Monday, August 8, 2011

Tears are words that need to be written...


The conversation continues, time passes quickly and I need to wrap things up. For the last question, I choose, at random, out of the six hundred people there, a middle-aged man with a bushy moustache.
‘I don’t want to ask a question,’ he says. ‘I just want to say a name.’
The name he pronounces is that of Barbazan-Debat, a chapel in the middle of nowhere, thousands of kilometres from here, the same chapel where, one day, I placed a plaque in gratitude for a miracle and which I had visited, before setting out on this pilgrimage, in order to pray for Our Lady’s protection.
I don’t know how to respond. The following words were written by one of the other people on stage with me.
In the room, the Universe seemed suddenly to have stopped moving. So many things happened: I saw your tears and the tears of your dear wife, when that anonymous reader pronounced the name of that distant chapel.
You could no longer speak. Your smiling face grew serious. Your eyes filled with shy tears that trembled on your lashes, as if wishing to apologise for appearing there uninvited.
Even I had a lump in my throat, although I didn’t know why. I looked for my wife and daughter in the audience, because I always look to them whenever I feel myself to be on the brink of something unknown.
They were there, but they were sitting as silently as everyone else, their eyes fixed on you, trying to support you with their gaze, as if a gaze could ever support anyone.
Then I looked to Christina for help, trying to understand what was going on, how to bring to an end that seemingly interminable silence.
And I saw that she was silently crying too, as if you were both notes from the same symphony and as if your tears were touching, even though you were sitting far apart.
For several long seconds, nothing existed, there was no room, no audience, nothing. You and your wife had set off for a place where we could not follow; all that remained was the joy of living, expressed in silence and emotion.
Words are tears that have been written down. Tears are words that need to be shed. Without them, joy loses all its brilliance and sadness has no end. Thank you, then, for your tears.
I should have said to the young woman who asked the first question about signs that this was a sign, confirming that I was where I should be, in the right place, at the right time, even though I didn’t understand what had brought me there.

By: Paulo Coelho, Blog

Friday, July 15, 2011

Common GRE Words – Verbs of ‘Denial’ – Easy ways to memorize.

This week we are going to memorize a few verbs of ‘Denial’…not to mention, they are the words which keep appearing on the GRE Exams. Denial is a refusal to believe in a doctrine, theory, or the like. We will now work exhaustively with just seven high frequency GRE verbs /words of denial.

  • Abjure: Abjure is a verb of denial which means to give up, disown, disavow, renounce. Pretty good number of synonyms, aren’t they? A person who abjures is the one who gives up worldly concerns in quest of some nobler pursuit.
Do you remember any philosopher/saint who abjured worldly benefits in order to attain salvation?
Good, if you do remember, link that person to this verb of denial and you will never forget. Both the person and the verb.

  • Ostracized: ‘Ostracized’ means to exclude, eliminate from a group, society, conversation or any other such thing by a general consent. When a person is ostracized, he generally is not allowed to participate in any group related activities.
Did you ever see a movie or a documentary dealing with the families of culprits? If you had, then you know that children of culprits are usually ostracized from their community. You can visualize a scene I guess or a situation wherein women from that particular culprit’s community, banging the door against the child’s face. Did you recollect any such scene? If you did, kudos!! For you will never forget this word too!!

  • Repudiated: To repudiate is to reject, disclaim, deny, not accept, rebut. Well, that’s interesting. One can repudiate a doctrine, a principle. Last but not least one can also repudiate (disown) one’s son!! Have you come across a thing like that, wherein a father repudiated (disowned) his own child? A visit to a nearby rehabilitation center will get you face to face with addicted children repudiated by their parents.
  • Proscribed: ‘Proscribed’ is a high frequency verb of denial which means banned, controlled, restricted. To proscribe is to banish or outlaw (a person)
  • Nullified: ‘Nullified’ is not so tough high frequency GRE word. It’s a word that’s more or less familiar to many of us. Even if it is not, it can be committed to memory pretty fast. Null is void. To nullify is to cancel, to invalidate, to abolish, to quash so on and so forth.
  • Rescind: ‘Rescind’ is again a verb of denial which means to annul, to cancel, countermand, withdraw etc.
  • Confute: to confute something is to show something to be false. One can confute an argument, means; show an argument to be false, invalid or even defective.
Don’t just read these words, jot them down in your notebook and use them at least once or twice in your regular conversation today. Utter the words aloud- each word five times!!
As I always tell you do not just mug up the meaning of a word, instead:

