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-   -   Bookcees revived (http://netcees.org/showthread.php?t=125437)

oats 06-22-2017 01:12 AM

Bookcees revived
 
my list of books read in 2017. everyone else who like to read should follow suit.

1. On Writing by Stephen King (4/5)
2. Your Republic is Calling You by Young Ha Kim (4/5)
3. Kafka On the Shore by Haruki Murakami (5/5)
4. The Guest by Hwang Sok Yong (4/5)
5. After Dark by Haruki Murakami (4/5)
6. The Vegetarian by Han Kang (4/5)
7. American Nations by Collin Woodard (5/5)
8. The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut (4/5)
9. I'll Be Right There by Kyung Sook Shin (4/5)
10. Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami (5/5)
11. Without You There Is No Us by Suki Kim (4/5)
12. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz (5/5)
13. I Have the Right to Destroy Myself by Young Ha Kim (3/5)
14. Sightseeing by Rattawut Lapcharoensap (4/5)
15. Atlas of Cursed Places by Olivier Le Carrer (3/5)
16. My Financial Career and Other Follies by Stephen Leacock (3/5)
17. Joseph Anton by Salman Rushdie (4/5)
18. Lua: Art of the Hawaiian Warrior by Richard Paglinawan (4/5)
19. Me by Tomoyuki Hoshino (3/5)
20. The Red Shark by Ruth Tabrah (4/5)

Just finished The Red Shark today, about a kid from Chicago who moves to Hawaii. It's young adult fiction, but surprisingly well-crafted. Very different from the YA style of today, I think, which overemphasizes simplistic vocabulary and structure. Still maintains the breeziness of YA, but in a way that's not off-putting for older readers. I really enjoyed the story, too. If you have kids who like to read, or if you like YA stuff from time to time (as I do), definitely recommend it.

Mr. J 06-22-2017 02:59 AM

Finished Wuthering Heights awhile back I'd give it a strong 4/5

Going to get around to reading Mythology & maybe tackle Anna Karenina.

Reading Stardust right now though

Tha Pastor Reach Yeah 06-22-2017 05:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. J (Post 614877)
Finished Wuthering Heights awhile back I'd give it a strong 4/5

Going to get around to reading Mythology & maybe tackle Anna Karenina.

Reading Stardust right now though

Wuthering Heights is good. I used to massively be into the classic gothic genre.

Have you tried the likes of Melmoth the Wanderer, Castle of Otranto, Uncle Silas, The Woman in White..?

I'll think of some more later.

Stardust is the Neil Gaiman book, right?

oats 06-22-2017 06:44 AM

I have respect for the romantic/Victorian classics, but I can't say I enjoyed many of them. Wuthering Heights was aite, and I mostly enjoyed Vanity Fair. 20th and 21st century lit all day for me though.

Ghost1 06-22-2017 08:38 AM

niiiice

ill get my list up maybe tomorrow

finished freakonomics.....shit was fire. I think I prefer gladwell but these guys were very dope. the abortion bit was beautiful/

midway thru the social animal by Elliot Aranson....couldn't get this on audio anywhere and was barely able to get the shit in PDF...on amazon they want 80 bucks for this shit LMAO ....anyways its super dope

also midway thru gladwells david and goliath. fire fire fire/

been reading that social animal book on my kindle fire...I like the kindle a lot but the screen is a little small.....you guys use e readers? thinking about maybe a paperwhite? suggestions?

uh-oh 06-22-2017 08:41 AM

i use the kindle app on my phone. i got the G6 tho so its kind of a big phone. not like my old note but it works.

Ghost1 06-22-2017 08:43 AM

what all does the kindle app do tho.....do u get free e books....? or is it just a pdf viewer?

veritas 06-22-2017 08:44 AM

I have read the following since the end of March (no audiobookmo)

1. Thirty Seven essays on life, wisdom and masculinity by Quintus Curtius (3/5) a decent breezy read. Some essays are much better than others

2. Tools of Titans by Tim Ferris (5/5) THE MANUAL. so much. So good. A life book that you will go back to time and again. Must buy.

