MedVision ad

Your personal library (2 Viewers)

4unitfreak

Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2008
Messages
291
Gender
Female
HSC
2008
I have nearly 100 in boxes packed away somewhere because I don't have enough room for them all. :shy: What I have out is:
The Catcher In The Rye - JD Salinger (my all-time favourite)
1984 - George Orwell
Frankenstein - Mary Shelley
Northern Lights - Phillip Pullman
Four Tragedies (Hamlet, Macbeth, Othello, King Lear) - Shakespeare
Every book from The Inspector Lynley Mysteries - Elizabeth George
The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins
The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy: Trilogy of Five - Douglas Adams

I have a list of about 20 that I want to buy with my birthday money I just got. :D
 

Rockyroad

Banned
Joined
Jun 16, 2008
Messages
461
Location
The Gong.
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
ratcher0071 said:
I never knew a lot of people liked Catcher in the Rye :confused:
I know! I thought it was alright - a few funny and thought provoking bits but overall it was boring - I don't understand the fuss at all. It is my sister's favourite book too. I just don' t get it. There are so so so much better books.
:lol:
 
Joined
Jul 12, 2007
Messages
814
Location
Where soul meets body
Gender
Female
HSC
2008
Brave New World
The Catcher In the Rye
All Harry Potters
All Lord of the Rings
The complete works of Patricia Cornwell
Fight Club
Survivor
Diary
Out of My Depth
P.S I Love You
Atonement
Frankenstein
Angela's Ashes
Saturday
Speed the Plow
Of Mice and Men
A Streetcar Named Desire
To Kill a Mockingbird
The Notebook
IT
American Psycho
April Fool's Day
Wuthering Heights
The Power of One
The Silence of the Lambs
The Happiest Day of my Life
 

Mrs. Wisty

"Bugger!"
Joined
Nov 15, 2007
Messages
31
Location
Melbourne
Gender
Female
HSC
2008
Lewis Carroll
The Complete Works
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (one copy for reading and a 1940s copy for looking at, lol)
Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There

Jean-Paul Sartre
Nausea
The Flies and Other Plays

Samuel Beckett
Waiting for Godot

Giacomo Casanova
Of Mistresses, Tigresses and Other Conquests

Francoise Sagan
Bonjour Tristesse

F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby
The Last Tycoon
Magnetism

William Shakespeare
Hamlet
Macbeth
Richard III
The Complete Works

Johann Wolfgang Goethe
Faust - Der Tragödie - Zweiter Teil

The Penguin Book of French Poetry

James Joyce
Selected Works
Ulysses

Marianne Faithfull
Faithfull

Sam McBratney
Guess How Much I Love You
Raad Eens Hoeveel Ik Van Je Hou (same book in Dutch)

Geoffrey Chaucer
Chaucer's Works
Troilus and Cressida

John Osborne
Look Back in Anger

Tommy Jaud
Vollidiot

Colloquial Dutch
Essential Dutch Grammar

Aldous Huxley
Brave New World

Bob Dylan
Tarantula
Chronicles Volume One
Bob Dylan and Philosophy

D.H. Lawrence
Sons and Lovers

A Complete German Course

Laurence Olivier
On Acting

Tom Wolfe
The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test

Tennessee Williams
A Streetcar Named Desire and Other Plays
The Glass Menagerie

I have way more; I have books in piles on the floor, under my bed, in my drawers, so that's just a selection....

Not really much light reading there, though!
 
Last edited:
Joined
Sep 9, 2008
Messages
247
Gender
Female
HSC
2009
JK Rowling- all Harry Potter books
Jodie Picoult-
The Pact
My Sister's Keeper
Second Glance
Change of Heart
Bryce Courteney-
The Power of One
The Potato Factory
John Marsden- The Tomorrow series and Ellie Chronicles
Jane Austen-
Pride and prejudice
Northanger Abbey
Persuasion
Emma
Margaret Mitchell- Gone with the Wind
Nicholas Sparks- The Horse Whisperer
Anne Frank-The Diary of a young Girl
Melina Marchetta-Looking for Alibrandi
John Grogan- Marley and Me
Arthur Golden- Memoirs of a Geisha
Alice Sebold- The lovely Bones
Yann Martel- The life of Pi
Khaled Hosseini-The Kite Runner
Kim Edwards- The Memory Keeper's Daughter
Jeffrey Deaver- The Sleeping Doll
Sophie Hannah- Hurting Distance
Harlan Coben- The Woods
Patricia Cornwell- The Body Farm
Charlotte Bronte- Jane Eyre
Emily Bronte- Wuthering Heights
Anne Bronte- Agnes Grey
Fyodor Dostoevsky- Crime and Punishment
Choderlos De Laclos- Les Liasons Dangereuses
Jonathon Swift- Gulliver's Travels
Lew Wallace- Ben Hur
Charles Dickens- Oliver Twist
Erich Remarque- All Quiet on the Western Front
E.M. Forster- A Room with a View
Anthony Burgess- A Clockwork Orange
Mary Shelley- Frankenstein
Herman Melville- Moby Dick
William Golding- Lord of the Flies
D.H Lawrence- Women in Love
Agatha Christie- Murder on the Orient Express
George Orwell- Animal Farm
Joseph Conrad- Heart of Darkness
John Steinbeck- Of Mice and Men
Ray Bradbury- Fahrenheit 451
Nelson Mandela- Long Walk to Freedom
 

