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 Last update: 1/24/2008    

 

My Reading List

 

 

Reading is something that I cannot live without.  Since I do not want to limit myself to a certain genre,  I often ask other people about their favorite books.  Sometimes, I simply go to a bookstore, walk around, and randomly pick books that attract me at first sight. 

If you are like me, here is a selected list of the books I have read and enjoyed.   

 
 

Fiction

1.    The Cider House Rules  by John Irving One of my favorites. I have read it twice and would not mind a third run. By the way, Dr. Larch is my hero.

2.    The Hours  by Michael Cunningham The writing style is a bit too sentimental. The stories are touching and depressing at the same time. So, read it when you are in the right mood.

3.    She’s Come Undone by Wally Lamb

4.    To Kill a Mocking Bird  by Harper Lee

5.    The Last of the Mohicans by James F. Cooper

6.    The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown 

7.       East of Eden by John Steinbeck

8.       Of mice and men by John Steinbeck

9.       One hundred years of solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

10.    Skinny legs and all by Tom Robbins

11.    Jitterbug perfume  by Tom Robbins

12.    Even cowgirls get the blues by Tom Robbins

13.    Life of Pi by Yann Martel It is a book about faith, hope, luck, persistence, and maybe, mysterious powers. Much more important, it is an appealing story well-told. I just cannot help keeping turning the pages.

14.    Miracle Strain by Michael Cordy

15.    Animal farm by George Orwell

16.    1984 by George Orwell   

17.    Lord of the flies by William Gerald Golding

18.    The catcher in the rye by J. D. Salinger

19.    Catch 22 by Joseph Heller

20.    Lady Chatterley's lover by D. H. Lawrence

21.  Coastliners by Joanne Harris

22.  Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford

23.  Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden

24.  On Beauty by Zadie Smith

25.  The Virgin Blue by Tracy Chevalier This is completely a chance-reading. I got the book on my flight to Denver in Spring 2005. I was sitting next to this gentleman who, like me, was reading. I remember I was reading "Out of Africa" by Isak Dinesen. You might have already guessed what he was reading. Yes, he was reading "The Virgin Blue". We struck a brief talk on these two books. First, my book, I was so glad that he thought the same way as me that the book was far more pleasing and close-to-life than its Hollywood counterpart (starring Meryl Streep and Robert Redford). Then, his book, he was close to the last page. He told me that it was written by the same author who also wrote "Girl with a pearl earring", a New York Times best-seller. Then I asked: "Is it good?" Instead of answering my question, he said: "Why don't you read it and then tell it by yourself? Anyway, I am close to done. I will give the book to you before we head out to our next flight." Thus I got the book. I brought it back and left it on my floor ever since. About one month ago, I was running out of my reading list. So, again by chance, I picked up this long-forgotten book from the floor. Now I am done with it and understand why he would address my question by giving me the book. The book is a bore and an utter disappointment. The author tried too hard to connect two seemingly parallel story-lines, especially considering neither story is convincingly told. (A side-note, if you are like me, who likes reading a novel in split-narrative fashion, read "Kafka on The Shore" by Haruki Murakami, and "The Jitterbug Perfume" by Tom Robbins, I am sure you will have your time well-spent.) On the other hand, I consider this reading as a little adventure that wanders into an unpleasant end. No matter, it is not late to find my way out. Oh, about the gentleman, I remember he told me that he is a professor in literature at a college of liberal arts in California.

26.  Kafka on the shore by Murakami Haruki

27.  Snow by Orhan Pamuk (Nobel Prize Winner in Literature 2006)

28.  Farewell, My Lovely: A Philip Marlowe Murder Mystery by Raymond Chandler (A book picked up at a yard sale. Cost? Free!)