3. 11/22/63 by Stephen King (3/5) A better book than most, but not King's best. Still enjoyed

4. American Gods by Neil Gaiman (3/5) a decent book, a great premise, it sort of fell off at the end

5. Find out anything from anyone anytime (4/5) a very good and practical interrogation manual. Enjoyed.

6. Kafka on the shore by Murakami (3/5) the fool who talks to cats was a great character....kafka was ok, and the whole love angle was weird. The end was meh.

7. Time and again By Jack Finley (5/5) this book was the inspiration for 11/22/63 and is superior and very much ahead of its time. much recommendations.

8. Darwin's Doubt by Meyer (5/5) yet another scientific manual which destroys Darwin's theory of evolution. You fools would shun this book due to your liberal agendas.

9. Valis by PKD (5/5) So dope. Mind bending

10. The Divine invasion by PKD (4/5) book 2 of the trilogy, not as good, but still dope

11. The transmigraton of Timothy Archer by PKD (5/5) book 3 of the trilogy and super dope. OVerall read the trilogy for a sci-fi look into madness and religion.

12. Assisted the autobio of John stockton by John Stockton (5/5) What an amazing human being. Must read.

13. Grit by Duckworth (4/5) a Dope book. and knowledge that would benefit alot of you.

14. The way of the superior man by Deidre (5/5) this is a MUST READ for any man who wants to increase his ability with women. A life book. read often and often

uh-oh 06-22-2017 09:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bags (Post 614888)
what all does the kindle app do tho.....do u get free e books....? or is it just a pdf viewer?

its just a kindle on your phone basically. i like it better than my actual kindle because my phone screen is backlit, unlike my old kindle which is that dull horseshit supposed to be easy on the eyes but you can't read without a light on

but yea it has the kindle store and all that, keeps track of where your at in books, you can sync it with the audio books too so wherever you leave off in one it will pick up with the other, i don't do audio books but its supposed to do that.

you can get kindle unlimited which is 10 bucks a month i think and read from millions of the books included with that.

im not a huge reader though so i'll just buy a book here and there outright.

kindle unlimited might be better for you though, espescially since you read old classics and other shit. all of those are for sure included, its basically all books that wouldn't sell well anymore on their own

Ghost1 06-22-2017 09:09 AM

nice list v gonna peep some of those


and word to uh oh...my kindle fire is backlit....its the main reason I like it so much.an yea I need to look into kindle & the app more I only just yesterday started using it.

Tha Pastor Reach Yeah 06-22-2017 02:41 PM

I'll re-do my list:

1. Alive in Christ - Stuart Olyott 3/5
2. Dare To Stand Alone - Stuart Olyott 4/5
3. God Strengthens - Derek Thomas 4/5
4. Exodus For You - Tim Chester 3/5
5. Born Before Midnight - A.W. Tozer 4/5
6. Memoirs of Thomas Boston 5/5
7. 2000 Years of Christ's Power Vol. 3 - Nick Needham 4/5
8. Glory of Christ - John Owen 4/5
9. Desiring God - John Piper 4/5
10. The Great Ejection - Gary Brady 3/5
11. The Holiness of God - R.C. Sproul 5/5
12. Expository Sermons in Revelation Vol. 1 - W.A. Chriswell 4/5

New Graphic Novels for this year:

1. Batman Eternal Vol. 1 - Scott Snyder 4/5
2. Batman Eternal Vol. 2 - Scott Snyder 3/5
3. Flashpoint - Geoff Johns 4/5
4. Flash: Savage World - Robert Venditti 3/5
5. Flash: Zoom - Robert Venditti 3/5
6. Justice League: Origin - Geoff Johns 1/5
7. Old Man Logan - Mark Millar 4/5

Currently reading Confessions - Saint Augustine and Expository Sermons in Revelation Vol. 2 - W.A. Chriswell.

Mr. J 06-22-2017 07:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tha Pastor Reach Yeah (Post 614878)
Stardust is the Neil Gaiman book, right?

