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This week I have been reading

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  • Just finished a marriage portrait by Maggie O’Farrell, strongly recommend 
  • Classic French Cooking .. Elisabeth Luard .. MasterChef here I come !!
  • Acts of the Apostles. 
  • Portnoys complaint - Philip Roth. Birthday present from my boss. Very funny so far... Seems Ive been missing out on a classic author 
  • McBobbin said:
    Portnoys complaint - Philip Roth. Birthday present from my boss. Very funny so far... Seems Ive been missing out on a classic author 
    Operation Shylock is very good too.
  • About half way through The Talented Mr Ripley. Marvellous stuff.
  • Rack, Ruin and Murder - Anne Granger. The second Campbell and Carter mystery. A body is discovered in a tumbledown mansion owned by the last in the line of a once rich family, who is now hardly able to look after himself and veering towards alcoholism. The usual cosy Cotswolds setting hides a network of present day intrigue and long buried secrets. A nice easy read, with a decent plot and a twist that you only see coming at the last minute.      
  • Chunes said:
    Finished Project Hail Mary. A slight drag with the science in the second act but otherwise interesting and entertaining read. 

    Also The Wager, the true story of a ship that set off from Deptford in the 1700s. Disaster strikes, they're shipwrecked and different factions emerge... The survivors find themselves in a court martial, and have different stories of who was to blame. Fascinating. 

    Becoming by Michelle Obama. Tepid, tame and unrevealing. 

    Strong Female Character by Fern Brady. Shocking, sad but very often hilarious story of growing up as an undiagnosed autistic girl in working-class Scotland. Really enjoyed. 

    And What My Bones Know. Probably the best and most moving book I've read on trauma and recovery. 
    Just read the Wager, it,s the type of book that floats my boat or not in this case! 
    Really enjoyed it, and smashed it in a few days.

    I have just finished The Sledge Patrol ( David Howarth) true story of the resistance against  a small German foothold on Greenland during the 2nd WW.
  • SE_7EVEN said:
    Chunes said:
    Finished Project Hail Mary. A slight drag with the science in the second act but otherwise interesting and entertaining read. 

    Also The Wager, the true story of a ship that set off from Deptford in the 1700s. Disaster strikes, they're shipwrecked and different factions emerge... The survivors find themselves in a court martial, and have different stories of who was to blame. Fascinating. 

    Becoming by Michelle Obama. Tepid, tame and unrevealing. 

    Strong Female Character by Fern Brady. Shocking, sad but very often hilarious story of growing up as an undiagnosed autistic girl in working-class Scotland. Really enjoyed. 

    And What My Bones Know. Probably the best and most moving book I've read on trauma and recovery. 
    Just read the Wager, it,s the type of book that floats my boat or not in this case! 
    Really enjoyed it, and smashed it in a few days.
    I love a shipwreck story too. If you haven't read In The Heart of the Sea by Nathaniel Philibrick already, it's absolutely brilliant. (Don't be out off by the awful movie adaption). 
  • The Winner David Baldacci,really great read if a little far fetched.
    Baldacci far fetched?  No, really?
    We all need a little bit of fantasy in our life and authors like Baldacci provide it,also just finished his "Law of innocence",a Lincoln Lawyer novel,really enjoyed it.
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  • The Winner David Baldacci,really great read if a little far fetched.
    Baldacci far fetched?  No, really?
    We all need a little bit of fantasy in our life and authors like Baldacci provide it,also just finished his "Law of innocence",a Lincoln Lawyer novel,really enjoyed it.
    Lincoln Lawyer is Michael Connelly, surely, t&t? 
  • The Winner David Baldacci,really great read if a little far fetched.
    Baldacci far fetched?  No, really?
    We all need a little bit of fantasy in our life and authors like Baldacci provide it,also just finished his "Law of innocence",a Lincoln Lawyer novel,really enjoyed it.
    Lincoln Lawyer is Michael Connelly, surely, t&t? 
    certainly is
  • The Winner David Baldacci,really great read if a little far fetched.
    Baldacci far fetched?  No, really?
    We all need a little bit of fantasy in our life and authors like Baldacci provide it,also just finished his "Law of innocence",a Lincoln Lawyer novel,really enjoyed it.
    Lincoln Lawyer is Michael Connelly, surely, t&t? 
    certainly is
    A very senior moment,of course it is.
  • MW Craven, Washington Poe crime series. Superb
  • Some way through Unruly, a history lesson on the English monarchy from earliest times  written by David Mitchell.  You only need a passing interest in history to enjoy the witty anecdotes that can make you laugh while being educated on obscure Anglo Saxon history. If only history was taught like this at school.

