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What are you reading?

Started by Heldi, January 10, 2006, 12:12:46

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agapanthus

Bluebird...pass it on when you've finished!!!! ::) ::)

agapanthus


flower

I have no desire to read any Pratchett books despite my partner having all of them :-\ just finished the DA Vince code and prior to that sabriel by Garth nix  , before Pratchett fans get mad each to their own as they say  gonna take the fifth for present reading and say a4a ;D
i am an angel really honest  wink wink

grawrc

I'm currently reading "Vanity Fair" - what a wow and how relevant to now!! :o I'm also reading the Faraway Tree books and Roald Dahl with my grandchildren. Reading is so cool!

triffid

Quote from: Merry Tiller on January 09, 2007, 21:14:56
I got Wintersmith for Christmas, haven't started it yet though.
Mr Pratchett must be worth a fortune going by his popularity on here alone

Ummm, yes. You could say the man is worth a bob or two. A couple of years ago, I think his worldwide sales stood at around 40 million books...

Bought Wintersmith for OH for Christmas and managed to stave off the temptation to read it until he left it unattended on Christmas Night  ;D




I have a book in my hand much of the time at home, and there's usually more than one on the go at once... I often put one down at the bottom of the stairs when I go out, and pick it up again at bedtime. Meanwhile, there's another lurking in the kitchen (being read while prepping supper for the triffid tribe) and probably one in the bedclothes from when I fell asleep reading...

Current/recent stuff...   
The Egg and I (marvellous, funny old autobiography by an American writer, Betty MacDonald).

Men of Honour (Adam Nicolson's riveting book about Nelson and Trafalgar).

Just starting The Subtle Knife (Philip Pullman) having read Northern Lights back in autumn.

Just finished Tehanu, the fourth book of the Earthsea quartet, which I loved. I read Ursula LeGuin's Earthsea books as a child, when they were still a trilogy; picked this one up in trepidation but it still has LeGuin's magic touch.

Plus a stack of online essays about the nature of light and the latest copy of The Week magazine.








tabbycat

#104
Quote from: triffid on January 10, 2007, 00:01:37
 
The Egg and I (marvellous, funny old autobiography by an American writer, Betty MacDonald).


Triffid - I love this book! No-one else I know has even heard of it! Have you read "The Plague and I"  by her as well? Funnily enough I just re-read it a month or so ago.

Tabby

triffid

Quote from: tabbycat on January 10, 2007, 10:33:56
Quote from: triffid on January 10, 2007, 00:01:37
 
The Egg and I (marvellous, funny old autobiography by an American writer, Betty MacDonald).


Triffid - I love this book! No-one else I know has even heard of it! Have you read "The Plague and I"  by her as well? Funnily enough I just re-read it a month or so ago.

Tabby



No, Tabby, I haven't heard of that one. The only other book of hers that I've read (also wonderfully funny) is "Anyone Can Do Anything" .   It's the only humorous account I've ever come across of life during the American Depression of the 1930s.

supersprout

#106
yay@triff & tabbycat - I've got all three, from charity shops, over the years :D Whenever I felt low about my choice of profession, I picked up Anyone can do Anything, soon put a smile back on my face. Have you come across Onions in the Stew by the same author?
if you can imagine it, Ruth Stout (Queen of Mulch) wrote her books in a very similar style ;D

triffid

Just looked it up, SS --  :) Sounds the perfect cure for all life's little downs.

With Christmas over, I think I'll have to start a 'mummy would like this for her birthday' list  ;D

tim

How can anyone not have read Betty MacDonald??

Ceratonia

Just finished Samuel Pepys biography by Claire Tomalin;a fascinating book. Currently doing 'Olga da Polga' by Michael Bond as bedtime reading.

Thank you to whoever it was that mentioned BB and 'the little grey men' - remember loving those books as a child. Straight over to Amazon for me, I think.

Brendon Chase was one of his classics, too, wasn't it? Wonder what my kids will make of a story about children running away from home/school, taking a rifle with them and then living in the forest trapping and skinning wild animals, collecting  birds eggs and so on?

triffid

Quote from: tim on January 11, 2007, 11:05:09
How can anyone not have read Betty MacDonald??

When I've mentioned her elsewhere, no one else has ever heard of her, Tim!
I began to think that this was a UK-wide problem, and that we were only exempt because we have cousins in Seattle.
That may be why we had the books in the family in the first place (they're not exactly recent editions  ;D)

tabbycat

Quote from: triffid on January 11, 2007, 10:09:17
"Anyone Can Do Anything" .   It's the only humorous account I've ever come across of life during the American Depression of the 1930s.

Am going to try and get hold of a copy of this one.

"The Plague and I" is about the author's stay in a TB sanatorium & all the people that she meets there. It's wonderfully funny and heartbreakingly sad at the same time. You can't imagine anyone around today going through it - they'd say their human rights were being well and truely violated! It's an odd subject to write about but it's fantastic. She's so good at seeing the funny side of really terrible situations.

Tabby

Froglegs

The first book i remember i enjoyed reading  as teenager was Arthur C. Clarke's "Lost Worlds"and that was it been a Sci-fi fan ever since,the "Gormenghast trilogy"got me in to fantasy books which i think is as good if not better than "Lord of the rings". Robin Hobb,Fiona McIntosh,George R.R.Martin,&David Eddings are but a few of my favorite Aurthur's.Currently reading book two of the "Tamir Triad"by Lynn Flewelling.For some book bargins take a look at the Greenmetropolis.com i find them very good. :)

supersprout

great link froglegs, thank you :)

Froglegs

Forgot to add Robinson crusoe.I wonder how many lottie holders would survive on a uninhabited island....think i would...if i had me shed....oh and that nice cob shop that does them nice bacon butty's i get on my way to the plot,...yea think would survive. ::)

caroline7758

Ooh, dangerous link frogslegs, could get carried away on there!

SamLouise

Resurrection!

So what's everybody reading these days (other than A4A threads!)  What's going on your Christmas list - it's only 2 months and 5 days away  :P ;D

I'm currently reading Spike Milligan's Rommel? Gunner Who?: A Confrontation in the Desert, the follow up to Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall.  They are very, very funny books.

OllieC

Ah, good choice! I'm reading Mark Steel, "What's going on?", very thoughtful,  funny & well observed politics, family & breakdown based humour.

asbean

Just finished "The Kite Runner", lovely book, wish I had read it when it came out.  I didn't want it to end.
The Tuscan Beaneater

twinkletoes

The last two books I have read have been From Here, You Can't See Paris (Michael S. Saunders), Serge Bastarde Ate My Baguette (John Drummer) and I am currently reading Happy Birthday (Christina Jones). After that, Paths of Glory (Jeffrey Archer) - I know he's not everybodys cup of tea......but I like his books.
twinkletoes

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