Best reads - Club Together Book Club?
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Thanks,WN. Will have to let daughter know a as she's my librarian!!
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Yes, that's the one, W. It's waiting for me to pick it up this week, saving it for our trip away next week. I've just started The Girl Who Takes An Eye For An Eye, the latest addition to the Millenium series. Well up to the usual standard.
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Had an email yesterday that new Le Carre is in so will be picking it up this week. Yahoo.
M - Have read the first three Larsen "Girl with..." books and enjoyed them. Is this follow up with a new writer really worth it? Not always found new authors taking over a character or series to be that good although Mrs.WN gives the thumbs up to Anthony Horowitz for the Conan Doyle story.
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I know what you mean about new writers. I gave up on the Ludlum books ages ago, still read the Bond books which have good authors but it's not the same as the originals.
But the two follow up Millenium books are pretty good - the language, characters and storyline stay pretty true to the originals, so worth a read, I think.
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After a visit to Leicester to the Richard III tomb and visitor centre, I purchased The Sunne in Splendour by Sharon Penman. A novel of the Plantagenets. A rollicking good read. I now have another of her novels called Lionheart. No prizes for guessing who that is about, lol. By the way whilst at the visitor centre I discovered I am a Ricardian because I have long held the view that RIII was not the murderer of his nephews.
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Will look that one up Patmau. Ta.
The new Le Carre is keeping me entertained. I re-read The Spy that came in from the Cold whilst awaiting this one and had forgotten what a great book it was. Must dig out his other ones over the winter, although not too enamoured with The Constant Gardener.
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Don't know if there are any Phil Rickman fans out there, but today, the day that his latest novel, All in a Winter's Night, came out in paperback, it can be bought on Kindle for 99p....a real bargain, but it may be just there for one day only at that price.
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I've just finished Jeffrey Deaver's 3rd book of short stories....Trouble in Mind....as good as ever!! His first two are Twisted and More Twisted.
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I recently discovered the Clifton chronicles and became hooked . If you haven’t read then just try the first one . I bought it in a car boot sale recommended by someone .
I have been reading anything about the war of the roses and the tudors. Also Owen Tudor and then jasper Tudor .
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Read "Charlotte Gray" by Sebastien Faulks. A very thought provoking yarn especially at this time of remembrance as it tells of a girl who is recruited into the SOE in a minor capacity and what she experienced in France. It is fiction but based on fact.
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brue, don't know if you read crime thrillers, but I've just started the 4th of a series by Damian Boyd which are all set in Somerset around the Taunton/Bridgewater area, using actual locations. Easy reading, but do need to be read in sequence, really, to understand what's going on.
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Will look out for those Nellie, I do sometimes read thrillers etc but I'm into non fiction at the moment. Goodness I wonder what might be happening around Taunton!? Just reading Monty and Sarah Don's "Jewel Garden" about their lives from meeting up, running a business, bankruptcy and the move to gardening (not your usual tale of woe and penury, slightly buffered by an inheritance at one point..!) A swift read with nice photos.
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brue, I'm now reading the 5th one and it's taking place during the flooding on the levels, with Muchelney and other villages along KSD being cut off.
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Just finished Ken Clarke's autobiography "Kind of Blue". As he has been around for a while it covers quite a slice of post war politics. He is a very big jazz fan and all the chapters are named after favourite songs! He comes across as a very laid back character, perhaps the only way to survive in politics?
David
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I'm halfway through Salman Rushdie's latest novel "The Golden House". I enjoy his books - they're always very challenging and tell a riveting story.
But I reckon that bloke must have a brain the size of a London bus! He uses such complicated language and obscure references and sentences that turn into complete paragraphs! Good stuff, but not an easy read!
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I think they call him a writer’s writer! I enjoyed Midnights Children but not many of his other books. I sometimes think it’s a choice between being entertained and being educated. I think it was William Boyd who recently said that there are only about half a dozen literary writers in the UK today. I tend to agree with that and often find myself drifting to the US and foreign (translated) authors.
My list would start with Rushdie, Boyd, McEwan, Mantel, Amis but I am sure there are quite a few others so I think 6 is maybe a bit mean.
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I had a book for Christmas from my sister, the same one that I'm reading at the moment "A Brief History of Everyone Who Ever Lived" So now I have two copies.. I mentioned it on here earlier. Anyone else with a new book, hopefully one they haven't read before?
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I don't often read biographies, especially those "celebrity life stories".
But for Christmas I treated myself to "Reckless Daughter", a portrait of the Canadian singer Joni Mitchell. I've loved her music ever since the first time I heard the album "Blue" back in the early 70's. Although she is known for laying her soul bare in her songs, she's always been a very private person and this new biography has given a fascinating insight, particularly into her early years and climb to stardom.
It's a brilliant read for any of her fans.
(Also got Robert Harris' latest - Munich - on hold!)
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I've just read his "Conclave" whilst on the cruise. Interesting and sympathetic insight into papal elections.
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Following the recommendation by tda I've just read Catherine Bailey's Black Diamonds, an extraordinary tale of family feuds, forbidden love, civil unrest and the downfall of a mining dynasty. A fascinating insight into the story behind the closure of one of England's greatest houses, Wentworth Woodhouse.
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