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Post by msdemos on May 13, 2019 22:51:04 GMT
SAVE FERRIS
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Post by Feologild Oakes on May 13, 2019 22:57:36 GMT
Yes i do
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mmexis
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Post by mmexis on May 14, 2019 0:51:16 GMT
I'm of the "so many books, so little time" ilk. Also, I'm on a YA selection panel and have to read about 40 books a year there. Plus professional reading....
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on May 14, 2019 2:02:34 GMT
There are plenty of novels I re-read. And some non-fiction.
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Post by jimanchower on May 14, 2019 8:39:22 GMT
SAVE FERRIS Yeah, I recently reread Trainspotting and I'm rereading Tortilla Flat right now.
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Bargle
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Post by Bargle on May 14, 2019 12:26:36 GMT
Yes, there are a number of old favorites and series I periodically reread.
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Post by vegalyra on May 14, 2019 19:10:46 GMT
I've re-read the Iliad a few times as well as the Canterbury Tales. When I was younger I re-read the Hardy Boys books several times. I think I wore out my copy of The Mystery of Cabin Island.
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Post by wickedkittiesmom on May 15, 2019 8:02:17 GMT
I reread all my favorites, I always find something I have missed and its like revisiting old friends.
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Post by The Herald Erjen on May 15, 2019 9:04:36 GMT
The only books I remember re-reading were "The Door Into Summer" by Robert A. Heinlein, and "Gilgamesh the King" by Robert Silverberg, but there may have been others that I don't remember now.
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Post by politicidal on May 15, 2019 14:51:43 GMT
Yes if I especially enjoyed reading it.
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Post by moviebuffbrad on May 15, 2019 22:40:22 GMT
I reread Watchmen almost every year.
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Post by CrepedCrusader on May 16, 2019 16:23:33 GMT
Not often (due to the time commitment). I've read two Stephen King books (the Stand and It) three times each over the years. I also listened to the Pet Sematary audiobook recently even though I'd read it once years ago. I read a couple Lois Lowery books (Number the Stars and the Giver) multiple times when I was younger. Whenever I have some free time between books I go back to re-reading the Rise and Fall of the Third Reich over again (I just start again right where I left off).
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Post by hi224 on May 16, 2019 18:19:59 GMT
sure.
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Post by yougotastewgoinbaby on May 17, 2019 0:06:30 GMT
I’ve Reread some of my favorite novels such as:
Under the Volcano Gravity’s Rainbow The Stars My Destination The Dispossessed The Fictions of Jorge Luis Borges The Sot-Weed Factor Petersburg Dead Souls Pale Fire
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Post by nutsberryfarm 🏜 on May 18, 2019 11:23:02 GMT
I’ve Reread some of my favorite novels such as: Under the Volcano Gravity’s Rainbow The Stars My Destination The Dispossessed The Fictions of Jorge Luis Borges The Sot-Weed Factor Petersburg Dead Souls Pale Fire in that order?
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bess1971s
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Post by bess1971s on May 18, 2019 14:01:44 GMT
I've re-read quite a few of my favorites. Just finished Jane Eyre for the third or fourth time.
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Post by yougotastewgoinbaby on May 18, 2019 16:22:39 GMT
I’ve Reread some of my favorite novels such as: Under the Volcano Gravity’s Rainbow The Stars My Destination The Dispossessed The Fictions of Jorge Luis Borges The Sot-Weed Factor Petersburg Dead Souls Pale Fire in that order? Don’t be silly. In reverse alphabetical order.
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Post by mstreepsucks on May 18, 2019 16:50:09 GMT
I've re-read the Iliad a few times as well as the Canterbury Tales. When I was younger I re-read the Hardy Boys books several times. I think I wore out my copy of The Mystery of Cabin Island. The Canterbury Tales, is that one hard to read?
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Post by jackspicer on May 18, 2019 17:59:26 GMT
Almost never. Only if I remember liking it, but can hardly remember any of the details.
I've re-read Band of Brothers by Stephen Ambrose; Heavier than Heaven by Charles Cross; Shade's Children by Garth Nix; Frankenstein by Mary Shelley; and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K Dick.
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Post by vegalyra on May 18, 2019 22:05:11 GMT
I've re-read the Iliad a few times as well as the Canterbury Tales. When I was younger I re-read the Hardy Boys books several times. I think I wore out my copy of The Mystery of Cabin Island. The Canterbury Tales, is that one hard to read? I wouldn't suggest reading without an interlinear translation first, as it's written in Middle English. An interlinear translation will have the Middle English along with the Modern English translation. Some of the tales are quite engaging like the Knight's Tale, and then others are pretty coarse and hilarious like the Miller's Tale. It's worth a read if you haven't before.
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