re trying to read that book as a way to better yourself as a writer, stop it right now. It’s good if you want to learn more about Stephen King writes. You don’t wan to learn to write like Stephen King.</p>
<p>the richest man in babylon!</p>
<p>The Lexus and The Olive Tree by Thomas Friedman. It is such a good book</p>
<p>I haven’t read anything for leisure in so long, but I always have a trio of books ready just in case the moment hits. I always read a light hearted book, an intense reading book, and a nonfiction book at the same time. Right now this is my selection:</p>
<p>Light: IDENTICAL by Ellen Hopkins
Intense: A MAD DESIRE TO DANCE by Elie Wiesel (!!)
Nonfiction: WELCOME TO THE URBAN REVOLUTION: HOW CITIES ARE CHANGING THE WORLD by Jeb Brugmann</p>
<p>Catch-22, for school, almost finished. I’m enjoying it.</p>
<p>I rarely read (as if I haven’t said this enough), and I find it major lulz how some of you have like…um, 10 books going on at the same time.</p>
<p>Reading about random articles for SCII…LOL.</p>
<p>Mao II - Don DeLillo</p>
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<p>I loved that book.</p>
<p>Emma
Wuthering Heights</p>
<p>I just finished The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins. I just started To Have and To Have Not by Ernest Hemingway.</p>