Re: Favorite Book
Posted: July 1st, 2008, 5:01 pm
Sure, what someone likes is their own opinion and thoughts toward it. Someone could like that, it may not be the best written book or one most of society would find truly intriguing and mind challenging, but someone out there could very well deem that book good and worth reading. Personally, it sounds a little strange, though I do really like the Anita Blake series, which has a lot of magical sex between fantasy races in it ( and if he hadn't already read it, I would recommend it to halfdesicaffeine, but he has- anyone else who likes fantasy and doesn't care about some (lightly used) sex scenes could find it interesting), which seems like it could be slightly similar, so I can't really comment on the strangeness of the book. To answer the wether or not you can take it serious, why not? It is a book and while you read it you can accept what is in that world to be true and serious, you can take it however you want, not everyone has to take it the same way and I am sure some people out there would find it completely interesting and erious and thought provoking, while others would just look at it and laugh or just say weird and move on.
Honestly, the whole battle of good book versus a book truly worth reading is going to vary between everyone depending on education, intelligence, personal tastes, and upbringing, etc. Therefore any battle over such can't be fully played out because you will never reach an agreement that fits the general population. While I know the books I listed before may or may not be the best written, and many people would deem them not worth reading, I still call them good- heck, I call some of them amazing- and enjoy reading them and I think that they are worth reading. I am not telling anyone what to read or what books they shouldn't, just what I like and what answers the topic.
Speaking of the topic ( now that we are back on it), more books to be added to my list:
Anita Blake series
The Speed of Dark ( discusses an autistic person's thoughts on their life and a cure (This book is futuristic, obviously) that would remove their autistic traits and the pressures on them for them to take it. I really like this book, it is really good and makes you wonder)
The Inheritance Trilogy
Gerald Morris ( author)
Honestly, the whole battle of good book versus a book truly worth reading is going to vary between everyone depending on education, intelligence, personal tastes, and upbringing, etc. Therefore any battle over such can't be fully played out because you will never reach an agreement that fits the general population. While I know the books I listed before may or may not be the best written, and many people would deem them not worth reading, I still call them good- heck, I call some of them amazing- and enjoy reading them and I think that they are worth reading. I am not telling anyone what to read or what books they shouldn't, just what I like and what answers the topic.
Speaking of the topic ( now that we are back on it), more books to be added to my list:
Anita Blake series
The Speed of Dark ( discusses an autistic person's thoughts on their life and a cure (This book is futuristic, obviously) that would remove their autistic traits and the pressures on them for them to take it. I really like this book, it is really good and makes you wonder)
The Inheritance Trilogy
Gerald Morris ( author)