What Book Are You?
I generally hate online quizzes, but this one is actually pretty fun. http://bluepyramid.org/ia/1q.htm Answer 6 questions, and find out which of the following books you are...
I am "The Catcher in the Rye" which, according to the site means...
"You are surrounded by phonies, and boy are you sick of them! In an ongoing struggle to search for a land without phonies, you end up running away from everything, from school to consequences. In this process, you reveal that many people in your life have suffered torments and all you really want to do is catch them as they fall. Perhaps using a baseball mitt. Your biggest fans are infamous psychotics."
Whatever.
- The Grapes of Wrath (John Steinbeck)
- A People's History of the United States (Howard Zinn)
- The Guns of August (Barbara Tuchman)
- Roots (Alex Haley)
- Moby Dick (Herman Melville)
- The Two Towers (J.R.R. Tolkien)
- The Fellowship of the Ring (J.R.R. Tolkien)
- The Return of the King (J.R.R. Tolkien)
- Ulysses (James Joyce)
- The Mists of Avalon (Marion Zimmer Bradley)
- David Copperfield (Charles Dickens)
- Great Expectations (Charles Dickens)
- Confessions (Augustine)
- The Sound and the Fury (William Faulkner)
- The Dictionary (Merriam-Webster)
- Les Miserables (Victor Hugo)
- A Theory of Justice (John Rawls)
- Anarchy, State, and Utopia (Robert Nozick)
- Godel, Escher, Bach (Douglas Hofstadter)
- Compassion Fatigue (Susan Moeller)
- Dune (Frank Herbert)
- Stranger in a Strange Land (Robert Heinlein)
- Jurassic Park (Michael Crichton)
- Ender's Game (Orson Scott Card)
- The Poisonwood Bible (Barbara Kingsolver)
- One Hundred Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez)
- Lolita (Vladimir Nabokov)
- Love in the Time of Cholera (Gabriel Garcia Marquez)
- Watership Down (Richard Adams)
- A Prayer for Owen Meany (John Irving)
- Catch-22 (Joseph Heller)
- Invisible Man (Ralph Ellison)
- Inherit the Wind (Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee)
- "Master Harold"... and the Boys (Athol Fugard)
- Waiting for Godot (Samuel Beckett)
- Hamlet (William Shakespeare)
- The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald)
- Mother Night (Kurt Vonnegut)
- Cat's Cradle (Kurt Vonnegut)
- Animal Farm (George Orwell)
- Pale Fire (Vladimir Nabokov)
- One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Ken Kesey)
- Mrs. Dalloway (Virginia Woolf)
- The Catcher in the Rye (J.D. Salinger)
- I, Robot (Isaac Asimov)
- Siddhartha (Hermann Hesse)
- Prufrock and Other Observations (T.S. Eliot)
- Loosely Based (Storey Clayton)
- Babar the King (Jean de Brunhoff)
- The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)
- Anne of Green Gables (L.M. Montgomery)
- The Giver (Lois Lowry)
- The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (C.S. Lewis)
- Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll)
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Douglas Adams)
- Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain)
- Fahrenheit 451 (Ray Bradbury)
- 1984 (George Orwell)
- The Handmaid's Tale (Margaret Atwood)
- Brave New World (Aldous Huxley)
- Cry, the Beloved Country (Alan Paton)
- Night (Elie Wiesel)
- The Things They Carried (Tim O'Brien)
- To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee)
I am "The Catcher in the Rye" which, according to the site means...
"You are surrounded by phonies, and boy are you sick of them! In an ongoing struggle to search for a land without phonies, you end up running away from everything, from school to consequences. In this process, you reveal that many people in your life have suffered torments and all you really want to do is catch them as they fall. Perhaps using a baseball mitt. Your biggest fans are infamous psychotics."
Whatever.