Also, help anyone else ID any books they can't remember the titles of!
― anthony kyle monday (akmonday), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 16:40 (twenty-two years ago)
― writingstatic (writingstatic), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 22:19 (twenty-two years ago)
― anthony kyle monday (akmonday), Wednesday, 14 January 2004 23:18 (twenty-two years ago)
― Chris Hill (Chris Hill), Thursday, 15 January 2004 20:07 (twenty-two years ago)
It's about a boy who somehow ends up left in the desert with no supplies, and he is being hunted by a man in a Jeep, I think. I remember that he finds a pool of water in a cave and drinks from it. That's all I can remember. I thought the title was Hunted, or something similar, but I seem to have a mental block.
― Aimee, Tuesday, 20 January 2004 14:06 (twenty-two years ago)
― scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 14:19 (twenty-two years ago)
― scott seward (scott seward), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 14:33 (twenty-two years ago)
― Aimee, Tuesday, 20 January 2004 17:20 (twenty-two years ago)
― Leee Majors (Leee), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 19:08 (twenty-two years ago)
I should mention I loved that book when I was made to read it in 9th grade--in a course, incidentally, in which we seemed to read only about neo-gothic sex and death. The Most Dangerous Game, Lord of the Flies, The Lottery, Leiningen vs. the Ants, Alas Babylon, Hiroshima, The Rocking Horse Winner, Romeo and Juliet, A Distant Episode. What a strange diet for children, when imposed (and how obvious, when not.)
M.
― Matthew K (mtk), Tuesday, 20 January 2004 21:12 (twenty-two years ago)
Funny you should mention the strange themes fed to middle-schoolers... I also read The Most Dangerous Game, Lord of the Flies, The Lottery and Romeo and Juliet that year, yet was denied extra credit (we were given a percentage point for every 100 pages read, resulting in my grade for the year reaching the 200% mark) for reading anything by Stephen King, who was my favorite author at the time. Though certainly not equal in literary value, no Misery or Cujo could be more disturbing to a 13-year-old than Lord of the Flies.
― Aimee, Friday, 23 January 2004 13:33 (twenty-two years ago)
In one scene some kind of fatalistic older character tells the boy about a man who died and his epitaph read: "Life is a jest and everything shows it; I thought so once and now I know it." The high school stock boys all laugh at this. I remember this scene because I didn't get why that was funny.
― W i l l (common_person), Thursday, 28 October 2004 19:16 (twenty-one years ago)
― kyle (akmonday), Monday, 1 November 2004 19:20 (twenty-one years ago)
― kyle (akmonday), Monday, 1 November 2004 19:21 (twenty-one years ago)
I read a story by a Japanese person written in the 80s or maybe the early 90s. The story is about a Japanese student living in Italy, I think with an older guy. The student spends a lot of his time playing a home console video game version of Dante's Inferno. A lot of the story is about how the game plays and the progress the guy makes in the game.
Only you can help. The library that had the anthology I read the story in has sold heaps of their stock because they are trying to focus on online texts and they don't have it anymore.
― bamcquern, Saturday, 12 February 2011 05:50 (fifteen years ago)