The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby TheCatchampion » Sat Mar 03, 2012 7:35 am

Yesss!
My old eReader broke but my Father bought me a new Touch pad one!

Anyway I flipped at my friend for saying books had sucked. All I told her was the quote
from the Book of Quotations "Books are the carriers of civilzation. Without books history is
slient, Literature dumb, Science crippled, thought and speculation at a Standstill."

Then people made of me for saying that so I threw a chair at them, and did some
other things. Anyway that shut them right up.





















    I
    I

    NOTHING SEEMS
    AS PRETTY AS THE
    PAST THOUGH


    ♥ ♣ ♦ ♠ ♥ ♣ ♦ ♠

    and you'll find yourself in a skirmish
    and you wish you'd never been born
    and you tie yourself to the tracks
    and there isn't no going back
    and its wrong wrong wrong
    aut we'll do it anyway cause we love a bit of trouble
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    Image
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby Kazza. » Sat Mar 03, 2012 10:42 am

zippyzoo77 wrote:I really liked all three of the Hunger Games books. They were well written, full of energy, and interesting all at the same time. I absolutely loved the clock arena, it was terribly creative! I have so much to say, but typing here on my phone is annoying.


I loved them all too!!!! <3 I liked the imagery in the end of Mockingjay because the epilouge made that entire book better in my opinion. I think that Mockingjay is something like the best and worst book of the series in my opinion. I LOVED it, but at the same time hated it. Spoiler Alert! Like when Prim died, I cried so hard...In that way it was my least favorite. I also wish that she had gone into a bit more detail as to what Gale and the other survivors of the book were doing. That would have made the book sooooo much better.

IcyColdCoke wrote:
Yesss!
My old eReader broke but my Father bought me a new Touch pad one!

Anyway I flipped at my friend for saying books had sucked. All I told her was the quote
from the Book of Quotations "Books are the carriers of civilzation. Without books history is
slient, Literature dumb, Science crippled, thought and speculation at a Standstill."


Hmm...I have heard this quote somewhere else...now where was it...*goes to room to find book*
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- Tumblr -
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby TawnyDestrange » Sun Mar 04, 2012 8:05 am

May I join? This looks awesome! :D


Username: TawnyDestrange
Nickname (if any): Tawny :)
Top Ten Favorite Books: Harry Potter series, Lord of the Rings trilogy, Hunger Games trilogy, Elfquest.....
Average amount of time it takes you to finish a book: Between one and three days, usually.
How many of the above symptoms you regularly experience: Most X3
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"People assume that time is a strict progression of cause-and-effect... but actually, from a non-linear, non-subjective viewpoint, it's more like a big ball of wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey.....stuff."
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby videlicet » Sun Mar 04, 2012 2:53 pm

I had to write a really short essay on how reading has impacted me. Since this is the 'Biblomaniac Army', I'd thought I'd share with you guys, 'cause you know how I feel. :p

Reading has had a major impact on my life. I try to imagine a life without books. I look around at the shelves lining my room; the stacks of books upon books upon books, and try to pretend they aren’t there. The innumerable stories; doors into other worlds, other lives, gone. How empty my head would be, without those thousands of stories! I remember reading once that whilst an author may write a story, they need the reader to complete it. It is a joint effort, a combination of the imaginations of the writer and the reader. That is what makes a story.

Through reading I have learnt things; more than I have ever been taught at school. Things we don’t get taught at school (and maybe should). For example, I have learnt that life isn’t fair. That what goes around doesn’t always come around, and that it is better to accept reality for what it is than to flounder in dreams and fantasies. Sure, some might say that that is what a reader of fiction does; that they seek to escape reality by hiding in books. I say, that isn’t true. So, why do I read? I guess I read for knowledge, for learning about things that I would never have discovered otherwise. Through fiction I unearth fact. And through fact I better piece together the world around me. The more you know the less you need, as the saying goes. Knowledge is power.

And now, here’s the funny thing. I can hardly explain the impact reading has had on me. If I were to describe myself in a few words, reader would be one of them. That is how essential reading is to me. Can you really explain something that is such a part of you that it is like an arm or a leg? Friends ask me all the time why I bother reading, why I waste my time staring at scribbles on paper, when I could be watching TV, or hanging out with them? And, you know, every single time I’m asked this, I can’t give an explanation. It is like someone asking you, “Why do you breathe?” How would you respond to that?

Maybe, this lack of my ability to explain the impact reading has had on me is an explanation in itself. It demonstrates just how much I have been impacted. The word ‘activity’ hardly seems adequate to describe reading. It is far, far more than an activity. To me, reading is an adventure, a tireless, ceaseless adventure. A foray into worlds known and unknown. Stories make the intangible tangible, the unknowable known.

Reading has made me, made me who I am today. Reading and books have done more than just impact me. They are such a crucial part of my existence that they help to define me. I am who I am because of reading. Without it, I would be a whole different person.
on semi-permanent hiatus
(unable to fill any art requests as my tablet is very broken, apologies!)
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meanwhile the world goes on. / meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes, / over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers. --wild geese, by mary oliver

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hey, viz here! eternally busy, stressed university student. lover of books, space, autumn, mint chocolate, cats. gay.
my previous username was vizàviz

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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby Bilbo Baggins. » Sun Mar 04, 2012 2:59 pm

TawnyDestrange wrote:May I join? This looks awesome! :D


Username: TawnyDestrange
Nickname (if any): Tawny :)
Top Ten Favorite Books: Harry Potter series, Lord of the Rings trilogy, Hunger Games trilogy, Elfquest.....
Average amount of time it takes you to finish a book: Between one and three days, usually.
How many of the above symptoms you regularly experience: Most X3

YESYESYES LOTR!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! had to get that out XD
I'm an adult now! don't message me about things i said when i was 12
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby Roonil Wazlib » Sun Mar 04, 2012 3:13 pm

Viszla7 wrote:
I had to write a really short essay on how reading has impacted me. Since this is the 'Biblomaniac Army', I'd thought I'd share with you guys, 'cause you know how I feel. :p

Reading has had a major impact on my life. I try to imagine a life without books. I look around at the shelves lining my room; the stacks of books upon books upon books, and try to pretend they aren’t there. The innumerable stories; doors into other worlds, other lives, gone. How empty my head would be, without those thousands of stories! I remember reading once that whilst an author may write a story, they need the reader to complete it. It is a joint effort, a combination of the imaginations of the writer and the reader. That is what makes a story.

