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	<title>World Wide Mike &#187; school</title>
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		<title>My First Meme: How Many Top Books Have You Read?</title>
		<link>http://mmm.beachtemple.com/blog/2008/06/28/my-first-meme-how-many-top-books-have-you-read/</link>
		<comments>http://mmm.beachtemple.com/blog/2008/06/28/my-first-meme-how-many-top-books-have-you-read/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Jun 2008 12:39:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Play by Play]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[meme]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[school]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mmm.beachtemple.com/blog/?p=100</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[There&#8217;s a meme running around on some blogs. I don&#8217;t usually participate in these kinds of things, but I found this one interesting enough. Anyway, here&#8217;s what&#8217;s going on: The Big Read posted a list of the top 100 books in the UK. I couldn&#8217;t find the source reference for this, but apparently the Big [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There&#8217;s a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme">meme</a> running around on some blogs. I don&#8217;t usually participate in these kinds of things, but I found this one interesting enough.</p>
<p>Anyway, here&#8217;s what&#8217;s going on:</p>
<p>The <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/bigread/">Big Read</a> posted a <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/bigread/top100.shtml">list of the top 100 books in the UK</a>. I couldn&#8217;t find the source reference for this, but apparently the Big Read claims that most adults have read no more than 6 of those top 100 books.</p>
<p>On the list below I&#8217;ve <strong>highlighted</strong> the books I&#8217;ve read. The meme also says to indicate which books you loved and hated, but I won&#8217;t bother.</p>
<p>1 Pride and Prejudice &#8211; Jane Austen<br />
<strong>2 The Lord of the Rings &#8211; JRR Tolkien</strong><br />
3 Jane Eyre &#8211; Charlotte Bronte<br />
4 Harry Potter series &#8211; JK Rowling<br />
<strong>5 To Kill a Mockingbird &#8211; Harper Lee</strong><br />
6 The Bible<br />
7 Wuthering Heights &#8211; Emily Bronte<br />
<strong>8 Nineteen Eighty Four &#8211; George Orwell</strong><br />
9 His Dark Materials &#8211; Philip Pullman<br />
10 Great Expectations &#8211; Charles Dickens<br />
11 Little Women &#8211; Louisa M Alcott<br />
12 Tess of the D&#8217;Urbervilles &#8211; Thomas Hardy<br />
<strong>13 Catch 22 &#8211; Joseph Heller</strong><br />
14 Complete Works of Shakespeare<br />
15 Rebecca &#8211; Daphne Du Maurier<br />
<strong>16 The Hobbit &#8211; JRR Tolkien</strong><br />
17 Birdsong &#8211; Sebastian Faulks<br />
<strong>18 Catcher in the Rye &#8211; JD Salinger</strong><br />
19 The Time Traveller&#8217;s Wife &#8211; Audrey Niffenegger<br />
20 Middlemarch &#8211; George Eliot<br />
21 Gone With The Wind &#8211; Margaret Mitchell<br />
22 The Great Gatsby &#8211; F Scott Fitzgerald<br />
23 Bleak House &#8211; Charles Dickens<br />
24 War and Peace &#8211; Leo Tolstoy<br />
<strong>25 The Hitch Hiker&#8217;s Guide to the Galaxy &#8211; Douglas Adams</strong><br />
26 Brideshead Revisited &#8211; Evelyn Waugh<br />
27 Crime and Punishment &#8211; Fyodor Dostoyevsky<br />
28 Grapes of Wrath &#8211; John Steinbeck<br />
29 Alice in Wonderland &#8211; Lewis Carroll<br />
30 The Wind in the Willows &#8211; Kenneth Grahame<br />
31 Anna Karenina &#8211; Leo Tolstoy<br />
32 David Copperfield &#8211; Charles Dickens<br />
33 Chronicles of Narnia &#8211; CS Lewis<br />
34 Emma &#8211; Jane Austen<br />
35 Persuasion &#8211; Jane Austen<br />
36 The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe &#8211; CS Lewis<br />
37 The Kite Runner &#8211; Khaled Hosseini<br />
38 Captain Corelli&#8217;s Mandolin &#8211; Louis De Bernieres<br />
39 Memoirs of a Geisha &#8211; Arthur Golden<br />
40 Winnie the Pooh &#8211; AA Milne<br />
41 Animal Farm &#8211; George Orwell<br />
<strong>42 The Da Vinci Code &#8211; Dan Brown</strong><br />
