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What are you reading at the moment

(1201 Posts)
Hattie64 Thu 26-May-11 19:58:46

I have just started reading 'The Secret Life of Bees' by Sue Monk Kidd. One of the reviews 'Wonderfully written, powerful, poignant and humerous'. Well I shall find out, I am on page 26 at the moment, and is very easy to read.

JessM Wed 14-Sept-11 17:37:02

Oh yes. Rochester needed a kick in the crotch didn't he, what with not telling J about the mad wife, not being in the least bit straight about the little girl, trying to enter a bigamous marriage and then suggesting J should live in sin with him. Goodness me!

GoldenGran Wed 14-Sept-11 17:17:52

I think you go for either or, never both. I was going to meet and fall in love with Rochester....and dear reader I didn't- nothing like him, and now I'm quite pleased, all that moodiness and sulky furrowed brows would now make me want to give him a good slap!

crimson Wed 14-Sept-11 17:13:04

I was a Heathcliff girl meself!

GoldenGran Wed 14-Sept-11 17:07:41

Crimson Jane Eyre is wonderful, lovely dark and brooding Mr. Rochester. This was always my favourite book as a teenager,I liked Wuthering Heights, but never swooned over Heathcliff like I did Rochester! Love d the Time Travellers Wife, but never saw the film, I was put off it by friends who didn't like it.

crimson Wed 14-Sept-11 16:10:33

Finished it in the early hours of this morning. Now going to watch the film, if only to try to make sense of what I've just read. I don't really want to. I had a friend who would never watch an adaptation of a favourite book, because once you have a mental image of someone as a fictional character you can never get rid of it. I think short stories, like the Green Mile or Benjamin Button make better films because the producer can expand on the idea, rather than compress complicated ideas into a two hour film. But, as it is, Henry and Claire are very vague images in my imagination and I want to see how they've done it. Seeing Jane Eyre first, though......

JessM Wed 14-Sept-11 10:59:46

Yes Crimson, I enjoyed it too. But not the film of it, which didn't really hit the spot for me.

crimson Tue 13-Sept-11 22:17:04

So glad I persevered with The Time Travellers Wife. Now on the last few pages and know what phoenix meant. A great exercise in the 'suspension of disbelief', but beautifully written.

Hattie64 Tue 13-Sept-11 19:49:32

I really like Fanny Flagg, you don't want to read too many of them in one go though!!!
I am now reading 'The Lantern' by Deborah Lawrenson, set in Provence. Well written. I love the French influence though, and have thought I would rather like to go to Provence for a holiday next year.

Annobel Tue 13-Sept-11 08:47:00

The Help is probably the only book that our NWR book group was completely unanimous about.

JessM Mon 12-Sept-11 20:00:01

Oh I have a copy here of The Help. One of a carrier bag full from MIL. Thanks for the recommendation.

Nonny Mon 12-Sept-11 18:53:37

I just finished "The Help" by Kathryn Sockett" this morning. A really good read. I have recently read most of the works of Fanny Flagg Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe" and "Daisy Fay and the Miracle Man"inclued. I couldn't put them down!

Countrymouse Sun 11-Sept-11 18:50:08

Just read The Help" by Kathryn Stockett. Hard to believe such attitudes towards black people existed in our life time.

numberplease Sun 11-Sept-11 16:32:13

I`m still struggling with The Wood Cutter. I`ll finish it, and it`s not a bad story, just very drawn out.

glassortwo Sun 11-Sept-11 10:16:52

"The Midwife's Confession" I have just finished it, throughly enjoyable read.

Notsogrand Sat 10-Sept-11 23:36:54

I really appreciate this thread. So many ideas for new authors and books. smile

glammanana Sat 10-Sept-11 23:25:45

I picked up "The Midwife's Confession" from the library and started to read it yesterday I am engrossed already,I have just finished "The Bay at Midnight" by the same author and found it very good reading, a real page turner.

numberplease Sat 10-Sept-11 22:42:50

Not so far.

Annobel Sat 10-Sept-11 22:10:05

Is that a Dalziel and Pasco detective story?

numberplease Sat 10-Sept-11 21:55:56

I`m now reading The Wood Cutter, by Reginald Hill. I haven`t read much yet, but hope it picks up soon, I`m finding it a mite confusing.

yogagran Sat 10-Sept-11 20:55:13

Thanks goldengirl - another one added to my wishlist!

numberplease Sat 10-Sept-11 18:03:06

I`ve just read, in a very short space of time, a really short book by Catrin Collier, called Black Eyed Devils, only 79 pages, but really good. It may only be a short story, but I think it could be expanded slightly to make a very good film. It`s set in 1911, in Tonypandy, Wales, during a miners strike.

goldengirl Sat 10-Sept-11 16:02:55

Just finished Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks. Unputdownable. The story revolves around WW1 and as I've just visited a battlefield and some of the places mentioned in the book it had particular significance. It's made me want to read the other two in the trilogy which are WW2 based I believe.

artygran Fri 09-Sept-11 20:36:50

Look forward to it! smile

Acheron Fri 09-Sept-11 16:10:41

1222 by Anne Holt for Crime Book Club. It's different. I've read it quickly so it must be quite good. A slightly "old fashioned" whodunit.

jangly Fri 09-Sept-11 13:26:31

Oh I do hope you love his books as much as I do. We will be partners in crime adventure. smile

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