Every Dead Thing is quite gruesome in places, but am enjoying it, not sure what that says about me!
Blusters in corner if my mouth
Retirement is it what you thought it would be?
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.
Every Dead Thing is quite gruesome in places, but am enjoying it, not sure what that says about me!
Just started to read Bill Bryson's books again. Have finished "Walk in the woods" which was very funny and now on "Notes from a big country". Forgotten how funny and well written they are.
Bill Bryson is great fun - enjoy!
As a contrast!......I am currently reading All Quiet on the Western Front. I had always thought it was just a film, but the film is based on a book which charts the story of a young German lad in the trenches. It is harrowing and insightful and it is very interesting to get a different take on the First World War from the German side. What a dreadful waste of life it all was!
I`ve seen the film several times Mishap, didn`t realise there was a book. It`s a very powerful film.
I`m presently reading The Shadows in the Street, by Susan Hill, one of the Simon Serailler series. I like these books by Susan Hill, but wasn`t over impressed with The Woman in Black, couldn`t see what all the fuss was about.
bookdreamer I also like Bill Bryson, in fact I'm reading A Walk in the Woods at the moment because that is what my son is doing. I'm skipping over the bits where he imagines 'Deliverance' type people named Virgil hiding in the woods!
I love that book. I read it for inspiration when we walked the Samaria Gorge many years ago. They're such 'feel good' books.
Anyone else read 'This Is Where I Am' by Karen Campbell? Would certainly recommend it.
I`ve just finished Into the Darkest Corner, by Elizabeth Haynes. Took a bit of getting into, then I couldn`t put it down. Am now reading another of hers, Human Remains, again a bit confusing at the start, but it`s getting better.
Im reading Putting Right The Past by Ian Wilfred even though its written by a man it's a chick lit book. Still trying to get into The Middlestiens it started off good and then fell away.
Human Remains was OK, but I won`t be looking out for any more of her books, not really all that keen.
Am now reading The Visitor, another of the Jack Reacher books by Lee Child. As usual, it hasn`t disappointed, I may have stated this before, but I`m IN LOVE with Jack Reacher! (not in the guise of Tom Cruise though!)
I have been looking forward to King of the Jungle by K S Silkwood being released. It is the debut novel of a new young author and although I haven't finished it yet, it hasn't disappointed so far.
Jonathan is a kind-hearted, self-deprecating, 30 something who experiences life's unfortunate people and situations but so far, still gets something positive out of them.
It is intelligently written, witty, observant, edgy and..just different.
The style of the narrator reads like an Alan Bennet recollection and I find myself laughing out loud, it really tickles me.
If you are looking for something different to read .....this could be it. Maybe a future Book Club read?
I`m nearly at the end of Home Front Girls, by Rosie Goodwin, my prize from Gransnet. It`s a complete departure from my usual reading matter, but I`ve loved it, it`s almost unputdownable! It starts in 1939, and it`s about the lives and experiences of 3 very different girls through the 2nd world war. A lovely book, thank you Gransnet.
We have a few ladies in my village that came here as land girls and stayed. I wish they'd write their memoirs. One of them is in her late eighties, and still working! [not on the land, I hasten to add....]
"Mishap" I read All Quiet on the Western Front" many years ago and was absolutely riveted by it. I've never wanted to read it again though, the experience was too real to want to relive it.
After being rather dismissive of The Great Gatsby on another thread I decided to read it again, to see what I missed as a student. It's like reading a different book! I keep rereading pages just to enjoy his wonderful style; it really is one of the great American Novels.
Many thanks for my copy of The Cleaner of Chartre, it arrived today.
The Lollipop Shoes by Joanne Harris - It's the sequel to Chocolat.
It didn't really grab me in the first hundred pages but at the same time I started to have an interest in the characters by a third of the way in I was gripped.
I'm almost at the end. I shall most probably stay up tonight to finish it.
City of Veils by Zoe Ferraris. Set in Jedda it's a great contrast with the series I got hooked on earlier this summer - the Kate Shugak mystery novels by Dana Stabenow, set in Alaska. Both writers give a great insight into the lives of the inhabitants of their settings. I think Zoe Ferraris could do with making her structure tighter but nevertheless her plots are intriguing and the characters nothing like as conventional as I had expected.
Growing Up Bin Laden - fascinating book chronicling the lives of Osama bin Laden's first wife (who bore him 11 children) and his 4th son Omar. It is a chilling story of how a decent and very rich Saudi businessman, respected by all who knew him, turns into a lunatic fanatic - his charisma prevents anyone stopping him in his tracks, although he loses his Saudi citizenship and is eventually thrown out of Sudan.
His influence on his wives and children, who had to obey his every whim (including living without modern conveniences like air conditioning and electricity) was all-pervasive and cruel. His sons were forbidden to show their teeth - which of course meant they were not allowed to smile.
His wife was kept totally in seclusion and in the dark about what he was doing, and was forced to obey him, dragging her children from one country to another and into increasingly awful conditions. She finished up escaping to her family in Syria at the instigation of her son Omar - this goes against her every instinct to obey her husband at all costs - and she has to leave some of her children behind - she never learned their fate, but they were most likely to have been killed when the US bombed Afghanistan after 9/11.
Omar is totally against his father's warlike mindset and determination to create a muslim world - he wants to live in peace, and eventually escapes but has to face a struggle to make a peaceful life for himself whilst carrying the dreadewd bin Laden name.
This is a fascinating book with many insights into the life of muslem families, and of women in particular.
Daughter of Fortune, by Isabelle Allende - I loved House of the Spirits and this is just as good. I have learnt a great deal about how the West of the USA developed around gold fever.
I think I'd like that one Greatnan having recently immersed myself in Ken Burn's American West documentaries. [note to self; start making list of books to read when finally decide to retire or finally retire having decided to do so but procrastinating as ever..]
Bring up the bodies the sequel to Hilary Mantel,s Wolf Hall. I love anything connected to the time of Henry the V111.
The problem, Tegan, is that good new books are being published all the time and I am still intending to re-read all my old favourite classics - I just don't have enough years left!
I kind of feel that when I've bought a book or a dvd I've slightly absorbed it by some process of osmosois [much as anything recorded on the video player was like an extension of my memory]. But then someone once said to me 'if you haven't got time to watch it when it's on how will you find time to watch it later? And she was right, of course
.
The Cleaner of Chartres - it arrived yesterday & it seems like it may be a very good book
Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress. Just started it and it's turning out to be very interesting. It's about how youths in cities were treated during the Cultural Revolution, being sent to mountain villages to be 're-educated' in the simple, hard-working lifestyles of Chinese peasants.
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