Books - What are you reading?
Discussion
Starting on the 2nd in the Montmerancy series of books.
My wife and I loved the first so much she introduced it into her school reading curriculum. The kids loved it and it has become a firm fixture.
If you haven't come across it don't be put off by teenagers enjoying it. The title character is the alter ego of a bit of a scallywag in Victorian London. Won't say much more for fear of spoilers but if short of a simple read that is just a great story give it a go.
My wife and I loved the first so much she introduced it into her school reading curriculum. The kids loved it and it has become a firm fixture.
If you haven't come across it don't be put off by teenagers enjoying it. The title character is the alter ego of a bit of a scallywag in Victorian London. Won't say much more for fear of spoilers but if short of a simple read that is just a great story give it a go.
Finished The Woods by Harlan Coben, first of his I've read and really enjoyed it, the first person style was good and the interplay between the main characters came across really well.
there was a point about a third in where it started to drift a bit but it was a decent page turner.....
looking for my next read now....
there was a point about a third in where it started to drift a bit but it was a decent page turner.....
looking for my next read now....
100 Days, Sandy Woodward's memoir of the Falklands. (only £2.99 on kindle)
I spent a couple of days last year doing some work with Mike Clapp (commander of the amphibious task force) and Julian Thompson (commander of 3 Commando Brigade), so interesting to see how Woodward's take on things varies.
I spent a couple of days last year doing some work with Mike Clapp (commander of the amphibious task force) and Julian Thompson (commander of 3 Commando Brigade), so interesting to see how Woodward's take on things varies.
Has everyone here stopped reading? I'm on Roy Jenkins's Churchill just now, with Tobias Smollet and James Lee Burke on the side. Also some old "Practical Motorist" mags from the fifties with hilarious and dangerous tips like tying a ball joint together with bits of inner tube! Assuming you've survived the inevitable loss of control of car and bowels. Must go !
Managed to finish Orlando Figes 'A Peoples Tragedy'; an outstanding study of the intricacies of the Russian Revolution and ultimately the raping of the Russian people by a few egotistical and pyschopathic individuals.
Inbetween times I read 'Happy Odyssey' by Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart - a towering and undeafatable character.
Then flew through a pulp novel, Girl on a Train which apparently is a well written thriller being picked up by Hollywood but I correctly pinged the killer on page 98 of about 350.
Now ploughing through Edward Rutherford's 'New York' after previously reading his 'Sarum', 'Russka' and 'Dublin'.
Then perhaps back to Russia with a dog-eared copy of Sir Bernard Pares, 'Fall of the Russian Monarchy' and 'Ten days that shook the World' by John Reed.
Inbetween times I read 'Happy Odyssey' by Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart - a towering and undeafatable character.
Then flew through a pulp novel, Girl on a Train which apparently is a well written thriller being picked up by Hollywood but I correctly pinged the killer on page 98 of about 350.
Now ploughing through Edward Rutherford's 'New York' after previously reading his 'Sarum', 'Russka' and 'Dublin'.
Then perhaps back to Russia with a dog-eared copy of Sir Bernard Pares, 'Fall of the Russian Monarchy' and 'Ten days that shook the World' by John Reed.
Shadow R1 said:
Got a few to get through.
I tried the tomb a Fargo adventure, didn't like it.
Black wind and Atlantis found were very good.
Arctic drift was good.I tried the tomb a Fargo adventure, didn't like it.
Black wind and Atlantis found were very good.
Crescent dawn good.
Trojan odyssey good.
Havana storm ok.
Dying hours, good one about Thorne.
Rush of blood, i didn't like got 100 pages in and gave it to the charity shop.
Assassin is in progress now.
I've just finished "A thousand suns" by Alex Scarrow, which wasn't what I was hoping it would be. The cover blurb talks about the allies secretly surrendering to the Nazis and an accidental discovery of said fact, and I was hoping it might have gone in a different direction than it did. Before that I read "In the name of honour" by Richard North Patterson, which wasn't bad but dragged on a lot. Courtroom drama, bit of a twist but quite plodding.
On "Suspect" by Robert Crais now.
On "Suspect" by Robert Crais now.
I've been reading a lot of the Black Library Warhammer 40k books recently, I think I'm regressing back into the teenage me!
Most recently the Night Lords trilogy (all a bit serious really with a couple of comic relief murdering psychopath characters), and a few of the Commissar Cain books (which I find really funny, full of fairly off the wall humour and doesn't take itself too seriously).
I'm not sure how much knowledge of the whole universe you need to understand those books, but as a bit of a geek I love them.
I also bought a book that was recommended on the Audible adverts on the end of a Youtube video - The Martian by Andy Weir. It's about an astronaut who gets stranded on Mars and has a Robinson Crusoe type survival story but obviously set on Mars so has to worry about air, food, power, etc.
It's written as a first person log mostly (as he's alone), with a few 'normal' parts in there for the bits on Earth, etc. Can get a bit technical but it's only a sentence at a time where he just spouts a bunch of numbers at you.
I only intended reading a few pages on Monday morning, but 7 hours later I finished it in one sitting!
Most recently the Night Lords trilogy (all a bit serious really with a couple of comic relief murdering psychopath characters), and a few of the Commissar Cain books (which I find really funny, full of fairly off the wall humour and doesn't take itself too seriously).
I'm not sure how much knowledge of the whole universe you need to understand those books, but as a bit of a geek I love them.
I also bought a book that was recommended on the Audible adverts on the end of a Youtube video - The Martian by Andy Weir. It's about an astronaut who gets stranded on Mars and has a Robinson Crusoe type survival story but obviously set on Mars so has to worry about air, food, power, etc.
It's written as a first person log mostly (as he's alone), with a few 'normal' parts in there for the bits on Earth, etc. Can get a bit technical but it's only a sentence at a time where he just spouts a bunch of numbers at you.
I only intended reading a few pages on Monday morning, but 7 hours later I finished it in one sitting!
Lefty said:
Re-reading 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea for the first time in about 20 years. I got a newly translated version, it's fantastic!
Now that is a shout. Not read that myself since I were a lad. Unless my parents have chucked out my copy, entirely possible after leaving the parental nest 20 years ago, I'll dig it out and have a read.Started "Lonesome Dove" by Larry McMurtry. So far so good. Good job I like frontier western, days of yesteryear, stuff I suppose.
I love reading and did a lot in the past but in recent years haven't done much, lack of time or lack of making time. A Women i went on a few dates with back in March bought me Pawn of Prophecy, the first book in the belgariad series as gift. I got hooked and yesterday i got the entire set and plan to read through them all.
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