Through reading I have learnt things; more than I have ever been taught at school. Things we don’t get taught at school (and maybe should). For example, I have learnt that life isn’t fair. That what goes around doesn’t always come around, and that it is better to accept reality for what it is than to flounder in dreams and fantasies. Sure, some might say that that is what a reader of fiction does; that they seek to escape reality by hiding in books. I say, that isn’t true. So, why do I read? I guess I read for knowledge, for learning about things that I would never have discovered otherwise. Through fiction I unearth fact. And through fact I better piece together the world around me. The more you know the less you need, as the saying goes. Knowledge is power.

And now, here’s the funny thing. I can hardly explain the impact reading has had on me. If I were to describe myself in a few words, reader would be one of them. That is how essential reading is to me. Can you really explain something that is such a part of you that it is like an arm or a leg? Friends ask me all the time why I bother reading, why I waste my time staring at scribbles on paper, when I could be watching TV, or hanging out with them? And, you know, every single time I’m asked this, I can’t give an explanation. It is like someone asking you, “Why do you breathe?” How would you respond to that?

Maybe, this lack of my ability to explain the impact reading has had on me is an explanation in itself. It demonstrates just how much I have been impacted. The word ‘activity’ hardly seems adequate to describe reading. It is far, far more than an activity. To me, reading is an adventure, a tireless, ceaseless adventure. A foray into worlds known and unknown. Stories make the intangible tangible, the unknowable known.

Reading has made me, made me who I am today. Reading and books have done more than just impact me. They are such a crucial part of my existence that they help to define me. I am who I am because of reading. Without it, I would be a whole different person.


I have no words to say about how beautiful this is :')
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby Actually.A.Herondale » Sun Mar 04, 2012 3:14 pm

I'm currently reading "The False Prince" ((Book one or the trilagy)) and it's the second book EVER to almost make me cry.
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby TheCatchampion » Sun Mar 04, 2012 3:59 pm

I shocked my Mother once becuase I have finshed the secound book to Alice In Wonderland withen a day.
Everytime I tell somebody I finshed it in a 23/4 hour peiord, they never belive me. Usually those are the people who have no
sence into reading. Anyway. Anyone else read the orignal book of Winnie the Pooh? At the time that book was mean't for kids 9-11.
But after the cartoon was released the whole thing it self seemed childess and Immature but its a true classic thats highly recommended for People of all ages.





















    I
    I

    NOTHING SEEMS
    AS PRETTY AS THE
    PAST THOUGH


    ♥ ♣ ♦ ♠ ♥ ♣ ♦ ♠

    and you'll find yourself in a skirmish
    and you wish you'd never been born
    and you tie yourself to the tracks
    and there isn't no going back
    and its wrong wrong wrong
    aut we'll do it anyway cause we love a bit of trouble
    Image
    Image
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby Ourpawprints » Sun Mar 04, 2012 4:34 pm

Username: Ourpawprints
Nickname (if any): 'pawprints
Top Ten Favorite Books: (not in order) Scorpio Races, The Incident At Hawks Hill, My Side Of The Mountain, Wee Free Men, Watership Down, Shades Of Gray, Warriors, Eragon, Phantom Stallion and Return To Hawks Hill.
Average amount of time it takes you to finish a book: Depends on if I'm really into it. If I am then I'll read it in a few hours. If not then I'll just start and stop a lot so it takes much longer.
How many of the above symptoms you regularly experience: 4/5
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"You shout it out,
But I can't hear a word you say
I'm talking loud not saying much
I'm criticized but all your bullets ricochet
You shoot me down, but I get up

I'm bulletproof, nothing to lose
Fire away, fire away
Ricochet, you take your aim
Fire away, fire away
You shoot me down but I won't fall
I am titanium"
-David Guetta Titanium

Between school, my pets, homework, art and life I have not been able to get on cs often, so please don't be surprised if I'm not very active.
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Re: The Bibliomaniac Army (booklovers, UNITE!)

Postby nopenope123 » Sun Mar 04, 2012 7:07 pm

IcyColdCoke wrote:
I shocked my Mother once becuase I have finshed the secound book to Alice In Wonderland withen a day.
Everytime I tell somebody I finshed it in a 23/4 hour peiord, they never belive me. Usually those are the people who have no
sence into reading. Anyway. Anyone else read the orignal book of Winnie the Pooh? At the time that book was mean't for kids 9-11.
But after the cartoon was released the whole thing it self seemed childess and Immature but its a true classic thats highly recommended for People of all ages.


We have it at home. Both of the two fist orginal books. They are very good,and very cute. I love when Tigger comes...
Worraworraworraworra...

Also,you said you shoked peiple with reading books in a day. I shoked dad this afternoon with telling him I'm reading 13 books at a time. Aslo,I often read out a 400-page book in a day or so. Mostly in som hours,that depends.
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