That's the one.

I'm working around a few of his books lately.

Check out Good Omens that seems up your alley

boof 06-22-2017 08:35 PM

just read the existentialism is a humanism lecture by jean-paul sartre

thought it was pretty good but it sounds like he was still in the process of trying to figure shit out

will check out a lot of these in here, appreciate it

Tha Pastor Reach Yeah 06-23-2017 07:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. J (Post 614948)
That's the one.

I'm working around a few of his books lately.

Check out Good Omens that seems up your alley

Haven't heard of that one.

I've read American Gods, Neverwhere and Anansi Boys. I think Neverwhere is my favourite, although probably because it was the first one of his I've read and it blew me away. I'd never read anything quite like that before. American Gods is probably the best, but those 3 are all in quite a similar vein really.

Ghost1 06-23-2017 11:49 AM

Finished David and Goliath and the social animal

Loved both

Also having read the physical text of the social animal I determined I can actually read faster than I can get thru an audio book even with the speed multiplied

Still the convenience of audiobooks are unparalleled

Mr. J 06-23-2017 02:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tha Pastor Reach Yeah (Post 614970)
Haven't heard of that one.

I've read American Gods, Neverwhere and Anansi Boys. I think Neverwhere is my favourite, although probably because it was the first one of his I've read and it blew me away. I'd never read anything quite like that before. American Gods is probably the best, but those 3 are all in quite a similar vein really.

Word. Neverwhere was great. Especially when they cross the bridge to the market.

Sandman is what got me hooked though. That interpretation of Midsummer's Night Dream & the battle in Hell for his helm.

Good Omens was done with Terry Prachett. Funny book imo. The ending is what really pushed my fandom over the edge though

Currently working through Beyond Good & Evil right now alongside this book on Pit Bulls

I finished the Tao Te Ching awhile back

Tha Pastor Reach Yeah 06-23-2017 03:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr. J (Post 614989)
Word. Neverwhere was great. Especially when they cross the bridge to the market.

Sandman is what got me hooked though. That interpretation of Midsummer's Night Dream & the battle in Hell for his helm.

Good Omens was done with Terry Prachett. Funny book imo. The ending is what really pushed my fandom over the edge though

Currently working through Beyond Good & Evil right now alongside this book on Pit Bulls

I finished the Tao Te Ching awhile back

Sandman's dope. Was left really sad when he died. Still feel sad about it tbh!

Mr. J 06-24-2017 11:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tha Pastor Reach Yeah (Post 614995)
Sandman's dope. Was left really sad when he died. Still feel sad about it tbh!

Agree 100%

Stardust is 4/5 for me I'm just about done.

Good Omens is 5/5 for me personally.

oats 06-26-2017 06:55 AM

1. On Writing by Stephen King (4/5)
2. Your Republic is Calling You by Young Ha Kim (4/5)
3. Kafka On the Shore by Haruki Murakami (5/5)
4. The Guest by Hwang Sok Yong (4/5)
5. After Dark by Haruki Murakami (4/5)
6. The Vegetarian by Han Kang (4/5)
7. American Nations by Collin Woodard (5/5)
8. The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut (4/5)
9. I'll Be Right There by Kyung Sook Shin (4/5)
10. Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami (5/5)
11. Without You There Is No Us by Suki Kim (4/5)
12. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz (5/5)
13. I Have the Right to Destroy Myself by Young Ha Kim (3/5)
14. Sightseeing by Rattawut Lapcharoensap (4/5)
15. Atlas of Cursed Places by Olivier Le Carrer (3/5)
16. My Financial Career and Other Follies by Stephen Leacock (3/5)
17. Joseph Anton by Salman Rushdie (4/5)
18. Lua: Art of the Hawaiian Warrior by Richard Paglinawan (4/5)
19. Me by Tomoyuki Hoshino (3/5)
20. The Red Shark by Ruth Tabrah (4/5)
21. The Domino Diaries by Brin-Jonathan Butler (4/5)

Just finished Domino Diaries, been reading it for a while since I tend to read e-books a little more slowly. But it was dope. BJB is one of my favorite boxing writers. This detailed his 10 years (on and off) living in Cuba talking to great Cuban boxers, investigating why some boxers turn down millions of dollars to defect from Cuba, while some take the money. Dope book, if you're interested in boxing and/or Cuba, def recommend it.

