Postby the_wolfs_howl » Sun Apr 15, 2007 6:10 am
As I read all the other posts, I slowly came to realize just how many books I've read that have made me think. Maybe, like JasonPratt, I think too much about what I read. Here's some that I can remember off the top of my head:
Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky
The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle by Avi
The Book Without Words by Avi
Till We Have Faces by C.S. Lewis (I know I didn't understand much of what he was trying to get at, but it really made me think)
The Great Divorce by C.S. Lewis
[I can't remember the title of this one, but they made a movie out of it called I Am David]
His Dark Materials Trilogy by Philip Pullman (I hated hated HATED them, but reading them really got a response out of me and I think it made me stronger in my faith because of reading all these rather obvious attacks against what the Bible really teaches)
Roald Dahl's short stories (Man from the South and The Swan are two of my favorites. The Wonderful Grammatizator or whatever it's called really freaked me out.)
Garth Nix's short stories (especially Endings)
The Third Culture Kid Experience by Ruth E. Van Reken...and some other guy
And that's all I can think of for now. I won't list the obvious Lord of the Rings and Chronicles of Narnia. I think anyone who understands what Lewis is trying to say in Narnia will be led to thinking a lot, and the type of people who manage to finish Lord of the Rings are the type of people who would think seriously about it.
You can find out things about the past that you never knew. And from what you've learned, you may see some things differently in the present. You're the one that changes. Not the past.
- Ellone, Final Fantasy VIII
"There's a difference between maliciously offending somebody - on purpose - and somebody being offended by...truth. If you're offended by the
truth, that's your problem. I have no obligation to not offend you if I'm speaking the truth. The truth is
supposed to offend you; that's how you know you don't got it."
- Brad Stine