29.  The adventure of Hukleberry Finn, by Mark Twain

30. Still Life With Woodpecker, by Tom Robbins

31. For One More Day, by Mitch Albom

32. Water for Elephant, by Sara Gruen

33. Puccini's Ghosts, by Morag Joss

34. Lisey's Story, by Stephen King

 

 

  

Science Fiction

&

Fantasy

1.       Books by Frank Herbert

. Dune

. Other Dune books: 2-6       

2.       Books by Robert Heinlein

. Time Enough for Love

. To sail beyond the sunset

. A stranger in a strange land

. The cat who walks through walls

. Job: A Comedy of Justice

. The moon is a harsh mistress

. Have space suit, will travel

3.      A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Adam Douglas

4.       Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

5.       The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells

6.       Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut

7.       The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut

8.       Galapagos by Kurt Vonnegut

9.    Books by J.R.R. Tolkien

. The Lord Of The Rings 

. The Hobbit

. The Silmarillion

. Unfinished Tales: the lost lore of middle earth

 

 

Children's Book

1.       Harry Potter (1-7)  by J.K. Rowling

2.       Little House On the Prairie (1-14?)  by Laura Ingalls Wilder

3.       The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe   by C. S. Lewis (Clive Staples Lewis)

4.       The Missing Piece Meets The Big O   by Shel Silverstein

 

 

  Misc.

1.       Sophie’s World: a novel about the history of philosophy by Jostein Gaarder

2.       A Man Called Intrepid  by William Stevenson

3.       The History of Reading   by Alberto Manguel

4.       A Brief History of Time  by Stephen Hawking

5.       Digital Code of Life : How Bioinformatics is Revolutionizing Science, Medicine, and Business by Glynn Moody

6.       Meditation by Marcus Aurelius

7.       Out of Africa by Isak Dinesen (Real name: Karen Blixen)

8.    London: The Biography by Peter Ackroyd

9.    De Kooning: An American Master by Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan  A must-read. What a marvelous life! He was his own enemy and master. He looked at the world and himself as forever changing. He took a strong hold of everything while, paradoxically, also abandoning everything. He created an art style nearly every decade. He lived for his art. He had numerous women, but no one could win over his art. He was born to be an artist, I believe, or the authors made me believe so.     

10.    In The Days of The Dinosaurs by Roy Chapman Andrews      

11.    Guns, Germs and Steel by Jared Diamond  A must read. Book Page on pbs.org.

12.    Love in the driest season: a family memoir by Neely Tucker A book that will touch every inch of your heart and make you believe in the god-like power of love.

13.    The year of magical thinking by Joan Didion What can you do when you hit the bottom of everything? You confront it, you learn to remember, to forget, to cope, and to share with others. It is a book that you might think too heavy for a fragile heart, but, amazingly, quite the contrary.

14.    Marley & Me: life and love with the world's worst dog by John Grogan  ( Be prepared for many good and loud laughs, and many more tears and maybe also an inexplicable sadness and emptiness towards the end. This is not to say I am a dog lover. If there is a way to measure my passion towards animal pets: it would be less than a millionth of a pinch. )

15.    What the best college teachers do by Ken Bain  (According to the author: ...what "exceptional learning" might mean. The closest we came was in terms of intellectual and personal development. In general, we thought of intellectual development as understanding a sizeable body of material, learning how to learn to expand understanding, to reason from evidence, to employ various abstract concepts, to engage in conversations about the thinking (including the capacity to write about it), to ask sophisticated questions, and the habits of mind to employ all those abilities. Personal development meant understanding one's self (one's history, emotions, dispositions, abilities, insights, limitations, prejudices, assumptions, and even senses) and what it means to be human; the development of a sense of responsibility to one's self and others (including moral development); the capacity to exercise compassion; and the ability to understand and use one's emotions. It also meant the emergence of the habits of the heart to maintain and employ these developments. )

16.  Strange Piece of Paradise by Terri Jentz 

17.  Running with Scissors, by Augusten Burroughs

18.  Collapse, by Jared Diamond

19.  Remaking Eden, by Lee Silver

20.  Freakonomics: A Rogue Economist Explores the Hidden Side of Everything, by Steven Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner

21. The Innocent Man: Murder and Injustice in a Small Town, by John Grisham

22.  To Soon Old, Too Late Smart, by Gordon Livingston

23.  A Man Without a Country, by Kurt Vonnegut

24.  Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, A Young Man, and the Last Great Lesson, by Mitch Albom

 

   

 

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