I think Revenge of the Sith is.
Untitled
-
-
There's already a topic similar to this that's only 2 pages back (for me anyways):
-
Well, Best and Favorite are different.
I think the best would be Don Quixote.
-
Black House by Stephen King. It's soooo fuckin' good.
-
If I had to absolutely choose just one, I'll go with Peter S. Beagle's The Last Unicorn.
-
Best SINGLE book? That's hard. Don Quijote, as Cap'n Carter already mentioned, is a great one. For something slightly more modern….how about The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, maybe?
-
"It" by Stephen King. That's some messed up stuff right there, but it's just too hard to put the book down after reading it for so long..
-
There are so many great books I find it hard to pick a single one as being better than the rest so I'll cheat and go with…
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
Something I'm actually shopping for. There are some really cool big fancy editions of it out there but I'm looking for big and cheap (those things can get expensive and I gots bills on the way). -
Either of…
War & Piece by comrade Leo Tolstoy
or
The Brothers Karamazov by comrade F.M. DostoevskyIf you won't read anything else during your life time, read these!
-
anything by clive cussler, its a muz read
-
I'd say the Han Solo Trilogy (all 3 in 1 big book). Books don't hold my attention very long unless I really like them.
-
I loved both Memoirs Of A Geisha and The Da Vinci Code.
These two made me think for some time, and books that make me think that much is damm good.
-
Originally posted by normyk@May 16 2005, 08:15 AM
There are so many great books I find it hard to pick a single one as being better than the rest so I'll cheat and go with…
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
Something I'm actually shopping for. There are some really cool big fancy editions of it out there but I'm looking for big and cheap (those things can get expensive and I gots bills on the way).
[snapback]49811[/snapback]I actually bought a nice leatherbound edition for only like 20 bucks at my university's bookstore. Definatly worth it, even though half the plays are boring as all hell (I was never a big fan of most of his historical plays).
As for my opinion on best book ever, well that's kind of hard. I guess I'll say Catch-22 by Joseph Heller because that was good and I can see it on my bookshelf right now. But Slaughter-House Five by Vonnegut should probably be somewhere up there too. Then again, I think I've read Sphere by Michael Crichton more times than any other book I've ever read (which is a hell of a lot). Ok, this isn't an easy question for me…
-
I'll second Catch-22. I need to read Slaugherhouse-Five, though.
-
The Bible.
-
I'd like to be optimistic. The best book ever has not been written.
Lincoln Steffens (1931) wrote:
"The greatest picture is not yet painted, the greatest play isn't written, the greatest poem is unsung."
But if we're talking of favorite book of the moment, that would be Peter Mayle's French Lesson: Adventures with Knife, Fork, and Corkscrew.
Delicious.
-
Without a doubt, Harry Potter, LOTR, The Mayor of Casterbridge and His Dark Materials. :lol:
-
the best book ever is Lord of the Rings:The Fellowship of the Ring and it will always be so
-
so many…um...if i have to chosse one i guess i would say...catch 22
-
Originally posted by wolfwood@May 19 2005, 06:26 AM
the best book ever is Lord of the Rings:The Fellowship of the Ring and it will always be so
[snapback]51703[/snapback]I can't believe this, we actually agree on something. :blink:
-
i know im freaked out to
hurry up and say something i can disagree with you on :lol: