Which books changed your life or mind?
- Inspiro Assistant
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- Dora Flood
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Dora Flood wrote:One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Cannay Row by John Steinbeck; I'm not sure how much they change lives, but they definitely open them!
- Dora Flood
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- Dragonflytears
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- Malachi
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- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-malachi.html
- johansburg
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- Fran
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- Favorite Book: Anna Karenina
- Currently Reading: Hide and Seek
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- Reviewer Page: onlinebookclub.org/reviews/by-fran.html
- Reading Device: B00I15SB16
The Handmaid's Tale
The Sixth Lamentation
I Married A Communist
The Kindly Ones
The Garden of Last Days
Human Traces
A world is born again that never dies.
- My Home by Clive James
- booklvr62
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- Favorite Book: <a href="http://forums.onlinebookclub.org/shelve ... >Dandelion Wine</a>
- Currently Reading: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
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- Reading Device: B00JG8GOWU
Breaking the Spell: Religion as a Natural Phenomenon by Daniel C. Dennett
Why I Believed: Reflections of a Former Missionary by Kenneth W Daniels
The Book Your Church Doesn't Want You to Read by Tim C. Leedom
Oranges & Sunshine by Margaret Humphreys
More Proof That There Is No Such Being As An All-Powerful,All-Loving God!,
Devasting story about how the so-called "Christian" charities in cahoots with the UK government dumped their children of the poor and orphanges like garbage,by sending them.... many only toddlers.... 12,000 miles away to be slave labor in Austrailia, New Zealand, Canada,ect!
and also seeing the enlightening film~
Judgment Day - Intelligent Design on Trial DVD ~ Nova
Fascinating account of the the Dover trial on Evolution vs Intelligent Design, shows the 'creationists' caught in their lies.
This documentary is gripping to watch and a real eye-opener showing the dishonesty and level of hate to which the creationists will go to,even to hate mail and death threats against the judge in the case!
- BizAcquire
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- goofygal37
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Incognito, by Eagleman. Yes, I picked it up because I am a psych major and perhaps "normal people" dont find it as interesting... (lol), but it truly was written in a way that anybody can understand. Taught me VASTLY interesting things about how the brain works, from simple tricks of our vision that we take for granted to the dizzying way we store memories. Included in the book are lots of fun pictures and examples of case studies, too, so it was an interactive mind stimulating book. On more than one occassion, after reading a particularly mind-blowing passage, I felt so OVERWHELMED that I had to physically put the book down and let it soak in. Mind boggling <3
Pretty Little Mistakes, by McElhatton. Probably one of my all time favorites. It may simple like a silly little choose your own adventure book, but it is NOT purely for entertainment. At the end of each of the mini-stories, McElhatton writes over 150 different ways to die, but none are creepy or terrifying. They are either hilarious and unreal or unexpectedly insightful and metaphysical, like how the afterlife is really just you waking up from a coma in some other universe and the whole huamn experience was just a simulation to make you grow as a person.... made me laugh, made me cry, and each story only takes a few minutes to read and yet describes such fantastical journeys of life.
Enjoy!!

- thespiritofspace
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You know, I started reading very early and always have been a big reader, but this blows me away.
Anyone else read any 1,000 page novels while in the second grade? (I was 8 in third grade but was among youngest in class and that was 50 years ago when kids started earlier. Poster noted it was Gulf War era for her at 8.)