"Of all the things that drive men to seas, the most common disaster, I've come to learn, is women."
-Charles Johnson, Middle Passage
Charles R. Johnson was born April 23, 1948, and is still alive today. He's a prominent scholar and has attended many colleges and universities, and his writing has influenced a lot of people.
Middle Passage was published in 1990.
The book is about a freed slave, Rutherford Calhoun, who has fallen in love with a wild, adventurous lifestyle. However, he meets a young woman who is determined to make a proper man out of him.
I would like to read this book, because I read practically everything. I have no guarantee that I'd enjoy it, but I'd at least like to have the experience.
-A. A. Milne, The House at Pooh Corner
Alan Alexander Milne was born January 18, 1882 and died January 31, 1956. He's most famous for his two Pooh books about a boy named Christopher Robin (named after his son) and his bear Winnie the Pooh (originally named Edward but changed later on).
The book is a classic, something where countless childhood memories have been built. Winnie the Pooh is an adorable yellow bear that is constantly getting into trouble and teaching life-long lessons.
I would like to read this book to see where the legend of Winnie the Pooh started, and to see how close the animated series are to the books.


I like your openness to new books, just for the experience.
ReplyDeleteGood morning, Mrs. Fraser,
DeleteI do love reading new books, and I'll read pretty much anything. I have found, though, that not all the classics are worth reading. Just most of them. My first attempt to read "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" resulted in literature-based disaster. Sigh.
Have a lovely night,
Zachary