Ghost1 06-26-2017 07:37 AM

1. Art of war by Sun Tzu (5/10)
2. 48 laws of power by Robert Greene (7/10)
3. how to influence people and make friends by Dale Carnegie (6/10)
4. the power of now by Eckhart Tolle (8/10)
5. think and grow rich by Napolean Hill (7/10)
6. the little prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (8/10)
7. outliers by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)
8. the power of the subconscious mind by Joseph Murphy (6/10)
9. Animal Farm (8/10)
10. Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse (8/10)
11. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens (9/10)
12. Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy (10/10)
13. Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy by Douglas adams (9/10)
14. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess (9/10)
15. 11/22/63 by Stephen King (10/10)
16. The Stand by Stephen King (10/10)
17. The power of the dog by Don Winslow (10/10)
18. Astrophysics for people in a hurry by Neil DeGrasse Tyson (10/10)
19. The Grand Design by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow (10/10)
20. A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson (6/10)
21. What Every Body is Saying: An Ex-FBI Agent's Guide to Speed-Reading People by Joe Navarro (7/10)
22. Ego is the enemy by Ryan Holiday (7/10)
23. King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine by Robert Moore and Douglass Gillette (10/10)
24. Modern man in search of a soul by Carl Jung (8/10)
25. IT by Stephen King (10/10)
26. The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker (6/10)
27. The Scarlet Gospels by Clive Barker (10/10)
28. Marley and Me by John Grogan (8/10)
29. The Lucifer Effect by Philip Zimbardo (7/10)
30. The Social Animal by Elliot Aronson (10/10)
31. The subtle art of not giving a fuck by Mark Manson (6/10)
32. Freakonomics by Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner (8/10)
33. David and Galiath by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)


having a current panic attack cuz I feel like maybe I missed a book since I haven't updated this in weeks.....but I think that's all of them....

been loving my kindle.

so I think the only book in my last 5 I didn't mention was the subtle art of not giving a fuck.......this shit did not live up to its name. what a let down. it was like listening to uh oh narrate and explain social psychology if he actually wanted to live past 40. was some gems littered thru out but ultimately this guys a fagot.


half way thru American gods and man I really want to dig this shit.........but right now I feel like I just don't get the hype over this? we shall see.....I will finish it in the next day or 2


also reading don winslow the force.......now this shit man.....this shit is like the wire and goodfellas set in present day NYC....idk why people are sleeping on don winslow but it makes me furious.

Ghost1 06-27-2017 08:12 AM

finished American gods.........I guess it was pretty good

he tied everything up really well....making parts that felt awful become really rewarding.......but they were still awful initially ....this book I feel like will have high replay value.....although the twists wont be as rewarding there will be parts I can appreciate more on a 2nd read thru

not sure I want to dive deep into Gaimans works tho at this point im on the fence

