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Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts

i've been reading this on and off for ths past month :p
so good, but so long...
 
i finally made a trip to the bookstore and picked up three titles. i've actually been wanting to read all three and can't decide which one to read first.


american psycho by bret easton ellis
don quixote by miguel de cervantes saavedra
wicked: the life and times of the wicked wich of the west by gregory macguire
 
Right now I'm reading Huis Clos by Sartre for my french literature class. I also have plenty of other texts I'm reading, but that is the only one right now that isn't an academic text.
 
Currently: Economics 8th Edition by Roger A. Arnold

Also reading other such enjoyable titles as:

1) Organizational Behavior 13th Edition by Stephen P. Robbins and Timothy A. Judge

2) Essentials of Modern Business Statistics With Microsoft Excel 3rd Edition by Anderson, Sweeney, and Williams.

3) Intermediate Accounting Volume 1 of 2 12th Edition by Kieso, Weygandt, and Warfield

4) College Algebra 4th Edition by Mark Dugopolaski


As you can see, I have a very light, very exciting reading list that will keep me throughly entertained for the next 12 weeks. The joys of being an Accounting major just never stop coming. ;)
 
I just finished reading The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. I wasn't suppose to, but seeing as it's the only book that was lying around at the time, I forced myself to read it. :)
 
I just started the Watchmen. I've never read a comic/graphic novel before but my boss brought it in for me to read. So far, not bad but it takes a bit of work to follow.
 
Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts

I found that book to be a resounding meh!

I'm about to start Snowblind by Robert Sabbag, following its recommendation by my brother.
 
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I just finished reading The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. I wasn't suppose to, but seeing as it's the only book that was lying around at the time, I forced myself to read it. :)

I really did not like that book. I found it poorly written, absurd, and I thought the plot started meandering as it progressed to the point that it was barely readable.
 
Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, A Man Who Would Cure the World by Tracy Kidder.

...An absolutely amazing and inspiring true story, and written as well as a work of literature. Highly recommended.
 
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