Argh, @tim gabbott beat me to it!
Forgot that moby's surname was a poor language removed issue.... Please Mods don't ban me not this week please please no.Herman Melville's Moby [Poor language removed]
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This one for me as a kid - it’s just so beautifully written and just hooked me from start to finish.
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This one as a teenager - it’s still one of my all time favourite books.
Incredibly dark, brutal and with an ending like no other.
Shaped my future reading as an adult.
I did to kill a mockingbird, awesome bookSchool books The pearl, and of mice and men.
Never read the book but I've seen the film.I did to kill a mockingbird, awesome book
My yr 10 English teacher loaned me The Wasp Factory, i was blown away, but The Crow Road was the one from Banks that got to me more... I like a realistic setup where you can relate to most of the characters.
One of the better film adaptions of a book there is. Gregory peck was great as AtticusNever read the book but I've seen the film.
I love the Crow Road too, but the Wasp Factory does it for me.
It’s just so vivid and the ending is just stunning / horrendous in equal measure.
Considering it was his debut book, it was just mind blowing.
I remember reading this book to my Nan when she was ill in bed, really weird that my memory has been triggered.Circa 1965, Florence Melly Junior school in Walton.
We read this as a class, the first book that absolutely gripped me.
It engendered a lifelong love of books and reading, as well as an ongoing love affair with Berlin.
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On holiday at the moment, and book I’m reading is The Forgotten Highlander. Alistair Urquhart, with the Gordon Highlanders. Taken prisoner in Singapore and sent to work on the railway and bridge on the Kwai. Utterly horrific.The Naked Island by Russell Braddon. An Aussie soldier who was caught up in the fall of Singapore in WW2. Ended up on the infamous Railway. I read it while I was stationed in Singapore, less than 10 years from the end of the war.