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#36 | ||
Brightness of a Blade
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Quote:
![]() There are books that I love the first time around but I don't exactly feel like re-reading them, even after a long time. But with LOTR, it's different, from time to time I feel the need to pick it up again, even if it's just to read a passage or two, though most of the times, I read it from start to finish. One of my favourite luxuries is to sit in an armchair at night, with a cup of hot chocolate close by and read LOTR, without having to worry about getting up early the next day. It's more than just the pleasure of reading though, it's like (to paraphrase Lalwendë's beautiful ex-sig), I try with the words to awaken the feeling. Quote:
Other books that I've re-read (though not for the same reasons) - some have been mentioned here before: Silmarillion, Hobbit, Unfinished Tales (it feels like I'm throwing them all here like apples in a basket ![]() Wuthering Heights - Emily Brontë Edgar Allan Poe's Stories - uh, Poe, I guess The Last Unicorn - Peter Beagle Possession - A.S. Byatt Some Shakespeare plays The Magician - John Fowles Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury Midsummer's Night - Mircea Eliade (that's a book I recommend to everyone on this forum, hopefully you'll find it translated). I also re-read children's books, (most of thier titles I wouldn't even know how to translate in English), just because I still love them a lot. Among those there's one of my favourite books ever, a collection of Italian folk tales, put together by Luigi Capuana. That book can be read and enjoyed by anyone, no matter their age.
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And no one was ill, and everyone was pleased, except those who had to mow the grass. |
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