What owlies should consume next
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The Artist's Way
by Julia Cameron
Suggested by:
Eunoia
thinks you would like this item.
Caitlin Rowley
says, "this is an excellent book. i would recommend it to anyone interested in helping to let loose their own creativity."
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Never Let Me Go
by Kazuo Ishiguro
Suggested by:
juniper68
says, "I"m sure this is on your list already, but this is one of those great books (like The Handmaid's Tail - but you've got that on already, too, I bet) that meshes seemlessly the future dystopia with our own world."
Sarah
thinks you would like this item.
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The Time Traveler's Wife
by Audrey Niffenegger
Suggested by:
Greg
says, "Read this recently and really enjoyed it. It is a romance, but not in an overwrought, Harlequin way. The twist of the time travel element and shifting narrative perspective keep it interesting. A good read."
Eunoia
thinks you would like this item.
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Middlesex: A Novel
by Jeffrey Eugenides
Suggested by:
Eunoia
thinks you would like this item.
Watson1973
says, "Very interesting story about people's choices and how they affect their children. "
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Walden Two
by B. F. Skinner
Suggested by:
tlong
says, "BF Skinner's Utopia based on his behaviorist philosophy"
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Island
by Aldous Huxley
Suggested by:
coupland
thinks you would like this item.
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Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom
by Cory Doctorow
Suggested by:
thebigsmoke
says, "One of the most original recent depictions of a (dys)functional utopian society out there - Doctrow "fast-forwards" our own "informational revolution" a couple of hundred years and ends up with a society that's immediately recognizable - plus it's a good read to boot."
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City
by Clifford D. Simak
Suggested by:
Marija MDMA
says, "A utopian/anti-utopian sci-fi novel written in 1952, it's got talking dogs and all kinds of awesome stuff. "
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Fahrenheit 451
by Ray Bradbury
Suggested by:
BekJ
says, "Classic look at censorship and freedom of thought"
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Oryx and Crake
by Margaret Atwood
Suggested by:
terascarlet
says, "Fantastic dystopia -- I don't usually like the genre, but this is my favourite. Pretty new too. I hope you've either read this or will read it for your dissertation (good luck with that, by the way!)"
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