Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Someone lent me The Kite Runner ages ago saying that once i got into it i wouldn't be able to put it down. Bless her - i'm only about three quarters of the way through and its OK ish. Not completely hooked.


Let me know about the Nicole Krauss, Capt. I got a copy of that waiting to be read somewhere in a box!


citizen

Just finished Exile On Main Street. A Season In Hell With The Rolling Stones by Robert Frank. About the making of the album and the general debauchery at Keith Richards house in the south of France. Wonderfully decadant. A pretty damned good rock & roll memoir.

We need to talk about Kevin, Secret History, and The Kite Runner are all faves of mine.

Has anyone read Augusten Burroughs? Dry was both hilarious and an absolute tear-jerker. And there is an absolutely terrific piece in Magical Thinking about his troubles with his cleaner!

Jonathan Safran Foer's Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is also worth checking out.

I'm reading Raw Spirit by Iain Banks. It's a non-fiction book supposedly about single malt whisky that is actually mostly about driving around Scotland, with the odd anecdote thrown in for good measure. It has its moments. And then it has it's other moments, the less good ones. But all in all it's entertaining, and probably more enjoyable than an all-whisky-all-the-time book would be, even though I do sometimes find myself wishing he would hurry up and get to the next Dram.

Did anyone else find Saturday by Ian McEwan a massive disappointment? I totally loved Atonement but I'm wondering whether to bother with On Chesil Beach as I found Saturday so tediously smug. The fact that David Cameron was recently pictured reading it is also putting me off (yes I know, how shallow).

Am currently reading Truecrime by Jake Arnott, which is a good gangster romp.

mmm...finding Istanbul by Orhan Pamuk a tincy bit painful. It's a shame because I'm going there this Thursday for a few days and hoped this book would open my eyes to more than the tourist view of the city. Never mind, I shall persevere but am already looking forward to a new book. What are the latest recommendations people?

I agree about McEwan- I loved atonement but felt Saturday didnt really have the same impact.

and am having exactly the same shallow feelings about the pict David Cameron.


I also agree about Orhan Panuk. still havent finished Snow and started it months ago.


I just read Jamaica Inn by Daphne Du Maurier and it's great. not as good as Rebecca but really quite scary. lots of late nights and wild weather in Cornwall. and another classic if you've never read it is 'to kill a mockingbird' which I read for the first time the other day. That book truly rocks. i'm sure everyone on the thread has read it but if not read it today!

Having not read John Le Carre before I rather enjoyed the Secret Gardener which I read recently. Not normally the sort of thing that I go for but it was worth it. I have to say that I envy anyone who's reading Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird for the first time. A wonderful book. If you enjoyed that then try anything by Carson McCullers, another great writer from the Deep South, a good start would be The Ballad Of The Sad Cafe or The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter, which is a personal favourite.

McEwan! :X He makes my blood boil. I read Enduring Love and hated it. Thought I'd give him a second chance and read Saturday and hated it. The man has wasted enough of my precious reading time and is now on my banned authors list.


Still enjoying the Book of Love, it's actually getting quite exciting, which I hadn't expected.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • As it's Halloween tonight, are we out witch hunting and burning ? 🤣
    • I hate to be that guy but i don't think you'll get much joy calling 999 if your phone has been stolen. 
    • Unless you are watching it 24x7 then its hard to qualify that its not being used. Unless you are a business overlooking it of course. Personally I am reassured we still have phone boxes as they provide a valuable emergency use. If you are mugged for you phone, you can call 999 from them, if your house or business is on fire and you run out without a phone you can dial 999 from them. Some people don't have a mobile so its potentially reassuring for them knowing they can call someone if they feel unwell whilst out.  Just because some people don't see value in an object, doesn't mean others don't.
    • Hardly a non-story @malumbu still one of the lead stories on the BBC.....you clearly don't understand when to serve humble pie! 😉  https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgk40l8jm7o   Absolutely. It's a disaster. And for this government, who were happy to tell us they had 14 years to prepare to lead, it has been one self-inflicted disaster after another since they took over. To be honest the signs were there when they were in opposition but I think we all gave them the benefit of the doubt as they weren't the Tories and now they have the reigns the additional scrutiny that brings is tripping them up.    
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...