Gone With the Wind
Wuthering Heights (older version)
Roman Holiday
The African Queen
Breakfast at Tiffanys
Newer Movies:
When Harry Met Sally
Educating Rita
Star Trek
Top Gun
Somewhere in Time
Ghost
Star Wars
ET
Pretty Woman
Housesitter
Sabrina(new version)
Working Girl
and a few hundred more..*S*
Newest Movies:
Contact
Deep Impact
Titanic
Runaway Bride
Entrapment
Mark of Zorro
The Haunting (new and old versions
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Lord of the Rings
just to name a few.
Musicals:
Camelot
Man of La Mancha
(the stage-play was better though)
My Fair Lady
Fiddler on the Roof
Sound of Music
Jesus Christ Superstar
My Favorite Books:
This is not easy, as I own over 1300 of them.
My childhood and young adult favorites were:
Enid Blyton (the Adventure Series)
Arthur Maxwell's "Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Stories"
Collier's Junior Classics "The Young Folks Shelf of Books".
My most recent favorite pop culture modern book is
Griffin & Sabine, an Extraordinary Correspondence fantasy,
by Nick Bancock.(It is a trilogy--and of course
I ran on to get the other two!).
Speaking of Fantasy, I have read all four
Harry Potter books and am looking forward to the next
book that is coming out soon.
I am a sci-fi buff as well as a fantasy buff,
so I enjoyed the movie Contact by Carl
Sagan.
As unual, the book is much better than the movie.
Another older favorite is Illusions
by Richard Bach; it is a very unusual book.
My favorite audio book is
Dave Barry in Cyberspace, by Dave Barry.
I don’t usually like audio books,
but this one is great.
My Favorite Poems:
Again, this is difficult, as I enjoy much poetry.
The classic Annabel Lee by
Edgar Allan Poe has been a favorite since childhood.
Another classic Dover Beach by Matthew Arnold
shows my love for the sea.
The Flea by John Donne
is a very intriguing and different love poem.
The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost
always offers me inspiration.
You Begin by Margaret Atwood discusses poetry.
And, as you may have guessed, several hundred more.
My Favorite line from a movie:
Heathcliff says at the death-bed of Cathy in the movie
Wuthering Heights:
“How can I live without my life?
How can I die without my soul?”
My Favorite Quotation:
“Imagination is more important than knowledge”
by Albert Einstein.