1. Work with the word.
2. Expand its meaning into a suitable context.
3. Relate it to the person or situation you know.
4. Share the word with your friends, colleagues
5. Try to pronounce the word aloud at least five times

Practice the above mentioned words this week and share with us a few more words, verbs of denial. Please do suggest a new verb of denial, in case you know any.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Idioms for Situations

Hi all, let’s learn this week what Idioms are and how they are used. Do you know that Idioms increase the beauty of language, and Idioms are language specific? Yes that’s right; we cannot translate the Idiom of one language into another. Wikipedia defines Idiom as a phrase whose meaning cannot be determined by the literal definition of the phrase itself, but refers instead to a figurative meaning that is known only through common use. Going by the definition we realize that the native speakers of English use Idioms more naturally than the non-native speakers. Let us now read and learn a few commonly used Idioms as mentioned by the Professors of Cambridge University. The meaning of the Idiom is mentioned within the brackets. We shall learn some more Idioms next week.

A. When things go right
If something or things…
  1. works like a dream this means a plan succeeded absolutely perfectly
  2. went according to plan this means they occurred exactly as intended
  3. went/ran like clockwork this means they went smoothly with no difficulty
  4. is/are up and running this means it has/ they have begun to work as planned
  5. is/are falling into place this means it is/ they are on the point of starting to work well
  6. is/are looking up this means they are looking very positive
B. When things go wrong
  1. Oh no! That’s all we needed! [in response to news that makes current problems even worse]
  2. That’s the last thing we wanted to hear!  [in response to news that fulfills your worst fears]
  3. This is like a bad dream! [when one bad thing after other happens in quick succession]
  4. It’s a real nightmare. [used very generally for traffic jams]
  5. What a pain! [very general…for something that causes difficulty]
  6. It’s the calm before the storm. [when things are quiet, but you fear they are about to change]
C. Confusing situations or situations you don’t understand
  1. When she said her name was Bloor it threw me completely. [I did not know how to respond]
  2. The event he organized was complete shambles. [a totally disorganized event]
  3. It’s a mystery to me, how people know my private life. [something that I cannot understand]
  4. I am sorry we must have got our wires crossed. [a miscommunication/ a misunderstanding]
  5. We can’t see the wood for the trees.[too much detail prevents us to see the overall situation]
D. Resolving difficulty [or failing to do so]
  1. It’s nothing it’s just a storm in the teacup. [a lot of fuss]
  2. That was a close call/thing. [It was almost a disaster]
  3. We solved the problem at the eleventh hour. [at the very last minute]
  4. It was all just brushed under the carpet. [never resolved, never mentioned again]
Read and share with us a few Idioms you know! It’s going to be very interesting. We are awaiting your response.

Regards.



Source: LearnWordList.com/blog

Monday, July 4, 2011

The Lunatic


1.
Oh yes, friend! I'm crazy-
that's just the way I am.

2.
I see sounds,
I hear sights,
I taste smells,
I touch not heaven but things from the underworld,
things people do not believe exist,
whose shapes the world does not suspect.
Stones I see as flowers
lying water-smoothed by the water's edge,
rocks of tender forms
in the moonlight
when the heavenly sorceress smiles at me,
putting out leaves, softening, glistening,
throbbing, they rise up like mute maniacs,
like flowers, a kind of moon-bird's flowers.
I talk to them the way they talk to me,
a language, friend,
that can't be written or printed or spoken,
can't be understood, can't be heard.
Their language comes in ripples to the moonlit Ganges banks,
ripple by ripple-
oh yes, friend! I'm crazy-
that's just the way I am.

3.
You're clever, quick with words,
your exact equations are right forever and ever.
But in my arithmetic, take one from one-
and there's still one left.
You get along with five senses,
I with a sixth.
You have a brain, friend,
I have a heart.
A rose is just a rose to you-
to me it's Helen and Padmini.
You are forceful prose
I liquid verse.
When you freeze I melt,
When you're clear I get muddled
and then it works the other way around.
Your world is solid,
mine vapor,
yours coarse, mine subtle.
You think a stone reality;
harsh cruelty is real for you.
I try to catch a dream,
the way you grasp the rounded truth of cold, sweet coin.
I have the sharpness of the thorn,
you of gold and diamonds.
You think the hills are mute-
I call them eloquent.
Oh yes, friend!
I'm free in my inebriation-
that's just the way I am.