43 One Hundred Years of Solitude &#8211; Gabriel Garcia Marquez<br />
44 A Prayer for Owen Meaney &#8211; John Irving<br />
45 The Woman in White &#8211; Wilkie Collins<br />
46 Anne of Green Gables &#8211; LM Montgomery<br />
47 Far From The Madding Crowd &#8211; Thomas Hardy<br />
48 The Handmaid&#8217;s Tale &#8211; Margaret Atwood<br />
49 Lord of the Flies &#8211; William Golding<br />
50 Atonement &#8211; Ian McEwan<br />
51 Life of Pi &#8211; Yann Martel<br />
52 Dune &#8211; Frank Herbert<br />
53 Cold Comfort Farm &#8211; Stella Gibbons<br />
54 Sense and Sensibility &#8211; Jane Austen<br />
55 A Suitable Boy &#8211; Vikram Seth<br />
56 The Shadow of the Wind &#8211; Carlos Ruiz Zafon<br />
57 A Tale Of Two Cities &#8211; Charles Dickens<br />
58 Brave New World &#8211; Aldous Huxley<br />
59 The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time &#8211; Mark Haddon<br />
60 Love In The Time Of Cholera &#8211; Gabriel Garcia Marquez<br />
61 Of Mice and Men &#8211; John Steinbeck<br />
62 Lolita &#8211; Vladimir Nabokov<br />
63 The Secret History &#8211; Donna Tartt<br />
64 The Lovely Bones &#8211; Alice Sebold<br />
65 Count of Monte Cristo &#8211; Alexandre Dumas<br />
<strong>66 On The Road &#8211; Jack Kerouac</strong><br />
67 Jude the Obscure &#8211; Thomas Hardy<br />
68 Bridget Jones&#8217;s Diary &#8211; Helen Fielding<br />
69 Midnight&#8217;s Children &#8211; Salman Rushdie<br />
70 Moby Dick &#8211; Herman Melville<br />
71 Oliver Twist &#8211; Charles Dickens<br />
<strong>72 Dracula &#8211; Bram Stoker</strong><br />
73 The Secret Garden &#8211; Frances Hodgson Burnett<br />
74 Notes From A Small Island &#8211; Bill Bryson<br />
75 Ulysses &#8211; James Joyce<br />
76 The Bell Jar &#8211; Sylvia Plath<br />
77 Swallows and Amazons &#8211; Arthur Ransome<br />
78 Germinal &#8211; Emile Zola<br />
79 Vanity Fair &#8211; William Makepeace Thackeray<br />
80 Possession &#8211; AS Byatt<br />
81 A Christmas Carol &#8211; Charles Dickens<br />
82 Cloud Atlas &#8211; David Mitchell<br />
83 The Color Purple &#8211; Alice Walker<br />
84 The Remains of the Day &#8211; Kazuo Ishiguro<br />
85 Madame Bovary &#8211; Gustave Flaubert<br />
86 A Fine Balance &#8211; Rohinton Mistry<br />
87 Charlotte&#8217;s Web &#8211; EB White<br />
88 The Five People You Meet In Heaven &#8211; Mitch Albom<br />
89 Adventures of Sherlock Holmes &#8211; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle<br />
90 The Faraway Tree Collection &#8211; Enid Blyton<br />
91 Heart of Darkness &#8211; Joseph Conrad<br />
<strong>92 The Little Prince &#8211; Antoine De Saint-Exupery</strong><br />
93 The Wasp Factory &#8211; Iain Banks<br />
94 Watership Down &#8211; Richard Adams<br />
95 A Confederacy of Dunces &#8211; John Kennedy Toole<br />
96 A Town Like Alice &#8211; Nevil Shute<br />
97 The Three Musketeers &#8211; Alexandre Dumas<br />
<strong>98 Hamlet &#8211; William Shakespeare</strong><br />
<strong>99 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory &#8211; Roald Dahl</strong><br />
100 Les Miserables &#8211; Victor Hugo</p>
<p>A few notes:</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve read the first few books in the Harry Potter series, but I won&#8217;t finish it. I also haven&#8217;t read The Bible cover to cover, so it&#8217;s not highlighted.</p>
<p>When I was in elementary school, the library had these abridged versions of classic novels. I read many of them, &#8220;Great Expectations&#8221; and &#8220;A Tale of Two Cities&#8221; among them.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve seen &#8220;Memoirs of a Geisha&#8221;, &#8220;Lord of the Flies&#8221; and &#8220;The Color Purple&#8221; as movies.</p>
<p>&#8220;Life of Pi&#8221; is sitting on the bookshelf right behind me, as is &#8220;The World According to Garp&#8221;. A certain used bookstore owner in Sunnyside told me it&#8217;s John Irving&#8217;s best work, and the others don&#8217;t quite measure up. I don&#8217;t plan to find out on my own.</p>
<p>Among the books listed, it&#8217;s interesting how many books (or movies) were worked through at school. I also wonder how much different this list of 100 would be for an (educated) American audience.</p>
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