Mongke
Member
My Place - Sally Morgan
hands down
hands down
Hahaha, i didn't mind My Place, "Dingo" by Mark Rosenberg was worse!Mongke said:My Place - Sally Morgan
hands down
is that possible? well i suppose the story of the grandfather was cool but if Nan didnt die in the book i think i would have kiled her over pure frustration!!! just stop asking her for gods sake!!!! get a hint, she doesnt want to tell you!!!!!!PLURFECT! said:
Hahaha, i didn't mind My Place, "Dingo" by Mark Rosenberg was worse!
Hehe, awh Mongke - you should have vented sooner!! *hug*Mongke said:is that possible? well i suppose the story of the grandfather was cool but if Nan didnt die in the book i think i would have kiled her over pure frustration!!! just stop asking her gods sake!!!! get a hint, she doesnt want to tell you!!!!!!
few, thats been on my chest for a while
haha! lord, i cant imagin it being THAT bad!PLURFECT! said:
Hehe, awh Mongke - you should have vented sooner!! *hug*
I read My Place when i was 13 or so, not as set analyatical reading, perhaps that's why i didn't hate it as much. Dingo, on the other hand... there were so many complaints about that text, that we were told not to even bother returning the books, lol!! :rofl:
Hehe, I read it at 13, because my Mother [who was a social worker at the time] thought it would be beneficial for me to be able to relate to aboriginality in it's academic aspects as well as the social. We often had kids staying with us of lots of different backgrounds, which was always awesome - i loved getting to know different people and learning to open my mind to what i wouldn't normaly see or understand.Mongke said:haha! lord, i cant imagin it being THAT bad!
how come so many ppl read MP when they were 13? is it some sort of childs recomendation thing? cos you are the 5th person i know at least whos read it at that age.
did it? surely there must be better Aboriginal reading arond? i dont know, i grew up in South Africa.PLURFECT! said:
Hehe, I read it at 13, because my Mother [who was a social worker at the time] thought it would be beneficial for me to be able to relate to aboriginality in it's academic aspects as well as the social. We often had kids staying with us of lots of different backgrounds, which was always awesome - i loved getting to know different people and learning to open my mind to what i wouldn't normaly see or understand.
Read it when you're older. It's a fantastic book.Mr Lovepony said:Nearly fell into a 1000 year coma reading that book. I don't know, maybe I'm intellectually challenged or something but the pages are still dripping wet from the saliva I've dribbled all over it while nodding off.
Anything that's long and tedious to read, too many to list that I've read that annoy the hell out of me. :mad1:duckofdoom said:Just curious as to wonder what people think as the most annoying book of all time is.
Heh, that just keeps going and going. Dan Brown added too many twistsvanush said:Angels and Demons
YOU WIN.sevenpuddings said:The Lake at the End of the World
It was horrible.... never again
Yeah. Along with the rest of the canon. What crap.pLuvia said:ALL shakespeare crap
Yeah, there were lots of twists and turns here and there. But I liked the story, one of the few books that I could visualise as a movie. if that makes senseM-turkey said:Heh, that just keeps going and going. Dan Brown added too many twists