Pace_T

Active Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2004
Messages
1,784
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
who could be stuffed listing all those books let alone reading them??

my teacher always says a personal library is an investment.
thats bullshit. the internet is a much better library than anything else.

teehee~
 

marcquelle

a.k.a. Michael...Hi!
Joined
Dec 7, 2006
Messages
1,490
Location
Jervis Bay, N.S.W.
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
cbf typing them all up but counted 138 books that are mine 57 that my parents so
195 books these are novels not textbooks and stuff for school
 

inasero

Reborn
Joined
Nov 27, 2002
Messages
2,497
Gender
Male
HSC
2003
KFunk said:
My shelves are mainly dominated by non-fiction books e.g. some books readable from where I am sitting:

Philosophy

Rawls - Theory of Justice, and Political Liberalism
Nozick - Philosophical Explanations
Priest - Beyond the limits of thought
Flanagan - The really hard problem
Nietzsche - Thus spoke zarathustra, beyond good and evil, & The birth of tragedy
Sartre - Being and nothingness
Heidegger - Introduction to metaphysics
Rorty - Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature
Aristotle - Politics
Plato - The Republic
Nagel - Mortal questions
Joyce - The evolution of morality & the myth of morality
Sidgwick - The methods of ethics
Blackburn - Essays in Quasi-realism
Williams - Ethics and the limits of philosophy
Mackie - Ethics
Lewis - On the plurality of worlds
Kripke - Wittgenstein on rules and private language
Wittgenstein - Tractatus Logico-philosophicus
Rousseau - The social contract
de Beauvoir - The second sex & The ethics of ambiguity
Camus - The myth of Sisyphus
Kierkegaard - Fear and trembling
Metzinger - Being noone
Kant - Critique of pure reason
Habermas - Between facts and norms


Logic

Haack - Philosophy of logics
Garson- Modal logic for philosophers
Hughes & Cresswell - A new introduction to modal logic
Hunter - Metalogic
Quine - Set theory and its logic
Potter - Set theory and its philosophy
Boolos et al - Computability and logic


Neuro/Psych/Phil

Sinnott-Armstrong - Moral psychology vol 1-3
Gray - Consciousness
Chalmers - The Conscious Mind
Zeman - Consciousness, a users guide
Dennett - Consciousness explained
Seager - Theories of consciousness
The Cambridge handbook of consciousness
Rucker - Infinity and the mind
Siegel - The idea of the self
Cicchetti et al - Neurodevelopmental mechanisms in psychopathology
Stein & Ludik - Neural networks and psychopathology
McKenna & Oh - Schizophrenic speech
Kircher & David - The self in neuroscience and psychiatry
Jenkins & Barrett - Schizophrenia, culture & subjectivity
Folensbee - The neuroscience of psychological therapies
Hunt - The mathematics of behavior
Yalom - Existential psychotherapy
Sutton - Philosophy and memory traces
Laing - The divided self
i see what you did there.

have a read of oliver sacks "the man who mistook his wife for a hat"- i'm currently reading it and i think you might be interested in it :)
 

supercalamari

you've got the love
Joined
Jul 1, 2008
Messages
1,590
Location
Bathtub
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
My bookshelf, or part thereof.

Medical (ish)

Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers- Mary Roach
Gray's Anatomy Facsimile (Huge A3 book)
10 year old Medical textbook given to me by a Nun

Gay/Lesbian
A Life of Unlearning- Anthony Venn-Brown
Stonewall- David Carter
My Child Is Gay- Bryce McDougall

Augusten Burroughs
Sellevision
Dry
Running With Scissors
Magical Thinking
A Wolf at the Table

Roald Dahl
The BFG
The Giraffe, The Pelly and Me
The Twits
Matilda
The Witches
Henry Sugar and Six More
Boy
Going Solo

Artistic

Postsecret
The Sopranos Official Guide
The Puffin Book of 20th Century Children's Verse (It has some great stuff in it)

Chuck Palahniuk
Fight Club
Choke
Snuff
Lullaby
Invisible Monsters
Diary
Haunted

Peter Carey

Oscar and Lucinda
His Illegal Self
My Life As A Fake

Belief
The Bible (NIV, NLT, KJV)
The Koran
The God Delusion- Richard Dawkins
Jesus for the Non-Believer- John Shelby Spong
Bullet Proof Faith- Candice Chellew-Lodge

and others I'll add later when I remember them.
 