4.
In the cold of the month of winter
I sat
warming to the first white heat of the star.
the world called me drifty.
When they saw me staring blankly for seven days
after I came back from the burning ghats
they said I was a spook.
When I saw the first marks of the snows of time
in a beautiful woman's hair
I wept for three days.
When the Buddha touched my soul
they said I was raving.
They called me a lunatic because I danced
when I heard the first spring cuckoo.
One dead-quite moon night
breathless I leapt to my feet,
filled with the pain of destruction.
On that occasion the fools
put me in the stocks,
One day I sang with the storm-
the wise men
sent me off to Ranchi.
Realizing that same day I myself would die
I stretched out on my bed.
A friend came along and pinched me hard
and said, Hey, madman,
your flesh isn't dead yet!

For years these things went on.
I'm crazy, friend-
that's just the way I am.

5.
I called the Navab's wine blood,
the painted whore a corpse,
and the king a pauper.

I attacked Alexander with insults,
and denounced the so-called great souls.
The lowly I have raised on the bridge of praise
to the seventh heaven.
Your learned pandit is my great fool,
your heaven my hell,
your gold my iron,
friend! Your piety my sin.
Where you see yourself as brilliant
I find you a dolt.

Your rise, friend-my decline.
That's the way our values are mixed up, friend!
Your whole world is a hair to me.
Oh yes, friend, I'm moonstruck through and through-
moonstruck!
That's just the way I am.

6.
I see the blind man as the people's guide,
the ascetic in his cave a deserter;
those who act in the theater of lies
I see as dark buffoons.
Those who fail I find successful,
and progress only backsliding.
am I squint-eyed,
Or just crazy?
Friend, I'm crazy.
Look at the withered tongues of shameless leaders,
The dance of the whores
At breaking the backbone on the people's rights.

When the sparrow-headed newsprint spreads its black lies
In a web of falsehood
To challenge Reason-the hero in myself-
My cheeks turn red, friend,
red as molten coal.
When simple people drink dark poison with their ears
Thinking it nectar-
and right before my eyes, friend!-
then every hair on my body stands up stiff
as the Gorgon's serpent hair-
every hair on me maddened!
When I see the tiger daring to eat the deer, friend,
or the big fish the little,
then into my rotten bones there comes
the terrible strength of the soul of Dadhichi
and tries to speak, friend,
like the stormy day crashing down from heaven with the lightning.
When man regards a man
as not a man, friend,
then my teeth grind together, all thirty-two,
top and bottom jaws,
like the teeth of Bhimasena.
And then,
Red with rage my eyeballs rool
round and round, with one sweep
like a lashing flame
taking in this inhuman human world.
My organs leap out of theirs frames-
uproar! Uproar!
my breathing becomes a storm,
my face distorted, my brain on fire, friend!
with a fire like those that burn beneath the sea,
like the fire that devours the forests,
frenzied, friend!
as one who would swallow the wide world raw.
Oh yes, my friend,
the beautiful chakora am I,
destroyer of the ugly,
both tender and cruel,
the bird that steals the heaven's fire,
child of the tempest,
spew of the insane volcano,
terror incarnate.
Oh yes, friend,
my brain is whirling, whirling-
that's just the way I am.


By: Laxmi Prasad Devkota [Nepali Poet]

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Casual sex between casual friends !

If you've willingly boycotted the 'Commitments-cum-Expectations' camp long back, 'Friends with Benefits' (FWBs) is probably the thing you're looking for.

Make no haste: Do not hook up with your friend without discussing certain boundaries that need to be maintained.


For your frame of reference, this fad defines mutually beneficial relationship between two friends who indulge in casual sex with no bonds or expectations involved. In an age when all that people think of is adding digits to their bank balance, this trend has become quite a rage. Commitment might have taken a backseat but the desire for pleasure never will.


On being asked reasons as to why this trend has come into being, relationship therapist, Rachna Kothari says "Some reasons would be, the mere known fact that two friends are physically attracted to each other and can benefit each other (most often sexually), the want of pleasure or feeling of loneliness in a person or exes wanting to be in a physical relationship with no label attached. For those who believe they live in a culture that pursues individualism as the highest goal, it makes this relationship more pragmatic. Because there is no commitment or responsibility, one is free from feelings of hurt, pain, etc. and this can be a very honest and practical way of going about in relationships."


