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Jul 2022

To Sir, With Love is more than just a good Sydney Poitier movie.

I took a science fiction literature class in high school where we read War of the Worlds, Fahrenheit 451 and 1984, among others.

I thought I was the only person who didn't hate To Kill a Mockingbird. I also read A Study in Scarlet in school, but I liked Sherlock Holmes stories already by then, so that wasn't a surprise.

Oh, also a good pick! I loved a good mystery as a kid.

Still do, actually :smile:

whaaat? Your high school had a science fiction literature class?? I'm jealous! I did read Fahrenheit 451 for one of my literature classes though.

My memory is not good enough to remember everything I read in school, but I liked Crime and Punishment and Fahrenheit 451. Death of a Salesman is the only written work that has made me cry so far.

I haven't read Slaughterhouse-Five yet, but one of my classmates said it was his favorite book, so I'm adding it to my reading list. For my Spanish classes, I think I liked Beltenebros and La Velocidad de la Luz.

I remember liking Walk Two Moons and Esperanza Rising (which made me emotional).

Frankenstein by Mary Shelly. I read it for A-level English Literature, and it's one of my all-time favourite books, just a great read!

The Handmaid's Tale, I did it for my A-level. It's a powerful book, and scarily relateable in places too

While there were some boring books in my school, was lucky to have some really cool ones too:

-Fahrenheit 451
-Momo
-Animal farm
-Papelucho
-The Hobbit
-Sandokan
-Lord of the flies
-Remi
-Tom Sawyer
-Don Quijote de la Mancha

there may be more, but those are the ones that came to my head first.

I got to read so much good stuff in my Sci-Fi class, but in English, Crime and Punishment is actually a book that got me through a really rough time in my life.

Boy in striped Pajamas. Seriously, how can I explain this. No major spoilers from me, but it shows mainly what happened during the Nazi times in Berlin, but it is fiction.

Sadness

Crying inside at all the fantastic books my school never had us read because it was small hick town.

*The Outsiders
*A Wrinkle in Time (I may be misremembering this. I read it in college for Children's Lit I know)
*The Lord of the Flies
*Fahrenheit 451(actually enjoyed and have read two more times)
*The Mysteries of Harris Burdick (this is a super cheat, but it was what got me writing. It's only illustrations with titles. But we had to create our own stories and I feel in love with writing and illustrations).

I came from a small town, who had us read the bare minimum and I am lucky my mom at least was insistent we read all the time outside of school. Most of the stuff everyone else mentioned I had to read on my own -_- And I liked some of my English teachers...their hands were just tied.

Ohh I saw some on this list that I also read in school!

• Fahrenheit 451
• The Hobbit
• Lord of the Flies

And I recently bought Animal Farm to read in my spare time!

Others I had to read and liked were:

• The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (or this one I chose myself, it was between this, Frankenstein, The Martian and some other really good choices)
• Of Mice and Men
• The Boy in the Striped Pajamas
• The Diary of Anne Frank
• Buffalo Soldier

These are the ones I can remember at the moment. We rarely read books that I disliked but there were some I wouldn’t pick out myself.

I loved Things Fall Apart. I remember having to read that as after Heart of Darkness as a compare and contrast sorta thing. Heart of Darkness bored the everlasting crap outta me

I forgot to add mine for me it has to be Perla by Carolina de Robertis. It was really good but also chilling and haunting.

As I recall, I devoured Brave New World in under three days. Damned good book.

I read The Bridge to Terabithia, Tuck Everlasting and From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler in grade 4-ish and I really enjoyed all of them as a kid (I even own a signed version of Tuck Everlasting! It's such a beautiful, evocative book).

I can't say I liked any of the books I had to read in high school and college though. We always got to vote on what we read (or it was in rotation by the prof) and I always got assigned the lamest, most boring of the options. Frankenstein I maybe would've enjoyed if my professor didn't have a weird funding-jealousy-driven anti-science slant that he attempted to inject into everything (I was a dual science and arts major so uh... I could tell).

1 month later

closed Aug 6, '22

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