Ghost1 06-28-2017 01:47 PM

1. Art of war by Sun Tzu (5/10)
2. 48 laws of power by Robert Greene (7/10)
3. how to influence people and make friends by Dale Carnegie (6/10)
4. the power of now by Eckhart Tolle (8/10)
5. think and grow rich by Napolean Hill (7/10)
6. the little prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (8/10)
7. outliers by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)
8. the power of the subconscious mind by Joseph Murphy (6/10)
9. Animal Farm (8/10)
10. Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse (8/10)
11. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens (9/10)
12. Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy (10/10)
13. Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy by Douglas adams (9/10)
14. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess (9/10)
15. 11/22/63 by Stephen King (10/10)
16. The Stand by Stephen King (10/10)
17. The power of the dog by Don Winslow (10/10)
18. Astrophysics for people in a hurry by Neil DeGrasse Tyson (10/10)
19. The Grand Design by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow (10/10)
20. A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson (6/10)
21. What Every Body is Saying: An Ex-FBI Agent's Guide to Speed-Reading People by Joe Navarro (7/10)
22. Ego is the enemy by Ryan Holiday (7/10)
23. King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine by Robert Moore and Douglass Gillette (10/10)
24. Modern man in search of a soul by Carl Jung (8/10)
25. IT by Stephen King (10/10)
26. The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker (6/10)
27. The Scarlet Gospels by Clive Barker (10/10)
28. Marley and Me by John Grogan (8/10)
29. The Lucifer Effect by Philip Zimbardo (7/10)
30. The Social Animal by Elliot Aronson (10/10)
31. The subtle art of not giving a fuck by Mark Manson (6/10)
32. Freakonomics by Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner (8/10)
33. David and Galiath by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)
34. American Gods by Neil Gaiman (8/10)
35. Blink by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)




blink was dope....not my favorite gladwell of the 3 ive read but it was still awesome

about to start the tipping point next

oh and ill be reading Job in the bible this evening @Witty

chronicles was rough but I made it thru

uh-oh 06-28-2017 04:00 PM

Neil gaiman is wack

Tha Pastor Reach Yeah 06-28-2017 04:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by uh-oh (Post 615462)
Neil gaiman is wack

You're wack.

Ghost1 06-28-2017 04:33 PM

yea idk American gods wasn't great.....

should I bother with norse mythology or neverwhere.....?



just finished book of Job though. fire.

Tha Pastor Reach Yeah 06-28-2017 04:39 PM

Tbh if you didn't like American Gods you prob won't like his others. Neverwhere is a bit different in characters and story but pretty similar style. I haven't read Norse Mythology.

I guess you just read Job as it is, rather than alongside a commentary/study. There's a lot going on in Job for sure. John Calvin preached through it which is a book on my wishlist!

Ghost1 06-28-2017 04:45 PM

correct. my intentions are to read thru the entire bible at face value. then I will delve into studying it. I mean I go to church so I get to hear sermons every week but word I plan to do my own research of the passages as well.

Mr. J 06-28-2017 04:50 PM

Yeah if you didn't like American Gods you wouldn't like the other stuff. It's in the same vein basically.

Otherwise I got my "To Read" shelf cluttered with books.
Doesn't help that I can pick whatever I want up after I'm done working.

uh-oh 06-28-2017 10:51 PM

Confession time

Ive never read any neil gaiman lmao

Hes always recommended and my favorite writers praise him. But i cant get invested in single novels, espescially when i dont know what they are about in the first place. I need at least a trilogy.

That said ill probably read his norse gods books. But again im a history guy and when i want to learn about mythology or even a culture i try and find writings from as close to the source as possible. So while i hear gaimans book is great i feel like i should learn about norse mythology prior to reading a modern persons rendition of it. The problem ARISES with it all being hearsay anyways tho because vikings were illiterate rune drawing dummies who dont have a history of their own, they exist because people recorded their encounters with them knahmsaying

Ill read something i guess

wasim 06-28-2017 10:53 PM

I haven't read a book in a good 3 months, time for me to get cranking this week. Gonna start read the books mentioned on this thread. Starting with On Writing by Stephen King

a question my netcees fellas who read a book in a week, how do you guys do it? honest question.

Ghost1 06-28-2017 11:03 PM

I read like 3 books a week

I have a lot of spare time at work tho

2 of the 3 are audiobooks

But I've been getting a full ebook read on my Kindle pretty easily within a few days completely outside of work



So check it out


At first I was just doing audiobooks.......had the speed cranked up to 1.75x .....or faster if I can still understand it.....but that's usually the fastest I can handle

Anyways.....after that and after hours put in with the bible I finally developed this speed reading technique where I Kindle am able to just see each word and ingest it as I glance over it keeping an inner monologue going



So maybe those will help u? Audiobooks at anytime you are doing a chore that doesn't require your ears

And read physical texts for a couple hrs before bed or when you can

The audiobooks at high speed will enhance your physical reading speed

oats 06-29-2017 05:28 AM

@wasim it's all about making time and reading things you actually enjoy. I try to wake up and read a little (can't always), and I read for about 20-30 minutes before work since I have 2 hours before students come, and I'll read for about 15 before bed. I read while shitting a lot, too. When I was taking the subway to work I would read an ebook on the way.

