I've been enjoying 'Life on the Mississippi' by Mark Twain that I picked up at the airport randomly. It's very witty and interesting to read about his time as a steamboat pilot.
I remember reading the script for 'Dangerous Liaisons' and thinking that I could quite happily spend the rest of my life watching this film; the story and the writing were so wonderful.
When I was in the Army, I read a book by Adlai Stevenson. He said law was as noble as saving a person's life. So at one point, I felt that way too.
I love reading about the supernatural, and time-slip novels, and the mistress of both is Barbara Erskine.
I read 'Red Dragon' back in high school. I love Thomas Harris' approach to the crime thriller that crossed over into horror in a way that nobody really tapped into.
I don't thrive on stress. I love lying on the deck on our houseboat reading a book.
I became a writer because I love to read, yet I never get to unless I'm reviewing a book or doing research.
I love books and the latest autobiographies. I'm a Gemini and love being with people, but then again, I love my own company, which is when I read most.
I would love to write something that people would still read 50 or 100 years from now. That comes with growing older, I think.
My favorite subject in high school was English. I love reading and writing, and I felt really supported in this subject, and my least favorite was math, since I felt completely lost.
I love mysteries, and I read them every night before I go to bed.
I love books. I read voraciously, and I happened to have been fortunate to have been in the right place at the right time.
I still love following and thinking about politics. I enjoy recommending important journalism I read or see from other sources.
I love books so much. I've read more books than anyone else I know.
I love 'The Autobiography of Malcolm X.' That was like the only black book we read in high school.
I love Truman Capote, Tennessee Williams, Flannery O'Connor. I read a lot of American writers.
I have always loved story - I escaped within it as a child, I read every day, I love figuring out the complex layers of an author's work.
Let a bill, or law, be read, in the one branch or the other, every one instantly thinks how it will affect his constituents.
I just had the sense that at least the books that I had read about law just didn't really have enough of that.
Many people read History books but it takes just a few people to LEAD the cause that will shape the course of HISTORY.
All must read their so-called 'holy' book - word by word - to determine, by self, its unholy bit.