Books - What are you reading?

Books - What are you reading?

Author
Discussion

thismonkeyhere

10,343 posts

231 months

Tuesday 3rd March 2015
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'Harry's War - The Great War Diary of Harry Drinkwater'

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Harrys-War-Harry-Drinkwate...

Superb. I have read a few books about the Great War, most of them good, but this stands out. Nothing else has got me this 'close' to the trenches and the whole experience. Highly recommended. thumbup

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
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The Three by Sarah Lotz - thoroughly enjoying it, bought yesterday, 50% complete already.

Has an accompanying website too... http://www.thethreebook.com/




drivin_me_nuts

17,949 posts

211 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
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Re reading Lord of the Rings. It's been twenty five years since I last read it. Boy is it different to the film and so much better in every way.

adaptive

821 posts

190 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
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Just finished Child 44 (and see it's been adapted to movie) and recently read the Kingkiller Chronicle books, now waiting for the third book to be released

rich1231

17,331 posts

260 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
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King Herald said:
About once every five years I pull out my dog eared copy of 'Lucifers Hammer' and give that a good read. It is nostalgic to go back to a book you've owned for 30+ years. I seem to remember first reading it as an apprentice in the 70's or early 80's.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucifer%27s_Hammer
Great book

Welshbeef

49,633 posts

198 months

Thursday 5th March 2015
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had ham said:
The Three by Sarah Lotz - thoroughly enjoying it, bought yesterday, 50% complete already.

Has an accompanying website too... http://www.thethreebook.com/

What is it about?

anonymous-user

54 months

Friday 6th March 2015
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4 planes crash on the same day ('Black Thursday') in different places around the world. A young child survives in three of those crashes. It is about the impact the three then have on the world. Very clever book.

droopsnoot

11,927 posts

242 months

Friday 6th March 2015
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Just finished "Vanishing Point" by Val McDermid, pretty good story but not if you don't like stuff that jumps forwards and backwards every few pages. A little predictable towards the end, I though, but readable.

I've just started "The Avenger" by Frederick Forsyth. So far there's a bit of Vietnam stuff in it, still waiting to get to the part where he tells the dramatic story of designing a mid-range family saloon car.

Goughie

616 posts

189 months

Friday 6th March 2015
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Currently reading "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism" by Naomi Klein. I have to say that I'm fairly conventional in my outlook on life, but Klein really does have a way of presenting humanist subjects in a way that makes you think about what you've been told as being "the truth". It's well researched, eye opening and in some ways an abhorrent look at Friedmanism. Highly recommended.

DUMBO100

1,878 posts

184 months

Friday 6th March 2015
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Mary Queen of Scots by Antonia Fraser. I live in a place called Battlefield and the story has many references to my local area

coopedup

3,741 posts

139 months

Sunday 8th March 2015
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Started to read Freefall by Tom Read again, a very harrowing story of how his life decended into madness before he came out the other side. He was a member of the Red Devils parachute display team as well as being SAS, well worth a look

Wills2

22,804 posts

175 months

Sunday 8th March 2015
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Grey Wolf, a conspiracy book about Hitler and how Bormann arranged his escape to South America, I don't believe the theory (before anyone jumps on me) but very interesting read with lots of factual data intertwined with the authors theory.


thismonkeyhere

10,343 posts

231 months

Tuesday 10th March 2015
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Vasily Grossman's 'The Hell of Treblinka'.

eek

Need some humour next, I think.

Tyre Smoke

23,018 posts

261 months

Tuesday 10th March 2015
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Currently 'struggling' with Daphne Dumaurier's Rebecca. I can deal with the period writing style, but boy is it sloooooooooow. Over detailed and laboured. I only hope it's got a twist in the tail, because I don't see it as much of a classic, if I'm honest.

Asterix

24,438 posts

228 months

Tuesday 10th March 2015
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Boris' Churchill thingy.

Only on Chapter Four but it's highly enjoyable to read.

K12beano

20,854 posts

275 months

Tuesday 10th March 2015
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I've been reading Somewhere Different by Duncan Ridgley.

Duncan gave up the 7:45 to King's Cross one day and started out on a two year adventure with his family - first around the Balkans, then to Egypt and finally planning to spend some time on a piece of land he'd purchased which was going to be paradise.

Nature had a different idea when he and the family arrived on Christmas Day, 2004, on the east coast of Sri Lanka, they never saw their plot of land in paradise, because when they got up the day after they arrived..... well suffice to say "Somewhere Different" became "Something Quite Different"!


I wouldn't say it was particularly well written, although I would say it seems to come from the heart and enters a world of internal struggle to be able to make a difference to his family, while dealing with the unexpected, the scary, the funny and the downright mundane struggle of plumbing in an old american RV. Couldn't put it down - even before I got to the heartstopping moments of Boxing Day 2004. highly, highly recommended as "Something Different" to read.

Slyjoe

1,501 posts

211 months

Wednesday 11th March 2015
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silverthorn2151 said:
Nezquick said:
Just got back from holiday and whilst there I read a 6 book series called "Arisen" which is basically about a zombie apocalypse. If you like such books, i'd thoroughly recommend this series as it's non-stop action from page 1 and through all 6 books. The seventh is currently being written.
.
Like the sound of those and the first two are about £2.00 for the pair on my Kindle, so I'll give 'em a go!
Damn fine books, a very addictive read, quite short per book though.


lowdrag

12,889 posts

213 months

Wednesday 11th March 2015
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The new Ian Ranking Rebus book "The Beat Goes On". A collection of short stories, perfect for taking to bed before nodding off.

Legend83

9,980 posts

222 months

Thursday 12th March 2015
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Started reading this:



but found it a little tedious so put it down. Picked up this instead:



Wow. What a fantastic thriller, I couldn't put it down. About a dysfunctional female DI tracking down a serial killer who's MO is to imprison two friends/colleagues/lovers with nothing but a gun with a single bullet.

Championed by many on PH, I am now onto this:


blindswelledrat

25,257 posts

232 months

Thursday 12th March 2015
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Legend83 said:
Started reading this:



but found it a little tedious so put it down. Picked up this instead:



Wow. What a fantastic thriller, I couldn't put it down. About a dysfunctional female DI tracking down a serial killer who's MO is to imprison two friends/colleagues/lovers with nothing but a gun with a single bullet.
]
By a startling coincidence I did exactly the same with the same two books.
Except I wasn't finding The Goldfinch tedious at all, I was just too lazy to make the effort.
I hate myself for being lazy. I enjoyed Eeny meeny as a cheap thriller but four or five weeks later when I read your post I had to google it to check if I had read it whereas I know if I had made the effort with the other one I would remember it for years.