A line from "On Writing" that stuck with me, is that reading should be short sips as well as long draws. People can get intimidated because it seems like a daunting task that requires setting aside an hour, but most of the times I read are short. Only once a week or so do I dedicate a lot of time in a single sitting.

Ghost1 07-07-2017 09:24 AM

1. Art of war by Sun Tzu (5/10)
2. 48 laws of power by Robert Greene (7/10)
3. how to influence people and make friends by Dale Carnegie (6/10)
4. the power of now by Eckhart Tolle (8/10)
5. think and grow rich by Napolean Hill (7/10)
6. the little prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (8/10)
7. outliers by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)
8. the power of the subconscious mind by Joseph Murphy (6/10)
9. Animal Farm (8/10)
10. Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse (8/10)
11. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens (9/10)
12. Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy (10/10)
13. Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy by Douglas adams (9/10)
14. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess (9/10)
15. 11/22/63 by Stephen King (10/10)
16. The Stand by Stephen King (10/10)
17. The power of the dog by Don Winslow (10/10)
18. Astrophysics for people in a hurry by Neil DeGrasse Tyson (10/10)
19. The Grand Design by Stephen Hawking and Leonard Mlodinow (10/10)
20. A Short History of Nearly Everything by Bill Bryson (6/10)
21. What Every Body is Saying: An Ex-FBI Agent's Guide to Speed-Reading People by Joe Navarro (7/10)
22. Ego is the enemy by Ryan Holiday (7/10)
23. King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine by Robert Moore and Douglass Gillette (10/10)
24. Modern man in search of a soul by Carl Jung (8/10)
25. IT by Stephen King (10/10)
26. The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker (6/10)
27. The Scarlet Gospels by Clive Barker (10/10)
28. Marley and Me by John Grogan (8/10)
29. The Lucifer Effect by Philip Zimbardo (7/10)
30. The Social Animal by Elliot Aronson (10/10)
31. The subtle art of not giving a fuck by Mark Manson (6/10)
32. Freakonomics by Steven Levitt & Stephen Dubner (8/10)
33. David and Galiath by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)
34. American Gods by Neil Gaiman (8/10)
35. Blink by Malcom Gladwell (8/10)
36. The Holy Bible (NIV) (10/10)


hadn't updated this recently because I been pouring all my reading time into the GOOD BOOK. finally finished it. I think I started in January so about 7months it took me. not going to review the bible lol......what could I really even say. was amazing. changed my life.

Destroyer 07-07-2017 09:26 AM

Yeah the part about how to treat slaves was really eye-opening

Ghost1 07-07-2017 09:31 AM

HEY HEY settle down. I am not here to debate with you sir. I enjoyed it and took a lot from it. if you want to focus on the negative aspects of it that's cool homie. but I have no desire to go down that road with you. surely @veritas would entertain you lol

veritas 07-07-2017 09:49 AM

Jude.....did you know that Blacks were the first slave owners?

And did you know that the Bible's condones indentured servitude and not outright slavery?

uh-oh 07-07-2017 09:57 AM

There is no way to prove blacks were the first slave owners. Human beings have owned slaves since the beginning of time

Mr. J 07-07-2017 08:34 PM

Forgot about this. Starting Mythology by Edith Hamilton and Picture Of Dorian Grey this week.

big baby 07-07-2017 11:15 PM

bb read 3 bikes a day it ez jus stop msging bags vidriosa of bb making fun of ppl an dread then u got dun prittifaZt LoLmao

oats 07-09-2017 12:09 AM

So i started watching the show version of American gods, really enjoying it. Anyone read any of gaiman's short stories?


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