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Books/book club

The Merrily Watkins books

(38 Posts)
Crafting Sat 03-Jan-15 19:12:15

Thanks Gracesgran nothing I like more than a good read. I will look out for the books on my next visit to the library on Monday.

petallus Sat 03-Jan-15 17:55:32

One of the characters in the books describes Gomer as Bart Simpson grown into an old man.

Gracesgran Sat 03-Jan-15 16:42:54

Lilygran - no I haven't. I will look them up. Would love to share one of my favourite authors with the GCs.

Gracesgran Sat 03-Jan-15 16:41:26

I knew Gomer! Prior to my marriage my OH lived in a house where he had "digs" with a lot of other young professionals. The house was owned by a lovely couple and was in a village just outside Hereford. He was a small man who had been involved with the land and horses all his life and was as knowledgeable about his love - horses, as Gomer is about plant hire. He was very much the "salt of the earth" and I picture him every time I read about Gomer.

Lilygran Sat 03-Jan-15 14:59:15

Thank you, Gracesgran I'd missed this one! Have you read the children's books about Marco and Glastonbury?

daffydil Sat 03-Jan-15 14:43:34

gracegran I think ITV Encore is on Freeview if you have that

mollie65 Sat 03-Jan-15 14:05:39

who could portray 'Gomer' - the picture of him in my mind is an old Herefordshire country man very rough and ready and sprinkling the unacceptable swear words in his conversation like my father would grin

Gracesgran Sat 03-Jan-15 14:02:27

Agree that the "pictures are better in the mind" in this case mollie65 although I don't know if I could not watch just to see.

mollie65 Sat 03-Jan-15 13:55:25

living in the area (herefordshire borders) it is very evocative of the place and its characters/stories. to my mind the Ludlow book is by far the best but they are much better to be read in sequence (nice long books too)
I would be reluctant to see televised versions of the books as so much is in the descriptive words and the characters hmm

Gracesgran Sat 03-Jan-15 13:51:48

Absolutely love them. The village I lived in before I left home was mentioned in the last one "The Magus of Hay". Written by Phil Rickman Crafting. I knew he had a website and was looking it up for you. This is the page about the Merrily books www.philrickman.co.uk/merrily/ and what did I then see but a page saying that "Midwinter of the Spirit" could be screened early next autumn on ITV Encore. I have a horrible feeling this channel is only available through Sky - I hope I'm wrong.

I have just downloaded "The House of Susan Lulham" - only available on Kindle. They say:

"... (a Kindle Single ghost story) was Amazon’s 2014 Christmas Number One crime and thriller short. It was developed from the story written for the international crime collection, Oxcrimes, published last May. The new novella, more than five times as long, is a part sequel and a response to readers who wanted to know what happened next. It now becomes Merrily 12 and a half. And you know what comes after number 12.5 in the average street…"

Crafting Sat 03-Jan-15 12:58:34

What are they about Petallus? I've not heard of them before.

petallus Sat 03-Jan-15 12:46:43

Someone on GN mentioned them so thanks to whoever it was.

petallus Sat 03-Jan-15 12:46:20

A month ago someone mentioned these books in passing. I thought I'd give one of them a try and now I'm hooked. I'm going back to Book1 and reading through the whole lot in sequence.

It was perfect reading to see me through my recent stay in hospital and forced immobility whilst recovering (which will go on for a few weeks yet). Entertaining, easy to read but well written.