It is for sure, considering how comfortable one is with the idea, 'Friends with Benefits' is not a bad way to go about relationships. But then again, it is not all that easy. Here are certain dos and don'ts while being a FWBs.


Most times, in such a relationship, it is difficult to maintain proximity after you're done with your physical needs. Don't hook up with someone you are extremely close to or someone you can't do without on a regular basis. People generally say that women tend to fall in love with their partners after getting physical. But studies break that myth. It is normal that the moment you have had sexual intercourse, the body naturally emits hormones which generate feelings of love and affection. Sometimes, one of the partners agrees to being 'friends with benefits' just because they have feelings for the other and think that having casual sex would actually initiate sparks for the onset of a relationship. This can lead to heartbreak or a break in friendship or, in a worse scenario, both.


If, god willing, you fall in love at some point, this past phase can provoke doubt in your current relationship. FWBs can be a human interference when you're in a real relationship. Your current love can actually be insecure (and we see no fault in that) because of this so-called past-bed-buddy. If the FWB is an acquaintance, it's easy to break ties once you both have satisfied your physical needs.


Remember, it's about having an unspoken agreement between you and your friend to have occasional sex, leaving out the emotional baggage. You both should acknowledge this. Make sure the signal 'We're not lovers' is clear. Don't nestle or cuddle everytime you get an opportunity. Even sympathy sex is a no-no. This paves way to wanting more than just sex.


Rachna Kothari says, "Mutually, if two friends agree that there's no expectations, no commitments, then it's not detrimental because their attitudes are set right for this. But for those who believe that lovemaking and not mechanical sex is what's important, it is obviously detrimental as it violates every bit of their expectations."


Make sure the intimacy of this relationship is just between the two of you, without making it a public deal. Don't brag about what a love muffin you are. The friendship could be gone with the wind.


Comfort is the key word while being FWBs. You need not be worried about concealing that birthmark which you've always disliked, or those flabs you couldn't lose in the gym or whether you will perform well in bed. Just enjoy the moments without fretting much.


Most importantly, play safe. Don't just hook up without taking precautions. A bubbly night or a stressful day should be no excuse to not use protection before sex. Make sure you don't end up panic struck because of this risky relationship.


Maintaining friends with sexual benefits can be quite a hassle unless you stick by the ground rules. There is no harm being offbeat in relationships, but not acting in accordance to the rules would just lead to your life going haywire.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

How to Add Videos to iTunes as TV Shows.


Things You'll Need

  • iTunes 8 or higher

    Instructions


    • 1
      Open iTunes, go to "File" and select "Add File to Library." This will open up a directory of the files on your computer. Select the video you want to add to iTunes and click "Open." Your video will be uploaded to iTunes.
    • 2
      Locate your added video in the "Movies" section of iTunes. All videos that you add to iTunes will be placed in this area. Right-click on the video and select "Get Info," the option at the top of the menu that appears.
    • 3
      Navigate on the "Get Info" menu to the "Options" tab. You will see several ways to change the video, such as adjusting volume, skipping when shuffling, and rating. Click on "Media Kind."
    • 4
      Use the drop-down menu to scroll to the type of media you want the video to be defined as. In this case, use "TV Show." You also have the options of "Music Video," "Audio Book" and "Music." Click "OK" on the menu.
    • 5
      Click on the "TV Show" section of iTunes to locate your video. After closing out of the "Get Info" menu, the file will automatically be moved to its new section.

Friday, June 24, 2011

I'm moving to..... Fb Status..... Meaning !!!

Are galz in you FB updating their status with stat  like I'm moving to Liverpool, New York, London !!! Well you may be wondering about that. Here's the hidden meaning of such status.


There was an inbox sent to girls saying this -

Right girls, were doing it again!!
But this time we're really gonna confuse the boys well
You know the drill.

Here are the options:
Single: I'm moving to London!
Seeing some1: I'm moving to Liverpool!
Single & looking: I'm moving to Ireland!
Single & looking secretly: I'm moving to Nigeria
Can't be arsed anymore: I'm moving to Wales!
Taken: I'm moving to Paris!
It's Complicated: I'm moving to Scotland!
I want a change: I'm moving to America!
I'm a lesbian: I'm bein Deported
I've given up on Love: Immigration are outside my house...