A Madman With a Box

New Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2013
Messages
2
Location
Kyogle, NSW
Gender
Male
HSC
2014
Uni Grad
2014
I have a ridiculous number of books, but here are my favorites:
The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Trilogy (all five books) - Douglas Adams
The Lord of The Rings/The Hobbit - J.R.R Tolkien
Inheritance-Christopher Paolini
Miscellaneous Doctor Who books - various authors
Discworld - Terry Pratchett
Collections of classic sci-fi short stories - various authors.
I have far more books, but those are my favourites.
 

GabbyS

Member
Joined
Oct 4, 2013
Messages
51
Gender
Female
HSC
2014
I'm regularly giving books to the op-shop/lending to friends and forgetting about them, but this is what's on my shelf:

Louisa May Alcott
Little Women
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Northanger Abbey
Pride and Prejudice
Sense and Sensibility
Simone de Beauvoir
The Second Sex
Anne Bronte
Agnes Grey
Charlotte Bronte
Jane Eyre
Emily Bronte
Wuthering Heights
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The Adventured of Sherlock Holmes
Agatha Christie
They Do It With Mirrors
Nemesis
Richard Dawkins
The God Delusion
Charles Dickens
Nicholas Nickelby
Oliver Twist
George Eliot
Middlemarch
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby
Graham Greene
The Ministry of Fear
Mark Haddon
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
Henry Handel Richardson
The Getting of Wisdom
Thomas Hardy
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Far From the Madding Crowd
Sonya Harnett
Surrender
Nathaniel Hawthorn
The Scarlet Letter
Khaled Hosseini
The Kite Runner
Victor Hugo
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Elizabeth Jolley
Woman in a Lampshade
Benjamin Law
The Family Law
Gaysia: Adventures in the Queer East
Harper Lee
To Kill A Mockingbird
L. M. Montgomery
Anne of Green Gables
Vladimir Nabokov
Lolita
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
The Little Prince
Jose Saramago
Blindness
Alice Sebold
The Lovely Bones
William Shakespeare
Shakespeare's Sonnets
Mary Shelley
Frankenstein
Bram Stoker
Dracula
William Makepeace Thackeray
Vanity Fair
Leo Tolstoy
War and Peace
Lynne Truss
Eats, Shoots and Leaves
Virginia Woolf
Orlando
A Room of One's Own
 

hawkrider

all class
Joined
Jul 15, 2013
Messages
2,002
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
I'm regularly giving books to the op-shop/lending to friends and forgetting about them, but this is what's on my shelf:

Louisa May Alcott
Little Women
Jane Austen
Mansfield Park
Northanger Abbey
Pride and Prejudice
Sense and Sensibility
Simone de Beauvoir
The Second Sex
Anne Bronte
Agnes Grey
Charlotte Bronte
Jane Eyre
Emily Bronte
Wuthering Heights
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
The Adventured of Sherlock Holmes
Agatha Christie
They Do It With Mirrors
Nemesis
Richard Dawkins
The God Delusion
Charles Dickens
Nicholas Nickelby
Oliver Twist
George Eliot
Middlemarch
F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Great Gatsby
Graham Greene
The Ministry of Fear
Mark Haddon
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time
Henry Handel Richardson
The Getting of Wisdom
Thomas Hardy
Tess of the D'Urbervilles
Far From the Madding Crowd
Sonya Harnett
Surrender
Nathaniel Hawthorn
The Scarlet Letter
Khaled Hosseini
The Kite Runner
Victor Hugo
The Hunchback of Notre Dame
Elizabeth Jolley
Woman in a Lampshade
Benjamin Law
The Family Law
Gaysia: Adventures in the Queer East
Harper Lee
To Kill A Mockingbird
L. M. Montgomery
Anne of Green Gables
Vladimir Nabokov
Lolita
Antoine de Saint-Exupery
The Little Prince
Jose Saramago
Blindness
Alice Sebold
The Lovely Bones
William Shakespeare
Shakespeare's Sonnets
Mary Shelley
Frankenstein
Bram Stoker
Dracula
William Makepeace Thackeray
Vanity Fair
Leo Tolstoy
War and Peace
Lynne Truss
Eats, Shoots and Leaves
Virginia Woolf
Orlando
A Room of One's Own
Impressive library.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 2)

Top