Recommend a book worth reading and list your top 3 of all time!?
trying to broaden my horizons
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- The Innocent Man Bridge to Terebitha Danger On Panther Peak Steven King's IT
- So B. It Among the Hidden i don't know the authors
- I'd say the Circle series by Ted Dekker. Actually, anything by him rocks, but I like the Circle best! (It starts with Black, then Red, and last, but not least, White.)
- all the conversation with God books by Neale Donald Walsch. Three all time favourites- Angels and Demons and Deception Point- Dan Brown Manifest Your Destiny -Wayne Dyer, all of the Anne of Green Gable books by LM Montgommery. Oh and all of the Andrew Greeley books with Father Punky.
- The Dark Flight Down - Marcus Sedgwick The girl with a pearl earing (forget the author) The King Arthur series (the seeing stone, then something else, then the crusade) I forget the author
- 1. A Widow for One Year by John Irving (He wrote The World According to Garp. Great movie but an even better book.) 2. I Know This Much is True by Wally Lamb 3. The Weight of Water by Anita Shreve (also Midwives and The Pilots Wife are both great books by this author.) And another book worth reading is The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold. It's a strange book but I enjoyed it. And if you're looking for a lighter read anything by Marian Keyes. She's so funny.
- Youll be blown away. Read C.S. Lewis' Mere Christianity, The Seeing eye, and the Weight of Glory. Read up on history that the politically correct have omitted from textbooks with ' How the catholic church built western civilization'. I'm not catholic, but this book really opened my eyes the the contributions of church men. A little preview: Father Nicolaus Steno (1638-1686) Father of Geology. The steno principles include 'the law of superposition' the 'law of original horizontality' and the 'law of lateral continuity posits' ( i just checked, my college geology book doesnt even mention he was a father!) When charles bossut, one of the first historians of mathematics, compiled a list of the most eminent mathmematicians from 900 B.C. through 1800 A.D. a full 5 percent were jesuits. That is amazing considering that the jesuits existed only 2 of those 27 centuries!
- "Into Thin Air" by Jon Krakauer
- The Bible (in what ever translation you feel comfortable with) The life of Billy Graham The life of Corrie Tenboom From Prison to Praise
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