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If you were really in Wide Web World*, you would now be a on a wild and crazy ride through a bizarre fantasy land based completely on puns.  Since this is just a simulation of Wide Web World, let's compare favorite books.

Here is Candace Weber's top 10 list of all-time favorite books:

1. Arthur Rex by Thomas Berger
2. Any Dortmunder novel by Donald E. Westlake
3. Any Jeeves and Wooster book by P. G. Wodehouse
4. All Creatures Great and Small by James Herriot
5. Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
6. Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
7. Curtain by Agatha Christie
8. Split Infinity by Piers Anthony
(If you felt cheated at not getting any puns on this page, try A Spell for Chameleon by Piers Anthony, or click here)
9. The Caves of Steel by Isaac Asimov
10. The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien

What are your favorite fiction books?  Criteria:  You've read it at least twice and still enjoy it immensely every time you read it. 
Now you get to vote:

Name (optional):

List Your 10 Favorites here:


OK, you really want a bad pun?   Here's a riddle:  Mahatma Ghandi went barefoot all the time so developed really tough feet, he ate very little and became frail, and his diet gave him very bad breath.  What did that make him (besides very unattractive to women?)  Click here for Answer

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Looking for a newer book that really makes you think?  Try  The Truth Machine, by James Halperin.  If you don't want to think so hard, but want something fun and intriguing, try the "A Man of his Word" series by Dave Duncan. Or for just plain fun, try any of the mysteries by Steve Allen (yes, the entertainer who does everything).

 

* Click here to read an excerpt of the novel Wide Web World, about a computer program that makes web sites into real places you can visit.

 

 

Answer to riddle:  He was a SuperCallusedFragileMysticWithExtraHalitosis!

 

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