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Careful with your work.


As a boy, Abin-Alsar overheard a conversation between his father and a dervish.
“Careful with your work”, said the dervish. “Think of what future generations will say about you.”
“So what?”, replied his father, “When I die, everything shall end, and it will not matter what they say.”
Abin-Alsar never forgot that conversation.
During his whole life, he made an effort to do good, to help people and go about his work with enthusiasm.
He became well-known for his concern for others.
When he died, he left behind a great number of things which improved the quality of life in his town.
On his tombstone, he had the following epitaph engraved:
“A life which ends with death, is a life not well spent.”

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

What man want !!!

While men may keep asking themselves the eternally puzzling question - what do women really want, there are several things that the fairer sex unfairly assumes about men. While each man is different, here are some simple things you should know about your testosterone fuelled counterparts... 

Some men like to talk about feelings albeit indirectly. Be innovative and ask him questions that might reveal how he feels for you. Ask him how he would surprise you with a romantic getaway.

There are some men who like to express their feelings of love through actions. Pay attention to the things he does around the house or just for you. Does he help without you telling him? Little things that make you smile are his way of expressing his feelings.

A recent survey said that the only reason men take longer to commit is because they want to be absolutely sure about their decision and not because they're scared to commit.

Women often complain that men don't listen when they talk. While this might be true in some cases, men usually prefer to listen quietly without giving the expected monosyllables like, 'Ok', 'Yes' or 'Fine'. Don't fret - he's probably processing everything you're saying and thinking about it silently.

Most men begin to get annoyed when a woman starts whining and clingy. Men enjoy spending time by themselves, too. So while spending time together doing activities that you both enjoy is fine, give him space to pursue his own hobbies as well.

Don't try to drop subtle hints to men - they don't get it. If you want to tell your guy something, say it directly.

Men think about sex way more than women. Accept it. But remember that thinking and fantasising is not the same as doing. And several men find sexual intimacy more satisfying when they're in a a committed and loving relationship.

Men like it when you initiate sex. They like being pursued. Experts say that most men wished their partner initiated sex more often. Don't feel shy about taking the lead. He enjoys and wants that.

If you thought that men are always ready for lovemaking, think again. Just like women, men, too, sometimes are not in the mood for sex. This could be for a variety of reasons - stress at work or home. Don't take it personally.

All guys get performance anxiety at some point or the other for different reasons. Help him relax and be supportive.

Monday, May 23, 2011

What's the big deal about virginity !

Virginity is not a sure shot formula for long lasting marital bliss.


From time immemorial a woman's virginity has been her prized possession. Throughout history one will read about cultures across the world placing a high value on a a woman's virginity. But times are changing and for an increasing number of young men and women, sex is no longer the kind of taboo that it earlier used to be. And much to our older generation's charging, pre-marital sex is a definite reality of our times.


In fact, these days, couples who are in a relationship have no qualms about getting sexually intimate with each other even though there may be no guarantee that the relationship will culminate into marriage. However, when it does come to the question of marriage, especially in the case of arranged marriages, a woman with a sexually active history still raises eyebrows and sets tongues wagging. What then is the big deal about virginity and how does this kind of a mentality hamper the lives of numerous women?


According to Dr Mahindra Vatsa, gynaecologist and sex counsellor, this kind of mentality is largely because our traditional values are still strongly embedded in us. "One of the most common questions I get, till date, is 'How do I know that my bride or girlfriend is a virgin?' The only answer that I have to such questions is that there is no way to know," says Dr Watsa. According to him, it's just the man's and his family's inflated ego that results in such unrealistic demands. How then, does our traditional culture not hamper couples from engaging in pre-marital sex? "Once a couple is engaged, it's like a license for marriage so they feel they can do anything," he opines.


"It's actually not such a big deal. However, I still get men who complain to me saying that the wife did not bleed on the first night and hence, they suspect that she's not a virgin. The truth is that the presence of the hymen which ruptures (resulting in the bleeding) is not a sure shot sign of virginity. Some women are born without it, there there are those for whom it is so elastic that it never ruptures while for some it is so fragile that a slightly intense activity may have ruptured it without them even realising it. It is just not possible to access whether a girl is a virgin or not by just examining her except if she's been through a pregnancy or if she admits to having sexual intercourse," says sexologist Dr Rajan Bhonsle.


