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Last Book You Read....


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I very rarely read books / novels (or whatever you want to call the those collections of paper sheets with covers on the front and back) but this one has me going just now. Brilliant. My favourite bit so far has been where he's getting hassled from folk at school and he's ordering them to behave because he's their patrol leader at Scouts (mainly because I can associate this with someone else!).

I-Partridge-We-Need-to-Talk-.jpg

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The Island of Dr Moreau by HG Wells.

I've previously read "War of the Worlds" by Wells and this has the same "normal" man reporting the strange horrors about him kind of theme. I enjoyed it and can imagine the context being quite shacking stuff when it first came out but horror/torture porn like the Saw films have perhaps numbed our generation.

But still another off my list, just started Dracula which has nipped along it's first 30 pages so all's good.

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20000 Leagues Under the Sea.

Collins Classics range are about the only English language books I can afford to buy over here!

First time I've read it, but despite the advances made since it was written, I think the book has aged extremely well. I enjoyed it.

Now reading Hit & Run, by Doug Johnstone. Not the greatest so far, but I have read far worse.

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Wages of Destruction by Tooze.

On the economy of the IIIrd Reich. Some of the views/information there contravenes "common wisdom".

Some cringeworthy typos or whitewashing, but on the whole an interesting read.

Borys

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  • 2 weeks later...

20000 Leagues Under the Sea.

I enjoyed this, but was fairly regularly looking up the various sea-creatures I'd never heard of before. It was an educational experience.

I've recently read The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruis Zafon which seems to have won a lot of plaudits but is somewhat devalued by having a "rushed" letter written by an endangered character explain away 90% of the mysteries of the book towards the end. "Rushed" because it's 100 pages long, and devalued because it's a lazy cop out. 3/5.

The Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out Of The Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson is self descriptive. Oh, and it's brilliant. There are two main stories, one in the present day - he climbs out of the window in the opening pages - and the other following Alan's first 100 years as he traipses through life bumping into famous figures through the 1900's. Both stories are farcical and very entertaining. 4/5.

The Death of Grass by John Christopher is an apocalyptic novel in which a virus spreads across the globe killing all grasses. This is a tricky book to sell but it was a gripping read. Set in the UK, Britain is largely unaffected as the virus causes havoc across Asia, but when it does reach the island it devastates overnight, law and order breaks down and it's everyone for themselves. It's short, and well worth picking this up. It's the best thing I've read in the last year. 5/5.

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I do like a mad over ambitious project so I've decided to read two books from every decade from 1700 to the present day.

The first two are Daniel Defoe's 'The Storm' (1703) and Jonathan Swift's 'A Tale of a Tub' (1704).

I reckon I can get to 2012 by 2015!

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The Island of Dr Moreau by HG Wells.

I've previously read "War of the Worlds" by Wells and this has the same "normal" man reporting the strange horrors about him kind of theme. I enjoyed it and can imagine the context being quite shacking stuff when it first came out but horror/torture porn like the Saw films have perhaps numbed our generation.

Marquis de Sade was a 100 years prior to H. G. Wells so I don't agree with your assessment!

I'd bet even today most readers wouldn't be able to finish his more extreme works.

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As the new version is out, I've decided to read the 'Football Manager Stole My Life' book. About 3/4 of the way through it, and it's a great read. Good mix of interviews with the writers of the game, insights as to where the legends of previous versions are now in real life (Cherno Samba is in the Norwegian 2nd Division, and is still convinced he's going to 'make it' in the game), and of course, various stories of CM/FM addictions from gamers.

My favourite one is the Geordie comedian who won the EPL with Blyth Spartans, made a wee plastic trophy, then booked himself on one of those city tourist buses with the open tops, and paraded the wee trophy all round Newcastle laugh.gif

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Finished Homage to Catalonia the other day and most of the way through Down and Out in Paris and London now. Thoroughly enjoyed both so far. I read Animal Farm and 1984 when I was a kid, maybe 12 or so, and looking back maybe I didn't really rate them too highly in terms of liking them, although I do think that those two are more to be appreciated than loved, if that makes sense.

Went on amazon today and bought Keep the Aspidistra Flying by George Orwell, 1982 Janine by Alasdair Gray and A Disaffection by James Kelman. Winter is drawing in so bleak tales of dissatisfaction, rebellion and attempted suicide it is then.

Keep the Aspidistra Flying is probably my favourite Orwell novel although I am a fairly ridiculous Gordon Comstock type so that figures....

Coming Up For Air is also a underrated Orwell novel and there is a Penguin compilation of essays that's worth reading, I think it's called 'Shooting the Elephant and Other Essays'. I love the one on working in a book shop which has a couple of laugh out loud moments, maybe not something you generally associate with Orwell!

At the other end of the scale the essay about the execution of the prisoner is pretty powerful stuff.

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As the new version is out, I've decided to read the 'Football Manager Stole My Life' book. About 3/4 of the way through it, and it's a great read. Good mix of interviews with the writers of the game, insights as to where the legends of previous versions are now in real life (Cherno Samba is in the Norwegian 2nd Division, and is still convinced he's going to 'make it' in the game), and of course, various stories of CM/FM addictions from gamers.

My favourite one is the Geordie comedian who won the EPL with Blyth Spartans, made a wee plastic trophy, then booked himself on one of those city tourist buses with the open tops, and paraded the wee trophy all round Newcastle laugh.gif

Reading this made me google Maxim Tsigalko, the greatest striker in Champie Man history. Retired at 29, what a waste!

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Hells angles, very good read, although it only scratches the surface, it is about as far as any non-angle could get.

i've always found hunter s. thompson rather protracted and obtuse but this is an acute book.

covers the whole 360 degrees of a biker gang.

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