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MagicBell wrote:...Im talking here [about] people who dont read at all...
MagicBell wrote:I didn't find 1984 very accessible at all. It was very slow in many places, and although that suited me, I can imagine many would become bored. Animal Farm could be a bit too simple for these non-readers. I don't think they might appreciate it's meaning and reason for being that way.
MagicBell wrote:I'm not too keen on this "i don't like mainstream/popular books" thing. I think that's kinda narrow (no offence). I look through book sections in shops all the time and I think it's mostly a load of c*** (not the best), but I wouldn't write it all off. There are often real gems there among the riff-raff. Books are books, and whether they are unheard of or critical successes, they should be judged on their own merits like anything else.
Tomo wrote:Do they have to be novels? New Scientist do some excellent toilet reading in the shape of "Does Anything Eats Wasps?" "Do Polar Bears Get Lonely?" "Why Don't Penguin's Feet Freeze?" and "How To Fossilise Your Hamster".
Robbie wrote:The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime is considered mainstream. Most of the titles nominated for the Booker Prize, Orange Prize, and similar prizes can be safely described as in or near the mainstream.
Everything in the world should be judged on its own merits, and I never said these are bad books. All I'm saying is that (as someone on the autistic spectrum) I don't enjoy stories about people and their relationships, so I don't read them, and therefore I'm not in a position to comment on them.
pcwells wrote:I thought Philip Reeve's Mortal Engines was tremendous
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