Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Welcome
to BookAndReader!
We LOVE books and hope you'll join us in sharing your favorites and experiences
along with your love of reading with our community. Registering for our site
is free and easy, just CLICK
HERE!
Already a member and forgot your password? Click
here.
i see what you're saying - but he is DEFINATLY the Steven King of his time. he got paid by the word for crying out, and it shows!! thats what really bothers me while reading Dickens.
i keep my list on microsoft works/word. its about 490books now, always adding/deleting. i used to print out the list and cross off the read books, but i always edited it randomly and had to reprint. i haven't done that since the beginning of summer and i'm hoping to create a less temporary list...
i couldn't get past the first page of "beer" b/c of the terrible dialogue. the author clearly failed at trying to sneak his way into teenage fiction.
also extensive description and repetition of words *cough*tale of two cities
i suppose i find a way to identify with most characters i become immersed into. i could think of astrid from white oleander and Jessica Darling from Sloppy Firsts off of the top of my head
i read YM religiously for a while.. [when i was 11] i'd be excited to go to B&N and sit on a couch and read all the teen magazines...
one article i recall was about a comparison of how a guy and a girl handle having a date that day. highly unrealistic. it annoys me now, looking back on it. it...
my friend saw the movie and understood the hype. she didn't sympathize (sp) with the two guys though, b/c of the adultery and how they treated their wives.