  • Some way through Unruly, a history lesson on the English monarchy from earliest times  written by David Mitchell.  You only need a passing interest in history to enjoy the witty anecdotes that can make you laugh while being educated on obscure Anglo Saxon history. If only history was taught like this at school.

    One of the best books I read last year - as you say, really accessible and funny.
  • About half way through Crime and Punishment. Not sure why I started but going to finish... Did tell myself I'll read War and Peace after this but I think that's a no go... 
  • About half way through Crime and Punishment. Not sure why I started but going to finish... Did tell myself I'll read War and Peace after this but I think that's a no go... 
    I started this a while back, gave up after 50 pages .. should have learnt my lesson, no so called 'classic' I have ever read has really resonated with me
  • About half way through Crime and Punishment. Not sure why I started but going to finish... Did tell myself I'll read War and Peace after this but I think that's a no go... 
    The Idiot and The Brothers Karamazov are must reads, along with The Double.
  • Reach for the Sky. Bader was remarkable. 

    Cheshire VC. The bloke who took over 617 Squadron after Guy Gibson bought it. Flew 100 sorties, so statistically should have died four times, then went to the Pacific to observe the bomb on Nagasaki, which changed his outlook on war.

    Now on Operation Mincemeat, the story of the man who never was. 
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  • Reach for the Sky. Bader was remarkable. 

    Cheshire VC. The bloke who took over 617 Squadron after Guy Gibson bought it. Flew 100 sorties, so statistically should have died four times, then went to the Pacific to observe the bomb on Nagasaki, which changed his outlook on war.

    Now on Operation Mincemeat, the story of the man who never was. 
    Have you read The Big Show by Pierre Clostermann? Frenchman who flew with the RAF during WW2. Excellent book.
  • About half way through Crime and Punishment. Not sure why I started but going to finish... Did tell myself I'll read War and Peace after this but I think that's a no go... 
    War and peace is much more readable. 
  • edited May 16
    Jints said:
    About half way through Crime and Punishment. Not sure why I started but going to finish... Did tell myself I'll read War and Peace after this but I think that's a no go... 
    War and peace is much more readable. 
    I think I'd struggle with it as i've read that each character has multiple names and I think I'd get a bit lost. Also the length of it does seem a bit of a mountain on its own! It's on my kindle anyway, got it for free from the Gutenberg Project so might give it a go at some point.

    About half way through Crime and Punishment. Not sure why I started but going to finish... Did tell myself I'll read War and Peace after this but I think that's a no go... 
    The Idiot and The Brothers Karamazov are must reads, along with The Double.
    Yeah The Idiot and The Brothers Karamazov are also on my list of books to read at some point - might have to look at the The Double next though as it seems to be a lot shorter.

    Although might go back to the 99p Kindle detective mystery books to reset my brain a bit after reading Crime and Punishment  :p

    My struggles might also be down to the translation! 
  • Reach for the Sky. Bader was remarkable. 

    Cheshire VC. The bloke who took over 617 Squadron after Guy Gibson bought it. Flew 100 sorties, so statistically should have died four times, then went to the Pacific to observe the bomb on Nagasaki, which changed his outlook on war.

    Now on Operation Mincemeat, the story of the man who never was. 
    Have you read The Big Show by Pierre Clostermann? Frenchman who flew with the RAF during WW2. Excellent book.
    I haven’t but I will now. 
  • Morality for Beautiful Girls - Alexander McCall Smith. The third of the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency series. I really enjoy these books - not hardhitting or cutting edge, but gently amusing and written with such affection and love for Africa, Alexander McCall Smith is an incredibly perceptive author. In this one the crimes are almost an aside to the problems Ms. Ramotswe's fiance is having and her secretary turned "assistant detective" stepping up to the plate to help out. The intertwined stories flow beautifully, and you find yourself engaged with all the characters, caring about their lives and their future.          
  • Listening to The Stars‘ Tennis Balls by Stephen Fry. 
  • Just finished The Running Grave, Robert Galbraith, spending hours reading it each day.  

    It’s the best yet, and even though nearly 1000 pages long, it left me wanting more.  

    Wholly recommended.  Just be prepared to lose a few days!
  • stonemuse said:
    Just finished The Running Grave, Robert Galbraith, spending hours reading it each day.  

    It’s the best yet, and even though nearly 1000 pages long, it left me wanting more.  

    Wholly recommended.  Just be prepared to lose a few days!
    Sounds like one for my "To read" list.
  • Reading Cormac McCarthy's Suttree. Heard for years he is brilliant but hard going. It's true. Not given up yet.
  • Reading Lonesome Dove. Epic western by Larry McMurty. Very very good. 
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