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Interesting Books
 
 

Interesting Books Below

 

Welcome to the collection of interesting books. We’ve taken all our book articles about interesting books and put them in one place for you to check out. Our writers have the unique ability to find interesting books that normal humans do not have. This ability comes from years of studying, genetic alteration, brain performance enhancing steroids, and hard work. They are pretty much super humans and we do our best to prevent them from taking over the world, but unfortunately we do not feel we’ll be able to stop them forever… Our writers truly are the best and have great powers, but with great powers come great responsibilities. So please read responsibly.
What Should I Read Next

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Interesting books are just the start of your book journey on Bookkaholic. We have so many different articles, ideas, and books that you’ll want to keep coming back because finding books is half the battle of reading. This is a battle we want you to win because if you can’t find something new and interesting to read, you’ll be stuck with ‘Twilight.’ And not even our writers can help you if you catch a case of the ‘Twilight.’ If you look below you can see the books we’ve read, reviewed, and thought were unique. Check them out.
Or if you are not impressed (you can’t be serious?) you can come take a look at our awesome books which are sure to get you excited. We also have many book trailers, book debates, and books you should read next. Our interesting books are here, but we do have more to offer you and hope you take a look at it. Don’t forget to book mark us, join our mailing list, or visit us weekly for new articles and book info. Check out the interesting book articles below, comment, rate, and enjoy.
 

The Most Interesting Books

1. Etiquette and Espionage by Gail Carriger
2. The Bellwether Revivals by Benjamin Wood
3. Contagious by Jonah Berger | Book Review
5. Wonder by R.J. Palacio
6. Angelmaker by Nick Harkaway
7. In The Skin Of A Lion
8. The Innocents by Francesca Segal
9. Heartburn by Nora Ephron
10. Until Thy Wrath Be Past by Asa Larsson

Interesting Book Lists

Books like The Hunger Games
Novels for Gamers
5 Books for Spring Reading
Popcorn Dystopia
3 Interesting Books
5 Books on Postmodern Holocaust Literature
4 Books to Read in a Zombie Apocalypse
Bibliotherapy
5 First-person Plural Books
Dog Books
Coffee Table Books
Graphic Novels From Classic Stories
Female Goddess Fiction

 

Interesting Books

Welcome to our compilation of interesting books. We know that we’ve got some great books for you to read and we want you to find them here. Take a look below for lists, reviews, and more.

Review: Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card 5.00/5 (100.00%) 1 vote

 
 
What Should I Read Next
 
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card

Review: Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card

Ender's Game is a science fiction novel for everyone. Call it either gateway science fiction or the exception to the rule, Orson Scott Card crafted a little novel that got people talking in a big way. Twenty-eight years after i...
 
Interesting Books
 

Sightseeing for Book Nerds: A Tour of Antwerp’s Plantin-Moretus Museum

“A book-binding museum?! We’re going!”   Beer and waffles are all well and good, but when planning my recent stay in Antwerp, Belgium, I knew that I had to make a pilgrimage to the Plantin-Moretus Museum. A bunch of old bo...
 
 
What Should I Read Next
 
papergardencloseup
papergardencloseup
papergardencloseup

Review: The Paper Garden by Molly Peacock

I first came across Mary Delany’s intricate paper flowers at an exhibition held at one of London’s great treasure troves, the Sir John Soane’s Museum, in early 2010. Though at the time I recognized the flower mosaics as gorgeou...

 
Awesome Books
 
IMG_8315
IMG_8315
IMG_8315

Reading Paraphernalia

Last week I wrote about librarians’ pet peeves, and how devoted I am to my extensive bookmark collection. Now it’s time for a few more pieces of reading ‘equipment’ no bookworm should be without. First is a leather ...
 
 
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s3 take two
s3 take two
s3 take two

Review: S3 by Fourat Janabi

It had to happen sometime: one of the myriad books I’m sent to review, for Bookkaholic or other web and print publications, was bound to be a turkey. I’m afraid this (dis)honor belongs to S3: Science, Statistics, and Skepticism...
 
 
What Should I Read Next
 
summer reading
summer reading
summer reading

Summer Lovin’: 5 love(ish) stories for summer reading

Beach books have become synonymous with “Chick Lit,” an often condescending term for light-hearted books by women and about women that assumes predictability and a story about shoes, cosmos, and Mr. Right (the liter...

 
Awesome Books
 
tween books
tween books
tween books

I was a Pre-teen Book Nerd in the 90s

And, apparently, that meant loving books written ages before I was born, with a big emphasis on the 80s. I was a huge bookworm and had large, unfortunate glasses that kind of made me look like those cartoons of bookworms, which...
 
 
What Should I Read Next
 
Scan-133
Scan-133
Scan-133

Book Review: No One (Personne) by Gwenaëlle Aubry

What first intrigued me about No One (Personne) was the first line of the back cover synopsis: “No One is the portrait of a man without a true self.”  I really love a book that explores and plays with layers of iden...
 
 
What Should I Read Next
 
haroldfry
haroldfry
haroldfry

Review: The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (2012), Rachel Joyce’s debut novel, is the deceptively simple tale of a sixty-something-year-old man who steps out of his Devon home to mail a letter but ends up walking to Berwick-on-Tweed...

 
 
What Should I Read Next
 
july reading
july reading
july reading

I Am America (And So Can You!): The Perfect Book For July Reading

Happy (belated) 237th Birthday, America! You don’t look a day over 150. Aside from all the fireworks and stars & stripes bikinis, I can’t think of a better way to start off this most patriotic of months than wit...