He goes on to add that in a relationship, if a couple is to make it work successfully, it is more important for the couple to worry about virtues like trust and honesty. "If a woman admits to a sexually active past, it shouldn't be held against her. The very fact that she's even admitting it, even though she could have very well hidden it, means that she is honest and that's all that should matter," he says.


For some men, however, especially those raised in very orthodox families or old-fashioned joint families, it's the family members who tend to influence their decision. "In many of these families, something like falling in love or sex before marriage equates to the girl being bold. Their reasons, hence, for rejecting such girls is that post-marriage, too, the girl will continue with the same behaviour," Dr Bhonsle explains.


Commenting on the issue, actress Sophie Choudry opines, "Most people in Mumbai and other metropolitan cities do not expect their partners to be virgins anymore because India has gone through a dramatic change in the past 10 years. India is no longer the closed society it was. The modern young Indian woman is working, independent and makes her own choices in life. It's a change the Indian man has had to adapt to. Nonetheless, we cannot ignore that there is tremendous pressure on girls from smaller cities and more conservative families and virginity does still play a major factor when it comes to their marriage."


An intact hymen is not a sure sign of virginity.


A woman's hymen can be ruptured by non-sexual activities like intense sports, dancing, sitting astride on two wheelers, etc.


It is not necessary for a virgin to bleed the first time she has sex. In fact, is one goes by the statistics, only 42 per cent of women do so.


With the current advances in medical technology, a plastic surgeon can quite easily reconstruct a layer of tissue to resemble the hymen (the procedure is called Hymenoplasty).


Remember, virginity and chastity are not the only measures to base a happy marriage on, honesty and trust are far more important traits that both partners should possess.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Best 100 Novels


  1. 1984 by George Orwell
  2. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
  3. The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
  4. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
  5. The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger
  6. Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky
  7. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
  8. Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
  9. Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov
  10. Animal Farm by George Orwell
  11. The Brothers Karamazov by Fyodor Dostoevsky
  12. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
  13. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
  14. Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
  15. The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
  16. Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
  17. War and Peace by Leo Tolstoy
  18. The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
  19. Lord of the Flies by William Golding
  20. Ulysses by James Joyce
  21. East of Eden by John Steinbeck
  22. Harry Potter Series by J.K. Rowling
  23. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
  24. Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
  25. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
  26. Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
  27. One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  28. Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut
  29. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
  30. The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
  31. Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand
  32. Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes
  33. The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand
  34. The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
  35. A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
  36. Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
  37. Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
  38. The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
  39. The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde
  40. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams
  41. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  42. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest by Ken Kesey
  43. The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner
  44. The Stranger by Albert Camus
  45. The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway
  46. Moby Dick by Herman Melville
  47. Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
  48. Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad
  49. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
  50. On the Road by Jack Kerouac
  51. Watership Down by Richard Adams
  52. His Dark Materials by Phillip Pullman
  53. The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown
  54. Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
  55. The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger
  56. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway
  57. Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
  58. Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
  59. Dune by Frank Herbert
  60. Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust
  61. Dracula by Bram Stoker
  62. Life of Pi by Yann Martel
  63. Love in the Time of Cholera by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
  64. The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway
  65. The Stand by Stephen King
  66. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
  67. Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
  68. A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole
  69. Middlemarch by George Eliot
  70. The Idiot by Fyodor Dostoevsky
  71. Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy
  72. Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier
  73. For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway
  74. The Unbearable Lightness of Being by Milan Kundera
  75. Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden
  76. Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk
  77. The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
  78. The Trial by Franz Kafka
  79. The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
  80. The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
  81. Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery
  82. A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving
  83. Of Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham
  84. The Road by Cormac McCarthy
  85. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  86. Persuasion by Jane Austen
  87. The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood
  88. The Twilight Saga by Stephenie Meyer
  89. The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco
  90. Emma by Jane Austen
  91. Blood Meridian by Cormac McCarthy
  92. The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
  93. Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
  94. The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver
  95. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time by Mark Haddon
  96. As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
  97. Siddharta by Hermann Hesse
  98. All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque
  99. Beloved by Toni Morrison
  100. Atonement by Ian McEwan